I arrived in Barcelona in the early evening. I took the aerobus from the airport to Plaça de Catalunya, and then walked the rest of the way to my hostel, which was off of the main and famous drag, La Rambla. On my bus ride in, I saw probably one of my favorite sights in all of Barcelona, Plaça de Espanya. I have no pictures of it, and I never got to see it not from the Aerobus, but it was breathtaking.
Upon arrival at the hostel, I was reunited with my good friend from Bordeaux, Kellyann, and we waited patiently for our other good friend, Harmony. We were in a room with a Frenchman from Salsbourg, who was ever so happy that we spoke French, as his English was not very good. After we all made it to the hostel, we had a lovely tapas dinner at a restaurant recommended by Linden.
The next morning, Harmony's sister arrived, and we started to take Barcelona by storm. We first started with the Picasso Museum. It was AWESOME. No photos could be taken inside, but I got to see Picasso's works from when he was 10 all the way through to the end of his career and full blown Cubist expression. I particularly enjoyed looking at Picasso's intensive study of Las Meninas by Velasquez. I was so excited. I had just seen the original in the Prado! Again, amazing.
We also spent a late morning/early afternoon on the beach. It was sooo crowded, and there were people selling tattoos, massages, scarves, sunglasses, beers and water walking around the beach. It was madness. In my haste to get a tan, I was not very liberal with my sunscreen application, and I ended up burned. As I write this, however, the burn has faded and I am slowly but surely becoming tan.
(Side note: Sunscreen is incredibly expensive in France/Spain/Greece. After my burning in Barcelona, I ended up giving in and buying some before my landing in Greece. I bought the most cost effective/spf effective sunscreen. It was 15€ for 200ml, with the added bonus that it has plankton extract in it that protects against jellyfish, apparently. I have yet to try out this feature, but I will just trust them on it.)
After some time in the sun, we went to La Sagrada Familia, "the world's most visited construction site!" It's the slowly but surely being realized "temple" designed by Gaudi (unofficial architect of Barcelona). It was AMAZING. Gaudi was greatly influenced by nature, and all the forms seem to erupt naturally from the architecture, furthermore, his manipulation of light is spectacular. At the tops of all of the steeples are vegetal forms, and there are turtles supporting the massive columns that support the intricately decorated façade. Another night, we went to Park Güell, another creation of Gaudi's where we walked and wandered, entranced by the undulating tiled bench and rocky columns. I am now a huge Gaudi fan.
The last big event was going to Saint Joseph's Market. It was filled with tropical fruits, fresh fish, meats, candies, bread, pastries, tapas, anything really. It was so much fun to wander through. I also had amazing mango, pineapple and dragon fruit in my fruit salad. I went a little overboard, and I had a whole meal of fruit and bread. It was so satisfying.
And now for some photos:
The entrance to our Pension in Barcelona
The beach where I burned tanned
LA SAGRADA FAMILIA by GAUDI
The interior was amazing, and the way that light bounced around was mesmerizing
The windows were amazing
The views of the towers from the walkway between them
Light and construction
Me in front of the façade
Park Güell
The columns were amazing
The famous frontside
Candy in the market
The table of fruit where I bought multiple snacks and dinner
