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Today, Tuesday, I’m driving further south to a city I’ve never heard of before this week, Almería. As is the case almost universally in Spain, any place name starting with “al” (which means “the” in Arabic) derives from the 800 year Moorish occupation of Iberia. Almería is a Mediterranean seaport lying, subject to your interpretation of the coastline shape, at the southeast corner of Spain.
I’m staying with Andreea, a Romanian expatriate who lives in a very nice apartment in an eastern suburb, Retamar, a block from the beach.

Notably, she shares her home with three pet tropical birds, who have the run of the place. All through the day there are parrot calls and frequent flights from room to room. One of them is incubating eggs and I never see her.

The second is constantly flying around and, after a while, takes a liking to me. As I’m sitting on the couch, I periodically feel a sudden landing on my shoulder, where a substantial grooming session is undertaken (the bird grooming itself, not me).

The third one is futilely but determinedly incubating infertile eggs in the kitchen and is very defensive. The first time I go to throw something in what appears to be the kitchen wastebasket — which turns out to be the nesting box — I’m viciously attacked. It takes me a moment to even understand why my hand hurts so much but even if I had comprehended the danger immediately, I couldn’t have defended myself in any way that might hurt the bird. Andreea rescues me by chasing the attacker back into its box and placing a heavy object on the cover.

From then on, anytime I approach the kitchen or the adjacent front door, we have to first be sure the screeching aggressor is contained. I only sustain one more successful attack. Andreea also has a very affectionate, squat legged dog that craves attention.
Andreea works remotely in logistics — enabling goods to move efficiently from seller to buyer — and she warned me in advance that she would be busy. Nonetheless, once work is done, we spend the evening discussing our lives and choices, making a plan for tomorrow, and going for a walk along the beachfront.

My room is also the one where the birds sleep — in covered cages. Once the room is dark, they’re mostly silent.
Wednesday, Andreea works a while before a midday medical appointment. From there, we head east to Cabo de Gata National Park, a large area of mountainous seacoast.

We stop at the historic lighthouse and then walk down to a rocky cove which is one of her favorite snorkeling areas. I go swimming in the relatively warm and very clear water, while Andreea watches with absolutely no temptation to join me in what she considers off-season bathing.


The views of mountain and coastline are beautiful and afterward we drive further east around former salt evaporation ponds that are now a bird sanctuary.

As evening approaches we arrive in San José beach and harbor. This is a tourist resort but not overcrowded this time of year. Andreea chooses a very popular restaurant and we have a truly excellent dinner, including some of the best pastrami (!) I’ve ever tasted.

A long, after dark walk looping to the harbor and back finishes the day and we drive back to her apartment.
I’ve been invited to a Couchsurfing host in the center of Almería, but due to a prior commitment, I can only stay one night. Since parking there is very difficult, Thursday morning I leave the car where it’s parked outside Andreea’s and she drops me off downtown on her way to a friend’s house. I’m only a few steps from Klaus’ apartment and he’s there to greet me. He lives in a rooftop penthouse high above the street. Klaus is German but has lived in Spain for 46 years. He’s well-educated, articulate, and an excellent English speaker. He runs a business out of his home that lobbies (the more polite term is “advocates”) the European Union on behalf of tourism enterprises. Although he warned me that I would be on my own because of his workload, we quickly establish rapport and spend some hours in the morning discussing a wide range of topics. Later on, I head out on foot, eventually climbing the big hill to tour the Alcazaba, an enormous Moorish fortress with commanding views of the city and sea. The large site is also under active archaeological excavation.






I thus occupy myself until about 8 PM when I meet Klaus at a bar near his house. Here we spend another several hours in interesting conversation over drinks and tapas, finishing up long after dark. I learn a lot about EU politics, Klaus’ expatriate views about Spain, and lots more. Additionally, I resolve something that’s been quietly tugging at me all day. Sitting at the outdoor table in the evening light, Klaus bears a striking, and disconcerting, resemblance to Clint Eastwood. When I finally put my finger on that, he says he’s heard it occasionally from others.


After a comfortable night in Klaus’ well appointed guest room, I pack up in the morning but before I depart, we continue our conversation for another couple of hours. Although we have many differing viewpoints, we find our opinions very aligned on many issues.
Finally, I leave to catch a city bus back to Andreea’s home about an hour to the east, say my fond goodbyes to her, and head westward several hours, along a scenic route parallel to the still snow covered Sierra Nevada, Spain’s highest mountain range. I’m heading for Seville to stay with friends I made 18 months earlier.