Cost of Living in Spain to rise from today

Fresh produce aisle in Spanish supermarket

New IVA/VAT rates came into force throughout Spain today, meaning that already-cash-strapped families will have to tighten their belts still further.

Here´s what´s changed:

The general rate rises from 18% to 21%.

The reduced rate rises from 8% to 10%.   Many items previously included in the reduced rate list are now excluded, with their tax rate rising to 21%.   This means that entrance tickets for theatres, cinemas, shows,  attraction parks etc;  hairdressing; flowers, plants and funeral services will all cost considerably more.

The super reduced rate of 4% remains unchanged.  Again, many items in this category previously have now been excluded and placed within the general rate of 21%.   The cost of many stationery items and school materials will rise steeply  – which won´t go down well with parents as their children return to school shortly.

You can read the full list of changes here .

You might also enjoy reading:

Cost of Living: East of Málaga, Spain August 2012

I can see Africa from my terrace!

Bus Services: East of Málaga

CBBH Photo challenge: REPETITION

Repetition, repetition, repetition is the CBBH Photo Challenge theme for September!

In everyday life, repetition can often seem tedious.   However, with creative use in photographs, repetition can give an image a real impact.   Evidence of repetition can be found all around us, not only in nature, but more often in man-made objects too.

Candles lit for devotion in church

Take these candles lit as an offering of devotion, for example.  Just an odd one here and there wouldn´t make nearly as much impression as all of them together.   The pattern gives us a sense of order, making it clear to the viewer that the repeated object is the subject of the image. 

The viewer is led through the image and can be forgiven for thinking that there are more candles than there actually were in reality.   This impression is achieved by filling the frame with the repetitive pattern and letting some of the candles “fall out of” the bottom and top of the image.

Poppies adorn wooden crosses in The English Cemetery, Málaga, Spain

I found a similar effect in these simple wooden crosses, with their Poppies of Remembrance attached to them, in The English Cemetery in Málaga (Cementerio Inglés de Málaga) during early December, last year.   This time the repetition is more subtle as, even though the crosses in the top left of the frame are slightly out of focus and in deeper shadow, the effect of repetition is still apparent.

Big wheel at Feria de Málaga

The repetitive lines of illuminated lights on the Big Wheel at Málaga Feria not only draw our eyes towards the centre of the wheel, but also express the action of movement within some of the blurred lines.

By contrast, in the photograph below there are many repetitive features leading the eye into the distance.  This architectural sunshade can be found on the waterfront in the city of Málaga, adjacent to the Port.  Not only are there the horizontal struts of the sunshade itself, but also the repetition of their shadows on the tiled floor; the concrete stanchions supporting the glass panels near to the water´s edge and the line of palm trees heading off into the distance.

Port of Málaga walkway

My final image in the CBBH Photo Challenge for this month, returns you once again to the Noche del Vino (Night of Wine) held recently in the white, mountain village of Cómpeta.  As you can see, my visit was during the daytime, but the rows of chairs are already in place in the main square for the evening entertainment.

I love the contrast of the rows of stark wooden chairs set against the startling white of the buildings and the impossibly blue sky.

Rows of chairs set out for Cómpeta´s Noche del Vino 2012

This month´s Featured Blogs:

The Wanderlust Gene is written by a well travelled Australian who has been visiting and living on the island of Sri Lanka for the past twenty years.  She was born with an “itch to wander” and offers stories of the adventurous and pioneering women whose genes she´s inherited;  of travel adventures when the world was safer than it is today;  of moments of epiphany, and utter despair;  of beautiful things created by human hands, of awesome nature, and living things like elephants, and trees, and flowers;  and of farms, farmers and fishermen.

One of her most recent posts is a delightful tale of the Kite Season in Sri Lanka.  During “the inter-monsoon period when the winds high up in the troposphere are streaming across our island in a dependable, easterly flow – the time when little boys tear down dusty lanes outside their houses to launch their latest creation, and the sky comes alive with diving and dipping kites of all shapes and sizes.

One visit and you´ll be hooked.  Just as I was.

Dan Bohmer describes himself as “just another Soldier far away from home”,  deployed in Afghanistan where the time (difference to his home) is Nine & a Half Hours Ahead.

He prefers to use this blog as an outlet to share his pictures rather than his thoughts and, despite the desolate landscape and the razor wire, gives us an insight into subjects  we would normally never have access to.  We see photos of off-duty Afghan soldiers  (who love having their pictures taken) wearing baseball caps and proudly posing in their Commander´s sunflower garden.

Dan´s  blog also serves as a timely reminder for us to show our gratitude for the devotion of those posted far away from their own families as they continue to defend our home lands – wherever they may be.   Stay safe Dan and keep posting your great photos!

So that´s the CBBH Photo Challenge for September, folks!

Remember, all you have to do is post your entry by the end of the monthlink back to this blog and, most importantly,  don´t forget to add links to any two blogs that you´ve commented on during the past month, so that we can all HOP OVER and have a look.  Make sure you FOLLOW THIS BLOG so you don´t miss next month´s exciting challenge!

For more information on how the CBBH Photo Challenge works click here.

I hope everyone taking part enjoys the exposure the CBBH Photo Challenge offers to featured blogs and, who knows, you may end up finding a new favourite!  I´m looking forward to seeing your interpretations.

[CBBH logo Image credit: (cc) Mostly Dans]

 

Ready now: The Green, Green Grapes of Home!

A couple of weeks ago, I told you about our visit to the white village of Cómpeta for the  Night of  Wine (Noche del Vino).

Whilst we were there, I noticed a very interesting stall that had lots of local produce for sale.  There were not only locally-grown grapes and pasas (grapes left out in the sun to shrivel and sweeten on drying beds), but also an old vine root on display along with the bottled Moscatel wine available in sweet, semi-sweet and dry varieties.

Cómpeta grapes and old vine root

 

Grapes dried out in the sun, known as pasas

 

Sweet Moscatel wine for sale in Cómpeta

Best of all, look what I´ve just picked from the vines on our land!  In the photograph below, you can see that the bunch of grapes on the left is pretty much as you might imagine them to look, but the one on the right has grapes that have started to go brown as they shrivel and sweeten in the sun.

Some people might say that these are best of all to eat right now.   Not me, of course!  😉

Just-picked grapes from our own vines

 

You might also like to look at these posts:

Competa´s Noche del vino: Night of wine

Bus Services: East of Málaga

Patatas a lo pobre: Poor man´s potatoes

 

 

All change: A New Camera and a New Theme

Sardines on the beach at Torre del Mar, Spain

Sardines cooking over an open fire on the beach during this year´s  San Juan celebration in Torre del Mar, Spain.

 

My old camera went on the blink early last month, so I had to look for a replacement.   I need a camera that is light, and easy to take with me when I´m travelling, with plenty of features, yet not too expensive.     Hmmm … not too demanding, am I?

I don´t profess to be anything more than an interested, amateur photographer – but I know what I like,  and I keep trying to improve my images.   I do enjoy taking photographs and I think that´s half the battle.

Anyway, after much deliberation, I decided on the Canon PowerShot SX220HS and I´m loving it!

So, to celebrate my new camera,  I have decided to change the look of my blog to showcase the photos better.

What do you think?  Would you let me know as I value your comments?

Thanks – Marianne

Cheeky Monkey: Now you see him, now you don´t!

I recently posted that I can see Africa from my terrace, and that seemed to cause a frisson of excitement around the globe, so I thought I would give you an even better view!

Top of the Rock of Gibraltar with Africa in the background

On a recent trip to Gibraltar (less than a three hour drive from my home), with a friend visiting from Australia, we arrived at the top of The Rock to see the magnificent sight of another continent just 8.9 miles across the water.   AFRICA!  

This is the stunning view that greeted us at the entrance to the Mediterranean Sea, with a backdrop of the mountains of Morocco, including Jebel Musa, the other Pillar of Hercules – the name given in the ancient world to the promontories that flank the entrance to the Strait of Gibraltar.

What a view!

I glanced over to my right, to take in the Spanish mountains dropping into the sea, and when I looked back this little guy was posing for me!

He´s a Barbary ape – Europe’s only wild monkeys.   Local legend has it that as long as the Barbary Macaque population exists on Gibraltar, the territory will remain under British rule.

Barbary ape at the top of the Rock of Gibraltar with Africa behind

I just had time to take this perfectly posed image and, just as he appeared, quick as a flash he was off to join the rest of his friends!

Cheeky monkey!

This is my response to the Sunday Post – From a Distance

Related posts:

I can see Africa from my terrace!

Venturing further afield: A day trip to Gibraltar