Madrid; Prado Museum, Royal Palace and the Oldest Restaurant in the World!

We had our 7 euro breakfast and went across the street to the Prado Museum.  No lines when you have to pay!  Pretty amazing museum….way too large to see on one visit, so we stuck to the most famous pieces.  I was able to snap a photo of what turned out to be my favorite piece in the museum, Bosch’s “The Garden of Earthly Delights”.  What an amazing piece of intricate and bizzare artwork!  This is worth looking up on Wikipedia and exploring more in depth.  Proof positive that really good weed existed back in 1490!

I was attempting to take a good photo of Bosch’s “The Last Judgement” when an employee started reading me the riot act in Spanish.  Apparently there are no photos allowed in the museum?  WTF?  I wasn’t using my flash or anything.  Anyways, this is the only shot I got from here.  I think they want you to buy their 50 euro 25 lb book on the way out.  Thanks….the internet has lots of photos, and I don’t have to haul that around Europe with me!

Regardless, the Prado Museum is well worth the visit.  After we tired of looking at art, we headed to the San Miguel Market, a very famous place to get Tapas and beer/wine.  Nearly impossible to find a place to sit, we were able to snag a little corner of bar to eat our Tapas.  You want a cone of meat?  No problem!

A big old hunk of burrata.  Easy peasy!

Great food, but very crowded.  Check it out when you are here!  We got a bottle of decent Albarino here for 21 euros.  Love the wine culture here!

This guy was performing in the famous Plaza Mayor.  More wine culture!  Ok, wine “glass” culture.

Then we were off to the Royal Palace of Madrid, which is still the home for the royal family.  Here is a shot of the exterior.  Kind of stark in my opinion.  No plants?  No color?

Pretty cool armory here, considered one of the best collections of medieval armory in the world.  Again with the “no photos” BS, but I took a couple of shots regardless.  I just love the armor for the dog!

I don’t know who had it worse….the knight or the horse.  I can’t imagine wearing all of that armor.  I find it inconvenient to go skiing simply because of all the gear!

Here is a shot of the royal gardens adjacent to the palace.  They bought up all the land when they first built the palace so they wouldn’t have to look at poor people.  Finally some color!

Here is a portrait of the current royal family.  It’s ok to take a photo of that!

This is a panoramic shot of the ceiling in the main staircase entering the palace.  Everybody was taking photos so I guess this is also ok.

The rest of the palace was just as austentacious, although I admit the “Porcelain and Glass Room” was pretty cool.  Every panel was made of porcelain, and the vines you see entwined cover all of the seams.  Truly beautiful room!  I didn’t take this shot….there were museum employees trained by the Mossad who were ready to take me out of I pulled out my phone.  Thanks Google!

Here is the church adacent to the palace where the royals can convientely get redemption for all of the sins they plan for the day.  For you from California, those are called rain clouds in the background.

We ended the day with dinner at Botin, the “oldest restaurant in the world”, according to Guiness (the record book, not the beer).  This restaurant was founded in 1725.  We had the “world famous” suckling pig.  It was pretty good, but not something I think I’d order again.  Here is the kitchen where the pigs meet their ultimate demise.

The shot to show we were there!

Madrid, Spain

We departed Seville via high speed rail and watched the Spanish countryside fly by at 150+ MPH……I love high speed trains!  About 2.5 hours and we are in Madrid, where it’s suddenly a lot colder.  Madrid, besides being further north, is also at about 2200′ elevation, so it’s quite a bit colder than Seville in the south ( a high of 52 versus 62 degrees).  We are staying in a much nicer hotel….the NH Collection Paseo del Prado, and this hotel is perfectly situated for the various highlights of Madrid.  Best of all, no church bells!

We met our friends Dan and Kathy Westerlin who arrived from Barcelona.  They are taking a cruise leaving  Barcelona in a few days, so Madrid was a nice meeting point (in case anybody is wondering why we went from Seville to Madrid, and then headed back to Cadiz).  Dan and I worked together at the Port of Oakland, and between the two of us we could write quite the killer book about the idiocy of government work.  He’s written two books already, so who knows?

When we checked in, the hotel asked if we wanted their breakfast for 17 euros….if you prepay.  If we wait until the morning, it’s 27 euros.  Wow….I didn’t realize breakfast had become a used car salesman sort of negotiation!  We opted out, and ate a full breakfast about 20 yards away for 7 euros.  It pays to shop around!

We had some daylight left so we walked over to Retiro Park to check out the Palacio de Cristal (Crystal Palace).  Gorgeous spot, but they had some pretty bizzare modern art inside.  This is a steel cage made to look like a person shushing you.  There were 3 of these facing each other.

This is a shot from just outside the Crystal Palace.

Another shot of the palace.

We read that the Prado museum, the most popular museum in Madrid, was open for free from 6 to 8 PM.  We checked it out on the way back expecting maybe 100 people.  The line must have been a thousand people, maybe more!  The people at the back of that line will be lucky to get in before they close!  We aren’t that poor….we’ll go back and pay tomorrow!