Napping was
not all we did, but it certainly took
up a good chunk of the day. Today I participated in another field program: we
went to La Rioja for winery tours and wine tasting. We had to meet at the bus
at 8:30am. 8:30! This is too early to expect college students to be energetic.
The bus ride to La Rioja was an hour and a half both ways, so it is
understandable that after three days in Spain we were all a little tired and
bus rides are the perfect time for sleeping. We stopped at Cune/C.V.N.E. first
and were led on a tour. As nice as it was to hear about the process of making
wine and seeing barrels full of it, the very best part of this tour was seeing
the wine cemetery. The cemetery is full of bottles of wine that Cune cannot
sell for reasons I could not hear at the back of the group. Wine needs to be
kept in a colder, humid temperature, so the entire wine cemetery is covered in
mold. It was so fascinating. We got to walk all the way to the back of the
cemetery and saw mold covering the wine bottles, the walls, and the ceiling. It
was so gross but so, so awesome! Knowing I was walking on mold did not even
faze me. Later, of course, we tasted wine. My friends and I had fun acting like
we were posh wine tasters, swirling the wine and delicately sniffing it, but
honestly wine is not my favorite, so the amount they gave us of both rose and
red wines was more than enough for me.
Next we went to La Lucia, not a
winery but more of a wine museum. We watched one of the weirdest videos I have
ever seen in my life, a video about a woman whose car breaks down and is
approached by a rhyming fairy/elf and transported to a winery in La Rioja and has
the best time ever. The premise is already a bit out there, but what made it so
weird is that since the original video was made in Spanish, we watched a dubbed
English version in which the fairy still has to rhyme. So the rhymes this fairy
was spouting made little to no sense and instead of thinking about the lesson
in this film, that La Rioja is a great place for wine, I spent the time
wondering who in the world came up with the English rhyming lines and what
possibly made them think the final product was anything other than ridiculous.
We had lunch here, more fantastic Spanish food I don’t know the names for, and
dessert. Our translator/guide said the dessert was French toast. Oh my goodness
this is not what dessert was. It was some eggy concoction covered in a toasted,
breaded mix with some custard on top. While it looked questionable, it tasted
pretty good. But I wouldn’t ever order it again. The custard on top was
delicious and if the dessert had just been custard I would have been totally on
board. I’m sure some people did not mind the dessert was not amazing because of
the free wine we were all given with lunch. Free things are something college
students never pass up, especially if it’s alcohol.
After lunch it was back on the bus for us and time for Naptime: Round 2.
Back on the ship we went up to Deck 7 and played another game of embarrassing ping pong. For the record, we’re
getting better (very slowly) at ping pong.
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| At Cune winery |
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| THE WINE CEMETERY! |
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| You could fit 50 of me in one of these barrels |
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| Outside one of the La Rioja vineyards on my last day in Basque Country. Bye Spain! Off to Scotland! |
This was one of my favorite blogs you've written ;) Lookin' fab in those photos!!!!!
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