Friday, October 30, 1981

TGV and Grenoble (10/29/1981)

Thursday, October 29, 1981
Awakened by train crewmen banging on the door. We were already in Paris. Bought more TGV postcards, and when the tourist office opened at 7:00, I got some TGV brochures. When I went to get a TGV reservation, there were no more First Class seats. I ended up in 2nd Class on the 8:15 train to Lyon. Still had to pay the 8FRF/$1.50 fee.
Paris to Lyon TGV ticket
TGV locomotive
TGV entrance at Paris Gare de Lyon
Watched the 7:15 TGV leave, as well as one for Geneva. A large group of Asians were photographing each other in front of a TGV locomotive.
I was in car #15, which meant I had to walk past one complete 10-car train, and go to the middle of the second train coupled on. Second Class is definitely not as classy as first, and I never did appreciate French design. The seats were randomly colored in pairs of green, blue, and dark blue. I was at least able to ride facing forward.
We were really moving along. It was obviously the fastest I had moved in a ground vehicle, but things weren’t quite the blur I expected.
Arrived in Lyon-Brotteaux and switched right over to a train leaving for Grenoble. I couldn’t stay awake on this train. Arrived in Grenoble about 13:00. I got a city map from the tourist office and found the five squares that a Travel Magazine article suggested to visit. I left the modern copper and glass train station and followed Rue Casimir Brenier which led me straight to Place de la Bastille. It was busy with automobile traffic. There was a view of the muddy green Isère River below and the fortifications of the Bastille above on the hillside. Looking up river I could see the Téléphérique in the foreground and the snow-covered Alps in the background.
Téléphérique and Alps
La Bastille
Walking along the river, I discovered I had lost my map in a camera shuffle, and went back to find it. Continued along the river to the base of the Téléphérique/aerial tram way (established 1934, new gondolas in  1976).
Téléphérique base station
Téléphérique gondolas
Téléphérique gondolas entering station
Bought a round trip ticket for 15 FRF/$2.70 from a man in a sphere.
Téléphérique ticket
Four gondolas travel together along the aerial cable way, and I was directed to enter the 2nd car. The doors opened automatically and there were six little fold up seats circle around the central pole. The doors closed and we headed up to the ruins of the Bastille.
At the top there were hazy views into the sun of the city below. But it was clear in the direction of the Alps and you could see the slightly rosy-colored Mont Blanc.
View of Grenoble with Alps
View of the old town and gondolas
View of the Isère River
View towards Mont Blanc
More Alps
Zooming in on Alps
Above La Bastille
Heading down
Took the Téléphérique back own, passed the Jardin de ville/City Garden to Place Saint-André with its statue (1822) of Chevalier de Bayard, a French soldier whose remains are buried in the church here.
Place Saint-André
Made my way through numerous empty café tables and chairs to walk up Grande Rue to Place Grenette with its fancy fountain with dolphins by sculptor Victor Sappey.
Place Grenette fountain
Turned left on Rue de la République to the tourist office which didn’t have much to offer. A couple turns later I was at the edge of Place Verdun, a large green park.
Place Verdun
Grenoble trolley bus
Turned right on a side street to Boulevard Agutte Sembat to Place Victor Hugo, a park with benches, statues, and fountains.
Place Victor Hugo with statue of Hector Berlioz erected 1953
Returned to the train station on Avenue Alsace Lorraine. Used the last of my French coins for Tic Tac mints and caught the 15:14 train to Geneva. Arriving at 17:30, I had time to run to McDonald’s for a meal before the 18:24 train to Biel. Walked home and fell into bed.

Thursday, October 29, 1981

A break, then back on the train again (10/28/1981)

Wednesday, October 28, 1981
Arrived in Geneva about 7:30 and caught the 7:48 to Lausanne. Changed to a train to Neuchâtel, then to Biel. Home by 10:30 to shower. Did laundry and went to the bank. Picked up my mail. Took a nap and was awakened shortly after 17:00 by Kirby who knew I was home because I left some stamps at their door. He wanted to know if I wanted a great view of the lake. I grabbed my camera and we walked down to get some shots of a sunset over Bielersee/Lake Biel.
Sunset over Bielersee/Lake Biel
We then stopped at a wonderful little toy store in the old town. Kirby was jealous that I got to ride a TGV! I visited a little with Jan & Kirby and by 19:00 I was on my way again. Took the 19:47 from Biel to Lausanne. Arrived at 21:00 and had a McDonald’s meal. The McDonalds closed at 22:00, so I had to wait in the station for the 23:46 train to Paris. Went out to the platform to wait and saw a bare fanny in an open window in some apartments. Most people had their security shades down.
When the train arrived I found an empty First Class compartment. A French guy hanging in the corridor came to join me. Then a couple girls and a short man with a plaid suitcase. The girls asked if this was First Class, and when I said “yes” they left along with the French man. The short guy also had a 2nd class ticket, but he stayed and paid the difference to stay in First Class. He then began rummaging through his suitcase and pulled out a pair of pants. He took off his jacket and… he took his pants and left. I figured he had gone to the lavatory, so I decided to check out the compartment situation. The short guy was adjusting his new pants in the next compartment, and all the other compartments were empty! When I got back, the short guy started saying in accented English, “Okay, okay. I move to next compartment so you can sleep nicely. All by yourself and I all by myself, okay?” I was happy when he took his plaid suitcase and left.

Wednesday, October 28, 1981

Riding Trains in Four Countries (10/25-27/1981)

Sunday, October 25, 1981
At 7:00 I went to the restroom for my morning ablutions. It had been 23 hours since I was last in a bathroom! When I returned, one of the men opened the door for me. As it was, I never had to struggle with that door!
Now we were traveling through orange orchards. Stopped at Valencia. Valencia oranges? We had glimpses of the sea, more orchards with green oranges on the trees, and whitewashed towns. We stopped right across a grade crossing and the conductor said we would be stopped for half an hour. Drivers in the waiting cars were talked to, and they backed away and drove off. I heard complaints about the “máquina/engine.” An hour later we took off again. We were due in Barcelona at 14:30, but arrived at 16:00 We came in to the Barcelona Sants station, and I needed to get to the Termino station. Saw a flashing sign that the 15:53 train to Termino was coming in on track 6. No train on track 6 so it must be late. Finally there was a train that attempted to leave at 16:25, except that it shuddered and shook a few times and jolted to a stop.  After a few tries, they backed the good half of the train out of the station, shunted over to another track and continued the 15 minutes to Termino, arriving at 17:30! Passed through industrial backyards and maybe saw a gypsy camp; clothes were hanging to dry next to a fire with black smoke!
At Termino, I ran to get my boarding pass for the 19:00 train to Cerbère. My stomach was feeling queasy so I bought a can of Pepsi. Used the restroom that had sawdust on the floor. Despite the stall door not having a lock and no toilet paper, I left a 5 ESP/5 cent tip for the cleaning lady. Used up my other peseta coins to buy a chocolate ice cream bar.
Barcelona to Cerbère boarding pass
Able to board the train at 18:00. My boarding pass said 2nd Class, so that’s where I went. It was a smoking car, but I don’t think Spain has non-smoking cars! Our train seems to be one of the newest of the Red Nacional de Ferrocarriles Españoles (RENFE)/Spanish National Railway Network fleet. A Co-rail type coach with reversible seats, curtains in the windows, and automatic sliding doors between the cars.
Someone had a tape of rock concert music, and everyone seemed to be sitting in that half of the car. More like a rock opera, and in English. The latest thing in the U.S.? We left on time at 19:00. The conductor seemed puzzled by my boarding pass and Eurail Pass (difference in classes?), and asked to see my passport as well.
The ventilation seemed to work really well, drawing the smoke straight up so that I wasn’t bothered at all. After a couple stops, a big man sat next to me. He tried conversing in Spanish. “¡No comprendo!” He tried French, then sat back and clucked his tongue and groaned and sighed the rest of the trip to Port Bou, where he finally got off. The ventilator doesn’t work for someone sitting right next to you!
Lots of people were being assessed a supplementary fee by the conductor, whom I finally figured out looked like the doctor on “Love Boat.”
Arrived in Cerbère, France a half hour late at 22:10. Was waved through Spanish and French customs, and headed straight for the 22:40 train to Geneva. I haven’t yet decided my destination for tomorrow.
I was joined in my compartment by a quiet Australian who was going to visit friends in Montpellier where he had taught English a couple years ago. He was afraid of falling asleep and missing his 1:30 stop. The other fellow in the compartment had an alarm clock and set it for 1:00. This guy was from Chile, but his father was Swiss and he had a Swiss passport. His name was Wilfred Diener! Yet he had never been to Switzerland. He was a medical doctor doing research in London under the auspice of the World Health Organization.
The train left on time, making its way out of the station. Suddenly we heard an anguished cry from a few compartments away, and then the train came to an immediate halt. All the conductors converged on our car! We heard that a passenger, an American girl, was holding something out of the train window and it dropped. When she lunged after it, she fell out of the window! A French fellow a couple compartments further saw what happened and ran to pull the emergency brake. Apparently the girl suffered only a sore neck. What an unbelievable incident, and a miracle the girl didn’t have any more of a serious injury. Traveled along the rocky coast of the Mediterranean Sea.

Monday, October 26, 1981
The Chilean’s alarm went of at 1:00 and the Australian still had to be poked several times to waken. The two guys had an interesting conversation about Chile’s politics and I learned the U.S. was guilty of some kind of intervention.
Arrived in Geneva at 7:23, went through customs, and boarded the 7:51 train to Zürich. There I changed to the 10:18 train to Chiasso. Nice to experience First Class in Switzerland. I was joined in my compartment by two Americans who wanted to close up the compartment so that it looked full. They had clothespins to hold the door’s window curtains together. Then they realized they were in First Class, but decided to stick it out. It had been raining in Zürich, but everywhere else in Switzerland was covered with snow.  As we traveled south, the rain turned to snow. The conductor came by and I flashed my Eurail Pass which I had ready. The guys reached for theirs and the conductor asked, “Eurail Passes, also?” They nodded yes, and the conductor said OK and went on! Greg and Tim were construction workers/carpenters from California.
The snowfall got heavier so that we could not see the church in Wassen in two of the three passes. Zipped through the Gotthard Tunnel with a couple interruptions of sirens and the sound of jackhammers as they worked on the track. The weather was exactly the same on both ends of the tunnel, thick falling snow! I saw snow-covered palm trees!
I was going to get off in Lugano to see the “Miami of Switzerland,” but it was densely foggy there, not a day for sightseeing. Decided to stay on the train.
Our car was going only as far as Chiasso, and if we wanted to go to Milano, we had to move to the back of the train. We even had to pass through the baggage car that had a corridor on one side. This part of the train was crowded and we found three seats in 2nd class smoking. Ugh!
In Chiasso, an Italian customs agent came through and Greg remarked he looked like a Nazi with slicked back black hair and a tan trench coat. Now it was raining again, in Italy. After arriving in Milano at 16:00, I checked the schedule for trains to the Riviera but nothing ran at a convenient hour. Decided to follow Greg and Tim to Firenze/Florence. I changed my 21,100 ESP/$220 bills into 231,100 Italian Lire (ITL). Wow, more money!
We boarded the 16:45 train to Florence, and walked to the very front of the train. A conductor came through and told us to change cars because this one was reserved. Other passengers were yelling that they weren’t going to move because nothing indicated  any of the seats were reserved. We noticed that two seats in our compartment were reserved, so we just moved next door. Tim clothes-pinned the curtains, and Greg smoked a cigarette. The conductor came through and thoroughly checked our Eurail Passes. He told Tim to remove the clothespins, me to remove my feet off the seat, and Greg to put out his cigarette. Tim later went to the lavatory and discovered we were the only ones in that car. When we stopped in Bologna, the guys said to feign sleep so that people would not disturb us to get seats. No one did. We arrived a half hour late at 21:30 in Florence. Greg and Tim wanted me to join them in their travels, but I decided to go on alone.
Still no convenient trains to the Riviera, so I decided to take the 00:58 back to Milano. Sat in the First Class waiting room. An Asian guy sat next to me studying a timetable. When he was done I asked if I could borrow the schedule for a minute. He asked if I was Japanese, and after I explained my situation, he said I really looked Japanese (which most Japanese do not say!). He was traveling between job situations where he taught natural Japanese cooking. He is based in France, but goes all over Europe. He said the Japanese have good eye-hand coordination, good fine motor-perceptual abilities which apparently the French lack. He said the French can’t cut up vegetables well and can’t even tie up a package. Hmm…
He wanted me to watch his things when he went to the restroom. The waiting room was filling up, and I couldn’t save his seat. When he returned, we thought it was time to look for our train, but we learned it was going to be 80 minutes late!

Tuesday, October 27, 1981
The train was “only” 45 minutes late, arriving on a different track. We boarded and found a first class compartment with only one person in it. But he had tied the door closed with his belt! The Asian guy persisted and we were finally allowed in. The 0:58 train left at 1:50. It was due in Milano at 5:25, and we assumed that not all of us would oversleep and miss the Milano stop.
Fell into a deep sleep, and woke up at 5:45! The train was rolling along and I hoped it was late! Fortunately for the later sleepers, it was. Arrived at 6:25 and had to walk the full length of the train to get to the station proper. Got the 6:45 Trans Europe Express (TEE) train to the Riviera. We were in compartments with glass corridor walls and doors, and blue crushed velvet seats. Back in no smoking again. The countryside was flat outside of Milano. Near Genova we went through several tunnels under the hills. Along the Italian Riviera it was overcast and people seemed surprised to see snow up on the hills. At Ventimiglia, I had to move ahead to the cars going into France.
In France, the sun was trying to peek through the clouds. The way people were dressed, you could tell it was cold. I decided to forget about the Riviera and go on to Lyon. Past Toulon the sun was out and the sky was clear. Hooray! But it was cold outside. I got off at Marseilles because I saw a train was leaving in 10 minutes for Lyon at the next track at 13:55. I was usually alone in First Class and slept most of the way.
Arrived in the Lyon-Perrache station at 18:30 where the Train à Grande Vitesse (TGV)/France’s high speed train would depart. They left once an hour, but I saw that more departed from Lyon-Brotteaux. Caught the 18:36 to Lyon-Brotteaux arriving 10 minutes later. I had hoped for a TGV to Geneva, but the next one left in the morning. Went to get a reservation for the 19:00 to Paris, for 8 French francs (FRF)/$1.50.
Lyon to Paris TGV reservation
I had to walk the full length of the train to the first car, and had a window seat in the smoking car. Oh, no! After we departed, a stewardess came to give me a dinner menu. Another stewardess handed out a questionnaire, but I didn’t get one (it was in French). The dining car was car #4, but before I had a chance to stand up, the stewardess came by with a cart and gave me a tray and served the beverage of my choice. I had a teeny bottle of Pepsi. The tray had a drinking glass, cloth napkin, 2 sets of fork and knife, salt and pepper, and mustard. There was a large roll and a plate with a green salad covered with slivers of almonds, hazelnuts and raisins. There was a tasty salad dressing.
The first TGV line opened to the public between Paris and Lyon on September 27, 1981. The train did seem to go fast and sounded at times like an airplane (probably the sound of air conditioning!). There was a minor but constant vibration, not enough to spill a drink but enough to keep me from writing. The silverware would clatter if touching each other.
The stewardess came with a cart again, and probably because I am a dumb American, I wasn’t given a choice of entrée. I received the recommended dinner of a filet mignon with green beans. It was what I would have chosen anyway. I must have eaten like a starved person; everything tasted so good!
The stations whizzed by and occasionally there was a train going the opposite direction that hummed by. Lights flashed by outside; very different scenery than on a plane!
I didn’t take the cheese or pastries, or coffee, but I had to take the bill. The meal was a definite splurge at 72 FRF/$13. But worth it.
TGV dinner bill
We arrived at Paris Gare de Lyon on time at 21:42, in only three hours! In the station, I bought a Société Nationale des Chemins de fer Français (SNCF)/French National Railway Company timetable (37 FRF/$6.60) and some postcards in order to get change to use the restroom. I wanted to ride the TGV again!
Boarded the 23:53 train to Switzerland and found an empty compartment. Was joined by a girl, and the two Arabs walking back and forth in the corridor decided to join us. A French businessman entered our crowded compartment. Oh, when they realized this was a first class car, the girl and two Arabs left. I was left alone with the French guy. He spoke English and said he sold alligator-skin goods! When the train left, I went to the restroom and noticed all the other compartments were empty. Why did everyone converge on my compartment?! As we settled in to sleep, I had the seat by the window and the French guy moved to be opposite of me. As we rode along his knees kept getting closer to mine. I moved mine closer to the window and soon could go no further. I tried sitting up straighter and tucking my knees back against the seat. But old magnetic knees managed to get one of his knees between mine! He started inching/centimetering forward. This would not do, so I put up an armrest and turned to lie across two seats, drawing my knees up. Sure enough, magnetic knees unerringly found mine. I tried straightening my legs to bring my knees away from the edge of the seat. He kept coming forward. So I put up the other armrest and stretched full length across three seats, facing the back of the seats, scrunched up against the back of the seats so that there was at least 6’ of clearance from the edge of the seat. Soon I noticed warmth along the back of my thigh. I couldn’t believe it; the magnetic property moved to the feet! I couldn’t flatten myself anymore against the seatback, so suddenly sat up to sit in the opposite corner of the compartment. If a magnetic anything stretched all that way across the compartment, I might have to do it harm! Fortunately the guy got off but had the gall to say “Au revoir!” I certainly hope not!

Sunday, October 25, 1981

Costa del Sol/Spanish Riviera (10/23-24/1981)

Friday, October 23, 1981
We have been getting up by 8:00 most mornings. That is after Rod heads to work on his bicycle. We took a walk all around the jogging road which runs along a stream. The stream appears to be a dumping ground, but here too is where people wash their cars. Mikayla was collecting stones and tasting them.
View from the J apartment
View from the J apartment
Mikayla refused to take a nap today. I helped to make a pumpkin pie, and stayed until Rod got home from work. Kathy walked me to the bus stop and I caught a bus about 18:00.
Torrejon bus ticket
In Torrejon I managed to get the 18:20 train to Atocha. The train was extremely crowded, but the lottery man still managed to squeeze through.
At Atocha, I spent 10 minutes in a line at the ticket window, when the ticket guy got up and left. We switched lines to wait some more. I got a cuchette/sleeper ticket for 595 ESP/$6.20 and I still had three hours until the 21:55 train to Málaga. After a thorough washing up in the restroom, I found a seat to people-watch. Several senior citizens and people with handicaps went around selling lottery tickets. One was a spastic athetoid who maneuvered a three-wheeled bicycle by hand. The grown man next to me was reading a comic book.
Madrid to Málaga cuchette/sleeper ticket
At 20:00 I was able to board the train to Málaga and was shown to a middle bunk under a pudgy Spaniard already in the top bunk. He tried to engage me in a conversation but we got nowhere. A younger man came in, threw his things on the other top bunk, and disappeared. An Englishman came in wanting the top bunk, but had to settle for a middle one. This guy was very happy there was someone else who spoke English, and felt that the rest of the world should learn his language! He wanted to know if I was one of these Americans rushing around Europe on Eurail Passes. Not anymore! He hoped that no children joined us and had many disparaging remarks to make. However, he did so enjoy traveling by train!
Relatives of an older lady packed her in a bottom bunk and an anonymous man took the last bottom bunk. We left 5 minutes late at 22:00, and I hunkered down in my bunk for the night.

Saturday, October 24, 1981
Somewhere in the middle of the night we were stopped for longer than usual and I heard talk of the “máquina/engine.” Did we need a new locomotive?
We were due in Málaga at 8:20, but I figured we would be late and just in case I used the restroom at 8:00. I stood outside the compartment to watch the scenery go by; Gently rolling hills with olive trees. At first they seemed bare, but then I noticed green olives, and later some trees with black olives. At the dirt crossroads, trucks loaded with men or pairs of men on mopeds waited for the train to pass. Near the Puente Genil station there was an abandoned factory whose chimney was gently bent at the top. A steam shovel appeared to be playing in the dirt.
The land was rocky and dusty. Saw a couple tethered donkeys and one carrying a load of sticks. A couple tethered goats but most were in herds tended by old men or women, or small boys. Saw cork trees and what appeared to be cotton fields, low bushes with puffs of white. Further along, it began to get mountainous and there were prickly pear bushes and century plants. The older lady returned from the restaurant and explained the bunks could be let down to form seats, so pudgy, the lady, and I sat down. Anonymous had already gotten off the train, the younger man disappeared again, and the Englishman took his turn standing outside the compartment.
We finally arrived in Málaga 2-1/2 hours late, at 11:00. I followed a sign pointing the way to a local railroad which goes to Torremolinos. The Englishman was going that way as well. We entered the subway-like entrance and were directed right to the train, a typical Red Nacional de Ferrocarriles Españoles (RENFE)/Spanish National Railway Network electrified local train, except that it had better provisions for luggage. This train came out from underground and stopped at several rapid transit-type stations, including one at the Málaga airport. We went underground again for the Torremolinos stop.
In Torremolinos, we had to walk up the stairs to exit, because the escalator wasn’t working. I wanted to head for the sea despite the overcast skies and the cool breeze. I came to Torremolinos to see the central setting of James Michener’s book “The Drifters.”
First view of Torremolinos beach
Walked through outdoor cafés and past gift shops, bars, galleries, and boutiques. Apparently Torremolinos has grown in the past ten years and is now mostly new and tall hotels and apartment buildings. Most signs were in Spanish and English, and menus were in multiple languages, foremost in German.
Followed a sign to La Playa/Beach where you had to go down stairs to reach the sand. An elevator was another option. Down below you had a closer look at the porous Lava-like rock cliffs of the Punta de Torremolinos/Torremolinos Point. However, the little caves were full of garbage.
Porous rock cave
There were a few straw umbrellas and lounge chairs on the beach, but most seemed to be in the process of being trucked away.
Torremolinos beach
No one was on the beach, and the wind was causing big breakers that muddied the color of the water. Many very tan people were walking along the promenade and I joined them. Passed beachfront hotels and bars. Some ladies were selling embroidered cloth. Torremolinos was full of cats!
Saw an old Spanish villa that seemed out of place here.
Spanish villa
I detoured out onto the wet sand.
Torremolinos beach
Beachfront hotel
Torremolinos old town
Porous rock cliff
Beach elevator
Street sign
The supermarket had postcards of Málaga and not Torremolinos. Saw Jabón Maja Myrurgia/Maja soap for about $1 a bar.
Torremolinos new town
Torremolinos train station entrance
Hiked back up to the train station and caught a train back to Málaga about 13:00. Two German ladies sat across from me and one made a joke. The other turned to me to translate the joke into Spanish. I didn’t understand the translated version!
Talgo train in Málaga station
In Málaga, I got my train reservation for Barcelona, then went to explore the city. Walking forward out of the station, I ended up at El Corte Inglés department store, near where a wide road crossed a wide dry riverbed. Stopped in the store to find the book department and check a guidebook and map for sights to see. Decided I should at least buy the map. I didn’t have far to go, crossing the riverbed and following the palm-tree lined boulevard.
Alameda Principal/Main Mall
The street was full of buses, some with “popping” air brakes? Some buses were marked “Butano;” were they fueled with butane gas? Passed roasted chestnut vendors, candy vendors, and cigarette vendors. To the right you could see the masts of large ships.
Arrived at Ayuntamiento/City Hall, completed in 1919 and designed by two architects from Málaga, Fernando Guerrero Strachan and Manuel Rivera Vera, in Neo-Baroque style.
Ayuntamiento/City Hall
I walked up a slight hill to the Alcazaba or Kasbah, the lower fortress and royal residence of the Castillo de Gibralfaro/Gibralfaro Castle, rebuilt in the 11th century by the Hammudid dynasty, a Berber Muslim tribe that ruled that area of Spain. Thus, Moorish architecture. The museum was closed.
Alcazaba or Kasbah
Nearby I peeked through a locked gate at the ruins of the Roman theatre of Málaga, which dates from the 1C BC (rediscovered in 1951). Climbed farther along the walls of the Castillo de Gibralfaro/Gibralfaro Castle. From a lookout point you could look down into a bullfight arena, and see the port and an avenue with fountains below.
View towards bullfight arena
View towards port
Bullfight arena
Bullfight arena
City Hall and gardens
Mediterranean Sea
There were a lot of prickly pear cacti around.
Prickly pear cacti
Walked back down the hill, passing a Spanish guard with his “Mickey Mouse” hat and a submachine gun.
Found the Santa Iglesia Catedral Basílica de la Encarnación/Holy Basilica Cathedral of the Incarnation. When crossing the dry riverbed, I ran into the pudgy Spaniard from the train. He engaged me in a conversation, using French words for the difficult Spanish words. He absolutely insisted I share his pastries, so I eventually took half of light layered cake with cream between the layers, and another cake with a chocolate and a vanilla layer surrounded by cream with shredded coconut on top. He accompanied me into El Corte Inglés, where I was looking for postcards. He walked me to the Metro station, all the while asking me to go to dinner, and wouldn’t understand my “¡No!
Took the subway from the Guadalmedina station one stop to the RENFE station. Couldn’t find postcards at the station either. I should have bought postcards of Málaga in Torremolinos!
Málaga to Barcelona train ticket
Took the 17:15 train to Barcelona, passing rolling hills with goat herds heading home in the sunset. I somehow ended up in a First Class smoking section, and the two Spanish girls smoked a lot of cigarettes before getting off at the 2nd and 3rd stations. The men in the compartment wanted to share their food with me.
At about 23:00 they pulled out the seats and everyone stretched out to sleep. Since our compartment door was a struggle to open, I didn’t go to the bathroom that night. I put on  my jacket because it was getting cold, but later someone turned on the heat. One guy turned on his side so that his knees touched mine. With the rocking of the train, we got excellent contact. I had to change out of my comfortable position to avoid him. These Spaniards!