Yes, Virginia, there is a cider museum

I started this one last weekend, but I was too exhausted after the weird festival that never ends and then just couldn’t find time during the week.  I am going to roll three of these out before I leave for France on Sunday.

Okay, I wrote that  ↑ on Friday…it is now Tuesday…EDIT…scratch that, it is now Wednesday...and I’m in either France or Switzerland EDIT…I’m in France, St. Genis Pouilly, I’m still a little confused about which side of the border I’m on…EDIT…that has been cleared up, but I can go outside and run across the border right now if I wanted to, but I have a few hours before work so I’m going to at least get this one up EDIT…HA!...I might get all caught up on everything from a Greek beach next week!  And yes, Ben, you can comment on any post now.


photo 4
I can’t go anywhere without seeing these two.

Oh no, not these two again.  Everywhere I go I see them.  I’m not sure why they’re shoved behind the bar today, but yesterday I saw them standing up against some buildings, like they just robbed a bank and were waiting for the cops to run past them.  I actually get a little scared whenever I see them.  And this morning, I got to see them walk and spin.  That was a treat and a half. So I followed THEM around for a change.

Today there was a third character that I haven’t seen yet, a little short king who kept twirling like I guess you would twirl if you were a king.  If I see him twirling in a pintxo bar later I’m running for the hills.  I took a bunch of little crappy video clips of whatever the hell they were doing. I’m assuming practicing for the festival that never ends. When I get a chance I’m going to edit them, but here’s a little peek.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NiAvTvrZV38

I was headed to the cider museum when I was interrupted by the wandering processional puppets.  Agastarriaga.  That’s how I pronounced the name of the town to the confused bus driver.  Not sure how I managed to mangle “Astigarraga”, but I did.  I practiced it and everything.  And it seemed a lot easier to remember than Sagardoetxea, which even made matters worse.  I thought it was close enough, but he really didn’t know what I was talking about, and not in that dicky way that you get sometimes when you refuse to call a large coffee with milk something like latte gigante, he honestly did not understand me and was really trying to figure out where I was going.  I wonder if I would I be able to understand if someone asked me where “Blorkoyn” or “Manthannan” was?

Anyway, after I made the international sign for “does this bus go to the cider museum” with my man hands, I was on my way.  So, I love cider.  And I love Spanish cider, sidra, and was super excited when I saw there was a museum here.  Almost as excited as I was that there was an Alphabet Museum.  Basque cider has a very distinct taste, different than Galician cider and very different than Irish and English ciders.  I just recently had French cider and it was similar, but the cider museum lady was really adamant that nothing is similar.  More on cider mañana…but here are some photos of

2 Replies to “Yes, Virginia, there is a cider museum”

  1. Okay, those spinning dolls are pretty scary. And that pasta looks to die for! And I would NEVER use one of those urinal things, I’d rather pee my pants. Haha.

    1. I kinda wanted to use one of those urinal things. Hahaha, just kidding, well, sort of. Yeah, those dolls are a little creepy, huh? And they were all over the place, usually just standing and I’d get scared every time I turned a corner and they were there.

      And I’ll make you some Aunt-Tricia-in-Spain-style pasta!

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