A Return to Spanish Time
Though we sit just north in the
tropics, it is not a very warm evening. Much warmer than where we came from,
but brisk nevertheless. I tug my blazer tighter over my shoulders and bring my
tea cup to my lips. Amy bears up under the cold relatively well, however. She
hates cold, which is why we’re here. We flew to Gran Canaria to escape
February’s dregs. An upgrade from daytime freezing to evening briskness makes
the briskness that much more bearable.
In the air another attraction floats
upon the breeze. The vacation we’re taking commemorates Carnival. Carnival
marks, hypothetically, the last gasp of hedonism before Lent and the aesthetic
run-up to the Catholic Easter. The U.S.A. only finds Carnival in full form in
New Orleans for Mardi Gras, but across the Caribbean, South America, Europe,
and scads of other places, it offers parades, street parties, dancing, booze,
and purported joy. I have never been through a Carnival (skipping out on New
Orleans a couple weeks before Mardi Gras hit last year), but Amy has years of
experience from her time in South America. I feel like I’ve been through
several of them myself, having heard Amy’s stories and (sometimes fuzzy)
recollections many times over.
We sit at a café in Parque San
Telmo in Las Palmas, Gran Canaria, and wait for the Carnival to roll in. My
cell phone reads 8:30. The Parade is due to make its final turn at our corner
at 8:30, finishing just below the second-floor balcony of our hotel room. When
we checked in earlier that day, our initially taciturn receptionist could
hardly contain his excitement over how perfect our spot was, looking over the
park and the grand finale. We feel contained excitement as we sit and wait for
our waiter to bring us the bill; I am the retiring, boring type and so don’t
imagine I’ll make it through much of a Carnival if it goes late, and Amy is
conditioned to believe that Brazil > everywhere else, especially regarding
Carnival, the country’s finest annual celebration. The parade is tardy; Spanish
time is usually an approximate thing, biased towards the later side of any announced
time. The parade’s tardiness doesn’t surprise us so much as reassure us, the
warm embrace of an old friend.
We walk out to the corner. The
sound of synchronized drums draws us closer. The crowd at the corner is
relatively insignificant, no more than one or two deep at any given point on
the road. The first group marches through, a group of drummers and instrumentalists,
almost like a group from your small-town Memorial Day Parade, except all
dressed in green. After them came a few more dancing Krewes (the New Orleans
term, meaning the dancing group that marches in the parade), a few tawdry
floats carrying the Queen, 1st through 4th Ladies, Grand
Dame, and Drag Queen of the Carnival, respectively, and then a couple
semi-trucks.
At last Amy feels excitement, as
the trucks recall Brazil’s Carnival. The trucks are probably an evolution from
the floats and walking krewes of yesteryear Carnivals. They operate like
themed-party buses, everybody on board dressed in a matching costume – Flintstones,
Superheroes, Cats – while a DJ bumps the tunes to a thundering level. Everybody
on the truck is meant to be dancing and merrymaking, though most of the truck
people are drinking and yelling instead.
A few trucks pass and at 9:15 a
lull sets in. We decide we’ve seen enough. We return to our room, still dressed but at
least freed of the burden of other people. I stand out on the balcony and watch
the crowd of people below. Earlier, there was a preponderance of Superman and
Wonderwoman outfits, mostly of skimpy nature, as well as a lot of men dolled up
in women’s costumes, also of a skimpy nature. Now, I cannot pick out any specific
dominant theme, mostly just stragglers from the krewes and trucks that have
already passed.
As we stand out on our balcony,
Spanish time reasserts itself with a vengeance. The parade hit a lull, a delay,
but resumes beneath our eyes. The semis roll one or two down our street at a
time. The truck turns the corner 200 meters away from us, its melody reaches
our ears a truck length after that, and then the truck crawls past our balcony,
stopping at the intersection 50 meters to our left. If lucky, the truck can
soak in the spotlight and play its music for another 15-30 seconds, but as the
night wears on, the cops instructing them to cut the sub-woofers and move it
along get there quicker and quicker. Meanwhile, the next truck or two has
already reached our point on the street, the sound systems overlapping, waves
falling atop one another, us locked beneath those waves, struggling for air.
Or dancing. Mostly dancing. So we
dance. We dance along together, the most we’ve ever danced together, the most
Amy has ever allowed me to dance in her presence. That’s because my dancing is
rhythmic but uncoordinated, unreasonable and uncontrolled, imagined fluidity
replaced by spastic movements and rigid meandering over the 4/4 time
signatures. The sort of thing I’m not to do in public in her presence. But
here, it’s Spanish Time, it’s Carnival, we’re up on a balcony, and all we can
do is take pictures and laugh about it. No one can see us anyway.
Except that some of the people on
the trucks are taking our photos. We’re creating quite the little scene, it
seems. Some of those drunks down there are cheering, waving, snapping. We wave
back. We dance. I add a bounce or two to my moves. We laugh. Carnival roars.
This goes for an hour, and then it
things peter out again. No more semis. We stop dancing, stop sweating. The
noise in the street and in the park below persists but on a lower level,
without the foreground clamor of the music. We stay out on the balcony and
watch and glow.
On the edge of the street below us,
a girl kicks a bottle. She is maybe 10 years old and dressed in what looks like
a “traditional” costume; long purple skirt and white shirt, her black hair
flows down her shoulders even as it is tied in a knot. She kicks the glass
bottle along the street curb. The bottle rolls, banks off the curb once or
twice, giving way to her soft power. She kicks it one time too many, and it
shatters.
The girl retreats across the
street. Her mother and other relatives are talking in a circle there. They
don’t pay much attention to her, don’t notice her. She flits in and out of the
group, walks behind a tree in the park, and then returns to our side of the
street. She’s found another glass bottle. She’s kicking it again. Predictably,
after a few paltry efforts, she breaks it again.
We are too far away and too foreign
besides to say anything as the girl starts kicking her third bottle in the same
area. People stand on the other side of the curb railing with the glass
breaking just below them. At the 3rd, pattern-confirming bottle,
they speak up, sharing our shock. They tell the girl to stop kicking the
bottle. She stops. The bottle remains intact. The girl scurries back to her
mother’s circle. The mother stomps over to the scene of the crime and yells at
the people who spoke up to her daughter (the mother stands conspicuously closer
to the middle of the street, away from the broken glass). The people, an older
couple and another older man, yell back. The man peels off and finds a police
officer. The mother gives not an inch. Her husband, dressed in a washer woman’s
outfit with the top of a Christmas tree or a really funky hat on top of his
head, acts as a moderating presence and also speaks to the daughter. No one takes
him very seriously.
The police officer arrives. Some
sort of resolution is reached – your daughter can’t kick any more glass bottles
tonight, you need to leave this family alone, none of you can call one another
a stupid puta, etc. No arrests are to be made in this situation, and
there’s not much else to do. The plaintiffs, or else the street’s defenders,
leave their post along the curb to try to revivify their Carnival joy. The cop
and the girl’s parents continue to talk with much more laughter. The tumult
dies down. The night and the Carnival continue to flow, softly.
And then, as we sleep, Spanish Time
rears its head twice or thrice more; the semis circle back through the park
once and again, just as loud as the first time. The noise threatens our sleep.
I, exhausted from the flight, sleep through most of it, though I swear that at
quarter to 4 I’m awakened by the thumping tunes one last time. Amy sleeps
fitfully through the Carnival iterations, perhaps suffering for her
Brazil-based hubris. She says that I’m wrong about the last cycle taking place that
late.
Spanish time, ladies and gentlemen.
The thing about it is, the more dangerous something is, the
more thrilling. The more we have to risk to achieve something, the more it
appears worth it. Life is founded on the principle of efficiency, arbitrage,
and that idea; we will risk only as much as a reward merits. So, for a greater
reward, we will risk more.
With risk come fear and a chance of failure. Amy – cowering
and half-hyperventilating in the passenger seat, picturing us crashing through
the fragile guard rail and plummeting over the cliff into more rocks and chasms
and eventually the ocean, telling me to go slower, laughing at my beeping, and
squeezing in dramatic scenery photos with her new camera all the while –
decided the mountain drive only deserved to be risked once.
“San
Nicolas isn’t much to see in and of itself, but this trip is about the journey,
not the destination. A 30km drive through the coastal mountains is one of the
prettiest settings you will ever go through.”
So said our guide (I’m paraphrasing). The drive began at the
foot of the hill where we were staying in Agaete, on the Western coast of Gran
Canaria. We had been there for a day and already were succumbing to island
fever. With nothing else to do, a beautiful drive down to the touristy but
picturesque Puerto Mogan struck us as a winning proposition. (San Nicolas is about the halfway point
between Agaete and Puerto Mogan).
We left around noon. Google Maps told us it would be a 1h20m
trip, which would have us in Puerto Mogan in time for a late lunch. Our car was
a Toyota Auris, a small 4-door with an incongruous 6 gear manual transmission.
On the highway driving to Agaete two days earlier, I hit 6th a
couple of times, coasting at 100 Km/Hr, until the dashboard light quickly
suggested I shift down to 5th as we hit a hill. There might be a use
for the Toyota Auris’s 6th gear on flat highways and long stretches,
but it would be completely unnecessary on this trip.
We entered GC-200, the road that would take us the 65
kilometers to Puerto Mogan, unsuspectingly. The road began with a slight
incline and a few lazy bends. There was a white line dividing us from the other
side of the road. All was calm. Amy began taking photos out the window of
Agaete below, of the coastline coming into view, of the mountains in front of
us. Gran Canaria is considered something of a “mini-continent”, with a varied
landscape; the coastline features quaint towns and pebbly or coarsely sanded
beaches, while the interior has more of the rugged look, with mountains
stretching up to 5,000 feet and the reddish-brown visage of the barren hills
that can be found in Spain, Morocco, or New Mexico.
Rugged mountains and narrow “highways”. After a few easy
kilometers, we were climbing up and down the mountain, driving through blind
curve after blind curve, and finding that there was no more dividing line
painted on the road. The beauty out the window, plentiful, was now obscured.
Blocking our beauty was not the scenery, not the mountains getting in the way
of anything else, but the fact that I was driving and couldn’t look too much at
the scenery, and Amy was panicking because I was driving.
The GC-200 offers an ideal setting for car commercials.
There are car commercials that take place in green rolling hills on roads with
hairpin turns and endless switchbacks; there are car commercials that emphasize
the open road and the plains and the thrill of adventure – the GC-200 offers
neither of these. It provides a third possible setting: rugged coastal mountains
with frequent turns and undulations, with the promised land of water and sun
and fun just around the next (blind) corner. It is really a beautiful drive.
The problem is that I am no car commercial driver, and no
commercial for the Toyota Auris will feature such driving. I have never been
confused for a good driver. Amy has never been confused for a person who relinquishes
control in such crucial circumstances easily. The Toyota Auris does not handle
uphills very well, and on this drive I rarely achieved even 4th
gear, let alone 6th. We were also tourists, and obvious ones, not
sure where we were going and ignorant of which way the road would curve when.
"At least if we crashed, the ocean would douse the flames..." |
All of which led to the scene I began with: Amy panicking at
my side while I tried to maintain a balance between cool consideration and
competence. When going up, I would get the car up to about 40-50 km/h (roughly
25-30 mph) in 2nd or 3rd gear; when going down, I would
let the car coast at about 50-60 km/h, riding heavy on the brakes. As we were
tourists, and timid ones, we would often get passed. Passing on a narrow
mountain road isn’t easy; there’s hardly space for two cars on the road as is,
and then if a foolhardy driver tries to do it on a curve, they risk getting
smashed by a car coming the other way. We found a way to be passed, though,
because there are few trivial things worse than having someone riding on your
ass on a narrow road where you can’t help but feel sorry for them since after
all you’re the one going half as fast as everybody else: I would pull on to the
rare shoulders or to the little bubbles on the road where a car might stop to
get a picture of the view, or else edge towards the right on a stretch of road
where we could see no one was coming the other way and wave my hand so that the
car tailing me started heading me instead. We were passed by bolder tourists,
by eye-rolling locals, and even by runaway buses who handled the curves like
they were so many city streets, with abandon. “Those poor bus passengers,” said
Amy time and again, thinking of how bad she felt just sitting in our car.
"And if we crash, at least this photo will be evidence that I didn't have a heart attack first..." |
We learned a technique from the cars that passed us. Some of
the drivers, at least, when nearing a curve, would begin to beep. At first I
thought the beeping was directed at me, being sensitive to criticism. Then I
realized they were short, staccato, friendly beeps. Warning beeps. Beeps to
announce one’s presence on the road, bursts of noise and self-affirmation.
This being a trick that could only help our safety, beeping
quickly fell into my arsenal on the GC-200. As we approached a curve, I would
beep once sharply, then twice more for a follow-up. Some of the curves kept
going, with no end to the blindness in sight, and so I kept beeping every
couple of seconds. I felt like a satellite drifting out in space, sending
signals out to alert other intelligent beings of my presence. The scariest
thing, of course, would be to receive a signal in return.
Nothing scarier happened to us than almost running into one
pickup truck barreling around a curve fairly on (going 40 km/h allows for a
fair deal of reaction time, at least). We also stopped towards the end at “El
Balcon”, a scenic viewpoint. A man ran a concessions stand there, and he found
my initial parking job unsatisfactory, requiring me to back out on the road
across both lanes of traffic and straighten up. I had visions of rolling
backwards forever. Amy was so flustered she spoke with the man in English first
as she got out of the car; when she switched to Spanish, he in turn grew
flustered, saying “Coño, hablas español?” And yet, we survived.
We survived the whole
drive, of course. The 1h20m stretched into two hours, what with the crawling
speeds and the stops. We received very few beeps in return, but we made it to
Puerto Mogan, where our finest meal of the vacation awaited us, with smooth
vegetable paella and the best croquetas I had all trip. We took nice photos.
Somehow, it was all worth it.
And then we went back
around the island the other way, taking the highways. It took less time than
the trip through the mountains. The drive was not worth a second trip through
the mountains, and anyway, Amy’s heart and my ears wouldn’t stand it. Coño, indeed.
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