This entry was posted on 4/29/2009 8:07 PM and is filed under uncategorized.

Thursday April 2 2009
Perhaps one of the best words you can learn in Spanish (besides Siesta), is Descanso - Rest. As in DESCANSO IN CORDOBA!!
After
6 straight days and 377 kilometers, Tierras de Al-Andalus was taking a
day off, in the city of Cordoba. Really, nobody was going to 'rest'
much, because there were still horses to take care of, and there was an
old city waiting to be discovered. But just to be able to really open
the suitcase and spread out for a whole day and a half, sleep in a bit,
and just sit and breathe for a few minutes was, if nothing else, a
mental break.
I slept in till some ungodly hour like 9 AM, then
I got up and followed somebody's dirt tracks down the elegant marble
steps to breakfast where I joined the Belgians (living in Spain),
Joelle, Bernard and Melanie.
Joelle is quite amazed at the
trails the organization found. Some people think it's rocky, but it's
not rocky compared to where Joelle comes from. "Alicante (Spain) is
rocky, Florac is rocky, and France where I lived and had a riding
school is rocky. I'm used to stones - all my horses have padded, or
siliconed feet, so we were prepared." Joelle observed there are less
paved roads on this ride than in other European rides. She was also
amazed at how well the ride has gone. "Of course there will be
problems" in a ride like this, she said, though the only major things
we could think of were the two times when there wasn't enough water
provided for the horses, at a vet gate and a finish line.
After
breakfast I, by golly, was not going to work; I was going to take
advantage of this Descanso Day, and do some exploring. I grabbed my
camera and walked across the Roman bridge

into the old city.
The
Romans built "Corduba" in 169 BC because of its strategic importance on
the Gaudalquivir River. It became a main shipping port for transporting
local olive oil and wine back to Rome.
The Moors conquered
Cordoba in 711 or 716 AD and began building the Great Mosque, or
"Mezquita," in 785 AD, over the ruins of the Romans' Basilica of San
Vicente. It was inspired by the Mosque of Damascus, but still retained
a strong Hispano-Roman influence, seen in the materials used, the
direction in which the nave was set, and the superposed arches and
alternation of red brick and beige stone in the bonding of the arches,
modeled after the Episcopal palace. It eventually became one of the
largest mosques in all of Islam. The Moors also built the Calahorra
Fort that guards the Roman Bridge across the Guadalquivir

from the Mezquita. Cordoba became one of the largest cities in the world in the 10th century.
The
Christians under King Ferdinand III reconquered Cordoba in 1236, and
instead of tearing down the beautiful Mosque, they converted it into a
cathedral, adapting and adding to some of the architecture that was
already there. The Christians also built the Alcazar (Fortress) de los
Reyes Cristianos

in the 14th century, incorporating parts of the Moorish Alcazar that was already there.
After wandering around the relatively quiet streets

a while, I found my way to the stables, where people were busy with
their horses: shoeing - at least three shoers were busy on horses,

hosing legs,

icing feet, brushing, wrapping legs, grazing on the sparse grass,
walking horses, lunging horses, trotting out horses to check soundness,
and turnouts.
The German girls were standing outside with Heike
Blumel's horse "Lenny" - he was uncomfortable and could barely move.
They had been waiting on the vets to show up, whose "In 5 minutes" was
Al Andalus time, more like a half hour or more. Lenny looked
uncomfortable, but his eyes weren't glazed over, so I wasn't
too worried about him.
When
the vets finally arrived, they examined him, and tried to figure out
what it was. Visually, it looked like a tie-up, but that didn't fit.
The blood they took confirmed it wasn't a tie-up. Heike had ridden him
5 straight days at a very conservative and sensible pace between 11.5
and 12.5 km/h. Lenny vetted out lame at the finish of Day 5, and so had
the day off yesterday. Overnight he'd pooped and peed normally, ate up
his food and drank a whole bucket of water overnight. Today he was
stocked up, and swollen in one of his stifles.
By the time they
decided to put Lenny on an IV, it took 6 people to move him -
practically lifting him - the 20 yards to and then into his stall
because he just couldn't move his hind end and barely his front. They
had to let him rest halfway because his hind end about collapsed. Poor
Heike was in tears by the time they got him in his stall... last I saw
they were preparing an IV for him. It was the beginning of a long
day... and more... for her.
I ran into Fernando Uriarte,
visiting from northern Spain (he gave Steph a horse to ride last year
in Al Andalus), and with him, we picked up Binomios rider David Gacino
and his crew Alberto and walked into the old town, heading for the
Alcazar. The participants in Al Andalus were given a free pass into the
Alcazar today.
After we walked around the fortress

and gardens, and admired some of the old mosaics

that had once been in the center of the old city - now hanging on the
walls of a museum inside, the boys then went back to the stables, and
Fernando and I continued wandering around the city.
We stopped
for tapas in a bar where I had yet another version of salmorejo and
more of the Iberican jamon that was so delicious. Leaving the bar we
walked across the street into the Cathedral plaza, and ran into Alexis
and Ines and Jose Manuel Soto. We were going to go into the Cathedral,
and bought tickets, but then changed our minds and decided to walk to
the old Jewish quarter for more tapas.
Mariki, mother and crew
of rider Claudia Lorenzo, joined us - Claudia has dropped out of the
competition because her mare vetted out lame on Day 3, and had
developed a problem that didn't allow her to continue any more. It was
Claudia's first time at Al Andalus and they enjoyed the 3 days she did
ride, so Mariki hopes they can return next year with a more conditioned
horse.
Mariki and I continued walking and talking together - all
of it conducted in Spanish, and finally Alexis interrupted - "Merri!
Your Spanish has greatly improved!" It really had! It did take a lot of
effort, and at the end of some days I was just exhausted from it, but
it made things a lot more fun. You miss so much when you don't
understand another language (though boy, I still have a long way to go).
We
wandered the narrow labyrinthine streets through the medieval quarter
in "La Juderia" (The Jewry), once the home of the Jewish community. We
stumbled upon a lovely plaza where we sat outside and had the typical
Andalucian lunch: tapas, wine, and more people.

Three more friends of Jose joined us, then another 3 friends showed up,
then I saw Emilio the photographer across the square and I waved him
over. We kept pulling more chairs around our two tables till we had so
many chairs we had to get up to reach the tapas on the tables.
Fernando
and I concocted next year's "Spanamericano Team" for Al-Andalus,
Fernando and me riding as an Equipos team on Arenal (Steph's mount last
year) and another of his horses, "and Steph as photographer!"
And
speaking of trying to concentrate hard on understanding Spanish - at
times here at lunch there were 8 Spanish conversations going on
simultaneously, and 8 cell phones ringing at various times, so I could
no longer understand anything. (Or maybe it was the white wine.)
After
we'd consumed enough food and drink and company, Mariki, Fernando,
Alexis, Ines and I strolled back to the Cathedral to use our tickets.
We wandered the dark corridors and arches of the
Basilica-Mosque-Cathedral with its Islamic inscriptions and Christian
adornments and combined architecture.

When
we left, I had to split off to go do SOME work at the hotel, as it was
about 4:00, and the vetting in was at 5 - which i was going to skip
this time - and the Al Andalus meeting/party was at "8PM" in the
Alcazar.
I stated this in Spanish, and Ines started laughing and
hugged me - "Oh my god Merri, you are speaking spanish!" (Alexis
corrected one verb tense - dang those tenses!) OK now I am really
motivated to learn more for next year!
I did get a small amount
of work done, then got ready for the "8 PM" meeting back in the old
city, which was, I figured, a 10-minute walk across the bridge. Silly
me, I was ready and in the lobby at a quarter to 8, thinking people
would be heading over, (I was thinking in American time), and sure -
there were people down there, but nobody dressed to go to a
party/meeting. Some were on the internet, some were visiting, and most
were in their stable clothes.
I faded back upstairs and then
came down at a more reasonable time, after 8 PM, and caught Gabriel and
Jose Maria (?) starting to walk over to the meeting. I went with them,
and others we caught on the way; and we waited outside the Alcazar
talking with everybody till after 9 PM.

Heike
Blumel was there after spending most of the day with her horse Lenny;
he was a little better, but still didn't want to move. They didn't know
if they would be able to transport him tomorrow or not, so their plans
were on hold for tomorrow - either drive to tomorrow's finish at
Montoro, or to a vet clinic, or stay here, if he still could not load
onto a trailer. He was still peeing OK, his blood work wasn't too off,
and it still didn't indicate he was tied up; but they still weren't
sure what it was. Lenny still had a lot of fluid everywhere that was
causing pain in his legs; one of the vets thought it was muscle pain;
one thought it might be a fracture in his stifle. They'd given him 9
liters of fluid and some pain killers and anti-inflammatories, and
would check on his condition again tonight.
Leonard and Carol
were there, looking like two different people because I'd only seen
them the last 7 days in their riding and crewing clothes and vests. Leo
said "This is my last clean shirt left!" They had a severe weight limit
on their Ryan air flight to Alicante so he couldn't bring much except
what to ride in.
Finally we were let into the Alcazar around 9
PM, and we had the meeting, once again, in a room with too few chairs.
Fernando and I grabbed seats close to the front. It was the usual ride
meeting: chaotic, loud, most of it in Spanish, and the rest you
couldn't hear. This time they did use a microphone (for the first
time!) and tried to interpret most things to French and English; Juan
Landa spoke in Spanish and French, Alexis in English. But the
microphone didn't really help after all... people just talked louder to
drown it out. Even Fernando shook his head and said "Incray-ible!"
The
ride meetings were always on the verge of mayhem... but you just adapt.
The Germans always cornered Javier afterwards to find out the details
of the start and the crewing in his labored English; I always asked him
when the start was and when we'd leave the hotel in the morning.
In
addition to the 65 kilometer Al Andalus ride tomorrow, there would be a
120 km 2** ride, with international FEI rules that would start a half
hour before Al Andalus. We'd all leave by caravan from the stables to
the starting line, about a half hour drive out of town.
A speech
was given by the mayor, or second mayor of the town (it was too noisy
for me to concentrate on Spanish!); then the awards were exuberantly
given out, big, bottles of Extra Virgin Aceite de Oliva.
Now
here's an example of how the strategy of just riding steadily every
day, and to your own horse's ability, pans out: moving up to second
place overall now in Equipos was the team of Emma Rosell on Al-Jatib
and Maria Capdevila on Pinyo. Taking turns riding every other day, Emma
and Maria had placed 2nd (17.6 km/h), 4th (15.9 km/h), 5th (15.8
km/h),11th (16.7 km/h), and 9th (15.6 km/h).
I talked to Maria's
mom Nuria, who was their crew and biggest fan. Like many other people
here, Al Andalus was a dream of theirs. Nuria's 14-year-old daughter
Maria had wanted to ride in the first edition of Al Andalus in 2006,
but at 11 years old, she was too young. She'd started riding dressage
when she was 3, but dressage is a lot more expensive than endurance
(which isn't cheap either), so Nuria asked her, "You want to try
endurance?" (Hoping she'd say yes.). Maria did, and they eventually set
their sights on Al Andalus. They had to get special permission from the
Catalon and Spanish federations so Maria could ride here for the first
time when she was 12. It was also Emma's third year to ride Al Andalus.
It was their horses' debut in Al Andalus; Emma rides a gorgeous
10-year-old stallion, who is "getting stronger every day." He gets
nervous at the starts, but he settles down once he gets going. He
carries himself beautifully, collected and smooth.
And why do
they keep coming back? Nuria loves the people, the countryside, the
food, the experience. After all the fun I've seen Maria having with the
other young riders, it's obvious the friendships are as fun for her as
is the riding.
After the meeting we adjourned outside to a
courtyard of the fortress, and everybody appeared to be like me:
STARVED. Nobody is ever sure if it will be a sit-down meal or tapas...
or just beer and wine. It seemed tonight we'd just have plentiful
drinks.
Finally the waiters started coming, and they put one
plate down on each table. Fingers SWARMED over the food (yes, mine were
in there) and it disappeared immediately. I don't even know what it
was, it went straight down the hatch.
After a few more minutes,
one more plate came and the food was attacked as if by jungle ants in
the jungle - there one second, gone the next. Really, these were some
hungry endurance people (me included). I was so starved I migrated to
another table to try to cadge more food (like other people) - no, it
was gone!
Finally the tapas began to come with more regularly
and more variety - and the desperation wore off, and people (like me)
stopped desperately grabbing for food and slowed down to enjoy the
drinks and food and conversations without interruptions. I was getting
pretty good at talking with people - though my Spanish and powers of
concentration had faded by this point in the night... or maybe it was
the beer.
There were rumors of Jose Manuel Soto singing
somewhere "at 9 PM" - to those with a private invitation shown to me by
Fernando - but we'd seen Jose here as late as 10 PM. I could have tried
to sneak in, but I didn't know where it was, didn't know how long it
would last (or when it would start), I was exhausted (so much for the
"descanso in Cordoba"), and there's always the ordeal of having to wait
around for a ride back at whatever time of the morning, or trying to
find a taxi at 3, 4, 5, or 6 in the morning... so I walked back to the
hotel with some friends, and fell into bed around 12:30, ready for the
last two days of Al-Andalus.
