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What rental agency did you use?
I have been to southern Spain a number of times and I can suggest an alternate route.
Depending on your objective for the motorcycle riding part (seeing the sights versus enjoying the scenery and twisties), from Sevilla (while there, check out the cathedral, the Barrio and be sure to eat at the Las Teresas restaurant in the Barrio, you'll pig out on the finest Serrano ham and Manchego cheese) you could go down to Jerez de la Frontera (try a genuine arabic hammam on a side street next to the cathedral, you'll find it on Google, reservations recommended for the scrubbing and massage, quite an experience!). You could also visit the Sherry (jerez) wineries located there. Then you go on to Cadiz (endless fine sand beach on the Atlantic). From there, follow E-5/N-340 to Tarifa (windsurfing capital!), then on to Gibraltar (the Rock is worth the stop) and finally on your way back to Malaga.
The stretch of coastal road between Cadiz and Gibraltar by way of Tarifa is fairly twisty and very scenic.
The only part you'd be missing is Granada (where the Alhambra is). Your schedule permitting, from Malaga, Granada is an easy day trip there and back (approx 2.5 hrs one way). If you do make it there, visit the Alhambra in the morning (cooler) and make sure to grab lunch on the outside patio at the Parador hotel (right next to the Alhambra) for an amazing view.
In Sevilla, I stayed at the Novotel, with underground garage, 1 km from the Barrio and cathedral, you walk there. In Jerez de la Frontera I stayed at the Hipotels Hotel Sherry Park, very nice and well located near the wineries and the Royal School of Equestrian Arts (also worth a visit if you like horses). In Gibraltar (because Gibraltar proper is a zoo), I stayed just across the bay in Algeciras at the AC Hotel Algeciras, recommended.
Finally, instead of staying in Malaga, big city with a harbour, may I suggest Nerja, 45 minutes east of Malaga, a true typical Andalucian town. There is also a Parador hotel here, perched on the cliff by the sea with amazing views.
Hope this helps. Enjoy!
Robert
'02 Honda CBR1100XX Super Blackbird
'91 BMW K1 (sold)
The first point and click interface was a Smith & Wesson.
Will Spain be like this?
'08 NINJA 250r | Since 2011
^ Not quite ... that's in the Alps (specifically, the Dolomites) - you would be hard pressed to find a substitute for that.
That particular pass looks gnarlier than the pass-roads that I've seen there. Good find.
http://maps.google.ca/maps?q=Passo+M...+Pass&t=m&z=14
I just can't get over how narrow it is. There is no shoulder. What becomes your 'Exit Strategy' in this situation? If a car comes around a corner and doesn't give you any road, it's over. Hopefully Spain will be twisty but wider.
When my GF got back from Italy she said the scooters and motorcycles ripped through the narrow city streets. She said she'd be very uncomfortable being on the back of a bike there. How do you guys find riding in European cities?
'08 NINJA 250r | Since 2011
Your "exit strategy" is to ride in accordance with the conditions so that you can stop or maneuver within the distance that you can see ahead.
From my experience, European drivers are more heads-up in conditions like this towards motorcyclists (a good many of them ride, there are lots of bikes on the roads there) BUT they also expect you to operate YOUR vehicle in an appropriate manner. In North America, we're taught to ride "blocking position" to prevent cars from passing by and sharing your lane and that usually means being away from the shoulder. In Europe, you are expected to take up as little space as possible (ride right next to the shoulder). The other drivers will give you the space that you need to use ... but no more. They know how wide a motorcycle is. If two oncoming cars meet on a one-lane road like this, they'll almost stop and work out how to get past each other. If an oncoming car meets a motorcycle, the car will move over but not slow down ... You are expected to signal EVERYthing and they, in general, will signal everything. There is more co-operation, too. If you are on a bike and you come up behind a slow truck crawling up a steep hill on a one-and-a-bit lane road, and you see the truck move a little to the right and the right indicator comes on, that indicator means GO FOR IT, the way is clear to pass! You'd never see that in North America. Never!
Different from here but generally more enjoyable. There are more bikes (by a lot), and the car drivers mostly know about bikes. Fewer traffic lights, fewer stop signs, lots more roundabouts. Having said that, downtown in many larger European cities has a lot of walking streets and very good public transit access, so there's little point riding or driving downtown, just take transit like everyone else.
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