Tuesday 21 June 2016

France and Belgium - June 2016








RATED a respectful 8/10 by the highly critical Internet Movie Database website, the 2008 film In Bruges tells the story of two bumbling hit men sent to the charming Belgium city to lay low after a failed hit which inadvertently saw a young child killed.

The hitmen, expertly played by Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson, are polar opposites with Gleeson’s character more interested in soaking up the picturesque sites of the medieval city, whereas the irritable and somewhat younger Farrell wants to get out and sample some of the myriad of pubs and bars which line Bruges’ streets and cellars.

What follows is a catastrophic yet comedic chain of events involving a tactical suicide from the city’s iconic bell tower, a gun chase through the streets and canals of the city and an angry, cocaine sniffing dwarf.

Whilst this narrative may have proven difficult to top, my group of friends and I gave it a good go and produced a considerable series of mishaps ourselves.

Before we set off the plan had been to pick up our hired minibus, cross the channel and head to a campsite in the north of France, before making our way into either Lille or Lens to take in the Euro 2016 battle of Britain between England and Wales.

We had been vociferously warned to watch out for Russian hooligans and French ultras who attacked English fans in Marseille days before leading to running battles in the streets of the multi-cultural melting pot port.

Unfortunately violent supporter groups from the continent still see English ‘hooligans’ as a considerable force to measure up to given the trail of destruction they left around Europe in the 70s and 80s, and often target English fans as a way of proving themselves among the trouble making elite.

Although the vast majority of known English trouble makers have had their passports confiscated and no longer travel, English fans came under fire from rival groups and predictably fought back. I am in no way saying that the battles of Marseille were not at all the fault of the English, I just believe that if you kick a dog so many times it will eventually bite back and the English supporters, as rowdy and boisterous as they can be, didn’t go to France specifically looking for trouble as is the case with some of the Russians involved in the trouble who arrived equipped with well-organised fight tactics and MMA training.

Also the violence that took place in the Stade Velodrome highlighted the negligence of the French authorities who failed to prevent Russian supporters from rushing over women and children in the neutral section and attacking English supporters.

Anyway, I digress.

As we disembarked the ferry and made our way to our first campsite, we gawped at the sight of the rolling hills, beautifully constructed properties and quaint towns of the Northern France countryside. After arriving at our campsite located in the shadow of a country house, we enjoyed a drink in the sun and a few games of table tennis with other supporters, both English and Welsh.

The next day we boarded a train and headed to the student city of Lille recommended for ticketless fans due to the fact it has more bars and a bigger fanzone.

As soon as we exited the station we were greeted by hoards of English fans gathering outside bars and indulged in some good-natured ritual chanting and japes to pass the late morning hours.

The game itself was tight with England recording a late win thanks to a Daniel Sturridge goal, and we left Lille having enjoyed plenty of friendly banter and no trouble at all, although I do understand some flashpoints did develop later in the evening.

Ever since watching In Bruges I’ve always wanted to visit the city and we rolled into town feeling fresh with a sense of anticipation of what was in store.

As often portrayed, the city that is home to 118,000 people is full of cobbled streets, horse and carriages, canals, beautiful buildings and chocolate shops. Another Venice of the North.

The view from the bell tower was also well worth the 10 Euro admissing fee and gruelling 1,000 odd steps we had to climb to take in the panoramic eyeshot it offered of the UNESCO World Heritage Site.

It’s fair to say the European Championship atmosphere had spilled over the border and we enjoyed partying with Dutch and Belgium football fans, singing songs and dancing into the early hours at some of the busier, bustling pubs and bars.

So far, so good, but when in the early hours two of us split from the group and began to make our own way back to the campsite, things took a turn for the worse.

We ended up being enticed into what we now know is a building frequented by squatters and artists. We were invited in as we passed and after grabbing a drink from a living room bar open for a monthly party, we were shown into the dark, graffiti ridden tunnels which the squatters call home.
Foolishly we managed to lose our guides and spent half an hour desperately trying to find our way out of the darkened tunnels and court yards, overlooked by a crumbling chapel. A petrifying experience.

Waking up the next morning it became clear that it was not only our sense of direction we had lost, but also our bag containing the minibus keys so we sat at our camp, looking at a minibus we couldn’t enter or start plotting how we were going to escape the predicament we had found ourselves in.

Like something out of The Hangover, the gruelling eight hour trek across the city, retracing our steps from the night before, was as enjoyable as it was successful.

We visited two pubs, a late night bar, a kebab shop, a police station and rang every taxi company in the city, all to no avail.

Despondently we were forced to get the minibus towed into a compound and find our way home via taxis and public transport, albeit at an extra cost of only £50 or so.

One member of the group has since picked up the spare keys and returned to collect the wagon, however some casual internet research today has revealed the name of the building where the squatters’ party took place as Donkey Squat.

Frustratingly Donkey Squat was one of the places we returned in search of the bag the next night after receiving directions from people who were clearly enjoying some form of outer body, hallucinogenic experience. However we found nobody home other than an angry Irishman who told us in no uncertain terms that our lost items weren’t there and we were to leave immediately or risk his wrath. It seems the parties only take place once or twice each month.

A couple of emails to the party organisers later and the bag and keys are being posted home. The trip may not have involved suicides, dwarves, drugs or guns, but we certainly enjoyed our fair share of beer, disasters and new friends.

Another country off the list and more tales to pass down to future generations.

Friday 3 June 2016

Wembley, 2016.



Not many words on this, but as is often the case with supporting Plymouth Argyle, Monday's trip to Wembley was a fantastic day out once again ruined by the football. 

Pyrotechnics, camaraderie, beer and incessant chanting, it was all going so well until 3 o'clock. 

There's always next year.

Thursday 2 June 2016

Mexico, 2016.













SECRETLY I always turned my nose up at people who elect to go on all-inclusive package holidays, likening them to somewhat of a vacation straightjacket where travellers are tied to the hotel they have often paid through to nose to stay at.

So naturally, it’s fair to say that my maiden voyage to Mexico wasn’t as first planned. A travel itch had been eating away at me for some time now.  The itch was called Mexico.

I first had a chance to visit the north American country back in autumn 2013 during time spent travelling around the USA. I had pitched up at a fantastic hostel in the southern Californian city of San Diego, which offered day trips once a week to the Mexican border city of Tijuana.

I had been eagerly anticipating the trip throughout my week spent there, but at the last minute got talked out of it and instead spent an afternoon watching American football, a sport so boring I left at half time and returned to the safety of the pub.

While I was under no illusions and was fully aware that Tijuana is far from the most Mexican of experiences, after all it is a border town best known for being a key drug route into the US and popular destination for America’s underage drinkers, the fact that I passed up an opportunity to visit a new country really pissed me off (seeing the world is a passion of mine as I'm sure you're aware by now).

Fast forward two and a bit years of pure annoyance and sense of missed opportunity and I finally made it, albeit to the opposite end of the country.

As previously touched upon, rather than backpacking or going where the wind took me, I arrived in the Riviera Maya staying in an all-inclusive hotel.

When I previously thought of all-inclusive trips I associated them with being sat by a pool drinking crap beer for two weeks, rarely venturing away from the comforts of the hotel and generally being a waste of an opportunity to see a new country.

However, fast forward two weeks and I can confirm that providing you have the desire to get out and about, you can still see a good chunk of area and get back in time for your already paid for dinner.

Sadly, large swathes of Mexico are poor areas where drugs cartels feud openly in the street as they vie to control the lucrative smuggling routes. However the Mexican government is clearly aware of the beauty, history and culture associated with the Yucatan Peninsula and do their best to keep violent crime away from the area to ensure a steady flow of pesos out of tourist’s pockets and into government coffers.

The Yucatan Peninsula is known for its Caribbean Ocean beaches and Mayan ruins and from the mushrooming resort of Cancun in the north, to the yoga retreats of Tulum in the south, the area is lined with white sand and turquoise water beaches (think postcard Caribbean) and dotted with fascinating crumbling ruins hinting at the mightiest of civilisations.

Originating in the Yucatan around 2600 B.C the Mayans rose to prominence around A.D. 250 in present-day southern Mexico, Guatemala, western Honduras, El Salvador, and northern Belize and developed a highly sophisticated society.

They are known for their ancient writing system as well as art, architecture, calendar and astronomy and many an hour we spent wandering around the most famous of all the ruins, Chichen Itza, and also the cliffstop structures of Tulum, the city first encountered by Spanish colonialists as they arrived.

Mayan traditions are still prevalent despite the one-time Spanish rule and their short, stocky and extremely friendly people can be seen throughout the region, some still living as their ancestors did before the Spaniards became aware Mexico even existed.

Following on from a morning spent at Chichen Itza, we took a dip in one of the plethora of cenotes, natural pits or sinkholes, resulting from the collapse of limestone bedrock that exposes water underneath. Think underwater cave swimming in the dark, which certainly proved as if not more exhilarating than it sounds.

The cenotes have rightly become attractions in their own right and from there, watered and stuffed with the spicy but tasty traditional local cuisine; we hopped back on board the bus and headed to the city of Valladolid.

Valladolid was founded by Spanish colonialists and named after the Spanish city of the same name.

During a fleeting visit I was fortunate enough to stroll around its quaint streets, lined with picturesque coloured buildings and take some time out at its charming square which is overlooked by a church once used to try and convert Mayans to Christianity. The Spanish were shocked to learn that they originally worshipped a serpent and I was astounded to witness the incredibly slow and almost therapeutic pace of life there.

Visiting the various towns and sights you really get a feel of the area’s history from the ancient Mayan civilisations, through Spanish colonialism, leaving a contemporary hybrid and melting pot of traditions and practices.

Square miles of sprawling jungle and the world’s second longest coral reef makes the peninsula an adrenaline junky's playground and I was fortunate to get out equipped with my trusty GoPro (which I’ve finally got the hang of) and enjoy some snorkelling, abseiling, zip wiring and speedboating. Sea turtles, dolphins, iguanas and various species of fish and birds were among the wildlife that pitched up during our excursions.

By the end of the trip I felt as if I had sampled the best that the Yucatan Peninsula and Riviera Maya had to offer, however our final excursion took me to an extremely special place.

Sian Ka'an is a nature reserve located on a thin strip of land with the Caribbean Ocean lapping it on one side and the most turquoise of lagoons featuring plenty of crocodiles on the other.

The area is teeming with wildlife and is also home to a group of people whose name escapes me.
The able watermen and their families live off the sea, capturing lobster and catering for a controlled number of visitors per week and there is just one bumpy road in and out of the civilisation Punta Allen, located an hours’ drive from Tulum.

The landscape is fit to grace any postcard and the residents there are relaxed, friendly and content despite living the most basic of lives. How I envy them and long to be back there as I sit at my desk this Friday afternoon.