
After a weekend in Barcelona, my husband and I rented a car. I love Spain (hence, my upcoming novel is called, “Flamenco & the Sitting Cat”) so we had much to admire along the way to French Basque country.

We stopped for lunch in Spain’s lovely city of Huesca. Their beautiful cathedral is in the historic district. Built on the remains of a mosque, it took 300 years to complete in the early 16th century.
Nestled in nearby ancient buildings are two restaurants. One is authentic Korean! As much as we love our kimchi, we decided that instead it was a lovely day for a modest yet elegant meal of traditional Spanish food on a pretty outdoor patio.

Huesca according to Wikipedia… is a city in north-eastern Spain, within the autonomous community of Aragon. It is also the capital of the Spanish province of the same name and of the comarca of Hoya de Huesca. In 2009 it had a population of 52,059, almost a quarter of the total population of the province. The city is one of the smallest provincial capitals in Spain.

Wall art and graffiti abound e-v-e-r-y-w-h-e-r-e in Spain! Here in the U.S., graffiti is seldom as welcome.
Our vacation had started in beautiful Barcelona.
Now that we’d enjoyed wonderful Huesca, we were off to France. There we’d see pretty Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port, enchanting Espelette, and phenomenal French Basque Country (Saint-Jean-de-Luz, Bayonne, and Biarritz).
Then, back in Spain, we’d marvel at the food and seaside dogs of San Sebastián, Spain and breathtaking Bilbao…
Discover more from Happiness Between Tales (and Tails) by da-AL
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What an eclectic mix of ancient and modern. A mosque that took 300years to build , kimchi and an yves st Laurent clad Buster Keaton piece of wall art. Aragon is now on my list. Thank you for the post.
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very glad you enjoyed it, Ellen – happy writing for 2018 🙂
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You too, And your travels.🙄
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Buster Keaton–with Yves Saint Laurent pants?
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hahahaha! hadn’t caught that, Mitch 🙂
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Thanks Da-Al. Good week !


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same to you, Louis 🙂
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Louis, have you considered adding google translate widget to you site? that way so many more people could appreciate it — free to all of us wordpress users & easy to install
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Widget google translate ajouté.

Da-Al pour ce bon conseil.
Bisous d’amitié. ❤
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Louis, sorry, I looked but couldn’t find it on your site…
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En dessous des 10 premiers articles, il y a un bandeau gris “Articles précédents”,
En dessous de ce bandeau, il y a 3 colonnes.
Le .” Widget google translate” est dans la première colonne tout en bas à gauche. Ok !
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ah – I see it now – you have such a great sense of humor on your site 🙂
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Looks like you had a wonderful time! BTW, Buster Keaton, I’m pretty sure. For graffiti, it’s wonderful, but if it’s painted on anything other than a boundary wall, I’m not in favor.
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it was interesting to find that graffiti means something different in contries other than U.S. I’m with you, but that prob has a lot to do with our culture. It was all over Spain & no one seemed to take offense, even the stuff that looks like tagging. Finally I asked someone if it makes them scared & they said not at all, which got me to thinking about how our graffiti is different…
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Yes, I agree, an entire cultural discussion possible there, but I’m not qualified to say anything.
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Beautiful photos!
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what a compliment coming from you, Nilla, given your expert photographic skills! I urge all to take a look at your delightful site 🙂
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I compliment where deserved, you sell yourself short. Thank you 😉
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❤
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