Ugghh.. my belly full of paella overrunneth. You should see this laptop balancing on my gut like a teeter totter. I can't complain though, the food we had at dinner tonight was delicious. Kicked it off with a fried tapas sampler and a bottle of the house white at el restaurante "Elche" en la Barri Gotic neighborhood. I'm getting ahead of myself though, time to hit rewind.

We began today as usual here in Barcelona- slept in and then went poolside on the rooftop for an hour or so. The concierege had suggested we take the "Bus Turistic" around town as a relatively inexpensive (20 euros pp) way to see a lot of the city. One of those double decker buses with the convertible top on which all of the locals can point and laugh at the tourists wearing big blue earphones as they hit all of the city's main attractions.
Our first stop was la Sagrada Familia, a church designed by world renowned architect Antoni Gaudi. The scale of the church is astounding. Construction began in 1882 and isn't predicted to be finished until sometime in the mid 2020's. Gaudi devoted 40 years of his life to this project before he was nailed by a train at the age of 73. He was well aware he wouldn't be around for its completion, but said it would be done on God's watch instead. We could have taken an elevator up one of the spires but decided it wasn't worth it since the line was an hour long and cost 4 extra Euros, but we were still able to take quite a few good pics from the ground up.
We hopped back on the bus headed to the Park Guell, another one of Gaudi's masterpieces. Amy and I thought it looked like a mixture of Candyland and a Dr. Suess book, so needless to say it was pretty sweet.
The heat was getting to us at this point and Amy stubbed her toe, so we decided to ride out the remainder of the bus tour without getting off at any of the other stops. After arriving back at the hotel, we ate more of Amy's bag of gummi's along with a Toblerone and some of the famous "Dinkle Sticks".
This brings us back to the beginning of the blog entry, dinner time. It was about a 10-block walk to the restaurant which we had Googled under the search terms "Best paella in Barcelona". This place was one of the 3 mentioned on Tripadvisor.com. We ordered the "peeled/deshelled" meat and seafood paella which was pretty tasty. For desert we had vanilla ice cream with hot chocolate sauce and Amy got the creampuffs. Great way to fill our bellies for the sleep time ahead of us before the big trip back home. Barcelona is a great laid-back city with good food and nice people. We'd like to come back again when la Sagrada Familia is finished.We can't deny we're exited to come back home where our guineas be and signs are written in English! But we wouldn't mind having a few more days off of work, of course...






















