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A few weeks back I was feeling like I knew Madrid pretty well, I’d settled into my home and life with my host family, I was getting used to teaching and getting better at keeping my students from screaming and throwing things. I was remembering at least some Spanish. I´d figured out the best way from my house to the center of Madrid.
Then, while scrolling through Facebook on a lazy Sunday morning something caught my eye. An article claiming a traditional shepherd’s pass was going to bring a herd of sheep through the center of Madrid later the same day. I didn´t quite believe it but I wanted to, so I grabbed a camera and caught the next Cercanias train headed downtown.
I arrived at Plaza de Cibeles and found a sea of people already there, it was clear that something was happening, even if I wasn´t sure what. I found a place among the crowd where I could see and waited, for what exactly I wasn’t sure.
Twenty minutes of waiting was rewarded with the sight of people coming down the hill, some on horseback and all in traditional dress. Still no sheep but it was beautiful and interesting. I snapped some pictures and wondered if the sheep were no longer part of this tradition.
Then I saw them, a sea of them, surrounded by shepherds, and dogs and photographers. It was one of the funniest things I´ve seen since arriving in Spain. A sea of sheep marching down Gran Via. They looked completely out of place, and still, it seemed to suit Madrid.
I followed the sheep down the Paseo del Prado and back up through Plaza del Sol to Opera. Despite the scenery and location, the shepherds seemed to be operating with a single goal, and the sheep were kept packed together. There was order in the chaos.
Near Opera, the sheep continued but dancers stopped, and took command of the streets. It felt like a window back in time, it looked like something out of a movie.
This whole day came to me through sheer dumb luck, I´d stopped paying attention to the ‘This Week in Madrid’ posts, and I was fairly sure I knew about most of the city’s festivals, at least the ones worth seeing. I´d forgotten one key piece of knowledge from studying abroad here. Madrid, and Spain in general, always has new surprises waiting, if you’re willing to look for them.
Originally published on CIEE’s teach abroad blog.
You never get used to Madrid A few weeks back I was feeling like I knew Madrid pretty well, I’d settled into my home and life with my host family, I was getting used to teaching and getting better at keeping my students from screaming and throwing things.
#CIEE#ciee madrid#ciee teach#culture#Espana#expat#fiesta#Madrid#madrid traditions#nomad#sheep#shepherds#Spain#spain is different#spanish culture#teach#teach abroad#teach english#tefl#tradition#transhumancia#travel life#weird
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Rubielos de Mora, in Teruel, Spain.
Over my first puente (long weekend), I was lucky enough to be invited to a Casa Rural with my host family. A Casa Rural is a common type of accommodation in rural Spain, a rustic but well-maintained house in a small village; and well sometimes you can rent individual rooms or beds my family rented an entire house with a group of friends my host dad has had since college.
It was a great weekend with lovely people in a beautiful place, and I nearly missed all of it.
I’m really not good at talking to new people. In fact, I’m ‘I ordered delivery and told them to leave it outside’ levels of bad with new people.
I’m also borderline obsessed with travel shows. And there’s one scenario that appears in all of them: the spontaneous dinner/coffee/weekend with locals. While I know that in reality, these shows have people who make those ‘spontaneous’ encounters happen it’s still something I’ve always dreamed about. But you can’t meet the locals if you refuse to talk to people.
Agreeing to live with a host family was already a big deal for me, I’m still adjusting, but overall it’s been amazing. So, in the spirit of using this year to push myself out of my comfort zone, when they asked me if I wanted to go on vacation with them I said yes before giving myself time to overthink.
I’ve become comfortable with a lot in my travels, from squat toilets to chicken buses. But, spending a weekend with people I’d never met, many who have known each other since college, was incredibly uncomfortable. It was also awesome.
The trip started with a long and somewhat cramped drive, the last part of which was up a dirt road I sincerely doubted the cars ability to navigate. But we made it.
The house itself was amazing, the type of old that’s built like a maze. It made me feel like I should be on a guided tour, not sleeping there. It was a side of Spain I knew existed but had never managed to set foot in.
The stereotypical-ness was almost laughable. Our first dinner was tortilla de patatas and jamon and cured sausages. My host mom gave me a step-by-step explanation of how to assemble a proper pa amb tomáquet (for those curious it goes bread, tomato, salt, olive oil).
Our first full day there started with a casual trip to the supermarket. The supermarket happened to be in Rubielos de Mora, which was founded around the 12thcentury. It looked like it fell out of a storybook. The streets were also filled with people in traditional dress as festivities for El Pilar were in full swing. We got a massive amount of food and wandered the town. I discovered some of the decorative fountains in Spain pour clean drinking water, and then we headed back to the house.

Drinking from the fountain in Rubielos de Mora.
Our first lunch was paella prepared by my host dad and friends. I’ve wondered if the giant pans were actually used or if they were a cool decoration in eccentric kitchenware stores. It turns out they’re perfectly functional provided you want to feed an army.

My host-dad cooking Paella.
Our afternoon was slow; you can only do so much after eating your bodyweight in paella. And, because it was a Spanish vacation we spent hours after lunch at the table, enjoying a sobremesa.
Saturday started with a futile attempt to balance out the eating we’d done, and the eating planned for the rest of the trip. This took the form of a hike. We walked through the tiny town of Olba and followed a trail through the woods, over a small ridge, and to a lovely spot on the river. I need to learn to bring water when I hike but overall it was great.
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The morning’s healthy aspirations were immediately counteracted by lunch: an assortment of literally 8 different meats cooked on an old brick stove with an open wood fire.
In all it was an amazing weekend, I ate well, drank well, saw a brand new part of Spain, and learned more about what life is really like here then I did in months of study abroad. It wasn’t the crazy whirlwind tour I tend to use long weekends for. It was a family vacation, and because I managed to say yes I was lucky enough to be part of the family.

Another view from our hike.
A version of this post was originally published on CIEE’s teach abroad blog.
Learning to say ‘Yes’ Over my first puente (long weekend), I was lucky enough to be invited to a Casa Rural with my host family.
#anxiety#auxiliar de conversacion#brave#casa rural#CIEE#cite teach abroad#cultural immersion#culture#do what scares you#Espana#Europe#expat life#host family#immersion#mental health#nomad#olba#social anxiety#Spain#spanish#teach abroad#teach english#tefl#teruel#travel#travel life
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Madrid: Second Time Around
Madrid: Second Time Around
Coming to Madrid as an auxiliar de conversacion has been an interesting mix of the familiar and the new for me, and that’s been a little disorienting. I was lucky enough to study abroad in Madrid in 2017 and I was fairly certain that coming back to the city would be easy and the culture shock would be minimal.
However; it turns out two years is just long enough to forget a few key details, from…
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#abroad#auxiliar#auxiliar de conversation#CIEE#CIEE teach abroad#cite teach#cultural lessons#culture#culture clash#culture shock#Espana#female solo travel#journal#little lessons#live abroad#Madrid#metro#no pase nada#nomad#settling in#Spain#Study Abroad#teach#teach abroad#travel#travel life#travel log
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My beer is giving me #sideeye #dublin #ireland (at The Boat Bar!!!)
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#vintageteatour this afternoon in #dublin so excited about this #food. #travel #ireland #instayum (at Vintage Tea Tours)
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#bitterballen at #hannekesboom in #amsterdam they taste better than they sound. #travel #amsterdamfood #instayum (at Hannekes Boom)
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The alleys in #dublin are aggressively cool looking. #travel #ireland (at Dublin, Ireland)
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#sunset is pretty in #dublin even if you're stuck waiting for the bus. #travel #worldnomads (at Dublin, Ireland)
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Really loving the #sunny weather #dublin any chance we can keep that up? #travel #ireland (at Ha'penny Bridge)
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I guess there are worse places to #shop in #dublin #henrystreet is pretty nice on a #sunnyday #travel #ireland (at Henry Street)
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Post the #food you want to have? I ate pretty damn well in #berlin #travel #finsta (at Berlin, Germany)
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Found a few photos of #glaciernationalpark buried on my hard drive today. #goingtothesunroad is quite the #drive even on a cloudy day. #roadtrip #travel #worldnomads
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Inside one of the coolest #bars I've ever been to. #prague is a pretty fun city. #travel (at Klub Vzorkovna)
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View from the #effieltower it's hard to believe #paris was a month ago #travel (at Tour Eiffel)
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Sitting on the bus daydreaming about #food if I really believe maybe I'll land in #vienna to repay this meal. #travel #austria #finsta (at Neuer Markt - Vienna)
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Trying to remember this during my daily battle with#dublinbus #dublin #ireland #travel #bookstore #paris (at Shakespeare and Company)
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Photo of the Day 7.16.16
Photo of the Day 7.16.16
silk cocoons, Ankor Silk Farm, Seam Reap, Cambodia Taken December 2015 Want to be featured as a photo of the day? Email us an image and location at poordesignchoice.gmail.com
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#adventure#angkor#angkor silk farm#Cambodia#cocoon#december#email#farm#instagram#international#making#photo of the day#photography#poordesignchoice#seam reap#silk#travel#yellow
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