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Send us a textWhat happens when a devoted Cape Town resident who "would never leave South Africa" finds herself making a new home in a small Spanish town? Simona's story isn't your typical expat tale of fleeing problems, but rather a thoughtful journey toward family and opportunity.After both her adult children settled in Europe, Simona and her husband reconsidered their future. The growing gap between earning in rands versus euros combined with the pull of family abroad led them to Spain's beautiful Costa Blanca region. What they discovered there went far beyond financial considerations.The most profound revelation came about a year into their new life: "I didn't even realize how much fear I was living in until I stopped just looking around me and clutching my bag," Simona shares. Watching someone leave their phone unattended at a café table—and finding it still there upon return—highlighted the dramatic shift in daily security and peace of mind.Despite Italian heritage that simplified visa concerns, challenges remained. Spanish bureaucracy proved nightmarish, requiring legal help despite EU citizenship. Learning Spanish continues four years later (with amusing mishaps, like discovering the Italian word for butter means "donkey" in Spanish). And yes, those legendary Spanish siestas are absolutely real!The move enabled Simona to finally pursue her dream of writing children's books, with her first publication coming this year. Meanwhile, her programmer husband continues working remotely, allowing them a comfortable life in their small town where everything is walkable.For those contemplating a similar move, Simona offers wisdom: "It's not a question of the grass being greener on one side or the other. It's what you bring to it." Her experience shows that expat life isn't about escaping problems but about creating new possibilities—sometimes in unexpected places.Want to hear more stories like Simona's? Subscribe to South Africans Abroad and join our community of global South Africans forging new paths while keeping their roots. Share your thoughts or your own expat journey with us at saabroadpodcast.com.Support the showjoin our Facebook page South Africans Abroad the podcast https://www.facebook.com/groups/5237575539627532/
Roman Dütsch aus Sirnach (TG) lebt seit 21 Jahren in Javea an der wunderschönen Costa Blanca. Früher war der 51-Jährige als Tauchlehrer und Skipper tätig. Heute arbeitet er hauptsächlich als Informatiker. An Weihnachten schlüpft er in die Rolle eines Königs. Roman Dütsch lebt mit seiner Familie inmitten der Küstenstadt Javea an der Costa Blanca in Spanien. Mit knapp 30'000 Einwohner verwandelt sich Javea im Sommer zur Hochburg für Touristen aus aller Welt, sagt Roman Dütsch: «Der Ort ist auch bei vielen Promis beliebt. Nicht zuletzt wegen der wunderschönen Altstadt und der Hafenpromenade.» Seine Frau Ghemma arbeitet als Chefköchin in einem der renommierten Hotels. Roman Dütsch war früher ein begnadeter Tauchlehrer und Skipper. Heute arbeitet er als Informatiker für ein spanisches Telekommunikationsunternehmen, wo er seine Leidenschaft für Technologie und Problemlösungen auslebt. Trotzdem lässt ihn die Unterwasserwelt nicht los: «Ich springe gerne immer wieder mal als Tauchlehrer ein. Oder bin als Skipper auf einem Segelschiff unterwegs.» «Ich bin König Balthasar» Im Winter, wenn die Touristen Weg sind, bereitet sich ganz Javea auf ein besonderes Weihnachtsfest vor. Roman Dütsch ist seit Jahren Teil der Festkommission und verwandelt sich in einen König: «Ich spiele den König Balthasar und empfange die Kinder auf der Bühne im Dorfkern!» Der Weihnachtsumzug mit 4'000 Menschen hat in Javea eine lange Tradition. Roman ist überzeugt davon, dass Integration der Schlüssel zu einem erfüllten Leben in Spanien ist: «Es ist wichtig, die spanische Sprache zu lernen, um die lokale Kultur zu verstehen und zu respektieren!»
In this soulful and inspiring episode, I sit down with Jasper, also known as Lunar J — DJ, visual artist, entrepreneur, and founder of Heavenly Events and the Heavenly Full Moon Parties on Spain's Costa Blanca.We explore Jasper's creative journey from childhood — mixing tapes and making music with friends — to losing his creative spark during a difficult relationship, and how that spark reignited through painting, music production, and soulful event creation after his divorce.This episode is a deep and honest conversation about the rebirth of creativity, the courage it takes to follow your own rhythm, and how spirituality, music, and community weave together under the light of the full moon.Jasper shares the vision behind the Full Moon Party — hosted at the legendary Hacienda — and why he believes we all need spaces to feel free, dance, and connect to something bigger than ourselves.We talk about:Growing up with music and DJing from a young ageHow creativity returned after emotional burnoutPainting as a form of healing and personal truthThe origin and deeper meaning behind the Full Moon PartyTrusting signs from the universe (like angel numbers and white butterflies)What it really means to live from the heart and create your own happinessWhether you're an artist, a seeker, or someone dreaming of a more free and soulful life — this episode will remind you of the power of trusting your path.The first Full Moon Party of the season kicks off on May 17 in Jávea.Follow Lunar J on InstagramLearn more at Heavenly Events
Avsnitt 124 handlar om den enorma exploateringen av nya bostader på södra Costa Blanca. Det byggs nästan överallt och jag har i detta avsnitt koncentrerat mig på vad som händer i Orihuel Costa och Torrevieja. Det finns byggnadskranar överallt och de är inte stillastående. En ökad byggnadsutveckling sätter sina spår på en ökning av den kommunala servicen tillika belastningen av vägarna. https://www.facebook.com/PodcastVarforSpanien
We're diving deep into the world of professional cycling camps as we hear first-hand from some of the leading coaches and nutritionists in pro cycling. Reporting from the picturesque coastal climbs of the Costa Blanca in Spain, our host, Dirk Friel, brings you insights from performance coaches like Lieselot Decroix and Mattia Michelusi, who reveal the critical training techniques employed to enhance rider performance. Learn how pro teams leverage lactate testing, hear what metrics WorldTour coaches focus on around functional reserve capacity (FRC), and background on the growing importance of heat training. Nutritionist Nicki Strobel gives us a taste of what meal planning looks like during grueling tours and how data from TrainingPeaks is used to tailor nutrition strategies. Plus, Stephen Barrett explains the significance of durability in today's WorldTour races, while Liam Holohan shares insights on hypoxic training. Whether you're a coach, athlete, or enthusiast, this episode is packed with proven takeaways to help elevate your training to the next level. Special thanks to FDJ-Suez — https://www.fdj-suez.fr/ Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale — https://decathlonag2rlamondialeteam.com/ Team Cofidis — https://www.equipecofidis.com/uk/home Israel-Premier Tech — https://israelpremiertech.com/
El CEO de Disparate Entertainment, organizadora del festival, José Luis Iravedra, ha destacado la consolidación de este evento como uno de los más importantes de la Costa Blanca en apenas dos ediciones. “Jávea es un enclave mágico que reúne playa, gastronomía y una oferta turística inmejorable”.
Punto y final a una nueva semana en AIRE FRESCO, algo más corta que la anterior, pero en la que nos hemos vuelto a divertir de lo lindo, sobre todo porque le hemos puesto la guinda al pastel con un jueves, 20 de marzo, en el que además de inaugurar la primavera, dejar atrás las fallas y haber felicitado con algo de retraso a todos los papás, hemos vuelto a tener una pléyade invitados que son de auténtico lujo.Empezando por un extraordinario trío de voces que nos han acompañado para presentar el libro en homenaje a la figura de Miguel Barceló, que se presenta este viernes 21 en la Fundación Mediterráneo de la C/ Alameda de Benidorm, formado por su nieto el senador Agustín Almodóbar, el escritor Martín Sanz y el patrocinador y presidente de la Fundación Frax, Matías Pérez Such, realizando una síntesis extraordinaria para repasar la vida y la obra de este personaje ilustre del Benidorm del siglo XX y la primera parte del XXI.Ángela Fuster, teniente de alcalde de Polop, que ya estuvo la pasada semana presentando actividades de agricultura y deporte en LEO RADIO, ha vuelto de nuevo para dar un gran avance de algunos de los muchos temas que contemplan el catálogo de posibilidades del programa cultural marzo-abril y presentar en exclusiva el nuevo folleto turístico de Polop de la Marina. Sin duda un gran trabajo al servicio de un pueblo que ha encontrado con esta edil una persona dedicada en cuerpo y alma a defender los intereses del oasis de la Costa Blanca.Padre e hija, Elena y Serge Gambi, también nos han visitado para presentarnos el premio conseguido por ella en el Circo de Lux de Luxemburgo y hablarnos de sus proyectos de futuro para con el mundo del circo, más de moda que nunca y renovado como no se ha visto en las últimas décadas. Hemos aprovechado para hacer un repaso por la historia de esta cultura tan arraigada en el psique de la conciencia europea y avanzar el curso que Elena Gambi ofrecerá en Polop el día 5 de abril, una Masterclass de Malabares.Aun quedaba más por disfrutar. La gran sorpresa la hemos conocido al entrar al micrófono nuestra siguiente invitada. Cristina Alexandra, compañera y colaboradora de LEO RADIO nos ha soltado la bomba, está embarazada. !Enhorabuena, compañera¡, crece la familia de la radio. Y en su sección “El Arte de Cuidarte”, hemos hablado hoy de los hábitos que todos conocemos pero no nos aplicamos para estar mucho mejor con nosotros mismos.Vicente Saval, gerente de Nos Importas y Abonabe, nos ha presentado hoy el resultado final del “Iberia Motor Fest”, que nace, en su tercera edición, ya después de todo un año de trabajo. Viernes, sábado y domingo, miles de motos y coches de época se darán cita en la playa de Villajoyosa para que disfrutes del mejor olor a gasolina y ruido de los motores, acompañado de la mejor música y ambiente que sólo viviéndolo podrás explicártelo.
Alicante se consolida cada año como un destino clave para el turismo activo. La empresa Alicante Aventura, con más de 13 años de experiencia, ofrece un amplio abanico de actividades para quienes buscan combinar adrenalina y naturaleza. Desde barranquismo y vías ferratas hasta puenting y kayak, la compañía se ha convertido en un referente del sector
Über Migration, Flüchtlinge und Einwanderung wird – gerade jetzt in Wahlkampfzeiten – besonders hitzig, ja populistisch diskutiert. Das ist aus mehreren Gründen wenig hilfreich, ja gefährlich. Fakten werden verzerrt, Ängste geschürt, Folgen dramatisiert. Nicht, dass es nicht jede Menge Probleme gäbe, die unbedingt gelöst werden müssen. Aber der Fehler liegt tiefer: es fehlt das klare Bekenntnis als Einwanderungsland und eine deutliche Unterscheidung zwischen fluchtbedingter Zuwanderung und gesteuerter Einwanderung in den Arbeitsmarkt. Wenn wir nicht aufpassen, zerstört die überdrehte Diskussion die verbliebene Attraktivität Deutschlands für Talente aus aller Welt. Daran aber hängen unser Wohlstand und die Funktionsfähigkeit unserer Sozialsysteme. Eine Podcastfolge als Denkanstoß und Ermutigung für eine langfristig erfolgreiche Haltung und Strategie. Themen: Populismus aus! Warum Verzerrungen und Ängste niemandem helfen und viel schaden. Probleme lösen – aber schnell. Abschiebung, schnellere Verfahren und klare Regeln. Systeme ändern – dringend. Warum falsche Anreize junge Männer übers Meer und in den Tod treiben. Einwanderungsland – ja! Wir sind längst ein Einwanderungsland – dazu sollten wir uns bekennen und selbstbewusste Regelungen schaffen. Country Branding – nötig! Analog zum Employer Branding einer Firma sollten wir als Land eine Marke sein und vom ersten Kontakt an überzeugen. Smarte Prozesse – unbedingt. Kontaktaufnahme, Visum, Bewerbung – sollte alles digital, schnell und auf Englisch funktionieren. Integration – aber besser. Mit klaren Kriterien und Bedingungen selbstbewusst steuern, wer zu uns kommt. Parallelgesellschaften – warum nicht? Der Begriff jagt Angst ein. Aber Menschen vernetzen sich mit Ihresgleichen. Deutsche Rentner an der Costa Blanca oder Saarländer in Berlin bilden genauso Parallelgesellschaften wie Japaner in Düsseldorf oder Amerikaner in Kaiserslautern. Das kann bereichernd sein. Talente gewinnen – global. Talente sind mobil, die besten können sich Land wie Firma aussuchen. Für erfolgversprechende Initiativen braucht es Kooperationen von Kammern, Regionen, Branchenverbänden, Unternehmen und ehrenamtlichen Unterstützern. Als Impulsgeber unterstütze ich gerne Ihr Event - für eine zukunftsorientiertere Haltung und positive Beispiele. Website von Stefan Dietz www.stefandietz.com mit weiteren Ideen und Ressourcen. Anfragen zu Keynotes, Moderation und Veranstaltungstipps: office@stefandietz.com Stefan Dietz als Redner – online und offline - buchen
Los pequeños municipios de interior de la Costa Blanca, sus fiestas, tradiciones y gastronomía tienen mucho que ofrecer al visitante que decida viajar a esta zona.
Johan Bruyneel and Spencer Martin discuss a few takeaways from Johan's trip to Spain's Costa Blanca, where he got an up-close-and-personal look at UAE's pre-season training camp, including a ride with Tadej Pogačar, before debating the pros and cons of the far more intense pre-season training techniques modern riders implement. To finish things off, they give their initial opinions on the just-released 2025 Vuelta a España route before getting into listener questions. Zwift: This adjustability makes Zwift Ride perfect for anyone in the house to use and at $1,299.99 it's a game-changer so head to https://Zwift.com now to check it out Hello Fresh: Get 10 FREE meals at https://www.hellofresh.com/freethemove. Applied across 7 boxes, new subscribers only, varies by plan. That's 10 free HelloFresh meals, just go to HelloFresh https://www.hellofresh.com/freethemove
Desde el corazón de la Costa Blanca, MR Hotels se ha consolidado como un referente de calidad y hospitalidad en la Marina Alta. Con una trayectoria de casi 40 años, esta cadena hotelera nació en el centro de Dénia con el icónico Hotel Costa Blanca y ha crecido hasta sumar otros tres establecimientos emblemáticos: Les Rotes, Palau Verd y La Racona.
This episode of the Developer Diaries features an interview with Marc Pritchard, the Sales and Marketing Director atTaylor Wimpey España. Host Sean Woolley from Cloud Nine Spain sits down with Marc to discuss the history and evolution of Taylor Wimpey España, a leading property developer with a presence in Spain since 1958. Marc shares insights into Taylor Wimpey España's strategic approach to development, the challenges faced in the real estate industry, and the importance of maintaining a strong reputation. The conversation covers topics such as the company's growth from its humble beginnings to its current status as a major player in key Spanish regions like Mallorca, Costa Blanca, and Costa del Sol. Viewers will gain valuable knowledge about land acquisition, market trends, and the impact of global events like the financial crisis and COVID-19 on the real estate market in Spain. Whether you're interested in the history of property development, market dynamics, or the future of real estate in Spain, this episode offers perspectives from two industry experts. Stay tuned for more episodes of the Developer Diaries, where we explore the world of real estate development in Marbella and the Costa del Sol with leading professionals. See All available Taylor Wimpey Espeña projects on the Costa del Sol here: https://cloudninespain.com/en/search/popular-developments/taylor-wimpey-projects/1/ Get in touch with Cloud Nine Spain: Telephone: +34 951 203 808 Email: info@cloudninespain.com https://cloudninespain.com/
COSTA BLANCA TRAILS 2024 ANULADA ULTIMA HORA: Por qué, cómo y próximos pasos propuestos. Mayayo Radio Trail. https://www.ivoox.com/costa-blanca-trails-2024-anulada-ultima-hora-como-audios-mp3_rf_135729923_1.htmlNuestra sección TRAIL RUNNING VALENCIA lamenta la anulación ayer a última hora del evento que se iba a disputar 8-9NOV en Alicante. Estaban previstas seis carreras de montaña de 102k, 66k, 41k, 20k y 17k para 1.400 dorsales, pero pese a los antedecentes de las muchas ediciones anteriores y a las autorizaciones verbales previas, ayer a las 2.30PM se recibió un mail oficial denegando el permiso. Aquí nuestro podcast EN VIVO desde Finestrat hablando con el director de carrera Alejo, con nuestros compañeros inscritos María Benito y Vlady Trail para entender qué pasó y prevenir situacion similares a futuro ¿Qué os parece la propuesta de Mayayo para legislar un silencio administrativo positivo en 30 días en caso de ediciones sucesivas de toda carrera de montaña ya consolidada? Nuestros videos siempre aqui: youtube.com/moxigeno Nuestra web, con toda la info: carrerasdemontana.com #carrerasdemontañaConviértete en un seguidor de este podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/radio-trail-carreras-de-montana-mayayo--4373839/support.
COSTA BLANCA TRAILS 2024: Cómo, porqué y próximos pasos propuestos. Mayayo Radio Trail. Nuestra sección TRAIL RUNNING VALENCIA lamenta la anulación ayer a última hora del evento que se iba a disputar 8-9NOV en Alicante. Estaban previstas seis carreras de montaña de 102k, 66k, 41k, 20k y 17k para 1.400 dorsales, pero pese a los antedecentes de las muchas ediciones anteriores y a las autorizaciones verbales previas, ayer a las 2.30PM se recibió un mail oficial denegando el permiso. Aquí nuestro podcast EN VIVO desde Finestrat hablando con el director de carrera Alejo, con nuestros compañeros inscritos María Benito y Vlady Trail para entender qué pasó y prevenir situacion similares a futuro ¿Qué os parece la propuesta de Mayayo para legislar un silencio administrativo positivo en 30 días en caso de ediciones sucesivas de toda carrera de montaña ya consolidada? Nuestros videos siempre aqui: youtube.com/moxigeno Nuestra web, con toda la info: carrerasdemontana.com #carrerasdemontaña #radiotrail
Benidorm: Bettenburgen, Massentourismus, Sangriarausch, Nepperlokale. Wer nur das in dem Ort an der Costa Blanca sieht, hat nicht ausreichend hingeschaut. In seinem neuen Stück sammelt der französische Dokumentarist Lionel Quantin die Geschichten hier sesshaft gewordener Expats, behutsam nähert er sich dem Ort an und findet: Tiefe Melancholie. Und ein Gran Freiheit. Oder um es mit Rilke zu sagen: "So, also hierher kommen die Leute, um zu leben, ich würde eher meinen, es stürbe sich hier." Von Lionel Quantin Produktion: SWR 2024
Spanyolország ingatlanpiaca továbbra is népszerű a külföldi állampolgárok, köztük sok magyar számára, akik a jó éghajlat, a stresszmentes életstílus és a gazdag kultúra miatt vásárolnak ingatlant. A magyarok körében Ausztria a legnépszerűbb célország, de Spanyolország és Olaszország is népszerű, ahol az ingatlanok stabil befektetési lehetőséget kínálnak. A külföldi ingatlanvásárlások növekedését a forint ingadozása és politikai bizonytalanságok is segítik, hiszen sokan keresnek alternatívát. A spanyol ingatlanpiac stabilitása és az új építésű ingatlanok iránti kereslet egyre nő. Az új ingatlanok gyorsan értékelődnek, és kedvező pénzügyi konstrukciók is elérhetők. A bérbeadás terén a rövidtávú kiadások iránti kereslet magas, de a hosszú távú bérlés is lehet jövedelmező. Az Airbnb szigorítások ellenére a magyarok érdeklődése töretlen, ám fontos figyelni a helyi szabályozásokra. A legkeresettebb területek közé tartozik Costa del Sol és a Baleár-szigetek, de Costa Blanca és városi központok, mint Barcelona és Madrid is népszerűek. Összességében a spanyol ingatlanpiac stabil, és bár néhány szakértő buborékot lát, a jövőbeni kilátások kedvezőek. Ti vennétek ingatlant Spanyolországban? Esetleg van közületek valaki aki vett is már? Ha érdekel Spanyolország, keressétek partnereinket: https://mindenamikulfold.hu/segitseg/spanyolorszag/ Hajrá!
El presidente de la Diputación de Alicante, Antonio Pérez, promueve con entusiasmo el turismo de sol y playa, así como la riqueza económica, gastronómica y cultural de la Costa Blanca durante la feria Alicante Gastronómica.Escuchar audio
Welcome to Decomposed Radio 093. Here at Techno Towers, we're still reeling from the amazing "galloWay fEST" up in the Scottish Borders which was an incredible display of the talent and creativity that we're lucky enough to be surrounded by, which was the original inspiration to creating the podcast, to give it all a platform. With that in mind welcome another new artist to the Decomposed Radio Roster... Funkness Device. Also known as Steve Cox he's a "lifer" climber now living out in Spain, but still with firm roots in the Peak District. The set we're featuring today was recorded at "Tribe of Frog" in Spain where it went down an absolue storm. For those of you not in the know... Tribe of Frog are the UK's legendary psychadelic party producers originating in Bristol that specialise in spectacular decor, cutting edge techno, psy-trance and more. It still runs regularly down in Bristol, while the original owners Chris and Donna Rana continue to put on nights out in the Costa Blanca, featuring sun, sea, cervezas, psy-trance and techno...... which all sounds pretty good to me! As a DJ, Funkness Device likes to take the crowd on a journey, which is definitely what it's all about and as such his mix is a bit of a marathon mission through nu disco, breakbeats, tech house, dark deep acid techno and psy-trance.... so definitely something for everyone!! So settle yourselves in and get lost in the music. This is Decomposed Radi show 093, with Funkness Device........
Good Morning and welcome to another roasting hot day on the Costa Blanca. If you can understand what I have been writing it's because we've all learned how to use the English language in an agreed way. This morning I have been reviewing the UK newspapers with Neil Colbourne and we discussed how the British Red Cross has issued a document in which they have continued the woke trend of interfering with the English language. What concerns me most is the absence of comments from leaders in the fields of education and other major areas of influence. As a qualified educationalist I wonder why I bothered to dedicate so many years of my life to education. I am not an activist but I do urge people to wake up. Read about Antonio Gramski and maybe you can find some answers. In Gramsci's view, the bourgeoisie needed to develop a hegemonic culture using ideology rather than violence, economic force, or coercion. I believe his ideas are in the mix and are being used in Agenda 2030. I do hope you all have a successful and happy day and maybe the UK Minister for common sense will speak up! Here's the link to the podcast.......https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/rockrupert/episodes/2024-08-27T03_29_48-07_00
Kæru áskrifendur hér er annar þáttur uppfullur af skemmtilegum gullmolum liðinna ára. Strákarnir ræða afmælisveislur þar sem allt gekk eins og í sögu. Siffi 3000 fór til sálfræðings og ræddi vandamál sín. Haukur hringdi í Útvarp Sögu og ræddi hvað allt er ódýrt á Costa Blanca. Haraldur Hallgrímur Haraldsson kom með skilaboð til Kristínar Theadórsdóttur.Þættina má finna inni í áskrift á pardus.is!IG: helgijean & hjalmarorn110Takk fyrir að hlusta - og munið að subscribe'a!
Alex Watkins – Talking about the last edition of Costa Blanca News...with TRE's Hannah Murray
In the 1950s, the transformation of the sleepy little town of Benidorm began when Pedro Zaragoza was appointed mayor. He started by getting pipes built to allow running water, then went on to pass a decree which allowed women to wear bikinis. Now, every year millions of tourists arrive in Benidorm, on Spain's Costa Blanca. This episode was produced by Simon Watts in 2018, using recordings of Pedro Zaragoza. (Photo: Tourists flock to the beaches in Spain. Credit: David Ramos via Getty Images)
En Gestión del Patrimonio hablamos de crowdfunding inmobiliario con wecity. Una inversión alternativa que está contribuyendo a la democratización del acceso a las altas rentabilidades de este mercado tradicionalmente reservado a los inversores institucionales. Pertenece al ecosistema tecnológico e innovador donde promotores e inversores se comunican, financian y rentabilizan sus inversiones. Wecity, la plataforma digital de financiación participativa, lanza mañana una nueva oportunidad de inversión en Javea (Alicante). Álvaro Fuentes, responsable de inversiones en wecity, nos adelanta los detalles. La inversión La oportunidad de inversión consiste en financiar la adquisición de 4 parcelas localizadas en la calle Georges de la Tour 4-10, urbanización Absubia, Jávea (Alicante), donde se desarrollarán 4 villas de lujo con jardín y piscina privada. Las parcelas tienen una superficie de 1.000 m2 cada una y se proyectarán viviendas de entre 328m2 y 428 m2. El proyecto cuenta con licencia tramitada a través de Entidades Colaboradoras Urbanisticas (ECU) y el inicio de la comercialización se iniciará en el mes de julio. El proyecto se financiará mediante un préstamo hipotecario de 1.150.000€ a tipo fijo con Garantía hipotecaria de 1er grado. El promotor, Makekubo ha aportado fondos propios por importe de 525.167 € que junto a los 1.150.000€ solicitados a los inversores de wecity, alcanza una suma total de 1.675.167 € necesarios para la adquisición del suelo y pago de los costes técnicos. La devolución del préstamo de los inversores de wecity, se producirá con la venta de las cuatro parcelas. Ubicación Jávea, en la Costa Blanca de Alicante, es una de las zonas más exclusivas y codiciadas del mercado inmobiliario español. Su entorno natural, con el Parque Natural del Montgó y playas mediterráneas, atrae a quienes buscan un estilo de vida lujoso y tranquilo. La oferta inmobiliaria incluye villas de lujo, modernos apartamentos y encantadoras casas tradicionales, muchas con vistas al mar. La alta demanda se debe a su clima soleado, excelente infraestructura y proximidad a servicios esenciales. Jávea cuenta con reconocidos centros educativos como Xàbia International College y Lady Elizabeth School, y destacados servicios de salud como el Hospital HLA San Carlos. La amplia oferta gastronómica y de ocio, junto con actividades recreativas como la navegación y el golf, complementan su atractivo estilo de vida mediterráneo. Jávea es ideal tanto para vivir como para invertir, combinando naturaleza, calidad de vida e infraestructura sólida.
Z tego filmu dowiesz się, jak zacząć inwestować w Hiszpanii, jaki jest próg wejścia, co wyróżnia ten rynek, a także czy trzeba byc rezydentem hiszpańskim by inwestować w Hiszpanii. Opowie o tym Piotr Wysocki. Spis treści: 00:00 - W dzisiejszym odcinku 00:20 - Rynek nieruchomości w Hiszpanii - czym się różni od rynku polskiego? 01:07 - Piotr Wysocki - czym się zajmuje biznesowo? 02:09 - Jakie są główne przewagi inwestowania w Hiszpanii względem inwestowania w Polsce? 03:15 - Dlaczego warto zainteresować się inwestowaniem w Hiszpanii? 04:00 - Czy można wynajmować nieruchomości inwestycyjne? 04:58 - Czy banki w Hiszpanii udzielają kredyty hipoteczne inwestorom z zagranicy pod nieruchomości w Hiszpanii? 07:00 - Z czego wynika dynamika na rynku hiszpańskim? 08:43 - Jaki jest próg wejścia do inwestowania w nieruchomości w Hiszpanii? 09:55 - Jaka jest stopa zwrotu na nieruchomościach w Hiszpanii? 11:02 - Jakie są zagrożenia przy takich inwestycjach? 13:20 - Jaki jest wzrost wartości nieruchomości w czasie? 14:00 - Jak zacząć inwestować w Hiszpanii? 15:40 - Jak wygląda prawo własności w Hiszpanii? 15:45 - Czy trzeba byc rezydentem podatkowym w Hiszpanii by tam inwestować? Gość
“Aire Fresco” les propone hoy un plan: escuchar la radio durante dos horas trepidantes. Hoy nos visita Joaquín Huete, Presidente del Centro de Estudios Espíritas de Benidorm. Una asociación sin ánimo de lucro que, este fin de semana celebra las “XII Jornadas Espíritas del Mediterráneo”. Florencia Bossel, vocal de ARDIC nos hablará de la situación en la que se encuentran los residentes damnificados del incendio de Campanar, en Valencia. Y hoy, daremos la bienvenida a nuestro compañero Leopoldo Bernabeu y de su pronta reincorporación después de unas mini vacaciones. Y ¡es hora de ponerse a punto! con el “V Cross Solidario” del Centro Doble Amor, nos hablará el vicepresidente de la asociación, José Manuel López. Ejercicio y solidaridad, ese es un fantástico plan para el fin de semana. Álvaro Lazaga sigue incansable y cada vez más cerca de cumplir su 56 Camino de Santiago. Sigue por tierras portuguesas y sabremos la última hora del peregrino. “El pan nuestro” es la sección que nos trae Alberto Varela, director del Hotel Meliá Benidorm, para ponernos al tanto del pan de muchos en Benidorm y resto de la Costa Blanca: el Turismo. Y finalizaremos el “Aire Fresco” del martes , con la abogada María Carmen Ferrer Lloret para hablar de un tema, desgraciadamente de actualidad, los desahucios. Esa es nuestra propuesta para hoy. ¿Piensas perdértela? Recuerda, tú cita es en Bom Radio Benidorm.
While northern Europe is swept by blizzards and freezing temperatures grip the landscape, in the relative warmth of Spain's Costa Blanca cycling's elite teams are making their final pre-season preparations and, as part of that, have been meeting the press. We joined this welcome migration and this pod features three of the peloton's biggest names...We start with Belgium's most feted sporting star, Remco Evenepoel, one of the "big four" who are due to clash at the Tour de France this summer. We ask the Soudal-QuickStep leader about whether he can end his country's 48-year Tour drought on his debut in the race, how his team is shaping up to this challenge, and about his post-Tour hopes for glory at the Paris Olympics.Fabio Jakobsen has removed himself from the ever-growing shadow Evenepoel casts over his teammates at QuickStep by joining dsm-firmenich PostNL. We ask the Dutch sprinter about why he wanted this move, hear about the goals he has set himself for the Giro d'Italia and Tour de France, and about his aim to knock long-time rival Jasper Philipsen off the top of the sprinting tree.We also reveal the latest news on the Tour of Britain and Women's Tour, which both face an uncertain future following the breakdown in the relationship between British Cycling and race organisers Sweetspot. There are reasons for optimism, we understand...We end with "Dave watch", a look at the latest movements of Ineos director of sport Dave Brailsford, featuring a brief cameo from the man himself... This podcast is brought to you with the support of our sponsor, Saddle Skedaddle. Support the show
Do they know it's Christmas? Well, no, not at most pro team training camps, where thoughts are a million miles away from brandy cream and mince pies. We sent our intrepid reporter to the Costa Blanca to get the latest from the peloton's stars...Mark Cavendish says he's ready for his final hurrah: Motivated by the desire of his Astana-Qazaqstan to see him race for one more season and also by his competitiveness at this year's Giro d'Italia and Tour de France, the Manx sprinter says he's happy and relaxed as he goes into what is likely to be his final season. He also admits he's humbled at being described as the best sprinter of all time. Lidl-Trek's GC hopes pinned on Tao Geoghegan-Hart: The Briton tells us that he's recovered well from the pelvis fracture that he sustained at the Giro and will go into 2024 with his focus set very squarely on the Tour de France, where his objective is nothing less than the yellow jersey. We also hear from Italian climber Giulio Ciccone, who believes he's got the qualities to challenge for victory in the Giro d'Italia, thanks to his team's increased investment in training preparation and tech.One Cycling's sense of déjà vu: Last week's WorldTour seminar in Lausanne led to further developments in the project to revamp the men's professional scene. We detail the latest, including the rumoured sidelining of Jumbo-Visma boss Richard Plugge, the emergence of a new player at the project's head, and, in another significant shift, reports of contact with the women's side of the sport...This podcast is brought to you with the support of our sponsor, Saddle Skedaddle. Support the show
La ocupación hotelera durante del puente de la Constitución ha rozado el 90% en varios puntos de España, como por ejemplo en Benidorm y en otras ciudades de la Costa Blanca. Del exterior, Javier Milei ya ha jurado el cargo de presidente de Argentina este domingo y, a todos los efectos, ya es el máximo mandatario del país latinoamericano. De vuelta a España, el Congreso se prepara para el primer debate parlamentario sobre la ley de Amnistía, que comenzará este martes.
Are many land & rock formations actually petrified Titanic beings, mega flora & fauna from another era? Bio-Geologist, Dr. Mike Wilkerson, is here to tell us why this may indeed be true! Mike Wilkerson has always had a knack for asking unconventional questions. As a teen computer hobbyist turned hacker in the early 80s, his thirst for knowledge led to wild adventures with some of the top hackers in the nation. But in 1985, the fun ended in a brief incarceration, after being caught for his infiltration of computer servers at Microsoft and three other Seattle area companies. Though he has walked the straight and narrow since then, Mikes propensity towards questioning the unquestionables has never waned. In the decades that followed, he morphed from a mischievous hacker, to a benevolent back-cracker. For over a decade now, Mike has lived and worked as a chiropractor on the Costa Blanca in Spain, where his mission is to improve the health of the world one spine and mind at a time. As a part-time independent researcher, Mike has focused primarily on alternative history, non-standard cosmologies, catastrophism and rapid petrification. Some of his presentations are available on his Stellium7 YT channel. Show links: / @stellium7 Follow our new YT channel: / @offgridelegance Please help us get HowTube back up and running with a small donation! https://howtube.com/crowdfund Get our favorite blue blocker glasses! https://alfavedic.com/raoptics Alfa Vedic is an off-grid agriculture & health co-op focused on developing products, media & educational platforms for the betterment of our world. By using advanced scientific methods, cutting-edge technologies and tools derived from the knowledge of the world's greatest minds, the AV community aims to be a model for the future we all want to see. Our comprehensive line of health products and nutrition is available on our website. Most products are hand mixed and formulated right on our off grid farm including our Immortality Teas which we grow on site. Find them all at https://alfavedic.com Follow Alfa Vedic: https://linktr.ee/alfavedic Follow Mike Winner: https://linktr.ee/djmikewinner
On this episode of The End of Tourism Podcast, my guest is Macià Blázquez-Salom, a professor at the University of the Balearic Islands, who specializes in the Geography of Tourism, Territorial Planning, Sustainability and Degrowth. He utilizes his teaching and research activity in the environmental movement (and vice versa), and through his activism in the Grupo Balear de Ornitología y Defensa de la Naturaleza (GOB) and Alba Sud.Show NotesMacia's Journey in the BalearicsThe Beginning of Mass Tourism through Currency DevaluationContradictions in MallorcaCocoon Tourism in SpainYou Want to Work in the Balearics, You Have to Sleep in a TentBoosterism and Green BoosterismDegrowth Definitions and ContradictionsImagining Other Modes of TravelImagining Other Modes of ResistanceHomeworkGoogle Scholar: Macia BlasquezOrcid: Connecting Researchers with ResearchersMacia Blasquez's UIB SiteTranscript[00:00:00] Chris: Welcome Macia, to the podcast. From what I've been able to dig up around your life and work that you've been studying, tourism and its contradictions for a very long time. Now, I'd like to ask you what drove you towards a career as a professor and critic of the tourism industry?[00:00:24] Macia: Well, in fact, even before finishing my degree, I was involved in social movements here in the Balearics, in Mallorca, particularly. I was member of the committee of the volunteers collaborating with the GOB, which is the biggest ecologist group. Then by the eighties and perhaps influenced by this collaboration, I decided to study geography and to analyze the relation in between tourism and natural conservation, because by then we had promotion after the tourism boom in the sixties and seventies.The eighties Spain became member of the European Union and some of our politicians, they decided and they were promoting the Balearics as second residents destination for north European people, and this means that investment in the real estate market even increased with foreign people buying second residencies and promoting as well the promotion of more urban development for this purpose.And that was written in the natural areas due to what we call "green" or "gray-grabbing" with new facilitation of land here in the Balearics. And this was the main aim I had to develop my research on this topic, with special planning and natural conservation in the Balearics.Afterwards we had what we called the real estate bubble that began in the nineties and burst in 2008. And that was a period when I was more involved, particularly in the social movements. In fact I feel more related with activism than with academia. After the crisis with my age, I took the decision of giving support to younger people in the social movements and devote more time to the academia with colleagues Ivan Murray or Ernest Canada or Robert Fletcher or Nora Muller, other people who are working in this research group in the University of the Balearics Islands. But I still working with the NGOs Alba Sud, particularly the GOB, and other social movements in this region in the Western Mediterranean region particularly. [00:03:03] Chris: I have some questions regarding these social movements that I think maybe we'll get to in just a bit.But, I'd like to try to offer a bit of context for our listeners in part because before I heard of your name and before I interviewed our mutual friend Ivan, for the first episode of the podcast, I don't think I had ever heard of Palma or Mallorca before, even as someone who had traveled through Europe and many other parts of the Mediterranean.And so I'm curious if you could give us a bit of background on how Palma came to be over touristed, or at the very least, what you've seen come to pass in your time there. I mean, I know it's, it is also historically has a lot of deep importance for the Spanish state and Mediterranean history culture.[00:03:55] Macia: I'm sure you have heard about the dictatorship of Franco in the forties, fifties. Mm-hmm. Fifties. He was given support to the Luther in the second World War. And after the defeat, the technical support he had was coming from Opus Dei, was introducing tourism and real estate business as a way to have foreign direct investment.And as a result, Spain had a very important development of, of real estate business in this new areas particularly related with sun and sea tourist resorts. Perhaps you have heard about Costa Del Sol, Benidorm in Costa Blanca, or Costa Brava in Catalonia. And the same for the Balearic Islands. During that period, in the case of of M we had a huge amount of new hotels being double developed.And they were financed partly by people coming from North Europe, particularly from Germany. There was a novel accumulation of capital in that, in those regions that have had industrial development and investors realized that tourism could be a good business, introducing this way of consuming savings, consuming income for working class people in the UK, in Germany, and this is how in the Balearics we had the development of what we call the tourist boom in the sixties with hundreds of hotel being built up every month really in Mallorca, in Ibiza. Perhaps you have heard about Ibiza, right? [00:05:52] Chris: And this is just to be clear, this is in the first decade of international mass tourism post-war, correct?[00:06:01] Macia: In the Sixties, because the two first decades after the war, our regime, the dictatorship of Franco was defeated. I mean, they were given support to Hitler and Mussolini and Spain was set aside. And the model they were following was self-sufficiency. We became members of the UN United Nations by the end of the Fifties when Franco decided to take this option of promoting foreign investment, making the change of currency with the foreign currencies possible.And it was through devaluation of the peseta, this means that investing from the UK, Germany, or even the United States, or for tourists coming to Spain, visiting our country, was so cheap due to this devaluation of the currency. And this way we had that mass tourism development and mass foreign investment, foreign investment and flows of people coming here for holidays and enterprises developing their activities for profit.This was the beginning and the result were that after all those years, we now have eight hundred thousand tourist beds in the B alearics and we had 16.5 million tourists last year in the Balearics, 2022. And this is a huge amount of tourists for an archipelago that just has. 5,000 square kilometers, 1.1 million inhabitants.Most of our tourists are coming from the UK. Let's say 25%. Germany, another 25%. This means 8 million tourists coming from Germany. Then we have 13% coming from mainland to Spain. And then we have people from Scandinavia, Norway, Sweden Denmark, the Netherlands. They come here looking for sun warm weather conditions during the summertime, particularly during the high season.This is July, August, September. This is when we are having more over crowded beaches, traffic jams in the roads and the touristification of every single place in our islands. Because by the beginning, tourists were going particularly to the tourist resorts. But nowadays the countryside, natural areas, villages and, and even the historical center of the cities is being touristified.You can find boutiques, you can find terraces of bars and restaurants, all of them changing very quickly, the landscape and the way of life of our places. [00:09:17] Chris: At what point in your life did you arrive in the Balearics, in Mallorca, or are you from there?[00:09:23] Macia: I'm from the Balearics. The mother of my father Fr was from Palma. And the parents of my mother were from M and I was grown here. It's quite common in places like Balearics to have roots, to have grown people is not moving that much. Right. I attended my degree and I finished my PhD thesis, and now I have my job here and this is common. We're not moving that much. [00:09:54] Chris: Well, it's a bit of a blessing to hear that there are people in the world still who live in the same place they were born, which is more and more rare. I guess I'm curious, you know, over the course of your life then, in Palma, is there one thing that you might be able to single out as perhaps the most startling or biggest or devastating change that you've seen there?[00:10:19] Macia: Yeah. Well in fact it has to do with my political position during that moment because we had a right wing go government from 2003 to 2007 with Lots of cases of corruption related with mega pr This means projects with a budget higher to 1000 million euros. They were projects to promote highways, to promote big infrastructure, transport infrastructure, a new harbors, enlarging the airport equipment.Instead of refurbishing the hospital, they decided to build a new hospital. And this is nice, but at the same time, they were meeting and we have collected information about those meetings to arrange, Communicating in between big entrepreneurs and politicians. Where and how was that development going to be?And they were changing this information to give advantage to the investors in a way which is nowadays considered as corruption. Many of those politicians are even nowadays in jail because of those cases. And during that period I was involved as a representative, as a volunteer giving support to the campaigns for the right to the island, demanding the politicians and the public institutions and the entrepreneurs not to follow with that promotion which was jeopardizing our land promoting socio-spatial segregation destroying natural habitats. That was the peak of the real estate bubble. Just before 2008 when I was involved. We were preparing something which is called a popular initiative to the parliament.I was myself defending the initiative in the regional parliament which was in fact making a proposal not to allow more enlargement of the transport infrastructure, enlargement of the urban for instance, protection of natural areas. And that moment was particularly stressing, even violent with lots of discussions and pressures with people lobbying.But now I feel I did something nice. We have some successes, therefore it was worth doing that. [00:12:58] Chris: Beautiful. And I'm, I'm curious as well, I guess on a general scale on the island, how has civil society begun to respond? And I mean, we're talking about 60, 70 years now, so, you know, of, of tourism development there.How has civil society, how has the government, the NGOs responded to this over tourism, and what, if any, contradictions do you see in those responses? You've already spoken a little bit about the corruption. [00:13:33] Macia: Yeah, you're right. This is a very good question because I was a young guy perhaps having looked to the situation from an naive point of view.And now that I see it after some time, I understand some contradictions. Perhaps the biggest contradictions that I see now is that, Fighting to promote natural artist protections, for instance, or fighting for a better environment. They took profit of our campaigns to find new ways to earn money, to take profit from the situation. This is to say that nowadays we see how what was the biggest threat, the gray grabbing, is now becoming another model to exploit the land and the people, which is what we call "green grabbing."Capital and entrepreneurs and investors are taking profit of the land that was protected, setting aside urban development to promote a new image of the Balearics as a good refuge for capital investment and for the elites, and this is not that nice. After the time you realized that you were instrumentalized to promote the business of those that are nowadays refurbishing the hotels, a lot of investment is being devoted to the built environment.Because the real estate business is even more profitable nowadays. And as it is becoming scarred because we have stopped the urban growth these houses and these buildings, whatever they will be, perhaps hotels, are becoming more and more expensive and people is being fired. The people is not any long being able to live in the villages because they are becoming too expensive or in the Catholic shelter of the city and people is not being able to follow living in the Balearics and they have to go to live mainland.And this is a contradiction of the natural environment and the quality of life. It's becoming more exclusive. [00:15:59] Chris: Yeah, this was something that our mutual colleague, Ivan, had mentioned to me at some point. He was referring to the way that after the lockdowns, during the pandemic, once the government travel restrictions were dropped, that there was this pattern emerging or seeming to emerge around the stratification of tourism towards elite either travel or investment.So we could call maybe the elitification of tourism and tourism investment. And I imagine that's kind of what you're speaking to now. Is that correct? [00:16:41] Macia: Yeah. they were talking about cocoon tourism. People looking for a secure place to spend their holidays.At the same time, it has to be accessible. At the same time, it has to be sustainable. Now they are talking about circular economy, and the Balearics are leading this labeling, this branding, you know? Mm-hmm. It, it's like we, we are the best in the world to innovate in these terms.We were defending the natural areas. Afterwards, there was a limit of the number of tourists beds. We have eco-tax cuts for the accommodation, which is then invested in mitigating the problems that tourism is provoking. Now we have this circular economy system applied to the hotels that are having public support to invest in energy efficiency.And the result is that we have an elitization, we have elites grabbing built environment, grabbing land. And this promotes socio-spatial segregation in the islands. I imagine that it's the same that has happened in Bahamas or in Hawaii. It's like refugee for capitals and elites looking for security, looking for profitability, away from migration from the south because not that much migration is arriving to the Balearics.The mainland spain is closer to Africa or the Canary Islands. They are much more closer to Senegal, for instance, but not that much amount of boats coming from Africa with migrants looking for better living conditions are coming to the We have many, many marinas with huge yachts, very expensive.And this is another icon, you know, another example of the gentrification of the islands is a tourist gentrification. Second residences, good airport connections. The airport is growing and growing, that they are promoting more enlargement of the airport capacity, highways, rent al car and the local population is being set aside even more if you are not local, if you want to come to the Balearics to work during the high season, perhaps you have to sleep in a balcony or in a tent or in a car.Because it's so difficult to find dwelling, to find, to find accommodation if you are working. Wow. Yeah. Prices are increasing so quickly. Hmm. [00:19:38] Chris: On that note and in the context of these eco taxes and the island becoming a destination for this certain type of elitism I'm also curious about this term that Ivan introduced me to, that precedes a question that he actually wrote in for me to ask you. And the term that he mentioned, which I had never heard of before, is green boosterism or boosterism in general. Perhaps first you might be able to explain what Boosterism is for our listeners.And then secondly Ivan was mentioning this in the context of Spain receiving public funds from the EU in order to redevelop the tourism sector. And so the second question, then what do you think the trajectory of tourism is in Spain with this extra money?[00:20:36] Macia: The original government that allowed different ways to have new incomes coming from the tourist activity. One of them was tourist which is paid by those tourists using legal accommodation in hotels or in short term rental.And they have another way to have this. Income in the regional government, which is if you want to open a new hotel or to create a new short term rental in your house, there you have to pay to have the license. 3,500 Euros per bed is now what it is. With this money, regional government has income, which is not controlled by the central government.Perhaps you have to imagine that Spain is a federal nation, and it has a state, and our state, which is the Balearics is having control over this amount of money which is being collected through this status. In addition to this, as you said, European Union is giving support to the recovery of the Spanish economy with a budget, which is known as next generation.Is the way in which the European Union is promoting boosterism to recover the activity, the intensity I mentioned you before. In 2019, we had 16 and a half million tourists coming to the Balearics, and the result of this boostering after the COVID pandemics was successful as far as we had again, 16 million and a half tourists come to the Balearics in 2022.Therefore, they succeeded in boosting, recovering tourism as the most important activity in the Balearics. Half of our economy is based on tourism, 54% of our GDP. And this is as Ivan told you, something that our authorities are promoting. This is a way in which our politicians have decided to govern, to steer our economy, our society, going back to over tourism, going back to promoting the real estate business related with tourism as many tourists as possible.Promotion in the places where tourists are coming from, particularly Germany, the uk, Scandinavia, or nowadays in the States because we have a new direct fl from Palma to New York since half a year ago. Therefore, boosterism is in this way understood promoting growth. And green boosterism is, related with dressing it with sustainability, with circularity, with security, accessibility and natural areas protection.Greening that is increasing prices for people in Europe. Perhaps Magaluf is well known because it's a tourism destination for spring breakers, as you will say in the states. And nowadays, investment in hotels, refurbishing hotels is multiplying the price of the accommodation per 10. If you paid 40 euros before per night, now you have to pay 400.And this is a mass tourism destination that was popular among hooligans coming from England and nowadays is being gentrified. Through this process of elitifcation. [00:24:36] Chris: It's something that I wonder about from time to time, the increasing costs of travel and tourism being ways of certainly propping up the tourist economy or tourist economies, and then the real costs of tourism and how much of a discrepancy or a difference there is between those two things, right?Because so many of these tourist bureaus and governments and hotels and businesses are claiming that they are now, or at least moving towards charging people this kind of true cost, but certainly the true cost of these things goes well beyond our ability to pay for them in money, in cash, right?There are certain things someone, I think it was Deborah McLaren, someone who's been dealing with these issues for as long as you some, some 20 or 30 years. She said on that episode that there are things that you can sell that you can never buy back.So I'm always wondering about, it's like, okay, well we have these eco taxes and you know, surely, a lot of them just go into the pockets of the rich or the government. But even if they are being spent in good ways is that really a way of being able to measure the consequences and the cost of tourism?And so I wanted to take this opportunity to move a little bit towards the social movements that you've also been a part of there on the island. And to start with this notion of de-growth that seems to usually be set up in opposition to sustainability.Sustainability at the end of the day is really only trying to sustain the industry. You can say that, oh yeah, we're sustaining people and the planet, but insofar as the industry succeeds and then so de-growth a term that in my part of the world. And I think among most tourists is, is kind of a stranger.I think most people have still yet to really understand the depths of this term outside of perhaps over touristed places. But essentially, this manner of considering sustainability as keeping things where they are now, not reducing, not really changing anything, just giving the industry a more long-term success route.I know there's a lot of definitions and opinions on this, so I'll turn it over to you momentarily. But this willingness to shrink the tourist economy, whether it be just a little bit or whether it be to an incredible degree. But there's a lot of different opinions on this.And so de-growth becomes, in the last few years, in the last 10 years, something that really becomes a necessary possibility in the context of over tourism. I consistently come across reports and definitions that kind of vary in extreme degrees from what you've written as being neo Malthusian ideas, all the way to kind of post capitalist goals.And so I'm curious, why do you think there is all of this confusion in regards to the definitions of de-growth, and how much of it do you think is, again, just another form of greenwashing a way of saying, okay, so actually we're gonna change things dramatically on a systemic level, but we're only gonna do so insofar as it serves the industry.[00:28:16] Macia: Well, as you say it's so easy and it's so common greening the industry, the tourism industry, and giving support to those who have the power. And to those who get the benefits in economic terms. You can easily apply many different concepts, sustainability, circularity, or even degrowth.I will say degrowth in terms of having less people traveling, but with higher income. And you can say, okay, this is degrowth. This is fake because it's not considering the roots of the problem. It is perhaps solving environmental problems. This is greening, but i t is increasing inequality.Therefore, how can we make a definition of degrowth in a more appropriate way. There is another author in Barcelona, which is Giorgos Kallis. He's from Greece. He has been working in Barcelona for a long time. He has made a very good definition of degrowth. And he's establishing three particular characteristics of degrowing or degrowth political project.First of all, looking for decreasing the amount of energy and materials per capital. They call it "throughput." Is the amount of materials and energy that you use for your everyday life, or in this case for your tourist activity. This means that if you are traveling with a private jet or you are spending 10 times more water gardening, this is the kind of tourist behavior that has to degrow.This means contraction of the amount of energy and materials, but towards convergence because you cannot ask those not spending big amounts of energy and materials to contract. Those who are more guilty are the richest, you know, those who are spending more. This is the first characteristic.The second characteristic of this, degrowth political project, is that it has to promote redistribution and equity. You cannot consider a solution for tourist destination degrowing in the number of tourists if working class, middle class is being set aside, is being displaced, dispossessed.Therefore, this is the second characteristics. And the third one it is that the political project has to be planned and has to be democratic. People has to agree. Therefore, what is more important perhaps is awareness, the public debate, as you are doing with your podcast.Chris, congratulations. I like it a lot and changing opinions and talking about it and promoting thinking in the long term, not today, for tomorrow, but Jorge Riechmann in Spain is talking about precaution principle, because if you just think about your everyday life and don't consider future generations and people in the south and animals, plants, beings in the world.Therefore, the result is that we are behaving in an unsustainable way. And instead of degrowth, what we are going to have is recession without warning, directly to the collapse. [00:32:08] Chris: Yeah. Or end without end. de-growth, while it's something that you can look up and you can find in academic journals and articles and books, that it also shows up in the social movements. I think most famously among the Association of Neighborhoods for Tourism de-Growth in Barcelona. Barcelona, yeah. Right. And so we interviewed Daniel Pardo, one of the representatives of that group early on in the first season.And just so our listeners know, Spain is by far one of the most overt touristed countries in the world. And so we see, generally, in places like this, in overt Touristed places, a huge amount of backlash, protest, and as well alternatives against or in the face of the tourist industry.And so I'm curious Maia, about what kinds of social movements have risen up in Palma and what shape or form they take and what place you've played in them. [00:33:13] Macia: We like defining that movement in terms of right to the city or right to the land, or right to the island because it's, it is the movement of residents who are defending our rights. Going to the beach or just having access to housing is becoming so difficult. And in Palma there is a movement called Ciutat Por La Vida, the City for Those Who Are Living There. Like in Barcelona, they have trade union of people renting housing because they have organized an association to defend the rights.These are social struggles and we are also including the less favored people. I mean particularly people coming from Latin America or coming from Africa who are suffering the worst working conditions. And you can compare how those moving migrating, because they are looking for better living conditions are considering are considered by the system as those who have not right to do it.And at the same time, the system in this case capitalism is promoting tourists which consists of people who is also moving and perhaps they are even looking for a place to live as well because they are looking for the sun or looking for the culture or the hospitality of Latin community in Catalonia or in And this is not just environmental, it's not just being possible to be solved through greening. It has a social meaning. And it has to do with the system. It has to do with the salaries. It has to do with the model that is being applied to solve the problems. And the model the capitalist system is growth.The model in places such as Spain is more real estate development, more tourists coming. And we are seeing with phenomena such as the climate change or the rising prices of energy and the problems with migration, inequalities, growing inequality, the solution have to be perhaps out of the system looking for post capitalist solutions.And in this terms, degrowth and degrowing tourism.[00:35:52] Chris: Yeah. Sometimes I'll be talking to people here in Oaxaca or in other places regarding tourism and over tourism and what I think the end of tourism is or looks like, right? And certainly towards a certain degree of de-growth. And then I would, you know, also add for me personally abolition. Maybe I don't get that far. Maybe I do. And then someone often says " yeah, but what would we do without tourism," in a kind of angry, knee-jerk response? Right? And the question is always asked as if it's rhetorical, as if the question doesn't actually need to be posed, and if the answer doesn't actually need to be wondered about, right?What would we do without tourism? And I mean mm-hmm. You know, I have to ask the person why that isn't the real question, why you aren't asking yourself, really, what would you and your family and your community dream into the world without having this kind of dependency on this economy that is essentially, extremely precarious and exponentially damaging and destructive.So, in places like the Centro Historical of Oaxaca. And I'm sure in places like Paloma, 50%, over 50% of the economy is tourism. It is extremely difficult for people to imagine things otherwise. But you did mention there are groups in Mallorca that are actively engaging and fighting the tourist economy.GOB, I think one was you mentioned. Yeah. And Alba Sud, which is a little more on the academic side, I think. [00:37:44] Macia: We have designed research projects and they are looking for these bottom proposals from social movements, not that much u p-down from public institutions or entrepreneurs, and establishing as a goal different steps towards a better future. First of all, we decided to talk about a social transformation of the currently assisting tourism.This means that once you identify, for instance, low salaries in the tourism industry, or long day working conditions too much activity demanded to those, for instance, cleaning the rooms of the hotels. That is something that Ernest Canada has been analyzing in Spain in terms of "Kellys" the hotel maids. Therefore, social transformation on tourism, of tourism, of the currently assisting tourism means solving these problems.Or the same with energy consumption. The "throughput" we were mentioning before. It's like being pragmatic with the solutions is looking for short-term solutions to the problem. And then well, the same with biodiversity, for instance, or the same with climate change. But then the question is what about the future?What about he best of the scenarios you can imagine. Your utopia, right? Because I think we will agree with most of the people who is hearing your podcast that a better scenario for the future is having more leisure time. Mm. And leisure means we say cultivating yourself, reading, perhaps listening podcast or cooking for your friends, relatives, taking care of the children, the elderly people.This means some kind of wave that is improving the wellbeing of yourself and those around you. But at the same time, perhaps you are also willing to move and spend the night of out of your everyday life place. Therefore you visit relatives in another city or you spend days still walking for enjoying sports or perhaps sailing.I dunno. And this is tourism and this is improving your health, is improving your image of other places. Mm-hmm. When you were backpacker, you were traveling and that activity gave you a broader view of the world. Mm-hmm. You saw people, you met people in Mexico, for instance, and you decided to change your life and to take another position, political position, giving support to other ways of life. And the situation that the people in Oaxaca is having or had then before this. In this terms, tourism can give us opportunity to improve our life and the life of other people. We have to consider it, for instance, in the case of, imagine or teenager visiting places different to where they have grown and this is the way in which they develop alterity.Mm-hmm. They recognize what they are ,understanding what other people is. Mm-hmm. What are their living conditions and perhaps you see that they have a bathroom which is so different to the one you have at home, and therefore you appreciate the conditions you have at home. You have never thought how nice is the place where I am living the sanitary conditions?But if you visit, for instance, the case of Spain, wherever in Africa, you think, "okay, now I understand what is happening with those people who is even losing their life trying to cross the Mediterranean to come to the, to to Spain." I think that introducing this traveling is something that belongs to the culture in terms, for instance of pilgriming.People was visiting other places because it was a duty they had according to their religion. But it was also a way of becoming mature, realizing, being aware of what are the privilege you have and how valuable is your family? Once you see it from abroad, you think, okay, what you want to do is go back home because I feel unsafe.And this is a feeling that is helping you to improve, to become mature, to improve your understanding of the world. Therefore, we have to find the balance and perhaps not doing short breaks to spend a lot of energy in a weekend. But considering how much transformative is this kind of experience for teenagers, for instance. Therefore, perhaps as you said in your podcast, we are not anti-tourism.We want to find a way in which we can transform tourism in a social term and perhaps identify the way in which more leisure time can have as an small part of it, tourism as a way in which we become aware and we can help other people and we change things in the world. Mm-hmm. [00:43:53] Chris: And so on those lines, perhaps that would be some of the advice that you might have for our listeners or other people who might consider visiting Palma one day is go slow, pilgrimage. What would the end or transformation of tourism look like to you as an individual, as a resident of that place for people visiting?You know, it's, it's a little bit of a way of saying what kind of advice would you have for people who wanted to visit, but perhaps also taking into consideration what that world would look like.[00:44:33] Macia: Well, giving support to the social movements that are defending the right to the land, to the island, not interfering. And having in consideration social class struggles the environmental conflicts, dealing with pollution. Not coming to the Balearics for a short break, which means spending a lot of energy and polluting or short period of time not going into conflict with housing, using short term rentals, you have many, many important things to do. And perhaps a good way to do it is doing it from home beforehand. And promoting the networking in between people who has this awareness. This is why I think that, for instance, your podcast, another journalist activities is so important.Solving the problem of the language. I'm sorry for my English. Bridging the cultures and bridging the continents and the places that are so similar. I'm sure that in Mexico, in the Caribbean, in South America, in the United States, many places have problems which are so similar to those we are having in Spain or in the Balearics, in Mallorca or in Ibiza.Therefore networking is so nice. Mm. [00:46:11] Chris: Excellent. Thank you Maia. You were mentioning for a worthy traveler mm-hmm. Who might arrive on your shores is someone who is willing to engage and meet and know of the issues and the social movements and the activists and the activism in a particular place, and to be a guest as opposed to a tourist perhaps. And these social movements that exist in Spain, not necessarily against tourism, but in the context of tourism, most often, have a lot of time in. They usually have been around for years, if not decades, and the consequences of over tourism are now starting to reach other places much more quickly.I think Mexico is one of them. Mexico City, Oaxaca, certainly the obvious beach resorts. But in cities where people are starting to mobilize against] Airbnb gentrification pollution, as you said, among other issues. But these struggles and these movements are very young.Okay. And I'm wondering what kind of advice you might have for these grassroots movements that are just beginning. Coming from the point of view of grassroots movements that have been undertaken for years, if not decades now. [00:47:45] Macia: In my personal experience, what is more profitable perhaps is the link with the academia.Because nowadays it's so difficult to find independent, rigorous thinkers, let's say, people willing to contribute from an independent and rigorous point of view. I mean, in the case of Spain, we are lucky because most of the universities are public universities. And we still have most of the staff at university, we who are civil servants.In my case, we are working for the public administration and we are paid to think and teach and write to do this research. And this has been very profitable for the social movements in my opinion. This is my personal experience. You can also find other scientists in the society not related with the public institutions, not related with the academia.For instance, in the case of Alba Sud, we call it a post capitalist popular university because they, they don't depend on. Public funds, but they develop a very important, independent, rigorous research trying to establish these kind of foundations strong, very well based on writings of people that you have heard about them and you know, perfectly David Harvey from the City University of New York, for instance, or Jason Moore who works on Capitalism as well, or Silvia Federici, many other authors reading them and establishing the links.You have many, many good researchers, scientists in the States and in Canada and also in Mexico. Daniel nearly. For instance, in Mexico, you can use their writings and in this way develop the discourse with this strong foundations. This is what I will suggest. Perhaps it's, it's my own, you know, way the way in which I have done it.I suppose that you can find others, but if you maintain this independency and you work in a rigorous way, I always think that perhaps we won't win, but we will do what our conscience will mark, you know, as we have what we have to do. And this is a good enough for me. I dunno if we will stop the struggle with climate change and over tourism, migratory conflicts, people just dying while they are willing to cross towards the north. But we have to do all what we can, this is what can make us happy. [00:50:54] Chris: Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Thank you, Macia. It's been a pleasure.Yeah. And you know, I'd like to thank you on behalf of our listeners for joining us on the pod today, and being willing to speak in a language that is not your mother tongue for our Anglophone listeners. And before we depart today, I'd just like to ask for them on behalf of them once more.How might they find out more about you and your work? How might they read your writings and what you've put yourself to? [00:51:29] Macia: We have just finished a research project entitled Overtourism and Degrowth and you relate it with the University of the Balearic Islands?We have designed a webpage where we offer downloading papers, books. We have translated them to English, some of them, or we have published them. If not, if you cannot download them because some journals are asking you to pay, never do it because knowledge has to be free of charge, in my opinion, unless that knowledge that is being developed in the public institutions such as our university. Therefore write us message, you will find a way in which you can count at me or Ivan or Ernest, and we will send the documents in a digital way.And in this terms, I think that you can find whatever. And I am available for anyone who will want to know more about the topics we have been researching and welcome them. Welcome you as well to Mallorca whenever. Mm. [00:52:46] Chris: Beautiful. Thank you, Macia, once again. You're welcome for joining us today.[00:52:50] Macia: Thanks, salud. Get full access to ⌘ Chris Christou ⌘ at chrischristou.substack.com/subscribe
Spencer and Johan reveal their favorites to win tomorrow's challenging eighth stage, which ventures into the hilly interior of the Costa Blanca region before taking the riders up an extremely steep final climb before plunging down to the finish line in Xorret de Catí. Listen in to see if the duo thinks the breakaway or GC group will contest the win and which riders provide the most betting value. To get access to OŪTCOMES before the race, go to https://access.wedu.team to become a WEDŪ member!
Word of Mouth Podcast with Stuart Ojelay [Nu Disco, Vocal House, Club Classics]
For everything WoM related from Tickets to Events, Merch, Tracks, Podcasts head to:⬇️https://link.v1ce.co.uk/wordofmouthevents⬆️See below for what events are incoming!
With just over a month before Benidorm, Jordan has a couple of five-star reviews of Costa Blanca's top attractions to try and put William's mind at ease about the trip. Keeping up with the holiday spirit, we asked you to tell us your best swimming pool chat up lines and you did not disappoint! We also have a chat with another Diva Espana competition winner! To win a pair of tickets to Diva Espana, listen to the code in Tuesday's episode, fill out the form on sextedmyboss.com and you'll be in with a chance of coming to Benidorm with William and Jordan! Join Sexted Extra and laugh along to William Hanson and Jordan North helping you navigate the challenges of modern life ad free at https://plus.acast.com/s/sextedmyboss. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
As part of the Help I Sexted My Boss 5th birthday celebrations, Jordan North is taking William Hanson on a long weekend of Sexted shenanigans in Benidorm, and, the best bit is… you can join in the fun! With the help of the newly-named Producer Benidorm, and thanks to Amazon Music we're taking a load of lucky G&Divas on holiday to the Costa Blanca with travel and hotel accommodation sorted. Join Sexted Extra and laugh along to William Hanson and Jordan North helping you navigate the challenges of modern life ad free at https://plus.acast.com/s/sextedmyboss. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
¡QuéInsólito! le cuenta a Pepe Müller y a Victor Dr. Amor sus vivencias en la Costa Blanca. Señoras con botes de fairy y travestís del tres al cuarto en la perla del levante español, Benidorm, la Nueva York alicantina. Salseo Santi-Pepe/Pepe-Santi. Cambiar ansiolíticos por antidepresivos u/o antipsicóticos es lo que tiene querides.
Unterschiedlicher könnten die zwei Welten nicht sein, in der Aviva Thoma lebt. Die Zürcherin mit Künstlernamen Aviva Rocks verdient ihr Geld als Webcam-Girl und setzt sich für Tiere ein. Dass sie mit ihrem Beruf und ihrem Aussehen aneckt, stört sie nicht: «Ich stehe zu dem, was ich mache.» Seit fünf Jahren lebt Aviva Rocks in Spanien. Die 33-Jährige liebt das mediterrane Klima und die spanische Kultur. Die Zürcherin hat ihre Traumvilla in der kleinen Ortschaft Benitachell an der Costa Blanca gefunden: «Ich habe hier viel mehr Freiheiten als in der Schweiz.» Ein grosses Herz für Tiere Vor zwei Jahren hat Aviva Thoma einen Gnadenhof gegründet. Allerhand Tiere tummeln sich mittlerweile auf ihrem grossen Anwesen. Unter anderem Esel, Ziegen, Schafe, Schweine sowie Enten und Hühner. Aber auch zehn Hunde und eine Katze. Die Tierschutz-Aktivistin hat sich ihren Lebenstraum erfüllt und setzt sich für die Rechte der Tiere ein: «Es sind Tiere, die kein schönes Leben hatten. Hier finden sie Ruhe und Geborgenheit.»
In this episode we talked to Dr. Mike Wilkerson, a Chiropractor and purveyor of the nascent academic disciplines of BioGeology and Titanology. We had an amazing time discussing the misconceptions and the true biology of the heart (spoiler alert: the heart is not what we've been told) and his discoveries of heart fossils all over the world. Our conversation led us to explore the many resets that may have occurred in our history, myths in the area of Geology and the true nature of the realm we may live in. this interview is available in video at our Rumble channel at: https://rumble.com/v2b2zxo-tcrp-episode-78-bio-geology-of-the-heart-with-doctor-mike-wilkerson-stelliu.html Mike Wilkerson Bio: Mike Wilkerson has always had a knack for asking unconventional questions. As a teen computer hobbyist turned hacker in the early 80's, his thirst for knowledge led to wild adventures with some of the top hackers in the nation. But in 1985, the fun ended in a brief incarceration, after being caught for his infiltration of computer servers at Microsoft and three other Seattle area companies. Though he has walked the straight and narrow since then, Mike's propensity towards questioning the unquestionables has never waned. In the decades that followed, he morphed from a mischievous hacker, to a benevolent back-cracker. For the last 11 years, Mike has lived and worked as a chiropractor on the Costa Blanca in Spain, where his mission is to improve the health of the world one spine and mind at a time. Mike is a father of two, an avid hiker, a health crusader, artist, budding author, and mapper of rabbit holes. He is also a purveyor of the nascent academic disciplines of BioGeology and Titanology. As a part-time independent researcher, Mike has focused primarily on alternative history, non-standard cosmologies, gigantism, catastrophism and rapid petrification. He has also devoted a great deal of time to the study of the heart, its true structure and function, and made numerous videos on the subject of petrified heart stones. His extensive research on Petrified Titans and Organs can be found on the Youtube Channel: Stellium7. Join the conversation on Telegram at: https://t.me/tcrpodcast Mike's Channels and Contacts: Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/user/Stellium777 LBRY/Odysee: https://odysee.com/@Stellium7:5 Telegram: https://t.me/joinchat/M0i3e4RHg5wyY2M8 Rumble: https://rumble.com/search/video?q=stellium7 Bitchute: https://www.bitchute.com/channel/189AB3i8bvFz/ Paypal: stellium7@hotmail.com Patreon: www.Patreon.com/Stellium7 Bitcoin address: 1DfSsFYMLRYYkfvHu2XDrHGqYVj4HHgEgx Resources from this episode: An Amazing Heart Stone video: https://youtu.be/8mJpROW3lD4 The Heart is not what You Think video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gtTST2S2tBM Hangman1128's Youtube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@hangman1128/videos
Viðmælandi dagsins var fjölmiðlakonan og ferðalangurinn Snæfríður Ingadóttir. Hún sagði frá uppvextinum á Akureyri, hvernig hún leiddist út í fjölmiðlun og hvernig hún loks uppgötvaði ævintýraheima óhefðbundnar ferðamennsku. Hún hefur síðan þá skrifað ótal ferðahandbækur, nú síðast um Costa Blanca ströndina á Spáni. Umsjón: Gígja Hólmgeirsdóttir
Viðmælandi dagsins var fjölmiðlakonan og ferðalangurinn Snæfríður Ingadóttir. Hún sagði frá uppvextinum á Akureyri, hvernig hún leiddist út í fjölmiðlun og hvernig hún loks uppgötvaði ævintýraheima óhefðbundnar ferðamennsku. Hún hefur síðan þá skrifað ótal ferðahandbækur, nú síðast um Costa Blanca ströndina á Spáni. Umsjón: Gígja Hólmgeirsdóttir
Kaum ist das Jahr gestartet, steht der Besenwagen schon wieder in sonnigeren Gefilden. In Spanien tummelt sich fast das gesamte Peloton im Trainingslager. In einem Orangenhain an einer ruhigen Nebenstraße in den Bergen irgendwo an der Costa Blanca, reflektiert der gelbe Lack die Sonnenstrahlen an diesem Nachmittag in derselben Farbe wie die süßen Zitrusfrüchte an den Bäumen. Die Sonnenblenden sind runtergeklappt und drei Stapel mit 10 Tafeln liegen auf dem Armaturenbrett. Das erste Team kommt im neuen Kit vorbeigefahren: 6, 4 und 8 Punkte zeigen die Tafeln aus dem Schiebedach, eine solide 6 insgesamt! Ein Team nach dem Anderen zieht vorbei und endlich auch das Team Alpecin-Deceuninck. Jason Osborne schert aus der Doppelreihe aus, springt kurz danach vom Rad ab und hechtet in echter Actionheld-Manier auf den Beifahrersitz. Nach einer krönenden, olympischen Silbermedaille im Rudersport, unzähligen KOMs und einem Weltmeister-Titel im E-Cycling ist Jason in der 1. Liga des Radsport angekommen. — Besenwagen - der Radsport Podcast wird unterstützt von Rapha https://www.rapha.cc/ — Abstimmen beim Besenwagen Trikot Ranking 2023! https://www.besenwagen.com/trikots — Besenwagen x Rapha Kit, T-Shirts und mehr gibt's bei uns im Shop: https://shop.besenwagen.com/ — Hier kannst du unseren Newsletter abonnieren: https://www.besenwagen.com/newsletter — Niemanden erreicht? Hinterlasse uns eine Nachricht auf dem Anrufbeantworter: https://www.besenwagen.com/anrufbeantworter — Schreib' uns eine E-Mail! kontakt@besenwagen.com — Werbung: Klick auf https://athleticgreens.com/Besenwagen und sichere dir bei deiner AG1 Bestellung einen kostenlosen Jahresvorrat an Vitamin D zur Unterstützung des Immunsystems & 5 Travel Packs! AG1 ist ein All-in-One Supplement, bestehend aus 75 Vitaminen, Mineralstoffen und weiteren essentiellen Inhaltsstoffen, welche die täglichen Nährstoffbedürfnisse deines Körpers decken. Das hoch absorbierbares Pulver zahlt in die wichtigsten Gesundheitsbereiche ein: Immunsystem, Darmgesundheit, Energiehaushalt, Regeneration und gesundes Altern.
Die letzte Fahrt für das Jahr führt nach Spanien. Im Süden überwintert der Besenwagen mit Rentnern und Radprofis aller Welt an der Costa Blanca. Fast das gesamte Peloton füllt Hotels und Straßen zwischen Alicante im Süden und Dénia im Norden. Am Coll de Rates stellen wir uns wie alle anderen brav an und warten bis wir dran sind. Im Sport-Modus sind wir schneller als die meisten Fahrerinnen und Fahrer im Winter-Modus und fahren Slalom durch das Fahrerfeld zum Gipfel. Oben angekommen grüßt uns eine wohlbekannte Stimme mit Schädl spoitn signature move. Lukas Pöstlberger steigt ein und macht als erster Gast den Besenwagen Hattrick komplett. Zusammen fahren wir die Abfahrt in Richtung Winterpause, Jahres- und Teamwechsel. — Allen HörerInnen wünschen wir eine schöne Weihnachtszeit und einen guten Rutsch ins Jahr 2023! Vielen Dank für's Zuhören und bis nächstes Jahr! Bastian, Paul, Andy und Fabian — Besenwagen - der Radsport Podcast wird unterstützt von Rapha https://www.rapha.cc/ — Besenwagen x RAPHA ist zurück. Die aktuelle Kollektion wieder erhältlich! https://shop.besenwagen.com/collections/rapha — Remises, rabajas, sale! Le Tour, la Vuelta, Worldwide - alle T-Shirts jetzt im Shop reduziert! https://shop.besenwagen.com/collections/kleidung — Schreib' uns eine E-Mail! kontakt@besenwagen.com — Hier kannst du unseren Newsletter abonnieren: https://www.besenwagen.com/newsletter — Niemanden erreicht? Hinterlasse uns eine Nachricht auf dem Anrufbeantworter: https://www.besenwagen.com/anrufbeantworter — Werbung: Klick auf https://athleticgreens.com/Besenwagen und sichere dir bei deiner AG1 Bestellung einen kostenlosen Jahresvorrat an Vitamin D zur Unterstützung des Immunsystems & 5 Travel Packs! AG1 ist ein All-in-One Supplement, bestehend aus 75 Vitaminen, Mineralstoffen und weiteren essentiellen Inhaltsstoffen, welche die täglichen Nährstoffbedürfnisse deines Körpers decken. Das hoch absorbierbares Pulver zahlt in die wichtigsten Gesundheitsbereiche ein: Immunsystem, Darmgesundheit, Energiehaushalt, Regeneration und gesundes Altern. — Werbung: Wecke dein Potenzial mit WHOOP, deinem leistungsstarken digitalen Fitness- und Gesundheitscoach. Hast du Lust bekommen, die Hosts auf ihrer Fitness-Reise zu begleiten und dein eigenes Potenzial zu wecken? Steig' ein ins Besenwagen Team mit dem Code COMM-45DD49. Bis zum 18.12. bekommst du im Weihnachts-Sale 20% Rabatt auf im Voraus zu zahlende Mitgliedschaften und Verlängerungen! https://join.whoop.com Außerdem gibt es: 20% auf Accessoires 30% auf Luxe-Bänder und WYW-Bänder 40% auf Apparel 50$ Gutschein für den Shop für Mitgliedschafts-Verlängerungen Das alles findet ihr im Shop unter https://shop.whoop.com/
In this episode we take you to the fun city of Alicante. It is usually described in two words - beaches and bars. It has a whole lot more than that to offer. Listen as we take you to the most popular beach area with views of the Castle. We then take you up a lift inside the mountain to one of Spain's largest medieval fortresses - Santa Barbara Castle. We then take you along the prettiest promenade in Spain (in our opinion) and tell you all about the markets that are there at night. We take you to an fairy wonderland street in the Old Town called “Mushroom Street” and then to the most unique and fascinating museum that is all about the most famous festival in Alicante called Les Fogueres de San Juan - Bonfire Museum. We take a day trip to the famous Tabarca Island that used to be a pirate refuge. Next we go on another day trip to the prettiest white hillside village in all of Spain - Altea. Listen as we tell you why it is called the Santorini of Spain. Check out our show notes and pictures here. Go to our website at www.beachtravelwine.com for heaps more information. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/leanne-mccabe/message
AHHHH I stumbled upon more info and a solid case update just while looking for photos to post for you guys!!! I just had to get an update out as soon as I learned the info. Enjoy! nacho vidal - Olive Press News Spain (theolivepress.es) Olive Press Spain News - Andalucia, Gibraltar, Mallorca & Costa Blanca (theolivepress.es)
Remco Evenepoel heeft de Costa Blanca rood gekleurd. Rood van de leiderstrui die nu stevig om zijn schouders zit en van het bloed van zijn tegenstanders dat in Alicante uit de aerohelmen spatte. Eindelijk was het hoge woord eruit: hij gaat niet voor de top tien, maar de eindzege in deze Vuelta. Kan het nog mislopen? Hoe kijkt de rest van de wereld naar het fenomeen Remco Evenepoel? En is het een goed idee om hem nu al het mede-kopmanschap voor het komende WK toe te bedelen? Host Michaël Van Damme legt deze en andere prangende vragen voor aan wielerredacteurs Wim Vos, Jan-Pieter De Vlieger en Maarten Delvaux. Host: Michaël Van Damme Gasten: Wim Vos, Jan-Pieter De Vlieger en Maarten DelvauxUitgever: Het Nieuwsblad Postproductie: Pieter Santens (House of Media) Sounddesign: Xavier De Clercq (House of Media) Sponsor: Skoda
In this episode, Hannah is joined by Mark Eddy to talk about the upcoming multi-activity guidebook to outdoor adventure in Spain's Costa Blanca, with 60 route suggestions covering ridge scrambles, via ferrata, canyoning, sport climbing, trad climbing, hiking, trail running and mountain biking. Many routes require climbing experience, although they vary in difficulty, with options suitable for a range of abilities.If you'd like to walk the Costa Blanca Mountains yourself and explore this European adventure playground, you can pre-order Mark's Cicerone guidebook here. You can also find our Walking on the Costa Blanca, 50 mountain walks and scrambles guidebook here.Search for @CiceronePress on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, and join our Facebook community group, Cicerone Connect. Sign up for the Cicerone newsletter to keep up to date with all our news, events and guidebooks. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Take a listen, and begin your journey to one of the most ideal lifestyles one can live in Costa Blanca North, Spain, with Chris Hara, Owner and Managing Director of Fine & Country Costa Blanca North, an area dubbed Spain's “Jewel in the Crown” by the British travel Press. https://www.fineandcountry.com/es/costa-blanca-north
Im Interview: Der “Crash-Prophet”, Börsenmakler und Fondsmanager Dirk Müller über die aktuelle Inflation, die Geldpolitik der EZB und eine drohende Weltwirtschaftskrise. Macron verliert die absolute Mehrheit im Parlament! “Le Monde” Wirtschaftskorrespondentin Cécile Boutelet über den zweiten Wahlgang in Frankreich. Spanische Kellner-Krise: Fachkräftemangel in der Gastronomie an der Costa Blanca. Der Papst und die italienische Nonnen-Fußball-Nationalmannschaft.