Christmas is rapidly approaching.
I know this not just because the days are growing shorter
and I’m a Geordie Get Me Out Of Here is on the television. I know this because the
John Lewis Christmas advert was launched a few weeks ago and that to me signifies
the onset of the Festive season.
I was snuggled in bed with a poorly Britney (Not her real
name) on a Thursday morning a few weeks back and I watched the John Lewis advert
on Twatter about 30 seconds after it had been released. If you have been living
in a yurt in your garden and haven’t yet seen it, you can click here to watch
it.
In previous years there has been a lonely man on the moon, a dog bouncing around on a trampoline and a Monster hiding under the bed, but
this year the John Lewis advert shows Elton John reminiscing about his life.
Elton is seen playing the piano at school, in a pub and performing in a stadium
before we see a young Reginald Kenneth Dwight running down the stairs on Christmas
morning and tearing the wrapping paper off a piano-shaped gift from his Mother
and Grandmother; and John Lewis tells us that some gifts are more than just a
gift.
There had been rumours on social media for some time that
Elton was to star in one of the country’s favourite Christmas adverts and it is
also rumoured that he was paid 5 million pounds to be in it. As I watched it, I
just kept thinking that it was just really, really odd as I had been thinking
about Elton John only a few days earlier.
Many, many moons ago I used to go on holiday every year to
sunny Spain .
This annual pilgrimage to the home of Rioja and Cava always coincided
with the schools’ October holiday as Music Teacher Friend wasn’t allowed to
take her holidays during term time and it was her Uncle and Aunt who owned the
apartment that we stayed in.
Casa Rioja was a wonderful ground floor apartment in a beautiful
place called Calella De Palafrugell which is a coastal town in the
province of Girona .
Calella is an hour and a half from Barcelona by car and when
we first began going to Spain there were no direct flights from Newcastle to
Girona (which is closer to Calella) or to Barcelona. Instead we had the option
of flying from Newcastle to Amsterdam ,
Amsterdam to Beijing ,
Beijing to Rio, Rio to Reykjavík, Reykjavik to
East Midlands, East Midlands to Nice, Nice to New York ,
New York to Dublin ,
Dublin to Gatwick and then Gatwick to Barcelona .
Alternatively we could have flown from Newcastle
to Gatwick, Gatwick to Montpellier , Montpellier to Manchester , Manchester to Hong Kong, Hong Kong to Dubai ,
Dubai to Gibraltar, Gibraltar to Majorca,
Majorca to Alicante , Alicante
to the Isle of Man, the Isle of Man to Exeter , Exeter to Madrid , and
from Madrid to Barcelona . With both of these options we would
then have to charter a helicopter to fly us on to Girona and then hire a car to
drive the 50 minutes to Calella.
The third alternative was that we could fly from Newcastle to Heathrow, Heathrow to Barcelona and then hop in our hire car. We
obviously chose the latter as the shopping was far better at Heathrow compared
to Gatport Airwick and Heathrow even had a small Harrods store to enable us to
look at things that we couldn’t possibly afford while we were waiting to be
called to the gate.
The first time we went to Calella we landed at Barcelona at around 7pm. We
collected our hire car, drove around the airport and then went back to the
parking space that we had recently vacated to wait for Pilates Friend who had
flown in from Heathrow on a later flight. Music Teacher Friend then negotiated the
53 lanes of traffic through Barcelona
with me reading directions from a small notebook that her parents had given to us,
written on their last visit to Casa Rioja, detailing the journey we had to undertake
to get to our home for the next 7 days.
Bizarrely after several visits to Casa Rioja we never did
find the motorway with the toll booths on it. To this day we still have no idea
how we found our way from Barcelona
to Calella De Palafrugell in the dark and without paying 2 Euros for the
privilege. The grown ups back home said that somehow we must have taken the old
coast road instead of the new motorway every time we visited, despite the
excellent directions that were given to us.
Anyway; I digress.
Calella De Palafrugell is a place where you go to experience
true Spain and it should not
to be confused with the commercialised resort of Calella which is further South
and closer to Barcelona .
There are very few expats in Calella De Palafrugell and most of the whitewashed
houses in the town are empty during the week until the people who live and work
in Barcelona
arrive there for the weekend. During the winter there are only a handful of
bars and restaurants open as that is enough to supply the demand. Back in the day, Bar Gelpi’s was the place to be for lunch. It
was situated right next to the beach and served the most amazing Tapas and ice
cold glasses of San Miguel, but in the evening the restaurant Les Voltes was
our place of choice. It was much more expensive than anywhere else in the town
but the food was fabulous and we always visited at least once during our visits
to Calella.
Casa Rioja was in the El Golfet area of Calella on the
outskirts of the town on the Cap Roig headland. El Golfet is a very quiet area
and the only downside to having such a beautiful and tranquil area to stay in,
is that the land rises steeply from the beach at Calella. This basically meant
that walking back from Les Voltes in the evening after several bottles of wine
and a couple of large vodkas each could prove problematic. The hill back to Casa
Cava caused us many problems over the years. We collided with lampposts, cars, stray
cats, garages and even Spanish people as we zigzagged across the roads and pavements and
if our Catalan or Spanish had been any good we would have called a taxi.
If there had been such things in Calella De Palafrugell.
On our first trip to Casa Vino Tinto, we visited absolutely
everything in the area. We went to immense ceramic-produced-goods outlets and
bought everything from tapas dishes to garden ornaments. We went out in a glass
bottomed boat at L’Estartit, we went to fabulous beaches and quaint towns and
we even went to the Salvador Dali museum in Figueres. The Dali museum is
incredible, from the Rainy Cadillac, to his mad self portraits with rashers of
bacon on his face. Dali was an incredibly talented artist but was clearly as
mad as a lorry. We spent the whole day at the museum muttering “He was seriously
f***ed up” as we viewed every single piece of his art.
It was on our way back to Casa Vodka in the dark after a
long day out at the Dali museum that we stopped at the telephone box on the
hill to make a very quick call home to let our parents know that we hadn’t yet
died from alcohol poisoning. As Pilates Friend took her turn to use the phone
the threatening clouds that had been rolling overhead quite literally burst and
Music Teacher Friend and I ran to our hired Renault Clio for shelter. There was
a huge rumble of thunder as Pilates Friend jumped in the car and as we drove up
the hill to Casa Sherry the rain was coming down so hard that Music Teacher
Friend had the windscreen wipers on full welly. Pilates Friend had to shout
over the noise of the rain on the car roof to make herself heard and pointed at
3 soaked and hunched people walking up the hill ahead of us.
“OFFER THEM A LIFT!” she yelled.
“THEY COULD BE BLOODY AXE MURDERERS!” I roared back.
“IF THEY’RE ENGLISH WE’LL GIVE THEM A LIFT!” shouted Music
Teacher Friend.
“WHAT BLOODY DIFFERENCE DOES IT MAKE IF THEY’RE ENGLISH?!” I
bawled.
“IF THEY’RE ENGLISH WE’LL BE ABLE TO TELL IF THEY ARE BLOODY AXE
MURDERERS!” yelled back Music Teacher Friend.
“THEY’RE BLOODY SOAKED JUST OFFER THEM A LIFT!” shouted Pilates
Friend from the back seat.
The 2 women and their male friend were indeed English and
extremely grateful for a lift. They told us that they were staying with a
friend in one of the enormous Villas that were nestled into the countryside
very near to our apartment and had decided to walk back from the town without
realising exactly how far it was. The 3 of them had actually flown out from Heathrow
on the same flight as Pilates Friend, which made us instantaneously realise
that they couldn’t be axe murderers as they were able to talk about how bad the
queues had been at security that day.
When we pulled up at the enormous gates in front of their
Villa, Georgia, Victoria and Matt invited us in for a drink as a thank you for
our taxi service and told Music Teacher Friend to park as near to the front
door as she could as it was still raining heavily.
Georgia and Victoria were busy pouring drinks in a luxurious
lounge when an agitated bloke walked in.
“Who the f***ing hell f***ing parked their f***ing car there?”
he screamed adjusting his coloured spectacles and gesticulating furiously towards
the door.
Music Teacher Friend slammed down her drink on the table and
in her very best Teacher voice retorted: “Me. ” before adding hotly “Because it’s
raining and my hair goes frizzy if it gets wet.”
There was a long silence and then he began to laugh and
replied that frizzy hair was never a good look.
After that, Elton John seemed to accept us as part of his crazy
entourage and we had a tremendous evening. Not having eaten since lunch in Figueres
the green coloured cocktails that Georgia and Victoria were creating were going
down awfully well. So well in fact that Pilates Friend and I were eating olives
and salami straight out of the fridge and Music Teacher Friend was asking Elton
to play something on the baby grand piano. In fact as I remember it, she was
asking him to play anything except for “that god awful rendition of Candle in
The Wind because that was utter crap”.
As we left Villa Elton with the code for the gates written
in pen on the back of all 6 of our hands (to enable us to collect the Clio the
next morning), we invited our new found friends over to Casa Rioja the
following evening. In reality we knew that we would never see them again and
talked in very loud drunken voices into the early hours of the morning at Casa
Vodka-and-some-fake-Baileys-we-found-in-the-cupboard-as-there-was-no-gin-or-wine-or-mixers-left
about what an extreme experience we had just had.
The next morning we woke late with sore heads, collected the
Clio from Villa Elton and talked all the way to the local Supermercat about the
previous evening, trying to decide if it had all been a dream.
That night Music Teacher Friend created the most gorgeous
Botifarra and we relaxed on the candle lit patio at Casa Sangria with soft
music playing and the smell and sound of the Mediterranean
Sea wafting around us.
And there was a knock at the door.
Initially I think Georgia and Matt were marginally more scared
than we were when we opened the door brandishing a steak mallet, an empty wine
bottle and a set of barbeque tongs for protection.
Elton took one mouthful of the Rioja that Pilates Friend poured
for him and immediately sent Matt back to Villa Enormous for Champagne . Matt duly returned 10 minutes
later with a case of Bollinger and Elton seemed happy enough for the rest of the
evening, sitting on a window seat in our turret lounge in his tracksuit bottoms
and Watford FC top, sipping his Champagne from the one Champagne flute that
remained intact after my ambitious attempt at a Cava fountain earlier in the
week.
But I know what you are thinking.
You’re thinking: Is it really true? Is it really true that
you, Music Teacher Friend and Pilates Friend drank Bollinger out of pint
glasses while Elton John and his followers argued over which of your CDs they
were going to play next?
No.
Of course it’s not.
In the same way that little Reg Dwight didn’t receive a
piano for Christmas from his Mum and Granny.
But let’s face it, there’s no
point in a small untruth getting in the way of a damn good story.