Another menu del dia

We know at least one reader enjoys seeing the menu del dia signs. We like them too. This was a place in San Cibrao which was closed on the Monday we were there so we could not eat there. It happens we had Easter dinner there when we were here four years ago. We had coffee there this morning for old times sake.

The menus del Dia are a great deal. Today in O Barqueiro they did not have one and we spent €38 on a lunch and got less than we would have gotten for €24 with a menu del dia. And it didn’t taste any better.

Hotel Buenavista in San Cibrao

Post by Wynette: I like posting photos of what we see out our hotel room windows. Here is our view from our small and plain but clean and comfortable hotel in San Cibrao. It was the only open hotel in town (we don’t count the scrawly outskirts) and we were the only people in the hotel. Charlie and I decided that we were probably the only tourists in town.

The beach in San Cibrao, at night, from our hotel room window

A few more photos:

Charlie at the desk in our room (was nice to have a desk)
Hotel from the beach. It’s the pinkish one, second from the right.

Entertaining the locals

One of the advantages of growing old is that people stop noticing you. It is kind of like our superpower. Just ask Miss Marple.

This is true here when we are in big towns like A Coruña but not so much in smaller places. It is not obvious that people are watching us but sometimes we notice signs that they are.

A great example of this is four years ago when we were walking into Porto Espasante, where, as it happens, we will be in three days. Anyway later in the day we were talking to some old guys, as we do, and one of the men pointed to Wynette and said “She is slower than you.” We wondered how he knew this and he said he had watched us walking into town several hours earlier.

On this trip Wynette called up a bar so see if they would be open the next day. (We are skeptical of Google’s open/close times.) The guy appeared to be mystified why we would want to know this but said yes. Apparently such questions are not common in small towns in Spain.

It is not uncommon for us to do things that seem unusual to the locals. Our feeling about this is that it is a good thing. We figure the people will go home and tell their spouse about the funny thing some Americans did that day. So we are providing entertainment for them.

No Feve for us this trip

San Cibrao Feve station

Post by Wynette: We wrote yesterday that we planned to take the little Feve train today for the trip from San Cibrao to O Barqueiro. We got to the “station” (just a covered bench that looks like a bus stop with no personnel) and looked for the schedule to confirm what we had found on the internet. The not-too-large sign informed us that there would be no train but a bus would take us on the exact route and schedule instead. The Feve is not running from April 10 to 30 because of infrastructure repairs.

It was a little unclear where to go to find the bus but we finally figured out the map they had pinned up. It was all low key on their part and a bit stressful on our part, but it all worked out fine.

At one point at a stop about half way to our destination, I asked the bus driver if we needed to pay — he had not collected any money. He shrugged and spread his hands out. Nope, you don’t need to pay.

Signs explaining the change and where to go to catch the bus
Waiting for the Feve bus