Sunday, April 18, 2010

Trip Report for Puerto Vallata April 11-17, 2010

Day 1

Departed DFW in the morning and arrived Puerto Vallarta about noon - awesome that we can fly non stop and be to a lovely beach destination in 2.5 hours. Read extensively about the warnings of the timeshare people at the airport after you exit immigration before the taxi area so we zoomed through them and made no conversation with them. They are polite but if you give them the slightest indication you might be interested in what they are selling, they pounce on you.

got to the taxi booth, paid for our taxi and hopped in. The taxis from the airport to your local destination are price controlled and only white taxis are allowed to take people from the airport. Our fare was $180 which is a little less than $18. The fare is based on which zone you are traveling to within Puerto Vallarta.

Dropped at Villa del Palmar - lovely resort with lush grounds. Again after checking in, the "timeshare" girl needed to sit us down to explain the resort to us - as if we didn't have the intelligence to do it on our own but we played her game. Eventually after giving us the resort information she made her "offer" for us to tour another Villa property Flamingos which is their newest one. It is much further north from where we were staying and we decided not to stay there when we made our trade due to that fact. they make it worth your while if you will take their tour but we were not interested. So we parted ways with her amicably.

Spent the remainder of the day at the resort on the beach and had dinner at the resort that night. There is a small market that has basics which is all we needed in the way of food within a block of the resort plus the internet cafe and we made a trip there on Day 1. dinner that night was quite good - had tortilla soup and shrimp burritos and it was about $470 which is a little less than $47 US. The peso is about 11.6 to the US $1 right now.

Day 2

This was another lovely beach day. because we went in low season, there was never a problem finding a palapa or chairs on the beach or at the pool. Low season starts right after Easter and extends until the end of September. There is a constant parade of beach vendors all day long which is entertaining. they are not pushy and cannot approach you if you are behind the "yellow rope" unless you invite them to you. They do make eye contact and ask if you are interested in their wares but go away easily if you say NO. on a daily basis we had silver jewelry vendors, the "muffin man" selling muffins, ladies selling beach cover ups and dresses you would only wear in Mexico, a guy selling hats, vendors selling t shirts, shrimp on a stick, fresh fruit cut up,tablecloths, carved wooden items, but probably the two "most unique" were the guy wearing like a jet pack on his back offering to spray you with suntan lotion for a price and the guy carrying around his 3 foot iguana wearing a sombrero (yes the iguana) and offering for you to have your picture taken with the iguana for a price. Only in Mexico!!! again, very entertaining.

you could do kayaking, parasailing, fishing, snorkeling by just showing interest to one of the many beach guys offering these services in front of our place. also lots of cheap massages directly on the beach in private settings.

Monday night we rode the bus downtown to Cafe Roma for thin crust pizza. The evidence of our visit there can be seen at www.romamexico.com, look at their april 2010 photo gallery and we are photo number 09148. Great place and great pizza for under $10. took the bus back to villa del palmar and watched the sun set.

Our villa is rated by interval as a gold star which is the highest level but this is mexico and it is not the quality of a marriot in the US for sure but still a good place. Clean, maid service every day, again grounds are immaculate, timeshare rooms could stand to be updated but nothing was wrong with the place at all and they are in a great location. the beach in front is great for adults and kids and they have two great pools.

Day 3

Ned and i took a taxi to the marine terminal to catch our catamaran for our trip to Las Caletas for the day. This is where all the ocean going tours depart for vallarta adventures, our tour company. Continental breakfast served aboard, arrived to Las Caletas which used to be the home of John Huston who produced Night of the Iguana and pretty much brought Puerto Vallarta onto everybody's radar screen. Vallarta Adventures has done an incredible job with this place - you have beach time here, guided snorkeling and kayak tours, walking tours, live macaws and monkeys to see and a wonderful lunch provided. About an hour by boat each direction. We quickly figured out the bus system and rode the bus back to Villa del Palmar from the marine terminal for 50 cents. We just snacked at the resort that evening still very full from our late lunch.

Day 4

Got up and took a taxi to the other side of downtown - the longest ride we had - to La Palapa - a beachfront restaurant for breakfast. i had fried eggs and a tamale and guacamole - a good Mexican breakfast. what a wonderful view from this place. This is where the water taxis depart from to Yelapa. Got back from our breakfast and spent the remainder of the day on the beach. again took another taxi to a place that had wonderful reviews for dinner - El Arrayan - and it was great. I had plaintain empanadas with black bean/cheese filling and a hominy/shrimp soup. ned had a small plate (duck pate) as his stomach was a little under the weather.

Day 5

Another tour for me this day zip lining with vallarta Adventures in the afternoon. took a taxi to their office at the Marina and again figured out by watching how to get home on the bus. There were 14 of us in this tour - i was definitely the oldest. Rode in a vehicle like the military might use - canvas covered top, bench seats on both sides about an hour or more out of Puerto Vallarta to dense forest. it is amazing how they hauled in all the materials to build this place. again a first class operation by vallarta adventures. safety was number 1 everytime they put somebody on a zip line. they use double lines and have the highest safety standard afforded for this type of activity. i was never afraid and it was very exhilerating. we probably went on a dozen or more zip lines and did some rappeling and walking on swinging bridges and climbing ladders. Got back home, jumped in the shower and we were off to town again on the bus to eat dinner at the River Cafe. Wonderful food - i had mahi mahi and ned had a large calamari dish. this restaurant sits right on the river so we saw hummingbirds, iguanas in the trees, etc. the river wasn't very nice here but the foliage and animals were. Bus back home.

Day 6

Final tour for me today - a snorkel excursion and trip to Yelapa. I took the taxi to the marine terminal again and passed by the huge sea lion that they were using to have people's pictures made with. he is standing up on something that looks like a podium to prop him up. Vallarta adventures makes a lot of money with their photos. they have a photographer everywhere - she is even ahead of you on the zip line shooting you as you zip across. I didn't buy any of their pictures. Breakfast on the catamaran and then a stop to snorkel and kayak. Lots of fish - saw a pair of angel fish and lots of clown fish. Back on board for a big lunch and head over to Yelapa. Yelapa is a place only accessible by boat - it is a place where probably alot of poor people live as well as aged hippies and people that just want to escape society i suspect. although there were some tee shirts hanging for sale there by an artist that had a studio in Santa Cruz as well so i assume he is an american with studios in both places. When we arrived at Yelapa, you could either go on a 45 minute walk into town and to the waterfall or go to the beach. i didn't know how steep the walk would be so opted for the beach. we were all set up with chairs, umbrellas, beverage service, food(if you wanted to pay for it)and again the beach vedors passed by including another guy offering his iguana for a picture - this iguana was wearing a necklace. The pie lady was on Yelapa and i approached her before she started her beach walk and bought a piece of coconut pie - very good. You could kayak from the beach or parasail but this again was at your own expense.

we had about two hours on the beach here. and then back to port. had dinner this night at Vitea which is right on the malecon (boardwalk along the water with vendors, artists, etc.)I had shrimp and scallops and it was excellent. ned and i walked the entire malecon (10 blocks) and there are shops and restaurants for whatever you would like. again a bus ride home.

Day 7

Departure day
i spent up until about 1:30 on the beach enjoying my last day. We got packed up, checked out and taxied to the airport for our flight home. The PV airport is practically brand new - i think two years old - and it is state of the art for a Mexican airport - clean, lots of shops and restaurants.

as you can tell i was very much taken with Puerto Vallarta and look forward to my next trip there or as arnold would say "I WILL BE BACK"...

Thursday, December 03, 2009

Sunday, November 29 – taxi from Hotel Regencia Colon to airport. Got all checked in for flights and bought some pastries to eat on the plane. Flight to New York’s JFK fine but that airport is a zoo. You have to clear immigration and customs and drop your bags for rechecking and go through security (again) so if we had had less then 90 minutes, we might have missed our flight on to DFW (via Pittsburgh first).

Got home about 10:45 PM and glad to be home but it was a fabulous trip.






Barcelona, Spain – Saturday, November 28

We arrived back to port about 6 AM. No rush for us to get off so we had a leisure breakfast and then departed the ship about 8:45. Took a taxi to our next hotel – Hotel Regencia Colon – located right across the street from the Barcelona cathedral. Could not get into our room until after lunch. Hotel staff gave us directions how to catch the #19 bus to La Sagrada Familia – the Gaudi Cathedral that is still under construction – supposedly two more decades of construction. We arrived just fine and ned chose not to tour the LSF. He sat in a nice park across from this and people watched and also there was a dog park so he watched it, too. I rented a headset and started on my tour. it took about 90 minutes. There were lots of tour groups there but when I exited the LSF, the line was around the corner and down the block just to get in. It is am amazing site.

Found our way back to bus #19 and took it back to our hotel. There was some kind of Christmas festival that had started this day so there were shops set up (like Canton) all along the street between us and the cathedral. So we browsed along those and then had a very nice lunch at the Hotel Colon. Had some down time in the hotel room and then went out searching for some place to have a light dinner about dusk time again tons of people at the Christmas festival. We settled on a place close to the cathedral to have churros and cocoa for dinner and it was excellent.

November 27 – FRIDAY _ DAY at Sea – this should have been a relaxing day but really wasn’t. Ned entered the slot tournament which took 3 rounds to win and won $264. I played in two bingo tournaments and won $135 in one of the rounds.

We had great wait staff and cabin staff on this cruise.





more amalfi coast ophotos.






more photos from Amalfi Coast.






Naples, Italy –November 26 THURSDAY – Ned and I both went on t his tour. Our tour guide was Bruno. This was an amazing tour. We drove from Naples along the Amalfi coast to our first stop which was Sorrento. Had about 90 minutes to walk through Sorrento. Ned and I got a cappuccino and then headed off to buy some souvenirs. The drive along the Amalfi Coast is not for the faint at heart. Very steep walls and narrow two lane roads with lots of winding blind curves. I would never attempt this drive in a small car much less a bus. Beautiful views. We lunched with our entire bus group at a restaurant sitting over the cliffs with beautiful views and a nice lunch. Then the bus dropped us in Amalfi for some walking time. You wonder how people have built houses on these steep cliffs.






Rome, Italy – November 25 WEDNESDAY – I went on this tour alone as Ned has been in Rome many times. My first overall impression of Rome is overwhelming – the amount of people, the amount of stuff to see, etc. Fortunately I was on a bus riding through town touring all the ruins we saw. The bus dropped us adjacent to the Vatican where we had about 1 hour to tour. I headed to some of the souvenir shops and took quite a few pics. There were people everywhere and our tour guide (Giorgia) told us to plan for a minimum of 3 hours to view the Vatican Museum/Sistine Chapel. I got another gelato which wasn’t nearly as good as the one in Florence. We also almost didn’t get of the parking garage here because some stupid person had parked a car in a no park zone & the bus had to go through a lot of contortions to get the bus going again.






Florence, Italy – November 24 TUESDAY – Ned and I both went on this short tour. Good tour guide Trudy. Entered Florence from a hilltop and took great photos of the panoramic view of Florence. Bus then dropped us off at the Ferragamo Store which was our meeting place. We had about 90 minutes in Florence to walk again, take photos, etc. Only thing I would have liked to do was visit the Accademia and see the David statue but that will have to be another trip. Got some great panna cotta gelato in Florence. Walked over the Ponte Vecchio bridge and I guess in high season alla those jewelry vendors making a killing but they were all selling basically the same stuff.






Genoa, Italy – November 23 MONDAY
I signed up for a tour to the Cinque Terre. Ned didn’t want to do this tour. We had a drive through the countryside to get to the Cinque Terre from Genoa and it was VERY foggy but once we got to the water side of the mountain, it was beautiful sunny weather. Our tour guide was Andrea. He was fantastic. We all wore headsets where we could hear his “spiel” wherever we might be in the pack walking. We departed the bus in the second village (Riomaggia I think) because the bus could not get into the first village and have a place to park. We walked along the pathway of love and arrived at village #1 (Manarola) & took the train to Vernazza . Had some free time here in Vernazza. I got a Cappucino in a small place lisa told me about. Took some photos, enjoyed sitting by the water and visited a few souvenir shops. Alot of the town was closed up as this is very slow season now. Took the train past village #4 (Corniglia) as it requires many steps just to get up to this town which is built on the top of a hill on to village #5 which is the largest Monterrosa al Mar. Had free time here but again a lot of shops closed for the season. had a wonderful lunch out on the patio in a restaurant here.






Cannes, France – November 22 SUNDAY
We signed up for a shore excursion going to Nice, France and Monaco. The bus dropped us in Nice first and we walked around the old quarter in Nice. Had lunch at an outdoor, very smoky café with delicious crepes. Did some shopping at the wonderful flower market. Reboarded the bus for the drive to Monaco. We departed the bus in a parking garage under the Palace in Monaco and went upstairs. Toured all the gardens and grounds of the Palace, souvenir shops, etc. and took the small train that takes you from the Palace grounds down into Monte Carlo along all the expensive shops, the roads used by the racing cars, the casino (dress code and entry fee) and then back up to the palace. This was the only place it was really very cold atop the hill where the Palace sits.

Barcelona-November 21 SATURDAY

Slept good and departed hotel for Las Ramblas. Had breakfast on Las Ramblas. It was early. Most street performers hadn’t set up yet or were in the process of putting on their costumes/makeup. As we finished breakfast the crowds starting picking up & performers were out, we walked to the Columbus monument and then back through the crowds to our hotel. No problem with pickpockets although we had nothing displayed they would have wanted.

Took a cab to the cruise port and boarded the cruise ship. Had already printed out our cruise documents so that makes boarding very simple. Got assigned (to our good fortune) to a room with a window. Cruise ship departed Barcelona about 6 PM.















Barcelona – November 20 FRIDAY

Arrived BCN about 9AM. Took a cab and checked into Hotel Jazz located close to Placa Cataluna. Good hotel. Location was excellent. Departed hotel to catch Bus Turistica just a couple of blocks from our hotel. We rode around the first loop that covered all of the Gaudi buildings plus some other stuff. Got back to Placa Cataluna on the bus and exited and went to El Corte Ingles (a large department store) and had lunch. I had read on a bulletin board that the view from the top floor of El Corte Ingles was magnificent and it was. The food was just OK. walked back to Placa Cataluna and picked up the blue line of the Bus Turistica and rode it for another hour or so.

After this went back to our hotel for some down time. Went down to the bar in the hotel for a glass of wine and ordered dinner in the hotel and had an early night.












Tuesday, March 24, 2009



here are a couple of photos i left off the previous blog posting - photos of Amanda and the monkey and some alhambra palace photos.












Day 1 - March 14, 2009

This was arrival day into Malaga, Spain. Ned and I met up with Neil and Amanda at the Madrid airport for our final flight to Malaga, Spain. They had flown in from Chicago and we flew via Miami to Madrid. Upon arrival at Malaga, we picked up our two station wagon type car rentals and headed towards the Marriott in Marbella, spain. Somewhere along the way from the airport to the Marriott, Neil and I (we were driving the two cars) got separated. I had the directions to the Marriott and he did not. Ned and i found our way there and then I freaked out when i realized that i had lost Neil and Amanda. and they had no directions with them. we checked into the Marriott and our villa was ready for us. i was beside myself since i had no way to contact neil. i was even contemplating sending him an email from the marriott's computer room when they drove up after having been lost a while. I was very glad to see them. We had an enjoyable lunch out on the patio at the Marriott. (see Marriott Timeshare photo and photos of the girls on beach of the mediterranean sea).

Neil and amanda had to go back to the airport to pick Lisa up when she arrived from Paris and ned and i had to go the Malaga train station to pick up Ryan, Holly and Pax. We found the train station just fine and they were standing out front waiting for us so we picked them up and were on our way home (we thought). we got lost coming back to the Marriott because we took the toll road instead of the coastal road (also happened to Neil once). Eventually we made our way to the Marriott, but i was pretty frazzed after all this not to mention considerable jet lag i was experiencing. we finally had everybody together. lisa's luggage hadn't arrived at malaga but it did arrive the following day so she wasn't inconvenienced and it was delivered to the Marriott. Ned and ryan went to the grocery store and bought considerable food and we had pasta, salad, good bread and wine on our first night in marbella and called it a day pretty early the first night.





Day 2 - March 15, 2009

Every morning that we were all together Ned fixed a big breakfast and we usually ate about 9 AM. Our days tended to start either before or after Pax's nap depending on whether we were driving a distance to see something or staying local. After his nap on this day, we headed to old town Marbella for lunch and sightseeing in the old town. We found a tapas bar that i had read about in someone's trip report on Trip Advisor and it was fantastic. we ate outside and they kept bringing us hot tapas (the cold ones we served ourself from inside the bar) until we told them we had had enough. Very good food and reasonable. they actually count the skewers left on your plate at the end to determine how much you pay. (see photos of us at the tapas bar and having ice cream and at the port in Puerto Banus).



we had lunch for 7 adults and Pax plus beer and wine to drink for around 75 euros which was very reasonable. we walked down to the waterfront for a while for pax to play at the playground and then got some ice cream and headed back to the cars. On the way back to the parking garage, we walked through an esplanade that had statues by Salvador Dali so they were all very abstract. From here we drove to Puerto Banus. This is where all the rich and famous people come and park their huge boats. Quite a people watching place.


we stayed and observed all the huge boats and very high end shops and then headed back to the Marriott. By this time, i was no longer a driver of the cars. Neil and Ryan did all the driving from here on out with occasional back seat driving from me. Mostly when i was directionally challenged would i offer my opinion and it was always wrong. we went back to the marriott and had a light dinner. Some evenings we would go to the hot tub, sauna or steam room. The Marriott property here is wonderful and we had a great set up for our accommodations. Neil, Amanda, Lisa, Ned and I were in the 3 bedroom villa and right next door (we were the only villas on our floor) Ryan and Holly and pax were in a one bedroom villa. we had plenty of space and privacy for everyone.

Day 3 - March 16, 2009

This morning again a large breakfast and we were on the road to Ronda about 11 AM. Ronda is one of the pueblos blancos settled in Spain in the 800-900s. It is up in the mountains so a windy mountainous road to get there. I failed to mention for the previous day's posting that there basically is no such thing as street parking so everywhere we went in the cars to a town we had to park in underground parking garages. i had read about this so was aware of this. (see photos of the gorge and us walking to see the gorge).


In Ronda, we found a parking garage not too far from the center of town and left the cars. Fortunately i wasn't leading the gang to Ronda as i don't have a very good sense of direction. we made it to the information booth which is adjacent to the indoor bull ring (Ronda is the home of bull fighting) and a few more steps we would be treated with a view that Ronda is famous for. It sits on top of a huge mountain and there is quite a gorge to look down into the valley. we found the restaurant that i had again read about on Trip Advisor and had our lunch. It was called Dona Pepa and was fantastic. Again wonderful outdoor dining and everybody had a great lunch. we then lined up in front of the old church in the plaza where we had lunch and took one of our group photos. neil had brought his tripod. we did some more sightseeing around Ronda - narrow cobblestone streets, lots of shops, lots more views of the gorge and the "new" bridge over the gorge - new is a relative word since this town is so old. we went back to the plaza for some desserts, coffees and ice cream and headed back to the parking garage. we were looking for the arab baths in ronda to see before we left town. No street signs in town to direct you and after a couple of attempts to find them we were finally successful although it meant driving down what Ronda would call a road and what i would call a narrow alleyway. we parked the cars and walked down to the arab baths only to find that they had closed at 4 PM that day but we could see from outside what they would have looked like. Ronda was settled as was most of this part of Spain by the Moors (arabic people) and these baths were down on the lowest level of the city by the river where bathing took place. We headed back to the marriott and had a lite dinner in our villa.

Day 4 - March 17, 2009

This morning found us going in 3 different directions. Neil and Amanda left very early for the airport to fly to Barcelona for the day. Ryan, Holly and Lisa also left early to drive to Tarifa to take the high speed ferry across to Morocco to meet Aziz for their tour. About 9 AM Ryan called to say that because the winds were so high, the ferries had all been cancelled for that day. He and i both got word to Aziz that the tour for today was off because the kids could not get on the ferry. the kids were disappointed but drove on to cadiz and several other pueblos blancos for the day and enjoyed their sightseeing. They were on their own with what to do and see because i had done no research on this part of Spain because we hadn't planned to visit. Ned and i were taking care of pax on this day and after he got up from his nap, we took a taxi to the Fuengirola Zoo for a couple of hours and then a taxi back to the Marriott. Very enjoyable and Pax was so cute seeing all the animals. About 5 Ryan, Holly and Lisa made it in from their daily adventure. We debriefed about their day and what they did and then walked to one of the beach restaurants just down from the marriott called Cristina's and had a wonderful meal. Neil and Amanda were not expected back from Barcelona until about 10:30. About 9:30 PM the phone rings and it was Neil. I think the kids debated whether to tell me he called or not. I was already in bed. They had gotten on the wrong train in Barcelona that was not headed to the airport and missed their flight back to Malaga. They ended up having to overnight in Barcelona and take an early flight back to Malaga wednesday morning.

Day 5 - March 18, 2009

Neil and Amanda arrived back from Barcelona about 10:30 and we chatted about their "adventure". Shortly thereafter, we piled into our cars again and headed to Gibraltar for the day. Again, Pax napped in the car on the way. This was another windy day and down right cold in Gibraltar. We found the parking garage recommended by Rick Steves and left the cars and walked from the Spanish side of La Linea across the border into Gibraltar which is british and you do have to show your passport to enter. I had done lots of research on what there was to do in Gibraltar but most of it centered around using the cable car to get to the top of Gibraltar and to the Apes Den. As we were going through the airport terminal (you actually walk across the runway at the airport to enter Gibraltar) we were asked by a nice gentleman if we would be interested in a guided tour. he also told us that the cable car was being renovated with new cables and closed for a couple of weeks. That sealed the deal on booking the guided tour. We all fit into one van and Alistair was our guide. He was fantastic. Is a native of Gibraltar and one of his kids is in Scouts so we chatted about that, too. Some of the things we saw in Gibraltar we probably would not have seen had i been planning our day there so he really made our day worthwhle. We had lunch at the Cannon Bar which is like a British pub and almost all of us had Fish and Chips. ned had bangers and mash and the beers were good, too. After we concluded the tour, we stopped back and had some scones and tea/coffee at Figaro's. Then we caught the bus back to the Frontier (the border). I cannot wait for you to see the pictures from this day. Amanda and I both had an up close and personal experience with the Barbary Apes that live on Gibraltar. (see photos of Amanda with the "monkey on her head".)


she had one on her head and i had one try to climb onto my back. They are a tourist attraction there so are overtly friendly to tourists. we drove back to Marbella and had another light dinner.

Day 6 - March 19, 2009

This morning we departed about 8:30 for our drive to Granada. The big attraction for the whole country of Spain is the Alhambra Palace in Granada. Again, this part of Spain was settled by the Moors in the 800s+ and one of the last Moorish rulers built the Alhambra Palace. It is an amazing palace. I have never seen anything like it. The intricate painting, detailing, color schemes, water everywhere, gardens everywhere. holly took some amazing pictures at the palace so i will post those when available. (see photos of the Alhambra Palace).



Also near the Alhambra is the first Christian king's palace - Charles V - which looked just like a round coliseum when you compared it to the Alhambra Palace. Also available for us to visit was the watch tower area which is only viewed from outside. we left the Alhambra Palace to go to a restaurant that i had selected for lunch that was supposed to offer a traditional Moroccan type meal. I had read that you cannot easily navigate the inner city of Granada and we found that to be an understatement. We spent 90 minutes trying to find this particular restaurant and when we finally did find it, they were closed. it was like all the energy had gone from me at that point but we walked across the street and had some tapas at a hotel restaurant and then picked up some desserts and headed for home. because we were looking for a lunch place about 4:30 PM - it was too late for lunch and too early for dinner and any place that was open would only serve you what foods they had for tapas - thus our tapas for lunch. we got home and some of us went for a late dinner at the marriott and some of us stayed in for the evening.

Day 7 - March 20, 2009

Today was basically an unscheduled day which we all needed. we found a flea market within an easy drive and went there for about an hour. Lots of good items to choose from and reasonably priced and easy to get to and adjacent parking to the flea market (amazing!!!) we got home about the time for Pax to start his nap. Several of us had massages scheduled for this day.

See photos of our final day in Marbella.


I drove neil and amanda to the airport as they were leaving on this day to fly to Rome for a few days before coming back to DFW. After the airport run (i did not get lost - hurray) we all enjoyed some beach time and pool time. It was a beautiful day. we headed down the beach to another beach restaurant for an early dinner (called Tony's) and we were their only customer for dinner at that time. everyone in spain eats dinner very late (except for us). Again we all had wonderful seafood dishes and shared some sangria and our final meal together.

Day 8 - March 21, 2009

Lisa, Ned and cathy get up at 4 AM to drive to the Malaga airport and return the car and catch their flight to Madrid. Ryan and Holly and Pax stay at the Marriott until check out time and then transfer to another time share on the costa del Sol for another week with friends who are flying in from the states and Paris on the same day we are leaving. Lisa meets her friend Courtney in madrid and they are still touring Italy as of this posting.

After 10 months of anticipating our family vacation, it was beyond my wildest dreams of what a great time we had experiencing Spain - the Costa del Sol- together as a family.