Here we are in Portimão in the Algarve region of
Portugal. This is on the southwestern
tip of the country and has nearby what is supposed to be one of the most
beautiful beaches, Praia da Rocha.
As with most of these places on the Iberian Peninsula, the history goes
back to the age of the Phoenicians, Greeks and in the case of this area later
the Carthaginians and Romans. Of
course for a period of time it was under Moorish rule until the Portuguese
reconquest in the mid 13th century.
Portimão is situated on the Arade River and as such for much
of its history has been a fishing area.
During the 20th century from about 1906 to 1980 it was the
sardine capital. Our tour today
took us first to the Museum which is located in a former sardine processing
plant. It was very interesting to
see the process from fishing to canning. While the fishing was done by the men,
the processing was principally done by women. We tried to imagine what it must have been like to spend
every day handling sardines; I can only guess that you could never eliminate
the smell.
Little baskets on a conveyor to carry the fish from the boats to the factory |
Reproduction of the processing line |
In the 1980’s the industry apparently just crashed and that
was the end of it. Now this area
survives on tourism. The city was
devastated in an earthquake and subsequent tsunami (which reached nearly 60
feet high) in 1755 so much of the city is “new” (it’s kind of strange to hear
things a couple of hundred years old being called new). There’s a nice little promenade along
the river but not a great deal to see in town.
Our next stop was a little fishing village called
Alvor. On the way there we passed
some lovely hotels and what looked like timeshare complexes. In Alvor tourism
has overtaken the old economy.
Along the waterfront most of the old fishing sheds have been removed
to be replaced by cafés and restaurants.
There was one shopping street which sold mostly tourist souvenirs. There were lots of things made of cork
since Portugal is still the largest producer of that material.
After a little walk through Alvor we returned to the
ship. By that time the sun was out
and it was getting very hot with little or no shade around, so we decided to
stay on the ship and catch up on things.
I should have mentioned that our guide Carla told us that while it
doesn’t get extremely cold here in the winter, the summer can be brutally hot. Last summer the temperature reached 115 ° . We couldn’t deal with that!
Anyway, tomorrow we’ll be in Lisbon for an all day tour for
just the two of us. I’ll wrote
more when I can. Until then, até mais tarde.
1 comment:
Ann;
Sounds like a great place to visit.....
Bob
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