May 2, 2012

The Avengers posters anyone?





Today it's not about Portuguese stuff at all. Marvel started in 1939, but in 1961, the company launched Fantastic Four and other superhero titles created by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko, and others and they become world famous. I am fond of comics so I never miss a movie about superheroes. Next weekend I am going to take my nephew to the movies. It was a promise I made since the last one we watched together, John Carter. The Avengers is kind of a big thing. Four different blockbuster franchises in one movie! Marvel assembled their previous superhero films into one and I am curious to see how it works. We're prepared to watch Earth’s mightiest heroes working together - Tony Stark aka “Iron Man” (Robert Downey Jr.), Thor (Chris Hemsworth), Natasha Romanoff aka “Black Widow” (Scarlett Johansson), Bruce Banner aka “The Hulk” (Mark Ruffalo), and Steve Rogers aka “Captain America” (Chris Evans). I really hope it works.

Going to the movies is expensive, especially if it's a 3D movie! And as I love movies I hate it when I go and the film sucks...And, yes, I like a lot of different genres, American, European, Asiatic, French, whatever movies. I just have one condition - it should be good. I do enjoy good science fiction but it's hard to get a good one. Inception was terrific. The last sci-fi movie I watched was Super8 and it was a pleasant surprise. I also like fantasy and superhero movies so it will not be a problem!

Meanwhile, Zazzle has some fantastic posters from The Avengers and I might buy one for my nephew! Take a look! My favorite? Iron Man!)When I was a child my father bought me a magazine and there he was. Pages inside were black and white, only the cover was in full color. I painted all Iron Man I found inside with strong red and bright yellow!I think I still have that comics magazine! Iron Man has been my favorite ever since!)


This post was refreshed in 2015

April 25, 2012

Portugal got Silver in the World's Best TV & Films Awards



“Portugal – The beauty of simplicity” won Silver Medal at The 55th World's Film Awards 2012 awards ceremony for Short Film category for the promotional film. The video was a production of Turismo de Portugal. The Jury honored the World’s Best TV Programs & Films and awarded three Grand Trophies while only 2 silvers were awarded this year in the Short Film Category. This festival received entries from forty countries around the globe. All winning entries were selected by a Grand Jury made up of award-winning Television and Film professionals. The film can be download here.

April 23, 2012

Animation about Barcelos Rooster!


Graduation movie at Willem de Kooning Academie, Rotterdam. The unofficial symbol of Portugal is the brightly colored Galo de Barcelos - Barcelos Rooster. This animation tells the story of the legend.

April 22, 2012

Be careful when hitchhiking!



Last week I read shocking news in the newspaper. A young Danish woman asked for a ride and was raped. It happened in Rio Maior maybe 80km from my town. Although not able to speak Portuguese she asked for help in English at gas station. She came to Portugal with a group of friends and settled in Oporto. Then the 24-year-old woman decided to leave her friends and discover the country by herself. She wanted to get to Lisbon. At Leiria, she asked a ride to a truck driver. Not far from Leiria the truck driver stopped the truck in a desert place and threatened her with a screwdriver and then raped her. In resisting him she was attacked on the head, forehead, and neck. The attacker then dropped her on the roadside. She was clever and took the license plate number so the police were able to identify and arrest him. The man lives in Rio Maior and is married. He will be presented to a judge soon and punished.

These situations are infrequent but do happen in Portugal. From time to time one tourist gets in trouble. Please do not facilitate when you visit my country. About three weeks ago three young British teen girls loaded with luggage also wanted to pick up a ride to Leiria city and I gave them the necessary information. It was Sunday and they were next to a park in this city where I live. On Sunday not many traffic goes through that area. If they stayed where they would never be able to get to Leiria! But they were three not just one. Even when traveling in a group my advice is that youngsters must be aware of some risk. A trip from Leiria to Lisbon on public transportation is not so expensive. The bus ticket costs 12 euros. Nothing excuses the behavior of that trucker driver but the time of careless hitchhiking traveling is gone. Certainly, there are countries where it is even considered a dangerous activity. In Portugal this is not the case and most of the times you'll meet good people who will assist you with goodwill and sympathy. Nevertheless, bad encounters can happen, as was the case for this young woman.

Here's some Portugal travel advice! About this issue it reads:

" Sexual assaults are infrequent. Nevertheless, be alert to the possible use of ‘date rape’ and other drugs, including ‘GHB’ and liquid ecstasy. Purchase your own drinks and keep sight of them at all times to make sure they cannot be spiked: female travelers should be particularly watchful. Be aware that alcohol and drugs can make you less alert, less in control and less aware of your environment. If you are going to drink, know your limit and remember that drinks served in bars overseas are often much stronger than those in the UK. Avoid splitting up from your friends, and don't go off with people you don't know. See our Rape and Sexual Assault Abroad and Victims of Crime Abroad pages."

April 21, 2012

Fontinha's squatters forced to leave the school by force

António Serginho Photo

Hello friends and readers. I’ve been too busy to write anything but today I bring to this blog an important story. Sure that you already know that I love Oporto city and its people. I have already shared with you some photos of the city and you can expect some more in the future. Last year in June I spent some days at Oporto during St. John’s Festival. It’s traditional to celebrate it on the streets with dancing, music, eating sardines and lighting paper balloons or jumping bonfires. I attended Fontinha’s St. John's street party. It was a collective party. People were invited to bring food to share. There was already music and typical decoration hanging when I arrived at the scene with my friends. When we left the place was full of people from all social backgrounds and ages - babies, children, youngsters, adults, and seniors. From the windows of the surrounding buildings some os, the Fontinha quarter inhabitants watched us and waved to us. It was cool. That’s how I knew about Es.col.a da Fontinha project. Once this area had factories and around it, workers built small houses where they lived. Today houses are still there. Some are very old and lack good living conditions. But that's what these people can afford.



Mural painting inside the school (source)

Es.Col.A. means Collectively Managed Space. Escola is the Portuguese word for school. So, there was this public school at Fontinha quarter that was closed and abandoned for 5 years. Junkies gathered inside to get their usual fix, the floor was covered with syringes, broken bottles, all kinds of garbage and possibly lots of rodents. Kids jumped over the gate to play football in the patio during the day. At night streets in the neighborhood were empty as they were considered unsafe. It was a great place, an inspiring one. But the municipality had no money - and no ideas - to do anything about it.

On 10th April of 2011, a group of people decided to occupy that abandoned public space. Oporto has a lot of empty houses facing a slow but certain decay and so does the rest of the country. There is no tradition of occupying public buildings in Portugal. Squatting is when someone settles on land without right or title. We don't do that in Portugal. People are too afraid to disobey law even if our Constitution provides some support for that. Ok, bottom line, it's illegal. In the course of one year, the group managed to bring a new life to Alto da Fontinha where most people are forced to live with very low income and uncertain fate every day. They welcomed the group and together they worked hard to clean and paint the space. The squatters created a self-managed social center with recreational ( photography, yoga, music, capoeira, film and debates, recycling workshops) and educational (a library, after school for kids, foreign language teaching) activities aimed to the most needed, children and older people. All decisions are taken collectively; there is no leadership or hierarchy. Es.col.a project goes by the principles of self-organization and practices of consensus through weekly popular assemblies.

But City Hall had no sympathy for this occupation from the beginning. After a month of functioning the group was evicted by municipality order. Some negotiations with the City Hall were engaged and the project was allowed to stay. There was a promise of a contract to give the situation a legal frame and the group was forced to establish itself as an association, that is an institution that can be a source of legal rights and obligations. No one from the City Hall ever visited the space.

By 19 of April, a few days after Es.col.a was celebrating its first anniversary, the municipality sent police forces to evict the group. Maby 30 people offered pacific resistance. Police outnumbered them, there were maybe 200 officers there. I read that a dozen police cars arrived at the scene with masked and armed anti- riot-trained police.

Police destroyed what they found inside the building - a library, computers, toys, bikes, kitchen utensils, and furniture, children drawings and craft works. They broke the windows. Things were thrown down and smashed on the floor. I was really angry when I saw this destruction on internet videos as I considered to donate things to the group myself. Come on. This was too much. In my opinion, City Hall did not make serious effort to negotiate a solution. From what I've been reading it seems obvious.

Three people were detained after being injured by the police officers and three more got beaten up by the police. The two detainees will be presented to the court of law in May. Maybe 200 people protested in front of the City Hall building. The next day, in Lisbon and other Portuguese cities more people protested peacefully against the eviction of Es.col.a. I was at Coimbra and joined the protest. As an ex-lawyer I understand that to occupy a public place might not be legal. But we have to consider all scenario. If the City Law can give some institutions money so they can organize these kinds of activities, why not consider to recognize this group that was working for free? I condemn the lack of a proper negotiation between the two opposite parts. City Hall did not seek a solution because their mind was already made up from the beginning - Es.col.a should be crushed.

Now the school’s windows and doors are all boarded up. These events opened on TV main news. Hashtags like #Fontinha and #ocupai trended on Twitter. On Facebook and blogs, there are plenty of videos, photos and shared links about what happened on Fontinha.

The formal City Hall site statement says that given the group's incomprehensible refusal to accept the minimum requirements applied to any citizen or institution by law, the occupants themselves have forced the authorities to intervene coercively. City Hall also says that it isn’t clear if this movement is really interested in promoting community activities or just to disturb and challenge public institutions.

A petition is in circulation. What more than 2000 persons who signed are asking Oporto’s City Mayer is to reverse the eviction. In my opinion, proper negotiation should take place. This group should be considered and treated as a partner in community development and not a criminal one. It’s obvious that Fontinha’s residents need support. The municipality speaks about a project that will be implemented at Fontinha but I would like to know about schedule and budget when we all know that most of our municipalities are broke. Meanwhile, this group that was around for a year already providing support is banned with extreme violence and a lot of goods, some donated but people who had sympathy for what was being done was destroyed. To my eyes, it seems that City Hall social technicians and bureaucrats are discriminating the group just because they don't act by the book and not because they are not useful and needed at Fontinha's quarter. Before condemning the group's methodology they should learn about their activities. But to my knowledge, those City Hall social workers never set foot at Es.col.a. Why not join efforts in the name of social development?

The Assembly of Es.Col.A gathered on the evening of April 20 with around 200 participants and decided to reoccupy the building on April 25th. As you may remember from previous postages this is a national holiday that represents the end of the dictatorship in Portugal in 1974. I fear more violence on the way.


The official blog for Es.col.a is in Portuguese language, here.

A text in the Portuguese language I wrote about Es.Col.A can be found here.

April 4, 2012

Portuguese Sagres Tall Ship photos!




As I told you previously I went to visit NRP Sagres on the weekend. I had great expectations about this ship and they were totally fulfilled. I visited Sagres during the night with my sister and nephew and then in the morning, just by myself. It's amazing to watch the ship with all 6000 lights up - it takes 2 hours and a half to put all the cables and lights one by one! But by night there were too many visitors for my taste. The next morning I returned and then I was able to watch every detail of the ship the way I wanted and even asked the crew all sorts of questions.


Sagres has sailed across the world and will continue to do it. If you have the chance to visit it, don't miss the opportunity. It's a beautiful ship. I also watched her going up the river and then going away to the sea in her return to Lisbon. It was quite a show. Usually, Figueira da Foz is very windy but on Sunday morning there was no wind at all and when she left neither! So I did not have the chance to watch Sagres with all the sails on. But nevertheless, it was pretty exciting! Watch my Sagres photos on Facebook! I hope you like it!

A video about Sagres, here!

Unique Bonjour liqueur almonds from Arcadia



It's Easter time. In many countries, it is traditional to eat almonds at this time of the year. The small fruit is often covered with colored sugar or chocolate. We eat those almonds too. But in Portugal there is a special kind of almonds that I believe are unique in the world. They are called Bonjour Almonds and their price is high, 36 euros per Kilo. It's a small luxury. That small amount you see above cost me more than 5 euros. In fact, they are not exactly almonds, they are dragees. You can buy these anytime of the year in a little store at Oporto. It's called Arcádia.

The small and traditional shop is the visible face of Arcádia, the candy factory. Skillful hands create delicious treats, almonds, and chocolates. Margarida Bastos, along with his brother, John Bastos, manages the Arcadia. The grandfather of Margaret and John opened the Arcadia in 1933 and Bonjour Almonds were inspired by a recipe that he has brought from Paris. Inside of these almonds, there aren't any dried fruits. The multiple layers of sugar are concealing an interior of very sweet syrup. Different shape, different syrup flavor. Not everyone enjoys their taste. I loved it since I was a child. They are all painted and decorated by hand, one by one. You can identify different kinds of beans carrots, strawberries, babies...! They are really cute, a handcrafted item, precious. These were bought at Arcádia. I am going to give it to my nephew but first I photographed it so I could show it to you and tell you this small story.

March 29, 2012

The beautiful N.R.P Sagres!






Beautiful ship Sagres celebrates 50 years of service to the Portuguese Navy this year and 75 years of life. The ship Sagres was built in the shipyards of Blohm and Voss in Hamburg in 1937. She was baptized Albert Leo Schlageter. In 1948 Sagres entered the service of the Brazilian Navy and was named Guanabara. In 1961 it was acquired by Portugal in order to replace an old ship named Sagres. Her name comes from the Sagres Cape, the site of the world's first marine school, established by Prince Henry the Navigator in the 15th century. Its sails feature the Cross of Malta, which was emblazoned on sails of Portuguese vessels during the Age of Discovery. She first hoisted the Portuguese flag on February 8, 1962. Since then Sagres II has ensured the training of Naval Academy future officers sailors, supplementing the technical and academic knowledge taught at the Naval Academy. She made ​​more than 150 trips and sailed the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans, the North Sea, Caribbean, Japan, China, Mediterranean, Arabic, Baltic, Red, and Yellow. For the last 50 years at the service of Portugal and the Portuguese Navy Sagres has conducted three voyages around the world and visited 385 ports. She sailed about 600 thousand miles and is known as an Itinerant Ambassador to the service of Portugal. This ship is a symbol of Portugal in the world. I'm so thrilled I am going to visit Sagres next Sunday!( N.R.P. stands for Navio da República Portuguesa = Portuguese Navy Ship)


Source: Portuguese Navy Site


Look how beautiful this ship is as she prepares to dock at Shanghai port. I am so excited about the chance to see it, here, in my city, sailing up the river Mondego! I really wish there's good weather! Fog can get pretty thick here sometimes!

March 28, 2012

Buarcos - a small fishermen village I'm fond of!





To those who are already bored with my postages about Oporto here's something new with a taste of Summer. Buarcos is a fishing village, or, at least it was. When I moved to Figueira da Foz in the '80s there were lots of boats like this you can see in the photo below and maybe bigger, the dory boats, in the beach sand in front of this ancient XVIII century fortress wall. I remember fisherman sewing fishnets too. That's all gone. I believe some still live in the village and some live there and have bigger boats, like traineiras, that are used to fish sardines. Many dedicated to the codfish fishing and sailed away for the high sea for months. 

Buarcos has some good fish restaurants, narrow streets, and small houses, some covered in tiles. There's a nice public garden there and some cultural infrastructures too. I have to mention a curious theatre room called Trindade that was built in 1910. Inside it looks like a regular theatre with stage and galleries. But it's very small as if it was made for children. Next time I'll try to photograph it. There's also a curious folklore group here called Rancho das Cantarinhas. Women dance with heavy paper flowers decorated clay water pitchers on their heads!I'll see if I can get some good photos of it too. Women that sell fish still wear rich embroidered aprons that I would like to show you too.

Buarcos is near Serra da Boa Viagem - a small mountain. It's kind of a suburb to Figueira da Foz. I usually go to the beach there. It's just a small walk away from my house. 

Yesterday we had 26º. Sometimes we don't get that temperature in Summer days! Schools are shut for Easter break so many boys and girls were at the beach enjoying this hot Spring day. I wasn't prepared for it or I might have brought my beach towel along!



The ancient wall. We can make a nice walk along with it and watch the sea from it. We get some restaurants and bars along the way if we get hungry or thirsty!


A house covered with blue tiles.


Watch closely the difference between my second photo and this old postcard. There was no street in front of the ancient wall. The beach sands started just below it back in the 50s. This I never saw but my parents still remember it. The sea moved away from the land pretty fast.



And this black and white image is a screenshot from a movie filmed in 1929

Clearly, Buarcos was a fishermen's place!

Oporto is the best place to travel in Europe!


Portugal in photos - Oporto D.Luís bridge zazzle_postcard

My favorite Portuguese city has just bee chosen Best European Destination by 212.688 voters who have made their choice online. 20 selected towns were competing for the prestigious title of Best European Destination 2012. After a three weeks’ period of online voting, Porto is elected the Best European Destination 2012 and wins the title ahead of 19 big European cities! Congrats to Porto, the best place in the world...for me it is! Discover it and you will fall in love with this old city too!

With the variety of resources available Porto conquers all its visitors, from those who want it for its history and authenticity to the ones who seek to explore a new, more cosmopolitan and contemporary city. Discovering Porto means discovering what makes it different: the famous Port Wine, a Historical Centre designated World Cultural Heritage by UNESCO, Museums, Enchanting parks and gardens, fashion boutiques by national and international designers...Porto gives you a bit of everything. Give it a try.

March 27, 2012

#9 Zazzle Store: J. Brommers Zazzle Store is pure Spring magic!




Browse other Nursery Canvas Prints



Today we're having a great Spring day. Walking for a while at a local city garden after lunchtime has made me think of the art of Joana Brommers. No computers, just traditional media and lots of whimsical flowers and animals. Joana lives in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, but she's British. She's a fine artist and illustrator who specializes in children's and fantasy illustration. She finds her inspiration from storytelling books. Music, nature, and movies also transport her to other worlds. Botanical illustration is also a field she loves due to the extensive details involved. She's inspired by the old classic illustrators during the Jugendstil era. i.e. Arthur Rackham, E. Burnes, Waterhouse, Mucha and more. She always admired the fantasy/fairy art of Arthur Rackham, Beatrix Potter and modern fairy/ fantasy artists such as Brian Froud and Linda Ravenscroft. Her main mediums of use are watercolors and colored pencils, alone or mixed. It's incredible to look at Joana's work and to know that she´s a self-taught artist. You can find her work at Zazzle's JBrommers or bellow. It's pure Spring magic!

"The products that you will find here are all produced using my original illustrations and fine art paintings. You will notice that my work has a nostalgic style that reminds of the classic artists and illustrators of the late 19th Century and are full of magical creatures and detailed fauna and flora. When I paint I always have a goal in mind to bring back nostalgic memories and sense of magic, that hopefully bring a smile to anyone's face." Joanna M. Bromley

March 25, 2012

Listen to Fado de Coimbra at Fado ao Centro



Last Monday I traveled to Coimbra. It's 50 km from where I live. A woman was handing out flyers and invited me to enter a new Coimbra's fado house. I was pleasantly surprised by the discovery. Fado ao Centro is a very nice place. I lived in Coimbra for several years and listen to fado several times but it never crosses my mind to hear fado of Coimbra at home. Why? What makes sense for me is to go out and see and hear fado in its own environment. Perhaps thinking of people like me, a group consisting of current or former students of Coimbra had the idea to create the Fado ao Centro, space where people can listen to fado right in the middle of the historic city center and at very convenient times. Fado sessions occur during the day so even the older population more reluctant to leave home at night can go there and enjoy it. The room is cozy, with a sober but welcoming decoration. In one of its walls, there's a permanent exhibition on the history of fado and its interpreters, which can be visited for free. During fado sessions, curtains of the windows are closed and the room plunged into darkness and that's typical of night serenades, recreating thus an intimate ambiance, the ideal setting to hear the song of Coimbra. The show's at the final of the day also includes a taste of wine port. Visit the website of Fado ao Centro where you can listen to some fado and enjoy some photos of the performers.


Fado ao Centro is in the center of the city and Tricana woman statue.


Inside the room.


The spot where students play and sing.


Permanent exhibition on fado's history

It seems fado have first appeared in Lisbon and Porto, being later taken to Coimbra. Some say that fado was originated from Lundum, the music of the Brazilian slaves. Other say that students from Lisbon or from Brazil brought it to Coimbra where it gained new flavor and characteristics. Tunes sung by Provence troubadours in the Middle Ages are also pointed as a possible origin for this Portuguese typical and traditional song. Lisbon and Coimbra's fado are different. Fado of Coimbra has a lot of the student life feeling in it and men are the only ones who sing it. Coimbra's students wear a black suit and heavy black cape and that's how they sang it accompanied by classical guitar and a specially tuned Portuguese guitar. Students often sing about unrequited love or their student life's memories. If a student boy is in love with a girl she might expect, even today, that he shows up serenading under her window.