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The Car II

The driver who bumped into my car says it wasn't his fault. It does't really concern his insurance company at the moment whose fault it was as he has comprehensive insurance. If, in the end, they have to pay out, because it was his fault, he'll lose his no claims bonus. If it turns out to be my fault they'll get their money back by making a claim against my insurance company. If that happens I'll lose my no claims bonus and I won't get my car fixed. But whoever's fault it was he will get his car fixed by his insurance company. His insurance company won't worry about me. They'll expect my insurance company to look out for me and even to make a claim against them, on my behalf, for third party damage. Unfortunately my company won't be doing that for me because of the legal assistance problem explained below. My insurance company only insures the "third party" i.e. the other car/driver. I can't make a claim to get my car fixed because ...

Being on the telly

I was interviewed by the local telly, TelePinos, at the car club do on Sunday. I didn't feel to do very well at the time but I saw myself on the local news. I thought I sounded OK, the Spanish was far from perfect but it was reasonably sensible and I certainly grinned a lot.

Hooray, now I can pay tax!

My boss waved a piece of paper under my nose as I was on the phone at work today. It was my contract of employment, signed and dated by someone official. I am no longer an illegal, cash in hand worker. I pay taxes and I have rights through the Social Security system.

Not such a great success

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Despite the car being a bit of a jalopy nowadays we're still members of an old car club. The SEAT 600 Club of Orihuela in fact. Theyd asked me if I could organise a little excursion and I said yes. It was very simple to organise. I asked Roberto , the man who owns and runs the wine bodega and oil mill in Culebrón if he could do a guided tour. "No problem" he said "We do it all the time". I asked Eduardo a the local restaurant if he could do a meal for thirty to forty people. "No problem" he said "We do it all the time". As the day got closer the numbers went up. I spoke to Roberto "I can deal with ay number". I spoke to Eduardo, he said his restaurant could hold lots of people but he was dithering a bit about the menu. I contacted the Spanish secretary of the car club and asked him to speak to Eduardo just to make sure everything was sorted. That conversation took place. The cars were due in Pinoso at about 11 this morning. We go...

The car

I knew it would all go wrong. My insurance company says that because the car only has third party insurance (that's all I was offered because it's over 25 years old) there is no legal assistance included. This seems to mean that they are unwilling to talk to the other insurance company on my behalf. My brokers said I should talk to my car club (AA type equivalent) who do provide legal assistance. My car club said I would only need legal assistance if the man who ran into me contests the claim and even then only if there is any real doubt about his culpability and that my insurance company should deal with it. So the car club says it's not their problem and the insurance brokers say it's not theirs. I went to ask the Guardia Civil (traffic police) what I could do. They say the insurance company has an obligation to pursue the claim on my behalf and if they won't I should make a "denuncia" - a sort of official complaint against them. As you can imagine t...

Hogueras

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I mentioned the Santa Catalina fiesta a couple of entries ago. Well tonight they have bonfires in the street, they're called Hogueras. The cameraman from the local telly told me there were 75 of them all together. Families who live in the area invite their pals around and cook bits of food in the embers of the bonfires. Chasing away the autumnal blues I suppose.

So that's what 2,470 kilos of wood looks like

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We burn wood to keep warm in Spain. None of that new fangled central heating for us. Last year we had a pile of tree trunks and wooden debris around the house, which my trusty axe and I turned that into chunks that would fit into our, rather small, wood burning stove. This year we had to order some from a wood merchant. I rang several people to check prices and eventually ordered my mixed load of 2,000 kilos of almond, olive and oak from Juan who said he give me a ring to confirm the actual time but that it would be sometime this morning. He charges 11 centimos per kilo. When the wood turned up at 4.30 this afternoon it was Simón who brought it. I liked Simón, he complimented me on my Spanish. There was a problem; his lorry would not quite fit under the trees in our drive so he had to drop the wood on the track just outside our house. I now know that 2,470 kilos is 50 wheelbarrows full. It's piled in our wood store, in our garage and alongside the wall outside the garage. It took ...

Another Year

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It must be close to Santa Catalina's day because the district of Santa Catalina in Pinoso is having it's fiesta to honour their patron saint. Last year we went to the crowning of the Carnival Queen but, as spectators who knew nobody, it was too boring for words. This year we gave it a miss. We went back today though to get our free beer and free paella. We got the beer, or rather I got one, as being the habitual driver I can only ever have one. The paella is cooked in a huge pan out in the street - technically the pan is the paella so I should have written the rice is cooked in a huge paella out in the street - but who cares? It was supposed to be served at 2pm; at 2.30 there was no sign so we cut our losses and came home. Some of this is because, for one reason and another, I was in less than a brilliant mood, but part of it is the "been there, done that syndrome". I always thought Steinbeck had it wrong with Mack and the Boys and another sunset; how could anyone g...

Mushing

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There was some Mushing going on in the village of El Seque close to Pinoso this evening. El Seque is small; it makes Culebrón look large. They don't have a lot of tarmac in El Seque. Mushing is where a bunch of dogs, the dogs that I'd think of as Huskies, pull a sled behind them with a chap on the sled. For the picture to look right the man has to have big furs on and there need to be snow shoes tied to the sled. In El Seque they do it just as dusk falls, the drivers have those torches that fasten to their heads and the sleds have wheels. The Huskies are the same though. Actually it got more bizarre than that. I suppose a wheeled version of a ski sled is rather innovative and using the dirt roads that run through and around El Seque is just because the people who want to have a go don't happen to live near Fairbanks, Alaska. However, the first few competitors were lads on mountain bikes with some sort of harness that attached their one or two dogs to the bike. Now that was ...

Poor old car!

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Thud! the car stopping dead. Bits of metal tinkling to the floor. Maggie and I were on our way to get a cheap evening meal. We were both fine and otherwise it was just bent and twisted metal. Front wing and bonnet on mine front wing on his - more damage to the Audi on balance. No doubt there's a paper chase to come. No claims bonus to lose, maybe a dodgy insurance company that doesn't like parting with cash. And how long without the car even if things go smoothly? The man in the Audi called the police, as one has to in Spain. We were in the local town so they knew him of course but they seemed pretty even handed. Though using Spanish under such circumstances was a bit tricky and he spoke to the police in Valenciano (the local language) just to make sure that I wouldn't understand. Both of us remained reasonably calm although he was saying I was going too fast, didn't have lights on etc. My counter argument that he failed to stop at the Give Way sign was backed by rather...