youthathletics wrote: ↑Sat Jun 29, 2024 6:54 pm
old salt wrote: ↑Fri May 17, 2024 8:35 am
for gearheads & wannabes -- next time in Europe, rent a performance car & drive the Nurburgring. It used to be the F1 circuit for the German GP.
https://www.nuerburgring.de/en/
The F1 race in Montreal would be a good one to attend if you can't make it to the British GP.
If I lived in FL, I'd "summer" in Quebec & return to Mt Tremblant to ski in the winter.
Once you've learned survival French, check out Provence & the Med coast south to Barcelona.
It's also fun to "summer" in the UK when so many of the locals are vacationing in Iberia.
Lisbon is my favorite city.
Stay in the Alfama & ride the trams. I could reside happily in Portugal.
Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Fri May 17, 2024 1:28 pm
About the only thing that you and I are in agreement on…pretty much.
Seacoaster(1) wrote: ↑Wed Jun 05, 2024 4:06 pm
Love Lisbon; my daughter lived there for a year; we ate and drank our way through the Alfama. About two years ago, a partner of mine bought a condo just off the beach in Nazare, Portugal, a little north of Lisbon and south of Porto.
Here is one of the spectator activities in Nazare:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZfLSN4mxY0E
He rents the condo; let me know if any of you are interested.
My 25 year trip (one year overdue) has to be used before the end of the year. Company provides us a solid stipend every 10 years, then every 5 after 20 years. I recall seeing the above conversation and thought it may be a great starter for a new thread.
Due to our schedules, completing her masters, surgery, and work, we had to forgo 2023, now we have to do this before years end....considering Thanksgiving - Xmas time frame. A warm vacation spot in the Caribbean/South America is a last resort. Strong considerations in no particular order:
1. Portugal, Maldives etc
2 Scotland
3. Iceland
4. Cinque Terre
Feedback appreciated....
Congrats on the 25 years. I've been to a few of these places, so I will chime in where I have at least some experience:
Portugal -- great country, relatively inexpensive as Europe goes, and a lot to see if you like old architecture, palaces and churches. Good wine. The food is a bit funky for my taste, but the influence of Spanish cuisine (tapas, paella, Patatas bravas, gazpacho, etc.) gets you over the hump. We drank a lot of good wine all over the country. Lisbon is a beautiful old city. Porto to the north of Lisbon is also beautiful. My daughter traveled a bit to the Faro District in the very southern part of the country and loved it. The weather will be tough -- rain, cool -- in the November/December timeframe.
Scotland -- still on my bucket list, largely from the photos and experience of my brother in law and sister in law, who went there for two weeks for their 30th anniversary. They are seriously interested in single malts and traveled on the wrong side of the road, through spectacular countryside, to one distillery after another, took the distillery tours and the compulsory wee drams and the bottles to take home. My brother in law (avid fly fisherman) fished (for a price) a couple of well-known streams, operated by fishing clubs and private landowners and took some nice fish...and then went back to the bed and breakfast with the annexed pub and drank the local. All I know is they had a spectacular time, beautiful pictures, a lot of quality booze that they learned to differentiate. November in Scotland? This is why God invented wool and Patagonia make fiber pile.
Iceland -- we went there for a week with our two adult kids, and had the best family vacation we ever had (possibly because the "kids" were adult and weren't bickering as@holes). This is one of the really unique countries in the world: 300,000 people who are really connected in their community, where nearly everyone seems to be a first responder, where the bloodlines are so interconnected that local dating apps have enough background to make sure you aren't hooking up with your cousin by mistake. Volcanoes; beautiful rivers running off of glaciers, spectacular waterfalls seemingly everywhere, the Northern Lights for a good part of the year, unbelievable hiking and four wheel drive backcountry opportunities. The photographs I have of our Iceland trip are still gobsmacking almost two years later.
The problem? I think in November/December, it'll not only be cool and rainy on occasion, it'll be dark most of the time. In November, daylight is only about eight hours long. In July, daylight lasts for 23 hours a day.
Cinque Terre -- hiked and bicycled through this area of Italy in the early 1980s. So beautiful, so much good food and art and architecture, and wonderful people. But it is bound to be pretty expensive, if that matters to you. The beauty of Italy in the months other than summer and the immediate shoulder months is that you will encounter fewer Americans, which is always nice.
Excited to hear what you and your gal decide.