Tag: travel

  • Café con leche

    Café con leche

    Café con leche – probably the first words I learned in Spanish on a trip with my beloved late grandmother. I was 10 years old and she took me to the Island of Lanzarote, to a wonderful luxury hotel where I thoroughly enjoyed myself and stole almost all of the little soap bars we received from room service every day.At breakfast, she taught me how to ask the waiters for things and I clearly remember how she taught me to ask for a café con leche for her. It was a magnificent holiday. My first flight, my first words in a foreign language, reading paper maps in the car while directing her along the road; seeing volcanos and cacti plantations and her buying me my first pair of real Converse All Stars in bright green. I am still obsessed with Converse All Star some thirty odd years later on …

    Days like these make me miss my gran very much. I loved travelling with her. Widowed in her early 30s after coming to a foreign country, she was the ultimate role model I could ever have hoped for. I wish she were here with me today, on another Spanish island, ordering café con leche

    I believe that people we love and admire as children often inspire us. And it is only recently that I realized how much my grandmother inspired me to travel and to explore. She was unafraid, interested in culture, food and exploring. She even travelled through Turkey alone, taking the overland buses in the 80s!

    converse all star in front of Spanish fortress

    This time, I travelled to Palma de Mallorca on my own and because of some commitments, I did not get to explore the island outside of the capital. But what I can definitely say is that I will come back. I have been so pleasantly surprised by how well I was treated in the restaurants asking for a table for one. There was nothing judgmental or weird about it, contrary to many other places I have visited in the past. Nobody made me feel lonely, and that is a feeling that any woman travelling by herself knows how to cherish. I felt safe and comfortable and I am very grateful for that.

    If you also love café con leche with maybe something sweet on the side, I can warmly recommend the very cute and old school Ca’n Joan de s’Aigo where the coffee was fantastic and the enseimada absolutely worth it. 

    view of Enseimada, coffee and ice cream at Ca'n Joan de s'Aigo

    I was told about this place by a local and he said I should try the ice cream with an enseimada or cuarto, but to be very honest, I did not love the ice cream. If you like sorbet, it’s definitely for you, but I am more of an Italian gelato kind of girl, so it just did not hit the spot for me. That said, I took strawberry – so maybe the chocolaty-nutty-type of flavours may be different. I will happily check this for you next time I go!

  • About this blog:

    About this blog:

    Hi there! My name is Ana. I am visually impaired and single. But guess what? I love travelling. I love exploring. I love taking pictures, and I love comfort. And this is why I have called this blog the comfy traveller’s diaries. 

    Everybody loves comfort, right? But when I am speaking about comfort in the context of travel, I am speaking about the good kind of comfort; not the kind of comfort that keeps you trapped on your sofa with your hand stuck in a bag of crisps. 

    And this is the entire point of my travel blog: How to leave your mental comfort zone in a comfortable way.

    The kind of comfort I am talking about is probably more aptly described or synonymous with “well-being”. How do you travel well? Especially when you are on your own, and when you aren’t able to drive – and therefore – hire a car.

    Travel should be fun and beautiful and should make you richer in experiences and memories.

    As a (disabled) woman travelling on her own, I have quite a few thoughts about these concepts, as well as past experiences from which I learned in that regard.

    So, when I talk about comfortable travel, I talk about making better choices in the way you travel.

    Many years of solo-travel have taught me that you do not only pay for things in monetary terms. You pay with your time, your peace of mind, your stress and anxiety levels, your safety, your self-esteem, and yes, of course, with cold hard cash.

    With this blog, I want to share tips and experiences on how to travel more comfortably. I want to share thoughts and impressions of my travels. As a solo-traveller, I have a lot of time and opportunity to observe, to learn, and to take in impressions. But being passionate about my travels, I also want to share what I learned.

    I would love to be able to reach an audience that appreciates my travel diary, and I hope you are here to stay for that! 

    Thank you so much,

    Ana.