Now you see him, now you don't....Adventures in picture taking.
Yesterday, JR and I took a walk from our apartment to the Parque do Covelo (in Porto). To be clear, I love language learning as I think it is so interesting. Anyway, back to our story, we were walking in the park discussing aves vs pássaro. It has to do with flying vs non-flying birds. So all flying birds are birds but not all birds are flying birds. After figuring it out, we went to Reverso to get a grammar check on how to say it in Portuguese based on the definitions. Of course Reverso gave me the english translation as I wrote it out in Portuguese and it made me laugh and realize why we say Portuguese is a nuanced language while English is, well, English.
There's a lot of construction ongoing. This jobsite is ... interesting. We may have mentioned that there are "abandoned" buildings randomly scattered throughout Porto, and there are a lot of tower cranes around town that were not here in November. The reason may be a change in inheritance law, that makes it easier for multiple heirs to sell or redevelop property.
Parque do Covelo is an park set in a residential and commercial district. It has public WC (free), a section set apart for kids to play on various equipment and just run around as well as multiple trails based off a kind of spoke/wheel arrangement. The primary allee is alive with tree canopies.
These yellow flowers almost look like they are suspended without branches, but on closer inspection, the branches are great camouflage and the young flowers apparently start as fuzzy cocoons pods.
There's a feature with running water that starts as a fountain at the upper tier of the park and runs through the park and down to the lower promenade and looks like an homage to Frank Lloyd Wright's Falling Water. It continues past the waterfall, over an infinity edge and through the trough which goes even lower and down to a small collection pool.
The walk to and from had lovely art and stellar views hidden around every corner.
We decided to walk through the Marques Metro Station park, which we have walked through at least 5 times, and noticed a church for the first time - Igreja de Senhora Conceicão - with absolutely beautiful slate and marble 2" tile mosaics that grace the courtyard in front of the church.
Not to be outdone, the weird and the beautiful combine to bring some very interesting things. A Hell's Angels next to an, well, I'm not sure.
This 'ode to Escher' house
This patron saint on a car dealership and repair shop
And finally, these two items near each other. The Portugueses is translated, "theater and dance campaign, performed together or alternately"
2 comments:
I love this post so much! And the pink trumpet flower is a foxglove, I’d bet money on it!
And I hope you had a happy (USA) Mother’s Day, Stacey!
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