Thursday 19 September 2013
El Chorro
I came upon this relic in a gloomy corridor of our old hotel in Sevilla, and I can only think that it must be an energy-saving light-bulb that once belonged to St. Thomas of El Chorro. If only they had wired it up and turned it on, we might have been able to see it properly.
I first thought that 'El Chorro' meant 'The Gorge', as the mountainous area is famous for it's gorge, and the idiots who clamber around on a crumbling walkway that runs - intermittently - around it (look it up on You Tube for some of the most hair-raising footage you will ever see), but when I asked our friend who lives there, he told us it means 'The Drip'. He left it at that, so I have no idea how it got it's name, other than that the locals steal their water by tapping into a gigantic reservoir at the top of the highest peak, by simply sticking little pipes into the banks and running them down to their houses on the lower slopes.
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St. Thomas, the Drip ... hmmm. That's some 'relic'. Have you ever seen the relics in St. Mark's in Venice? My son couldn't wait to show them to me -- hands and fingers all gussied up in some kind of fancy metallic armour. By the 'case-load'...
ReplyDeleteI couldn't be bothered to queue to get into St Marks, but I did see the arm of John the Baptist, wrapped in gold in the Topkapi at Istanbul.
DeleteI've bought, and eaten, Churros on street corners in Madrid, but 'El Chorro' stretches my Spanish beyond its limit.
ReplyDeleteI like the idea of stealing water direct from the reservoir; it sounds rather Nigerian, I believe they do that with oil.
Difficult to run cars on water, though.
DeleteCorrect cars don't have much buoyancy do they ? (snigger)
DeleteI thought you were on a spiritual walk? I even turned my phone off and got H.I. to read me your blog whilst I lay in a darkened room.
DeleteIf only... I knew how to be modest I'd blush :)
DeleteNice to have you back Tom - life has been a little duller without you.
ReplyDeleteIt must have been heaven... Thanks Moll.
DeleteWas St. Thomas the one who said: "And let there be light."? Har, had, snort, snort ...
ReplyDeleteI thought that was Mazda?
DeleteOr Osram?
DeleteLove the little pressed metal thing. Sorry - I'm sure it has a proper name. Perhaps it was just a bulb display feature as opposed to an actual light?
ReplyDeleteJoanne doesn't like it.
DeleteThat fixture is quite pathetic. I believe chorro means anything from a lot to a little bit of water. A drip. And the fixture is a luz(er).
ReplyDeleteAre you calling me a pathetic, loser drip, Joanne?
ReplyDeleteAre you a light fixture in a corridor in a hotel in Spain?
Delete