Unlock Spain’s Secrets

The growing threat from identity thieves has made us incredibly paranoid about where we store our important documents. We hide our driving licences in the darkest depths of our filing cabinets, all our bank statements get incinerated and unwanted credit cards meet their maker in a food processor. This year, using considerable lock picking skills, I eventually fought my way to where my passport was stored and booked my flights to Madrid. What I found there was of particular meteorological significance. Much to my surprise, the rain in Spain does not stay mainly on the plain, as Professor Higgins and Colonel Pickering would have Eliza Doolittle believe in My Fair Lady. In fact, as I discovered, the rain in Spain stays mostly in the various mountainous regions. Within the Pyrenees Mountains, there are large plateaus from which Spain’s great rivers flow – The Tagus, the Ebro, the Duero, the Guadiana etc. That is not to say that Spain does not boast a number of very impressive alluvial plains in its many coastal regions – these present some of the Mediterranean’s finest natural phenomena, dusty bowls riddled with creeks and rivulets. I found all aspects of the Spanish coast quite remarkable to behold. There are a number of Spanish islands which I find are most easily accessed using the regular ferry services. Tenerife is the largest island by population, but I would certainly recommend visiting some of the smaller ones. With that in mind, I implore you to dig out your passport, visit Spain, and discover for yourself the geographical inaccuracies inherent in musicals of that era.
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