We Love Málaga Tours

victorAs some of you may know, I am in love with Málaga and consider it my second home after Sevilla, so I try to get down there as often as possible. And although I’ve been visiting on a regular basis since 2009 I know I still have a lot to learn about it.

I’ve been a Twitter pal of Victor @welovemalaga for a few months and had been hearing great things about his tours, so during a quick visit last weekend I decided to take one of his Malaga Walking Tours. We met on a rainy Saturday morning and, because of the weather, I had Victor all to myself.

A second-generation tour guide (his father and brother are also professional licenced guides) Victor is a natural story-teller. Charming, informed, and passionate about his native city, I was immediately drawn in and held captivated by his entertaining anecdotes and fascinating facts about Málaga. No dull routine “canned talk” on this tour! Places I had already visited many times took on new meaning and I also got to see a few “secret spots” that I didn’t know existed. The two hours flew by. Towards the end we were joined by Victor’s friend Tatiana and we were taken for the final surprise of the tour – a breathtaking rooftop view where we could look out over the port and also see the route we had taken.

victor and tatiana

By this time we were getting hungry and, because Victor also does tapas tours, we decided to do a mini-tapeo before I had to catch my train back to Sevilla. Just imagine! The Málaga King and Sevilla Queen of Tapas together at last. 😉 Not surprisingly, Victor took me to three places I hadn’t been to before and I remembered when I was in Málaga just before Christmas how he had also given me some great tips via Twitter on tapas bars I should visit. He certainly knows the tapas scene in Málaga and is open and generous in sharing his knowledge.

So the next time you’re in Málaga I whole-heartedly recommend that you take one of Victor’s tours. Even if, like me, you’ve visited the city before I guarantee you’ll see it with fresh eyes.

We Love Malaga

Past View Sevilla

Past View guides Lide & Paco
Past View guides Lide & Paco

You don’t have to spend much time wandering around Seville to appreciate how much the city owes to its long past, and to wonder what it actually looked like hundreds, or even thousands, of years ago. The other day my friend Peter (aka Seville Concierge) and I had the opportunity to take a glimpse back through the curtain of time, thanks to a new type of guided tour that uses a “virtual reality” headset to show how the city looked in the past.

Past View Sevilla has only been up and running for a couple of months, operating from its base next to the antiquarium in the Metropol Parasol where we were kitted out with goggles, earpieces and iPhone, and as far as I know it’s the only tour of its kind in the world, which makes you wonder why nobody thought of it before.

There are two tours available at the moment (morning and afternoon); a short tour which takes advantage of the walkways on top of the parasols for panoramas of the city back to Roman times, and a long tour (the one we did), which lasts about two hours, and takes you to some of Sevilla’s best known landmarks, like the Plaza San Francisco, the Torre del Oro, and the world heritage site of the Cathedral and Alcázar (without going inside), and although I know a fair bit about Sevilla I still learned some new things about the city’s history.

Past View price list and times
Past View price list and times

As well as being able to overlay the present day views with computer generated images of the past, we were also treated to three short videos featuring CGI backgrounds and real actors in period dress (like the rest of the presentation in either Spanish, English or French). So, in Plaza San Francisco we were accosted by friends of Miguel de Cervantes, recently arrested on charges of financial irregularities in the conduct of his work as a tax collector, and imprisoned behind the grim walls of the Royal Prison on the corner of the square. In the Plaza Triunfo it was the turn of the architect of the alminar (the minaret, now the Giralda Tower), and the changes that have happened in this area are fascinating, from the Caliph’s hidden passageway to the lost wall around the Grand Mosque. Finally, down on the docks, we met up with the servant of the great painter Murillo, searching among the ships for a consignment of lapis lazuli for his master, and a few of the shadier characters on the wharves, and given a warning about the looming walls of the Castle of San Jorgé, the headquarters of the Inquisition, at the end of the bridge of boats on the other bank of the river. The tour ended at the Torre del Oro.

Not surprisingly, given its novelty, there are still one or two rough edges to be smoothed out – the equipment felt a little clumsy to use at first, though it got easier as the tour went on, and Sevilla’s bright sunshine sometimes interfered with seeing the images clearly – but our English speaking guide Lide was patient and helpful throughout, as well as giving us plenty of information between stops.

Peter wearing his time travel kit
Peter wearing his time travel kit

It was well worth doing, and I’ll be back for the second tour sometime soon. For more information, including a preview video, you can go to Past View’s website

Madrid Food Tour

Lauren Aloise is a young American woman who first fell in love with Granada, later Seville and, finally, Madrid. She started Madrid Food Tour because she wanted to share her enthusiasm for Spanish food and ingredients with food lovers from all around the world. Lauren loves introducing people to new food and drink and explaining the background of traditional Spanish dishes. She believes that one of the main things Spaniards are resoundingly proud of is their food and the top quality ingredients found in the Spanish kitchen. Her aim is to pass along their pride and enthusiasm to each of her guests in Madrid.

Lauren and I met up in Sevilla last month and enjoyed an afternoon tapeo together, during which we swapped stories about our experiences in Spain and also talked about our work in the food and tourism industry. This week we decided to swap a set of questions and share them on our blogs.

You can find my answers here.

Here are Lauren’s answers…

Continue reading “Madrid Food Tour”

Tapeo Extremo II


So this is what I did yesterday! Met up with some Twitter pals and fellow bloggers for a Tapeo Extremo, a term coined by travel writing legend and hardcore tapeo phenomenon Annie Bennett. Taking part were Fiona (Scribbler in Seville), Kate (Tales of a Brit Abroad), Kate’s friend Nicki, and Kim (Becoming Sevillana). I’ve known Fiona for quite awhile now, and Kate and Nicki had been on a tapas tour with me last summer, but it was the first time meeting Kim. Everyone knew that this was going to be pretty darn demanding and they had a lot to live up to if they were going to reach “extremo” standards. And well, the girls did good.

MY challenge was that nobody in the group ate meat, and one only tolerated fish in small amounts, so it had to be a pescatarian/vegetarian affair. Was I daunted? Hell no. Though it has to be said that the tour focused more on fish and seafood until the fourth and final tapas stop. But I’m getting ahead of myself…

Continue reading “Tapeo Extremo II”