Overlook of the town of Castelo de Vide |
We drove into the walled village of Marvão – our starting
point – in late afternoon sunshine. We
were high up looking down onto a wild rocky plain near the Spanish border. We checked into our first pousada – the
Portuguese name for an inn. The
converted convent was set into the walls of the ancient town. After a short break, we met with Luiz for our
orientation. We were on a self-guided
bike ride. Luiz planned to leave us
after the orientation and pick us up more than 200 miles away in a few
days. While we biked, our suitcases
would be transported from village to village by taxicab.
Luiz ushered us into a small sitting room in the pousada. He pulled a bottle of ten-year-old Port and five
small glasses from his duffle bag.
Laughing at our surprise, he filled the glasses and explained that no
introduction to Portugal would be complete without sharing a glass of
port! We raised our glasses! Saudé!
To your health! It was
delicious. We sat in rapt
attention. We needed to understand our route
and our equipment since soon we would be on our own.
Luiz was a font of information. He brought out bike bags filled with inner tubes, Allen wrenches, pumps, locks and GPS systems. He gave each of us a booklet that explained the details of each day from the length of the route, the best places to have lunch, the location of public toilets, the best sight seeing options along the way and endless other useful information. His smiling relaxed manner put us at ease – or maybe that was the port? No matter. After the main information was shared, Luiz presented each of us with a Portugal Bike biking jersey and my favorite gift – a pair of green and yellow arm warmers. At the end of the briefing he told us to take a short break and meet him on the street in front of the pousada to check out our bicycles.
The street was very narrow, barely wide enough for a single compact vehicle to pass through. It was paved with cobblestones that looked as if they had been placed there several hundred years previously. We returned to our rooms and pulled out our bike shoes and helmets. We were appropriately nervous – worried that the gear systems, pedals and bike sizes would be right. Luiz allayed our concerns immediately. One by one along the tiny bumpy street, Luiz adjusted pedals, seat posts and gear levers until we all felt comfortable. We stored the bikes away in a safe place provided by the pousada, bade Luiz goodbye and agreed to meet back at the dining room at 7:30 pm. We were tired having flown from London and New York respectively many hours before.
Luiz was a font of information. He brought out bike bags filled with inner tubes, Allen wrenches, pumps, locks and GPS systems. He gave each of us a booklet that explained the details of each day from the length of the route, the best places to have lunch, the location of public toilets, the best sight seeing options along the way and endless other useful information. His smiling relaxed manner put us at ease – or maybe that was the port? No matter. After the main information was shared, Luiz presented each of us with a Portugal Bike biking jersey and my favorite gift – a pair of green and yellow arm warmers. At the end of the briefing he told us to take a short break and meet him on the street in front of the pousada to check out our bicycles.
The street was very narrow, barely wide enough for a single compact vehicle to pass through. It was paved with cobblestones that looked as if they had been placed there several hundred years previously. We returned to our rooms and pulled out our bike shoes and helmets. We were appropriately nervous – worried that the gear systems, pedals and bike sizes would be right. Luiz allayed our concerns immediately. One by one along the tiny bumpy street, Luiz adjusted pedals, seat posts and gear levers until we all felt comfortable. We stored the bikes away in a safe place provided by the pousada, bade Luiz goodbye and agreed to meet back at the dining room at 7:30 pm. We were tired having flown from London and New York respectively many hours before.
My sister and I decided to explore tiny Marvão. The town was laid out in an intricate system
of concentric streets that rose towards a medieval castle built on the pinnacle
of the hilltop. The sun was setting and
the light was bright and clear. We
walked along old stonewalls and paths that hung on the edge of the cliff,
moving up towards the castle. Suddenly
we stumbled on a formal box hedge garden, full of roses and topiary. The formal garden was the first hint of all
the gardens we would see during our trip.
The people of the Alentejo are serious gardeners. Over the next few days we biked by hundreds
of flower and vegetable gardens, filled with colorful rose bushes, bright red
geraniums and delightful flowering shrubbery, endless fields of wild flowers,
cork trees and olive groves, vineyards and dry golden grasses.
The days flew by as we biked
from hill top town to hill top town.
Each day was punctuated by small villages set in rocky terrain and
rolling countryside. The Alentejo is
famous as the marble and cork production capital of Portugal. We cycled by large and small cork trees often
in various stages of harvest – cork comes from the bark of the cork tree –
skilled cork harvesters cut the bark and peel it off the tree completely. Cork trees can be harvested about every ten
years and can live more than 200 years.
Once removed from the tree, the cork is soaked in water to make it more
pliable and eventually corks and strips of the soft material to be used in
shoes and mats and bulletin boards are cut from the soft material. Every little cork that you remove carefully
from your wine bottle started life as the bark of a cork tree – likely a tree
growing in the Alentejo!
While every day had its
charm, our first day was perhaps my personal favorite. We set out in the morning after a substantial
Portuguese breakfast of fresh fruit and cheese and scrambled eggs; café com
leite and lovely flakey croissants and crusty rolls. Just getting out of the walled town was a
challenge – the streets were incredibly narrow and bumpy – each one appeared to
lead into another steep narrow path.
When I stopped to ask a village woman how to get to the main road she
laughed and told me in Portuguese to just go down hill! Soon we passed under the city gate and pedalled
onto smooth asphalt. The first few
kilometers were an incredibly steep downhill run – I was more concerned with
whether my brakes worked than if my gears shifted smoothly. As we descended, we biked around hairpin
turns and past tiny goat farms set into the rocky hillside. The air was fresh and clean, the roadside was
filled with wildflowers – pink, purple, yellow, white, red; wild clover, vetch,
scabiosa, daisies, poppies, wild roses and flowers I did not recognize – all
vying for space and light. Straw colored
grass filled the fields, interspersed with large spreading cork trees and occasional
white oaks.
The Flor da Rosa Pousada |
Groin Vault Ceilings |
That night we rode into a
small town, Flor de Rosa and stayed in a 14th century monastery that
was recently converted into a luxiorious pousada. The fortified monastery was set at the edge
of a small village. Its stark white
spaces and high groin vaulted ceilings reminded us of its past as a place of
contemplative worship.
We stopped in small towns along
the way to eat ham and cheese sandwiches and to warm ourselves with hot coffee
and milk. The weather in May is not warm
and we appreciated the opportunity to warm our fingers around the small china
cups. On the second day, just as our
sandwiches were prepared and we had made ourselves comfortable on the terrace,
the first of several rain storms hit.
The accomodating gentleman who owned the café came to the door and
cranked the canopy over the open terrace.
Regardless, we locked up our bikes and went inside to enjoy our meal in
the cozy café. That afternoon and the
next day it rained continuously. We were
freezing as we cycled through windy fields and cold driving rain. We stopped in a small sports store the
morning of the third day to buy a warm vest for one of us. My friend was so cold as we left the pousada in
a hail and rain storm, we knew she needed more clothing. Both the second and third days we arrived at
spendid medieval pousadas soaked to the bone, tired and hungry. The inn keepers welcomed us and helped stow
our bikes. We peeled off our wet shorts and
shirts and brought feeling back into our frozen feet with lovely warm
showers. My best advice for biking in
Portugal in May is to bring extra warm waterproof bike clothes. While the landscape is beautiful, the weather
can be unsettled and wild.
The Temple of Diana in Évora |
Each of the pousadas we
stayed in had its own appeal – the pink and black marble floors and the Roman Temple in Évora, the
brick groin vaulted ceilings in Flor da Rosa, the inner courtyards with
fountains and orange trees, wide open stair cases decorated with old tapestries
in Estremoz, old frescoes and 15th and 16th century
paintings covering the walls of long hallways in each inn, the ancient farm
implements and large olive jars in Arraiolos.
We drank wonderful regional wine and enjoyed the traditional Alentejo
cuisine – Caldo de Peixe; black pork cooked in fragrant bread; coriander and
tomato soup with poached eggs; sardine paste; red peppers and salty nuts – everything was
delicious. We saw exquisite blue and
white picture tiles on the walls of building and particularly at the Vila
Viçosa train station – these traditional tiles are called azulejos. At the old closed train station the azulejos
explained the history and economy of the region. We rode down narrow streets so small we
wondered if our bikes would fit. We held
our breath as we cycled up slippery steep cobblestones. We crossed languid rivers and climbed up hilly
plains. We rode alone, we rode together,
we composed haikus to bolster our spirits when the rain blew sideways.
On the last evening we
pulled out our strappy summer dresses and wore them to dinner. We toasted a wonderful trip. We loved the ride. We loved the friendly people, the old
churches, the cobblestone streets, the cork trees and the wildflowers. We especially loved the historic
pousadas. Portugal has reason to be
proud of its architecture and its history.
We never once got lost. And
amazingly, we didn’t have a single flat tire which was just as well since none
of us had any confidence in our ability to successfully manage the tiny little
pumps! We think we might go back to
Portugal and bike again next year. It is
lovely.