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Esta página pessoal não tem uma pretenção especial, mas tão só dar-me a conhecer e intervir em sociedade.

Intervir e divulgar: a minha forma de pensar (política inclusive), o meu percurso pessoal, as minhas viagens, notícias, factos, imagens e textos (meus ou de terceiros) que considere relevantes e tudo o mais, que achar conveniente.

 

A Frase

Na escrita há os que escrevem aquilo que pensam e os outros, que pensam aquilo que escrevem..., pensando muitas vezes o oposto!...

José Capitão Pardal

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cerezo05

Recomendando aos meus leitores uma visita à “Fiesta Cerezo em Flor” e à bonita de Valle del Jerte, no da espanhola, que se realiza entre os finais do mês de Março e os primeiros dias do mês de Abril.

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 05/03/2010 FAUSTINO MARTIN in EL PERIÓDICO   

Conseguir que la fiesta del Cerezo en Flor constituya un escaparate para toda la región”, es uno de los objetivos marcados por los asistentes a la reunión mantenida en la sede de la Sociedad para la Promoción y el Desarrollo del Valle del Jerte (Soprodevaje), entre cuyos participantes figuran: La Consejera de y , Leonor Flores, la Directora General de Manuela Holgado, el del citado grupo de desarrollo, Victor López, el de la mancomunidad de municipios, Félix Díaz, el de la Asociación de Rural (Aturvajerte), Luis Morán, y los componentes de la directiva de Soprodevaje.

Además en el encuentro de trabajo, fueron abordados los principales retos que tiene planteados el Valle del Jerte, en lo que concierne al sector turístico.

En este sentido Soprodevaje señaló ayer en una nota remitida este diario, que para potenciar la fiesta del Cerezo en Flor , los asistentes a la reunión convinieron que “se deberá optimizar sustancialmente la logística y coordinación de este evento, de cara a mejorar y potenciar la imagen” del mismo.

Por otra parte fueron analizadas “diferentes propuestas”, encaminadas a romper la estacionalidad, mejorar las infraestructuras relacionadas con el , “y potenciar la en la ”.

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José Capitão Pardal

Face ao interesse de que se reveste a notícia, inserta no de Online de hoje (20091106), para o em geral e para em particular, tomo a liberdade de a transcrever, sem qualquer comentário adicional.

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31131187

À descoberta da mediterrânica, o jornal americano encontrou o , um destino, diz, “ignorado, mas não por muito tempo”.

Os “tesouros naturais”, a e os vinhos são assinalados no artigo. Tudo começa com Doug Smith.

Um empresário americano, cansado da vida de gestor da Korakia Pensione, um dos seus hotéis mais bem sucedidos que recebe pessoas como a fotógrafa Annie Leibovitz e o escritor Gore Vidal.

Procurava uma nova vida e partiu à descoberta. A primeira paragem foi a Grécia, depois a espanhola até que passou a fronteira e foram precisos apenas quatro dias para se decidir a comprar uma quinta do século XVIII, com 52 hectares perto de Campo Maior.

A história da paixão de Smith pelo vai ser contada na secção de viagens na edição do fim-de-semana do jornal americano New York Times, que já ficou online durante o dia de ontem.

O Alto é descrito como um destino “ignorado, mas não por muito tempo”. Comparado por várias vezes à Provença e à Toscânia (”de há 30 anos atrás”), o “Além-Tejo” tornou-se nos últimos anos “um refúgio de um sofisticado jetset ”, conta o jornal, que agarra os visitantes com as suas pousadas, adegas, monumentos e .

O de que vive aos sábados na praça da , onde se vendem “queijos, frescos, , peças de artesanato local e bric-a-brac”, e a Pousada Rainha Isabel, “de um luxo anacrónico”, também em começam a viagem.

O Crato e o Convento da Flor da Rosa, que “traz a arte contemporânea a um castelo do século XIV”, a vila de Marvão e a sua muralha mourisca, ou as Capela dos Ossos de Campo Maior e de Évora são outros monumentos referidos na reportagem do New York Times, que assinala também alguns “tesouros naturais da ”, “ideais para observadores de pássaros”.

A é longamente detalhada. Não só nas casas particulares, onde “a comida e o une igualmente locais e visitantes”, como também em restaurantes que recomenda, destacando a genuinidade dos produtos e o poder atractivo de uma cozinha que nos últimos anos tem vindo a cativar “um número crescente de amantes dos prazeres da vida”.

Mas são os queijos aromáticos que fascinam o jornal americano.

Em jeito de conclusão, há ainda tempo para dar vivas à paragem em , na “planeada ligação” por entre e , que deverá atrair mais turistas e compradores de “casas de fim de semana” por todo o .

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De seguida transcrevo a notícia constante do dito jornal New York Times:

Next Stop – Alto , Unsung but Not for Long

Pedro Marnoto for The New York Times

The walled town of Marvão in the eastern part of Alto in . The town’s castle was a Moorish fortification built in the ninth century.

By ROBERT GOFF

Published: November 8, 2009

IN 2002, Doug Smith was bored. Korakia Pensione, his Mediterranean-style boutique hotel in Palm Springs, Calif., that attracted a celebrity crowd like Annie Leibovitz, Gore Vidal and Brice Marden, pretty much ran itself. Mr. Smith was looking for a new project — a grand fixer-upper in an exotic locale — where he could show off his well-honed style and settle into a life of rustic ease with his new wife, Josie.

He scoured real estate listings for haciendas on the Yucatán and sea captain houses on the Greek island of Simi. But then, one summer while touring farms in the Extremadura region of Spain, Mr. Smith crossed into Alto , a region of Portugal that he’d never heard of, and found himself enraptured by the landscape, excellent food, a lost-in-time lifestyle and the relatively inexpensive cost of living.

After four days of inspecting broken-down barns and farmhouses, he bought a 130-acre 18th-century farm outside the village of Campo Maior. “Compared with Spain, this place was even more charming, beautiful and about a third less expensive,” Mr. Smith said. “Old guys in snap caps and corduroys tip their hats to strangers.”

In the past seven years, Mr. Smith, who no longer owns Korakia Pensione, has watched the Alto , a border province carpeted with cork oaks and olive trees in southeastern , emerge as a stylish backwater. The region’s name is derived from “Além-Tejo,” which means “beyond the Tagus,” the river that flows past Lisbon. A new blacktop highway now stretches eastward from Lisbon, and within an hour you’re admiring vineyards, the occasional whitewashed town or castle and gently rolling plains.

A sophisticated international set has started to snap up properties in the area, turning Alto into their little European playground. Now tucked among the fashionable homes is a smattering of boutique hotels, wineries and casual yet sophisticated restaurants.

Until recently, Alto was an enclave of Lisbon’s old-money set interested in making wine, raising the local breed of Alter-Real horses and communing with their version of the outback. But they welcome newcomers. “We want to tell the world about this part of ,” said Pinto Ribeiro, the president of Palácio do Correio Velho, one of ’s leading art auction houses, who has owned a farm in the region for more than 20 years. “It’s a poor place and could really use more visitors.”

He met Doug and Josie Smith while driving his horse and buggy along a country road that runs between their respective houses, and a friendship arose over ’s principal vices: food and wine.

A big night out in is a dinner party at someone’s home. As in Provence and Tuscany, food and wine bond families and strangers alike. On a warm night in July, Mr. Ribeiro prepared to serve one of his specialties, bachalau, gliding a long knife through what looked like a massive mound of coarse salt in a clay baking-dish. He carefully used the flat side of the blade to turn over a flap of encrusted salt and flesh to prevent salt from scattering into the giant cod beneath it.

“If you do this correctly, you might even need to add a bit of salt for flavor,” he said. The fish was the centerpiece of Mr. Ribeiro’s dinner party, which took place poolside overlooking the Reservoir, a hub for birdwatchers. The guests included the Smiths; a local landowning family; Mr. Ribeiro’s wife, Ana, and brother, José, a photographer; and a surgeon visiting from Louisiana.

By day the region is best visited by car. Start in , one of the main towns of the Alto with a population of 15,000. Once the seat of the 14th-century Portuguese king Dom Dinis, remains grand, if seemingly empty of people. Like many towns and cities in , the streets and buildings are lined in marble, an abundant local resource, which gives an overall effect of everything appearing white and, on a sunny day, radiant.

On Saturdays the main square of the town, the Rossio de Pombal, comes alive with a morning market where farmers peddle fresh cheese, wine, local crafts and bric-a-brac. Narrow streets and staircases lead up to the star-shaped ramparts of the castle walls.

At the center of the castle grounds, an 18th-century palace now houses one of the region’s best hotels, the Pousada Rainha Isabel. The hotel, like many pousadas (essentially a government-sponsored chain of high-end lodgings in historic buildings), is the epitome of anachronistic luxury. Imagine the Plaza in New York or the Ritz in Paris in, say, 1984 and you will get an idea. Waiters in rumpled tuxedos shuffle drinks to guests on the terrace overlooking the town.

For a slightly hipper ambience that reels in Lisbon’s beautiful people, drive to the bedraggled town of Crato, where the Convento da Flor da Rosa brings contemporary art and sleek décor to a 14th-century castle, later a cloister. The castlelike pousada may house the tomb of Nuno Álvares Pereira, a medieval knight and recently canonized saint, but on a sunny Friday afternoon, all eyes were on the modern infinity-edge pool festooned with amber sunbathers sipping white wine made from the arinto grape.

There is no shortage of historic sites in Alto and one of the most beautiful is Marvão, a walled town that sits on a narrow spit of rock overlooking the rugged plains that reach across into Spain. Marvão is home to perfectly restored, whitewashed houses and a castle built in the ninth century as a Moorish fortification by Ibn Marwan.

Another historic standout is the Capela dos Ossos, a marble-and-stone chapel built in 1766 with neo-Gothic flourishes in the small and bustling city of Campo Maior. The interior of the chapel, a smaller version of the Capela dos Ossos in Évora, is covered in human bones, skulls and two complete skeletons.

Alto also offers natural treasures. In particular, the modestly sized Reservoir looks like an oasis in a Saharan savanna with scrubby hills and clear water unmarred by boats. The reservoir, adjacent to Mr. Ribeiro’s estate, is a haven for rare birds like Montagu’s harrier, the great bustard and the Spanish imperial eagle. Visitors can stay at the Casa da Ermida de Catarina, a seven-room boutique inn that sits at the end of a peninsula on the private Rocha estate.

But for the epicures who have flocked to in recent years, the region’s top draw is its cuisine. Its basic elements are wheat, olive oil, pork and certain fish, like cod, which the locals fry, bake and infuse with garlic and herbs in various glorious ways. Lamb and duck make luxurious appearances.

Aromatic cheeses range from the firm, nutty Nisa to the runny, fragrant Queijo da Serras. The wines can be sophisticated and interesting, from the robust reds of the Quinta do Carmo, jointly owned by the Domaines Barons de Rothschild (Lafite), to lighter wines made from local trincadeira grapes.

Skip to next paragraphA perfect example of the ’s gastro-rustic cuisine is Restaurante a , a small establishment in sleepy Alandroal, where the owner and chef Monteiro serves exquisite local fare in a room decorated to look like a village square. Classics include queijo de Ovelha (an orange-crusted round of gooey sheep’s milk cheese), pato em molho de tinto (duck in red wine sauce) and migas a Alentejana (fried pork with bread soaked in pork fat). Culinary awards plaster the walls near the entrance, and there is a seriousness about the diners that is in keeping with the quality of the food.

Like Monteiro’s unself-conscious fare, many of Alto ’s Old World charms are served up in a straightforward and unpretentious manner. All of this may change when, in addition to the new highway from Lisbon, a high-speed train between Madrid and Lisbon starts service as expected in 2012, with a stop in , making Alto even more accessible to tourists and weekend house buyers from throughout southwestern Europe.

But for now it is an uncomplicated place, inexpensive and appreciative of visitors. “This is Tuscany 30 years ago,” Mr. Smith, the former hotelier, said.

FORMERLY PALACES, NOW HOTELS

HOW TO GET THERE

The nearest major airport is in Lisbon. Continental and TAP fly nonstop from Newark Airport to Lisbon, with fares starting at about $600 for travel next month, according to a recent online search. The drive to from Lisbon’s airport on the new highway takes about two hours.

WHERE TO STAY

Housed in a former royal palace, the Pousada Rainha Isabel in (Lardo de D. Diniz; 351-268-332-075; www.pousadas.pt) offers canopied beds, marble bathrooms and high-ceilinged rooms with views. Rooms start at 90 euros ($138 at $1.53 to the ).

Just outside of Crato, Pousada Flor da Rosa (Mosteiro da Flor da Rosa; 351-245-997-210; www.pousadas.pt) attracts a stylish clientele with rooms starting at 102 euros.

In , the Hotel São de Deus (Largo S. Deus, 1; 351-268-661-194; www.hotelsaojoaodeus.net) is elegantly appointed and has a small pool. Rooms start at 70 euros a night.

Between and Redondo, the Convento de São (351-266-989-160; www.hotelconventospaulo.com) is in a former hilltop convent, with two pools and stunning tilework. Rooms start at 90 euros a night.

WHERE TO EAT

Verde (Largo Dragões Olivança, 86; 351-268-324-701) in serves fare like roasted black pig and braised lamb shank with potatoes. Dinner, including wine, comes to about 25 euros a person.

Restaurante Casa do Povo (Rua de Cima, Marvão; 351-245-993-160) serves traditional fare on a terrace with valley views. The accorda Alenteja, a garlicky bread and coriander soup, is delicious. Lunch for two, no wine, is about 25 euros.

Restaurante a (Rua de Deus, 12; 351-268-431-143), above, in Alandroal is a venerated traditional restaurant. Dinner for two, with wine, is about 80 euros.

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José Capitão Pardal