No, not that one.
This one:
Music.
Welcome to Andalucía, southern most region of Spain.
There are mountains here. There are also ibex, oranges, some snow, flamenco, tapas, and a ski resort.
It wasn’t the greatest season in the Sierra and by mid April snow was a little thin. The Virgen de las Nieves made sure we still had a nice starting point.
Easy access.
Getting whiter.
My friend who lives here had a project she’d been wanting to ski. Apparently there aren’t a lot of people around who like this sort of thing, so we had to visit and make sure her proyecto got done. Bonus points for anyone who knows the sticker on the red skis.
3, 2, 1…..
Here we go.
The typical strategy for ski touring here is to take the lift up or start skinning somewhere near the resort, ski down some other valley till the snow runs out and climb back up to the resort. Like this you avoid walking out on dirt for many hours.
Back up.
This mountain is called Veleta (Weather Vane). It has a lot of weather. Walking with crampons is a much more popular sport than ski touring, because of what the weather does to the snow. Most people don’t even bother bringing skis. Everyone always has an axe and crampons, avy gear is farily exotic and optional.
The white things are the green houses in Almeria, a region also known as Costa del Polythene, where Europe’s cheap vegetables come from.
Ship traffic 3000m below the ski resort.
The next day was a little cloudy and we had spent most of the night in Granada’s tapas bars so we decided touring wasn’t mandatory and spent the day cruising. Granada is a really cool city. It smells like weed and orange blossoms.
This is one of the world’s most sensitive radio telescopes for wavelengths of a few mm.
This is an aprés ski dip in the ocean and a sunset.
And this was the flight back home.
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