Posts Tagged ‘torrevieja’

Graffiti – street art with a message (part 2 of 2)

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

This is a follow up post to “Graffiti – street art with a message (part 1 of 2)

Graffiti - Milano, Italy

Milano, Italy

Graffiti - Milano, Italy

Milano, Italy

Graffiti - Milano, Italy

Milano, Italy

Graffiti - Milano, Italy

Milano, Italy

Graffiti - Milano, Italy

Milano, Italy

Graffiti - Sofia, Bulgaria

Sofia, Bulgaria

Graffiti - Sofia, Bulgaria

Sofia, Bulgaria

Graffiti - Sofia, Bulgaria

Sofia, Bulgaria

Graffiti - Sofia, Bulgaria

Sofia, Bulgaria

Graffiti - Sofia, Bulgaria

Sofia, Bulgaria

Graffiti - Tarifa, Spain

Tarifa, Spain

Graffiti - Thessaloniki, Greece

Thessaloniki, Greece

Graffiti - Thessaloniki, Greece

Thessaloniki, Greece

Graffiti - Thessaloniki, Greece

Thessaloniki, Greece

Graffiti - Thessaloniki, Greece

Thessaloniki, Greece

Graffiti - Thessaloniki, Greece

Thessaloniki, Greece

Graffiti - Thessaloniki, Greece

Thessaloniki, Greece

Graffiti - Torrevieja, Greece

Torrevieja, Spain

Graffiti - Veliko Ternovo, Bulgaria

Veliko Ternovo, Bulgaria

Graffiti - Veliko Ternovo, Bulgaria

Veliko Ternovo, Bulgaria

Graffiti - Veliko Ternovo, Bulgaria

Veliko Ternovo, Bulgaria

Graffiti - Veliko Ternovo, Bulgaria

Veliko Ternovo, Bulgaria

Want more? Start with this web site: http://www.banksy.co.uk

Graffiti – street art with a message (part 1 of 2)

Sunday, November 21st, 2010

For as long as I can remember I have been interested in graffiti and street art. This type of art is not only temporary and anonymous for the people outside the scene,  but it also tells a lot about local culture and current events. Here below are some of the graffiti I have photographed during the last two years.

Graffiti - Athens, Greece

Athens, Greece

Graffiti - Berlin, Germany

Berlin, Germany

Graffiti - Cape Town, South Africa

Cape Town, South Africa

Graffiti - Cape Town, South Africa

Cape Town, South Africa

Graffiti - Cartagena, Spain

Cartagena, Spain

Graffiti - Cartagena, Spain

Cartagena, Spain

Graffiti - Copenhagen, Denmark

Copenhagen, Denmark

Graffiti - Crete, Greece

Crete, Greece

Graffiti - Fuengirola, Spain

Fuengirola, Spain

Graffiti - Fuengirola, Spain

Fuengirola, Spain

Graffiti - Granada, Spain

Granada, Spain

Graffiti - Granada, Spain

Granada, Spain

Graffiti - Granada, Spain

Granada, Spain

Graffiti - Granada, Spain

Granada, Spain

Graffiti - Istanbul, Turkey

Istanbul, Turkey

Graffiti - Istanbul, Turkey

Istanbul, Turkey

Graffiti - Istanbul, Turkey

Istanbul, Turkey

Graffiti - Istanbul, Turkey

Istanbul, Turkey

Graffiti - Istanbul, Turkey

Istanbul, Turkey

Graffiti - Istanbul, Turkey

Istanbul, Turkey

Graffiti - Istanbul, Turkey

Istanbul, Turkey

Graffiti - Istanbul, Turkey

Istanbul, Turkey

Look out for the follow up post, with graffiti from Milano, Sofia, Tarifa, Thessaloniki, Torrevieja and Veliko Ternovo!

Torrevieja VS Sofia

Monday, October 26th, 2009

After one week in Sofia I start to see and feel some differences between my last living place, Torrevieja, and here in Sofia.

Most obvious are the weather. From having to hide from the sun in Spain (still in October!) to having to buy more winter clothes in cold Sofia. Some days ago I was trekking up in the mountains in the outskirts of Sofia in the middle of the night to watch a meteor shower with a group of Couchsurfers, and it was below zero degrees with frost. Good think we had blankets and vodka.

Another difference is that almost everyone here speaks English or at least understands it. As usual people are a little bit shy in the beginning to speak but after a while you realize they are quite good at it. I’m still throwing out Spanish words by mistake, but have started to go to a language exchange to learn Bulgarian, as well as practicing the Cyrillic alphabet.

People here are really warm and helpful, but they seem to be wherever I travel. Just some people ignore you in the street when you ask for directions, but that is nothing new either. The rest stops and help you for 15 minutes, showing the path and distance on their GPS and so on. Maybe it sometimes have a small connection with how secure people are with speaking in English.

The prices here are incredible for still being inside Europe (almost comparable to Asia in some cases). You can get a kebab or slice of pizza for 60 cent, normal restaurant food for 3 euro, rent a central apartment with high standard for 200 euro a month, or a central room for 80 euro. Every time you get the bill somewhere it gives you a big smile =).

The food is great. Not only cheap as I mentioned above, but the variety and quality of the food here is really good, and I find so many food dishes here that I have never seen before. On top of that they need to write how many grams every dish is in the menu (it’s the law), which is very helpful. Be prepared though that it can take a lot of time to get the food, and that you won’t get it at the same time if you are a large company dining together.

So far I really like it here and plan to stay for at least 3 months (until January). In this time I will also check out other cities and countries close by as this area has a lot of unexplored places for me.