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Saint Jorge, patron saint of Cáceres, and DRAGONSLAYER |
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The academy | | |
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Last week I started doing private lessons. This means tutoring outside of school. I joined an
academia or academy which is like after school lessons that are run by this Irish guy. I also picked up 3 hours of
clases particulares, which are essentially one on one or one on two tutoring sessions. The hardest part was just starting. All the kids want to improve their English, but they don't know what they need to improve on, so I would play around with some things that I found difficult when learning Spanish. This one family is worried that the younger daughter will speak English better than the older daughter, therefore they scheduled two hours for the older daughter. To avoid having the younger feel left out, they still scheduled one hour with her. The other family is really nice, the only bad thing is that they live a 40 minute walk away from me. As of right now, thankfully, I work at the academy right before I go to their place saving me some time.
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Me kissing some guys toes for good luck |
Also, this past weekend I finally got to return to Cáceres. Cáceres was where we had my orientation and I was there for about 20 hours. They boasted about the old part and how we should take advantage of the 4 waking hours that we had and visit the
parte antigua. Well, we obviously didn't get a chance to do that, but this time we did! I went with my friend Tom and we met up with my study abroad friend, Mariel, who is doing the same program but in Cáceres. We actually went to eat at an all you can eat buffet that compares to Golden Corral with a slightly more Asian theme. Then she and her roommate took me out on the town on Friday night to some of the more popular spots of Cáceres. To be honest, Badajoz has a better night life. On Saturday, we met up with my roommate's boyfriend, Pedro (remember him?) who took us on a full out tour of the ancient part of the city.
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Can you see the water? |

This place is incredible. It is as if you were catapulted or trebuchetted in the Middle Ages. It was so well maintained that it felt like you were there. We saw a lot of churches and museums. In one of them, they had an
aljibe, the word for an Arab bath. This would store rain water that would eventually go to the town's people. This one actually still stored water and there was water when we went down, underground, to see it.
After the aljibe, we went to find some food. We went to this really nice, artsy place in the middle of the middle aged part of the city. The food, yet again, was spectacular. We had solomillo, a meat with cheese. I even had felafel, and loved it. Food is just sooo good here. Yes, it deserved that many o's in that sentence. Afterwards, we drove up this mountain to see Cáceres from a bird's eye view. That was amazing also. Then Pedro had to go as the
Real Madrid v. Barcelona game was on and we were about to head back to Badajoz.
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Cáceres from atop a mountain |
The way we got back to Badajoz was interesting. There is this website called
Blablacar. People post if they are headed from one place to another and if they have room to carry others. The three of us (because Mariel wanted to see Badajoz) got a ride from this man for almost half the cost of the bus and for half the time it would've taken. It worked out really well. He was a rugby player who grew up in Badajoz, had a girlfriend in Cáceres and works in Madrid. I felt really bad that all three of us fell asleep in his car. Not too bad because he was getting paid, but still, he was a nice guy.
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Tom and I watched part of the game |
On Sunday, Tom and I showed Mariel all of our favorite places of Badajoz with the pretense that it was not nearly as pretty as Cáceres. Then she left and I went on a run and took this picture of the sunset. I don't know why I don't run with my actual camera.
P.S. I know I have not been fulfilling my promise of writing once a week...which is evident from the two posts I posted today when I haven't posted in three weeks. I think it feels like my life here is just like my life at home, so writing about it would be as if I wrote about my life in the States except that every time that I said, "I went to get coffee in the USA," I would replace 'the USA' with Spain." So, I can't promise a new post every week...but you can check every week just in case!