Countries, Deals, Europe

All you need is Algarve

All you need is Algarve, it’s the story of Paul and Portugal, let it Penina Albufeira and the Beatles.

Of course. it was a different time, the explosion of package holidays, which even drew in one of the biggest pop stars of his day.

It is hard to imagine the Paul McCartney of today wandering into reception in a Portuguese hotel.

And asking to have five pounds exchanged into escudos (ask your parents).

But party animal and general good guy Paul was persuaded into joining house band Jota Herre on stage in the Sixties.

And improvising a song at the piano which became Penina, before entertaining the patrons until 4am.

Fado Goodbye

Party animal: Macca

And there the story may have stayed other than Portuguese prattle.

Had it not been for Paul playing a version of the song with John Lennon and Ringo Starr during the Get Back sessions.

And Jota Herre recording and releasing the song in March of that year, 1969, followed by Portuguese singer Carlos Mendes. 

All of which pop legend is still played out at the Penina.

And Albufeira nights at the Radisson Blu nights in Edinburgh’s Royal Mile.

Macca’s pitch

Come on Aileen: With Senorita Albufeira Aileen

Of course when you have such a prized piece of estate as the Paul McCartney piano he played on that night, well you’d keep it.

It is not unfortunately recorded in the annals of history whether Macca played a round of golf.

At the Panina, the country’s first golf course, designed by major winner Henry Cotton.

But the Penina is still dining out on its Paul McCartney connections.

Deal us in

Dip your foot in: Olympic-size pool

Just 45 minutes from Faro Airport and served by Ryanair and Jet2 Penina has of course many other features to appeal.

Such as the biggest pool in the Algarve, an Olympic-style swim.

And the first and oldest course in Portugal, dating from 1966.

And standing at their version of St Andrews’ iconic Swilcan Bridge.

We found a random week in November with our go-to providers loveholidays from £778 for two, down from £843.

 

 

 

 

Countries, Ireland

Boing, boing for the Boyne

Happy (or unhappy depending on whose side you’re on) 12th July, so for the day that’s in it let’s go Boing, boing for the Boyne.

And for those of you who don’t make the Battle of the Boyne the centrepiece of their existence a quick recap.

The battle was fought between Protestant Dutch King William of Orange, the new monarch of the UK and the deposed Catholic King James II in 1688.

Never mind that it was really fought on July 1.

And was moved forward when the Gregorian Calendar was adopted.

Or that the Pope, for political reasons, supported Protestant William against the French-backed James.

Red alert

Red alert: How Carson skewed the argument

This is the holiest of holy days for Northern Irish protestants.

And they spend all year honing their marching and musical skills.

And building skyscraper-sized bonfires on which they burn effigies of Il Papa (well, there is an energy crisis).

So, it’s party and holiday time in Northern Ireland for Edward Carson and his protestant sons and daughters.

While the Catholic population flee to Donegal across the border.

But what of the Boyne itself?

Well with the special logic that is uniquely Irish, the battlefield is in the southern Republic.

It’s in the South

Soldiers are we? And they fought in Ireland

The Boyne has been meandering peacefully through Co. Meath, 30 miles north of Dublin these past 332 years.

With the blood of 2000, Irish, Scots, English and foreign mercenaries (there were 12 nationalities in all) long since washed away.

What remains is the Battle of the Boyne visitor centre.

Now over I3 and a half years living in Ireland I passed the Boyne on countless numbers of occasions.

But I have yet to venture in.

The centre that is, not the river!

But I have vowed to, and will.

And, of course, I will give the Orangemen a thought today when I fly over the site on my Ryanair flit to Dublin.

Us bonny fechters

Hello, hello: Billy boy

Should you be in the vicinity of the Boyne, or are heading either up to Belfast, or down to Dublin, pop in.

Times have changed and you’ll be made to feel very welcome with free self-guided tours.

It’s fun too to imagine being actually on the battlefield and indeed your ancestors very well may have been.

Us Murtys and McNultys (Ma’s name) for example got everywhere which is probably where this peripatetic gene stems.

I found my great-uncles in the cemeteries and memorials of Flanders.

And in the building wall in Barbados.

Whose side are you on?

House about that: Boyne history

I dare say too that we were at the Boyne but on whose side?

My Dear Old Dad might spin in his grave up in Donegal at the result.

The good folks at the Boyne help us all to find out the truth about our ancestors.

So today I’ll be weaing some orange (hell, I like the colour and the Dutch, and who says I’m not allowed?).

And I’ll be going boing, boing for the Boyne.