Westworld Alberta
Issue link: http://westworldmagazine.ama.ab.ca/i/590742
Exclusive benefits to CAA Members. Call or go online today to book your complimentary hearing evaluation. At Connect Hearing, we know that "fine" really isn't fine at all when hearing loss starts to affect some of life's important moments, like family time during the holidays. Not when there are so many innovative hearing solutions available to you. Better hearing can start right now! To find out more, call 1.888.486.0177 or visit connecthearing.ca/caa today! ®CAA, CAA logo and CAA Rewards trademarks owned by, and use is authorized by, the Canadian Automobile Association. " My hearing is fine… " ... except during family gatherings. WHERE WINE MEETS unwind. EUROPE'S RIVERS & CASTLES From $3,149 USD AmaWaterways – aboard AmaDante + $168 port charges Nuremberg to Luxembourg 7 nights – August 4, 2016 Port Visits: Cruise from Nuremberg to Bamberg, Kitzingen, Würzburg, Wertheim, Rüdesheim, Koblenz, Cochem, Zell & Trier Add: 3 nights in Paris & 2 nights in Prague for an extra $1,420 USD per person Exclusive AMA Member Benefits: $150 per person savings, a bottle of wine & chocolates Rate listed is in U.S. dollars, based on double occupancy, based on an August 4, 2016 sailing in category E. Taxes and fees are additional. Rates listed include AMA Member savings. Price is accurate at time of printing deadline. All offers are subject to availability at time of booking. Additional terms and conditions apply. Ask your AMA Cruise Specialist for details. Booking fees apply to in-centre and phone bookings and are not included in the advertised price. AMATravel.ca/Cruise 1.866.989.6594 Combining incredible wine with Europe's historic wonders, this cruise introduces you to new flavours and old treasures. EARNING REWARD DOLLARS IS... W I N T E R 2 0 1 5 | W E S T W O R L D A L B E R T A 17 close second to athletic pursuits at this time of year. Entire families are out filling wicker bas- kets with boletes, chanterelles and other wild varieties. We park at a trailhead, and then coax our kids into a hike – one in the backpack car- rier, the other in between us holding our hands. After an hour of walking uphill through leafy trees, we break out into open pastures where sheep are grazing. e wind carries an earthy smell as we shelter on the lee side of a concrete weather station bunker on Montse- ny's summit. We snack on la selva, a creamy goat cheese typical of the region, and dark chocolate, while scanning the Costa Brava, 30 kilometres to the east, looking for the beach town of Tossa de Mar and its medieval walled city, which we had visited a few days ago. To the south lies the hazy sprawl of Barcelona, the magnificent capital of Catalonia. THE WEEKEND BEFORE OUR DEPARTURE for the south, the Fira de Tardor del Bolet, the mushroom festival, transforms Arbucies into a carnival. Main Street is closed to traffic, mak- ing way for vendors selling baking, sausage, dried and fresh mushrooms, mushroom-fla- voured mustard and tacky clothing. A man with a handlebar moustache pedals an inge- nius human-powered horse carousel, charging two euros per kid for a ride. e plaza is elbow to elbow with festival-goers. Mushrooms of all shapes, colour and sizes are artfully displayed around the central fountain. Local women sell a delicious stew of beef and sautéed boletes while a troupe of medieval musicians dressed in leather and leotards, and playing the lute, hand drum and fiddle, parade through the crowd. Our kids look on wide-eyed at the action. We stop at a stall manned by an ancient-looking gentlemen, his face as wrin- kled as a dried mushroom. We buy some wild mushroom mustard to take with us. "These people sure love their mushrooms," Lisa says as we return to our apartment to start pack- ing. e next morning we hit the road early for southern Spain. OUR APARTMENT IN LANJARÓN OCCU- pies all four stories of a centuries-old town- house and is mere steps away from the town's Fountain of Youth. It's noon on Saturday. Zola and Sabine chase a soccer ball around Placeta de Santa Ana while Señora Carmen, a wizened octogenarian, fills water jugs from the foun- tain already receiving a steady flow of visitors for a cleansing morning sip. Lanjarón, an hour's drive from the city of Granada, is known for its healing waters and