21 Tapas in La Manga (Mar Menor)

MANAÑA
Quiet. Calm. Dawn. Mornings in La Manga always emerge from this silence. Sat on my balcony overlooking the lagoon and its five islands. I drink the first espresso of the day and try to write as half the world still sleeps. Waters at the beach do nothing. Waters in the lagoon do even less. Over on the salt flats pelicans and flamingos move slowly in this early morning light. The air smells cool and refreshed. Doves coo from nearby trees. Small birds chirp softly, hidden in the shade and leaves (still entwined in the dusks of dawn). In front of me I count again the five nearby islands protruding out of the Mediterranean blue; chunks of rock, conical shapes, towering cliffs. Palm trees rise up towards the light, columns of silhouettes, grouped in bunches of threes and fours, reaching upwards for the morning. The ocean continues to do very little; just pushing itself ashore with no effort, only seeming to reach the shoreline as an afterthought, waves that never break, water arriving on sand with a quiet sigh before dissolving forever. A dog barks somewhere in the distance. Morning has broken.

Image by Karl Powell, Mar Menor, 2007

Found a café for breakfast. Mesón Casablanca. Not far from the lagoon, on the beach at Playa Honda. The morning sunshine reaches in and wraps itself around the building. The day still stretches out wide across the beach, yawning across the flat waters we face out onto. Like others here, I am sitting up at the long sturdy bar running along the length of this room, passing a series of hot grills and plates, coffee pots and white demitasse cups, bottles of beer and rioja, cut legs of jamón hang from the ceiling – partially obscuring the television screen which is broadcasting a daily game show on tve. A barista works inside here, serving coffee, serving food (there is also a large open window – a wooden hatch which swings open for business out onto a patio – people can order from outside and stand near the beach to eat or drink).

Image by Karl Powell, Comido Las Tapas, 2007

Small servings of tapas are offered for €3: pick what you like. For breakfast most people are eating slices of toasted bread covered in a spooning of hot, tomato salsa. The air is perfumed with garlic and saffron. A man in front of me eats this with his coffee. He has a baseball cap pulled down over a forest of tight wired, grey curls and his voice is a series of gruff barks. A friend sits next to him. Side by side they sit together, drink their coffees, eat their breakfast, smoke their cigarettes. Two women approach the hatch-bar to order something to go. The men have instantly noticed the sunlight creating a sheen of gloss along the length of their long black hair (they have possibly noticed more). The women order coffee and food. The men go back to eating. Their cigarettes burn, resting nose down in ashtrays, curling thin whisps of blue smoke up into the air. The morning sunshine continues to shine across the flat waters of Mar Menor and its five islands.

Image by Karl Powell, Playa Honda, 2007

TARDES
The midday sun has climbed as high as it can for today. It peers down from an intense height, causing eyes to squint when looking up. Shadows are now directly beneath your feet. Cicadas and crickets make the heat sound more intense than perhaps it is. Spent the morning over at Cartagena, not far, nearby, about twenty minutes away, still in the region of Murcia. Wandered around its small harboured streets, hot and dusty, sheltered in shade. Had an early lunch, elevenses, ate some seafood croquetas – deep fried and breadcrumbed, filled with musselmeat or crabmeat; I’d found a restaurant near the port, owned by two brothers. It overlooked the harbour, the lighthouse and the fishing boats bobbing about in the slick, still waters spilling in from the Costa Calida. Not long after, I caught a bus back to Mar Menor. There was a big fight in the middle of the journey – two old women shouting at each other. No idea what it was about or what they were saying, but both gave each other as good as they got.

Image by Karl Powell, Azuca de Cartagena, 2007

The bus dropped me off near enough to Méson Mesón Casablanca. I could see it from the bus stop. There was no one seated in the outside patio (or standing up against the latch-bar). Inside, things were happening, though. The owner greeted me with an Hola, como estas? I sat up at the bar and ordered a midday espresso (café solo). All was relaxed, all was mellow, Jimi Hendrix’s All Along the Watchtower played in the background from two small speakers tucked away in shelves between bottles of wine. Midday tapas were being served from metallic trays behind the bar, visible from behind counters of flat glass. Near where I sat I could see calamares being cooked in a tomato sauce; there was garlic, parsley and pine nuts in there, too. Next to that, were cuts of sea bass cooked in a broth with garlic, paprika and saffron – possibly with garbanzos (chick peas). I ordered both dishes with my coffee. Some bread was given to me for free. Everything in the bar had an unhurried pace. Nothing sounded louder than the spoken word. The owner seemed to know everyone who came in – either saying hola, or greeting some by their names. Sitting there time no longer mattered. I needed to be nowhere. And I guess this is one of the tricks to getting your money’s worth out of this life: to take time to savour the sunsets and tapas, to find the dolce far niente in each day’s frenetic convulsions and to linger there as long as possible. The bar was warm with the sound of smiles.

Image by Karl Powell, La Palma, 2007

NOCHE
Sunday night at Mesón Casablanca. The day is all but over. Just got back from watching the sun set down at Cabo de Palos. Went down to the beach there at late afternoon. Sat there watching the remains of the day sink behind the ocean. The sting of the sunshine had started to evaporate as I arrived, but with the approach of evening, coolness sunk deeper into the sand. I swam in the Mediterranean for as long as I could. Floating in waves, watching the colours of dusk fill and smudge the sky with oranges, reds and violets. Warm winds blew in off the ocean – facing that horizon you knew that you were looking into the beating heart of North Africa, possibly looking directly into the endless beauty of Morocco.

Image by Karl Powell, El Sol y La Mar, 2007

The light was dimming as I walked back to Mar Menor. It wasn’t a long walk (maybe thirty minutes or so). The sun had long disappeared over the mountains dividing Murcia from the white hot heat of Andalucía. Twilight consumed the sky, street lights blinked into life, cars began to drive with headlights on. I passed a small souvenir shop still open: Tabacos y Regalos. Inside all manner of gifts were displayed from postcards to ceramics to clothing. All I wanted was a bottle of water. The owner was an elderly man from A Coruña. We chatted a little. He told me about his region and said that all the greatest seafood came from the North West coast: Galicia, Cantabria, Asturias and the Basque Country. He told me to go there in the season when the months of the year ended with ‘re.’ That was the season that the best seafood could be found. He kept emphasising the ‘re’ sound several times so I understood what he meant before listing the months for me in repetition: Septiembre, Octubre, Noviembre, Diciembre. It was almost dark as I walked along the sand on Playa Honda. Music, salsa music, sounded from within the Deportivo Club on the beach (it was here you could hire a kayak or a kite surf for the day and use it in the lagoon). Rows and rows of palm trees reached up towards the stars.

Image by Karl Powell, Fin de Dia, 2007

And so, here at Mesón Casablanca, we are all relaxing. There is beer or wine to drink. The pace is slow. Busy hands move behind the bar – serving drinks, serving food. Busy hands move along the bar – smoking cigarettes, touching, moving. It is almost 8.30pm. There is a football match being shows on the television here. It is Getafe (blue) v Real Madrid (white). I’ve only just sat down, the match has already started (second half), and I can’t see what the score is from this seat. Have just ordered pulpo (octopus); it is delicious, I can taste vinegar, lemons and thyme (I can also see peppercorns, bay leaves and small, sweet onions). And then a goal! I don’t know who for. Looks like Real Madrid, looks like 1-0 to them. Two young men seated next to me wince and curse – they do not want Los Blancos to win tonight. People are entering the bar now. All are greeted by the owner: a couple from Spain, a lad from Africa, a lad from England. All sit here up at the bar (except the couple – they sit at a table facing each other, they look as if they are in love). Suddenly the bar explodes with noise and raised arms: Getafe have just hit the crossbar. On and on they press. All of us sit at this bar and drink our bottles of Mahou cerveza. We will watch this match until the end. An advertisement for a local bullfight over in Ronda flashes up across the screen mid-match.

Image by Karl Powell, La Noche de Mar Menor, 2007

MEDIANOCHE
Midnight. It is difficult to describe the silence here on my balcony in Mar Menor. Only the distant bark of dogs and songs of seagulls drift on the warm levant winds. The sky is black. So black. Stars shine clear and bright all around. Some brighter than others. Some bigger. Thin whispers of streaked chalkdust drift like stray veils flying across the indigo heavens. A glass bottle rolls about somewhere. The five, small peaked islands are visible by their outlines in the lagoon. You should hear this silence, this stillness. This is quiet.

Image by Karl Powell, Mesón Casablanca, 2007

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20 Singapore: Chinese New Year

NEWTON ROAD
Along Newton Road, traffic disappears into the darkness of night. The endless black has long brushstrokes of illuminated lights, of reds and whites from flowing taillights and headlights, moving from left to right, into view then out of sight. From the behind the tall windows in the lobby of the Royal Hotel, I watch the traffic move. Already having checked out and settled my account, I am waiting for my taxi to take me back to Changi Airport; my flight departs at midnight, my taxi is booked for 9.30pm (which is about an hour or so away). Nothing more to do now other than sit with my cases and keep myself occupied. The lobby is large, polished floors, a long reception counter; things are happening, staff are busy, sounds are muffled into hushed silence. At times you find yourself wondering how time you have spent waiting – in transit, in limbo – at lobbies and airports when travelling; existing in a bubble of patience as the rest of the world attends to what needs to be done. You find yourself feeling like a character in one of Edward Hopper’s paintings – Night Hawks is the one that springs to mind. In this painting we see people siting in a diner, at the bar, at night. Nothing seems to be happening. No conversation seems to be shared. It is viewed from the outside, from the darkness looking in. And despite being in this vantage point (outside looking in) it is those in the diner who seem to be inhabiting a transitory existence, killing time, strangers isolated in a strange city almost as if they are the ones passing through. As an audience, we are people-watching them. On Newtown Road, I am waiting for my taxi to the airport.

Image by Karl Powell, Hanging Lanterns, Singapore 2008

Singapore had been recommended to me, as a stop over, by someone who loved it. Just somewhere to break a journey and see something of somewhere I had only ever transited in at the airport. I arrived here two days ago with no expectations, just the weight and baggage of missing those I loved who could not journey with me (it will be some time until I see them again). Lost in thoughts, I tried to write here during my stay but felt distracted – wishing they were here as well, sharing the immediate experience with me. Waiting now on Newton Road, re-reading what I’ve written in notebooks to share with them later.

ORCHARD ROAD
Arrived in Singapore sometime this afternoon. Arrival was a blur. The flight was a blur. A long flight – emotions of departure, sadness of leaving someplace, heavy lethargy, letting heartstrings sound through the ache of racing timezones, sunsets, coloured clouds, clear night sky, the bright shine of the moon, moving through the starlit skies, chimes of turbulence, morning meal, surreal reality, touchdown soon, welcome to Changi. Thirteen hours over. Arrivals, passports, luggage. Taxi to the hotel. Near to Orchard Road. Check in. Room 1124. Showered. Snoozed. Late afternoon. Need to eat, time to explore.

Image by Karl Powell, The Year of the Rat, Singapore 2008

Found my way onto Orchard Road and walked east, towards the river, towards Raffles. Felt so fatigued from the flight. Felt shattered and drained, disorientated, hot humid,  sweaty sticky light-headed thirsty. Managed to find a Turkish Café. Sat and ordered a biryani and some water. Pores on the skin wide open. Perspiration rises to the surface of the skin in little beads, evaporating in the breeze of the day.  

Image by Karl Powell, Walking in Chinatown, Singapore 2008

After eating, I ended up walking down towards Chinatown. Evening had appeared in the sky. Followed Orchard Road into Stamford Road then walked down New Bridge Road into Chinatown. Got there as daylight departed. Got lost in a series of side streets, all festooned with red lanterns, coloured lanterns, noises and smells of cooking food, buzz of activity, a crowd carried forward in motion, in slow stagnations, not looking where it was going, just looking and stopping milling and moving again. The Chinese New Year was being celebrated (it was the Year of the Rat). There were images of the rodent everywhere, caricatured, emblazoned in red, appearing on bags and walls. Part of the swaying crowd, too tired to stray I instead surfed the flow, walking, milling, moving forward. Allowing yourself to get lost within that safe blur of human movement. Eventually I made my way back up to Orchard Road and found a bus stop going to Newton. I was the only one on the bus. I spoke to the bus driver, a man from India, who told me to go to the Esplanade tomorrow night to watch the fireworks. He stopped the bus opposite my hotel so I could get off safely. We waved good night and goodbye and good luck as it drove off up Newton Road into the darkness forever.

Image by Karl Powell, City Lights, Singapore 2008

HAJI LANE
Slept all night. It was a deep sleep with intense dreams that made little sense. Disorientating dreams. When I woke up I had no idea where I was. It was the darkness that threw me. I sat up then felt the unfamiliar sheets, sensed the dimensions of the room, remembered I was in Singapore. Woke up again for breakfast. Showered, ate, went and swam in the pool. It was small – ample – and tucked around the side of the hotel with a patio. It seemed to catch what was there of the morning sun, steaming behind the tropical bank of cloud cover, shadows fell. It was nice to feel weightless and float in the water. Dozing face up in the heat and humidity (sunshine spread out and fanned evenly behind a bedspread of cloud cover).

Image by Karl Powell, Golden Domes, Singapore 2008

Sometime after midday, I made my way back to Orchard Road. Caught a bus from hotel. Already there was a sense of familiarity, creating landmarks, recognising buildings. Walked the length of Orchard Road and turned up North Bridge Road towards Little India. Bought a green coconut from a street vendor who had so many floating in a portable tank of iced water. He cut it open with a few chops from a machete and popped in a straw for me to drink. Walked along Arab Street and Bussorah Street. Found somewhere to sit and eat. It was quiet and peaceful – how an afternoon lunch should be. The golden domes of the Masjid Sultan Mosque shone above the surrounding skyline of this area. Afterwards, I walked around these quiet streets. Found another mosque, the Massjid Abdul Gaffoor Mosque that bore a sign outside its perimeter fence: Visitors are Most Welcome. So I walked in. I was greeted and welcomed and told to enjoy my visit. I walked inside the green mosque, around the edge of the prayer hall (musalla). It was a large, open space. Stillness pervaded the area. It was cool and birds could be heard singing. Book cases stood along the outer walls. An elderly man sat on the floor, leaning against a pillar, reading. As I passed he looked up, smiled and said hello.

Image by Karl Powell, Coconuts, Singapore 2008

ESPLANADE PARK
Near the Elgin Bridge, I crossed over from Orchard Road onto the Esplanade Park. It was here the bus driver had told me to go to watch the firework display celebrating the Chinese New Year. At night Singapore looked so beautiful. The city lights glowed in the humming buzz of neon emissions, colourful, bright, constant and flashing. The spectrum of colours danced and reflected on the surface of black water in the Singapore River. It was busy with people. There were many families there together walking in groups. Food stalls were cooking. Great clouds of flavour curled and tumbled, rising up out of grills and hotplates, drifting through the park. Red Chinese lanterns and lights hung from the branches of trees. After walking for some time, I found a small wall, near Anderson Bridge, where lots of people were sitting waiting for the firework display. A young couple next to me offered me some snacks they were eating and we all began a conversation; their names were Sean and Cheryl and were from Singapore. As we waited for the fireworks they told me about their lives – their working lives – in Singapore. They told me they were very happy and often worked long hours (most days twelve hours each day, only seeing each other for breakfast and at night sometimes).

Image by Karl Powell, Esplanade Park, Singapore 2008

And then the fireworks interrupted and exploded from nowhere across the night sky. Amid the bright flashes, crackles, thumps and booms were the oohs and ahhs of all of us watching coloured patchworks illuminate the canvas above. It was great to be inside a crowd, reminded how something like fireworks can captivate an audience. Whenever you try to describe fireworks – in writing, in conversation – you always feel as if you’re doing them a disservice. We all know what they look like and sound like; you are mindful not to overtly gush about them, or sell a display short. There’s a wonderful description which comes to mind about fireworks in Jack Kerouac’s On the Road when he describes his love of people who live their lives passionately and with wild authenticity:

…the ones who are mad to live… [who] burn burn burn like fabulous yellow roman candles exploding like spiders across the stars and in the middle you see the blue centerlight pop and everybody goes “Awww!”

Image by Karl Powell, CNY: Fireworks, Singapore 2008

After the fireworks had finished, and after Sean and Cheryl and I had wished each other good night and goodbye and good luck, I made my way back to the hotel. The city was deserted. Everything seemed quieter than the night before. I caught a metro from somewhere back to Orchard Road. From there it was so late (about 1.30am) and all buses had stopped – maybe it was even a public holiday – but I found a taxi and made it back to my room.

NEWTON ROAD
On Newton Road, I am still waiting for my taxi to the airport. Traffic is still driving, still moving, still disappearing. Sitting here reflecting, looking at suitcases, watching the check ins and check outs, I begin to realise that my stay here barely scratched the surface of this beautiful island. Realising as I’m leaving that I would like to return and explore more, see more and travel around more – to just sit by the river, to belong in a crowd, to ride metros and buses with no destination in mind. To just ride and ride. Like Iggy Pop’s Passenger: just looking out from glass, looking through a window, seeing stars come out, seeing bright and hollow skies, seeing that everything in the city looks good tonight. To be the passenger. I put my notebooks away. Headlights pull up to the hotel. A white car parks in a bay. It says ‘Taxi.’ A driver speaks to a doorman and enters the hotel lobby. He makes his way to the front desk. Could be my taxi to Changi.

Image by Karl Powell, The Passenger, Singapore 2008

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