The Gibraltar Magazine December 2018

Page 1

t s e

D

ig

FESTIVE PARTYWEAR HIDDEN GIBRALTAR 12 WINES OF CHRISTMAS CHRISTMAS DESTINATIONS LONGING TO LEARN IN GHANA



Happy Holidays FROM


from the editor

DECEMBER ISSUE EDITOR’S NOTE

A

t last, time to open the polvorones and turrón guiltfree! I may have begun sampling in November - purely for testing purposes, of course. We wouldn’t want Christmas to be ruined by a faulty batch.

Also on the menu is copious Red Red Wine which will inevitably lead to Dire Straits. Can you guess who I’ve been interviewing this month? Two musical legends allow us an exclusive interview to discuss life, art, and of course, music (p. 58).

I’M DREAMING OF A WHITE CHRISTMAS… …BUT IF IT RUNS OUT, I’LL DRINK THE RED.

As all people who do Christmas right know, December is all about the decadence. So put down that kale smoothie and head on over to our recipe pages to learn how to make an easy-peasy-nutmeg-wreathy edible centrepiece, your very own vegan cranberry cheese, and – love them or loathe them, no Christmas would be complete without them – mince pies (p. 85). Tis the season to be jolly, but it isn’t without its worries - namely financial ones. Resham reveals the extent of our spending situation around the holidays, and offers some budgeting tips as well as some nifty ideas for DIY gifts (p. 70). Also on the topic of money, Alex discloses the results of a survey conducted on the millennials mindset to money management. How aware is this generation of alternative investment opportunities (p. 21)? On the first day of December Gib Mag gave to me… 12 wines of Christmas and 5 festive holiday destinations. Chris helps us through the dark nights, damp mornings, and dreary afternoons by giving us five great options for a winter getaway (p. 63), whilst Andrew educates us on the tipple that should accompany our Christmas spread (p. 79). Office parties, get-togethers with friends, family reunions, New Year’s… we’re all thinking it. ‘What do I wear?!’ Julia’s back to save us from any festive faux-pas with her fashion advice. (p. 77) Wishing you a very merry Christmas, and a LLani new year. See you in 2019!

4

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 2018


The Management and Staff wish you a

HAPPY CHRISTMAS & a prosperous

NEW YEAR

www.gibintbank.gi | +350 (200) 13900 | Gibraltar International Bank Ltd, PO Box 1375, Ince’s House, 310 Main Street, Gibraltar GX11 1AA Gibraltar International Bank Limited is authorised and regulated by the Gibraltar Financial Services Commission. Company Registration Number 109679


EDITOR: Sophie Clifton-Tucker editor@thegibraltarmagazine.com DESIGN: Lina Sproge design@thegibraltarmagazine.com REPORTER: Victoria Locke SALES: Advertising Team sales@thegibraltarmagazine.com

85

DISTRIBUTION: DHL martin@matrix.gi ACCOUNTS: Paul Cox paul@thegibraltarmagazine.com CONTRIBUTING WRITERS: Jorge v.Rein Parlade Alexander Tom Eran and Ayelet Mamo Shay George Linares Andrew Licudi Chris Hedley Julia Coelho Resham Khiani Jeremy Gomez Jess Leaper Stefano Blanca Sciacaluga Lewis Stagnetto Peter Schirmer Richard Cartwright Elena Scialtiel Sophie Clifton-Tucker

63

facebook.com/gibmag/ twitter.com/gibmag instagram.com/ thegibraltarmagazine/ The Gibraltar Magazine is published monthly by Rock Publishing Ltd Portland House, Glacis Road, Gibraltar, PO Box 1114 T: (+350) 20077748 E: editor@thegibraltarmagazine.com

33 42

Š 2018 Rock Publishing Limited. All rights reserved. No part of this periodical may be reproduced without written consent of The Gibraltar Magazine. www.TheGibraltarMagazine.com Magazine & website archived by the British Library 6

58 GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


54

74

40

content

79

8 Hello There: What is the most memorable gift you’ve given/received? 10 What’s on? 12 News

51 Rina’s Picture-Perfect Christmas

18 Around Town

54 Jazzing up the Holidays

BUSINESS

58 The Art Behind the Music

21 The Millennial Mindset 24 The Role of the NED 29 Property Investment Abroad

LIFE 33 Hidden Gibraltar 36 Making Gib More Accessible 38 Longing to Learn in Ghana 40 A Crystal-Clear Christmas 42 The Big Event

85

SCENE

56 Music: More on Morea

LEISURE 63 5 Christmas Holiday Destinations 70 ‘Tis the Season to be Budgeting 72 The Health Benefits of CBD Oil 74 Festive Partywear 79 Twelve Wines of Christmas

45 A Zookeeper’s Diary: Reptiles

REGULARS

48 The Holothurians

83 Recipes: Christmas Wreath, Vegan Cranberry Cheese & Vegan Mince pies 86 Guides and Information 89 #GibsGems 90 The Father of Politics 94 Schedules 97 Coffee Time COVER: PHOTOGRAPHER: David Rodriguez (drodphotos.com) MODELS: Sarah Carreras, Pauline Olivera & Niclas Ott HAIR & MAKEUP: Mayfair on Main www.mayfaironmain.gi

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

7


hello there

WHAT IS THE MOST MEMORABLE GIFT YOU’VE GIVEN/ RECEIVED? Abigail Taylor, 31 Senior Stylist at Mayfair on Main.

Hugo, 2 Distributor of Licks. My favourite present is my wooden bone which I take with me every time we go to the beach. I play fetch with it until I get tired… which is never!

Kirsty Watson, 26 Stylist at Mayfair on Main. My most memorable gift is my grandmother’s eternity ring which was left to me and I wear it every day as it’s like a piece of her is always with me.

It would probably be a photo of my whole family which was given to me by my cousin for my 30th birthday in a beautiful frame. The photo was taken when we celebrated my grandfather’s 70th birthday and he sadly passed away the following year.

Daniela Ayre, 38 Cancer Relief Nurse at the Cancer Relief Centre. My answer is my grandmas 1940’s engagement ring. Not only is it beautiful but as she sadly died over 10 years, it reminds me of my wonderful childhood memories, her strength, kindness and beauty!

8

George, 33

Abdelkader Rahmouni, 72

Manager at Calpe Pharmacy.

Shop Assistant at Calpe Pharmacy

I was given tickets to go see the ATP tennis tour in London from my brother. I got to see Federer play – he is a legend!

I was given £1000 as a present one year from my son. I was ecstatic! I really needed the money to redo my kitchen.



what’s on WHAT'S ON? DECEMBER 2018 EVERY TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY The Zone outh Centre, Line Wall Road Y Wednesdays 12:30pm–2:00pm Tuesdays & Thursdays 12:30pm–4:30pm

For further information and details contact the John Mackintosh Hall during opening hours or email info@culture.gov.gi

SATURDAY 8TH DECEMBER

SATURDAY 1ST DECEMBER UNTIL MONDAY 14TH JANUARY

For further information please contact info@gibraltarinternationaljazzfestival.com

Christmas Fun Fair Attractions 2018 John Mackintosh Square For further information please contact Gibraltar Cultural Services at info@culture.gi

An alternative safe place for young people aged 15 +

TUESDAY 4TH DECEMBER

For further information please contact Mark Zammit, Principal Youth Officer on mzammit@gibraltar.gov.gi or call +350 20078637.

Piano Recital by Valentina Lisitsa

EVERY THURSDAY Jam Session ord Nelson, Grand Casemates L Square, 10:00pm UNTIL SUNDAY 2ND DECEMBER Magic Festival 2018 John Mackintosh Hall International stage shows, close-up Magic, Magic Lectures and workshops. Tickets available from www.buytickets.gi

The Convent Ballroom, 8:00pm Tickets £20.00 available from Sacarello’s Cofee Shop, Irish Town & The Silver Shop, 222 Main Street Senior Citizens / Student tickets at £10 from the John Mckintosh Hall, 308 Main Street For further information please contact +350 20072134 THURSDAY 6TH DECEMBER The Gibraltar Horticultural Society Christmas Show J ohn Mackintosh Hall, 10:00am-7:00pm All manner of Christmas and seasonal decorations will be entered and displayed for all to view.

For further information please visit www.magic.gi

For further information please contact ghsmember@outlook.com

UNTIL MONDAY 22ND DECEMBER

FRIDAY 7TH DECEMBER UNTIL SATURDAY 8TH DECEMBER

The Gibraltar Christmas Market

7th SECEMU Bat Research and Conservation Conference

oulevard, Line Wall Road, B 12:00am–20:00pm every Wednesday, Thursday and Friday 10:00am–20:00pm, every Saturday 10

niversity of Gibraltar, U Europa Point, 6:30pm-8:00pm For further information please contact jornadas@secemu.org

Gibraltar International Jazz Festival t Michael’s Cave, S 8:00pm

MONDAY 31ST DECEMBER New Year’s Eve Celebrations 2018 asemates Square, C 10:30pm–3:00am Free Family Event organised by Axle Media on behalf of the Ministry of Culture La Sala New Years Eve Party 5 Ocean Village Promenade 3 7:30pm–3:00am Hollywood New Year’s Eve Party For more information and tickets please contact +350 20016500 or bookings@sunborngibraltar.com La Sala New Years Eve Party 5 Ocean Village Promenade 3 7:30pm–3:00am Hollywood New Year’s Eve Party For more information and tickets please contact +350 20016500 or bookings@sunborngibraltar.com Barbary Restaurant New Years Eve Party - Pirates and Pearls arbary Restaurant and bar, B 32 Ocean Village Promenade 7:00pm–1:30am For more information and tickets please contact +350 20016500 or bookings@sunborngibraltar.com NYE Moulin Rouge Cabaret Night urora Ballroom, A 35 Ocean Village Promenade 8:00pm–4:00am For more information and tickets please contact +350 20016500 or bookings@sunborngibraltar.com GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


what’s on NEW YEAR’S EVE CELEBRATIONS The Gibraltar Cultural Services on behalf of the Ministry of Culture is pleased to announce the programme of events for this year’s New Year’s Eve Celebrations. The events that are been organised by Axle Media will be held on Monday 31st December 2018 at Casemates Square from 10.30pm to 3am on Tuesday 1st January 2019. GCS has been working closely with Axle Media in order to provide very entertaining celebrations. The programme of events is as follows: 10.30pm The Jeremy Perez Session Band Midnight Spectacular Fireworks Display 12.10am Life In Stereo 1:50am DJ F-Grove The Gibraltar Cultural Services invites the general public to go down to Casemates and enjoy the festivities.

Christmas Menu Complimentary glass of bubbly on arrival

STARTERS Chicken liver pâté (D.F) (G.F optional) £5.95 Served with ginger infused orange and toasted pelayo Prawn and papaya salad (D.F) (G.F) £5.65 Sautéed prawns marinated in lemon mayonnaise with papaya Homemade cod croquettes £4.95 Served with aioli

Trio cheese parcel £5.45 Feta, mozzarella, cream cheese with walnuts and spinach filled in filo pastry with pink honey dressing Falafel (V.G) £6.25 Served with muhammara sauce

MAINS Turkey breast roulade (G.F optional) £16.45 With chestnut stuffing, served with grilled asparagus, baby potatoes and port sauce Retinto sirloin £15.95 On a bed of rosemary mash potato and pepper sauce Grilled salmon (G.F) £15.95 Served with sautéed vegetables and Béarnaise sauce Rack of lamb (D.F) £17.95 On a bed of vegetable quinoa and thyme jus Wild mushroom and roasted chestnut risotto (G.F) Drizzled with truffle oil

(V.G) £11.95

DESSERTS Baileys cheesecake £6.95 Christmas crumble £5.95 Chocolate mousse with pomegranate (G.F) £6.45 Christmas pudding £5.95 Mini selection of all the above £7.45 Selection of vegan desserts (V.G) £5.95

30 John Mackintosh Square GX11 1AA Gibraltar Tel: 200 70201 (V.G) - vegan (G.F) - Gluten Free (D.F) - Dairy Free info@vinopolisgastrobar.gi www.vinopolisgastrobar.gi 30 John Mackintosh Square GX11 1AA Gibraltar Tel: 200 70201 info@vinopolisgastrobar.gi www.vinopolisgastrobar.gi

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

11


news WE WILL STICK WITH BRITAIN Her Majesty’s Government of Gibraltar welcomes the unwavering commitment of the United Kingdom that it will negotiate future trade and other arrangements with the EU that work for all of the British family of nations, including Gibraltar. The deep and unbreakable bonds that bind the United Kingdom and Gibraltar together have not in any way, and will not be in any way, be diluted as a result of our common departure from the EU. Brexit will have no effect on the British Sovereignty of Gibraltar and the waters that surround it. Gibraltar is leaving the EU at the same time as the United Kingdom, despite having voted overwhelmingly to remain, because it is our relationship with Britain that guarantees our security, prosperity and the certainty of the rule of law. The Chief Minister of Her Majesty’s Government of Gibraltar, the Hon Fabian Picardo QC MP, said: “Throughout our history we’ve stuck with Britain. After Brexit, we will stick with Britain in the future too. This is our most important relationship. And as the UK establishes new trading and other relationships around the world, we look forward to the opportunities that will come from the benefits of our common language, our common law and the ties that bind us with the Commonwealth of nations around the world.”

12

COINFLOOR EXCHANGE GIBRALTAR Coinfloor Exchange Gibraltar (CFE Ltd) recently became the first recipient of a license under the GFSC’s DLT framework. CFE is part of the Coinfloor group which includes the UK’s longest established Bitcoin exchange. Becoming a regulated cryptocurrency exchange has been a key milestone for the company. CFE prides itself on providing a secure, reliable and trustworthy platform for trading cryptocurrencies. Obi Nwosu, CEO of CFE Ltd, thanked everyone involved in

the process and commented the group is very proud to be the first exchange in Gibraltar to have received a full DLT license and is very optimistic for future ahead.

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


news THE FAMOUS GROUSE TROPHY The champion of the day, winner of the Famous Grouse Trophy was Alex Ashmore with 36 Stableford points in just his second event with Med Golf. Alex also won the best team prize with his playing partner Sam Broderick with a combined score of 71 points. Sam went on to become the Category 2 winner with 35 points. The best gross score of 83 was posted by Matthew Bruce-Smith

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

who was also the Category 1 runner up with a score of 29 points. Matthew had the best gross score on the Par 3 holes of one over par.

22): Alistair Knight was runner up with 35 points the winner on handicap also with 35 points was Sam Broderick.

Paul Nash had the longest drive and the best senior was Andrew Licudi with a score of 33 points.

Category 3 (handicap 23 and above): Lee Scares took the runner up prize with 30 points and the winner with 35 points was Nicholas Farr.

Our handicap category prizes were won as follows: Category 1 (handicaps 0 to 12): The runner up with a score of 29 points was Matthew Bruce-Smith and the winner with 30 points was Mike Cowburn. Category 2 (handicaps 13 to

Nearest the pin winners were: Mike Cowburn, Tim Mitchell, Keith Johnson and Sam Broderick. Matthew Charlesworth was nearest the pin in 2 on a par 4 and Steve Stonefield was winner of nearest the pin in 3 on a par 5.

13


news ADOPT A RESCUE DOG Hello, my name is Harry. I was rescued by some kind people when they saw that I spent my life tied by a chain to a field. I have arthritis in my spine which means I need a special home, somewhere low key with a nice soft bed for me to relax on. I’ve never known comfort before but at least in kennels some people have bought me my first bed. I’m gentle and good with other animals, I just need the right home. If you can help Harry please enquire through the website: ainf.gi/doggy.php?id=304 A nimals in Need Foundation

ILLEGAL PARKING IN BLUE BAYS INCREASES The Ministry of Equality together with the Ministry of Infrastructure and Planning wish to advise the general public that there has been an increase in the fixed penalty, from £100 to £500, for parking in an Accessible Parking Bay without holding or clearly displaying a Blue Badge. The changes arise as a result of a review of reported misuse of accessible parking bays. With effect as from last month, any person who parks a motor vehicle without holding a Blue Badge in an accessible parking bay will be liable to a fine of £500. In the event that the matter proceeds to the Magistrates Court, any person who commits this offence may be liable on conviction to a fine at level 3 (up to £1,000).

14

The purpose of this amendment is to counteract the improper use of the accessible parking spaces. Too many drivers without blue badges park illegally or use accessible parking bays as a drop on drop off for people or goods or use it as a waiting zone. Motorcycles or obstructions are regularly found to be parked on the hatch lines adjacent to the parking, therefore obstructing passage to the vehicle parked there. All of these examples are to the detriment of Blue Badge holders, who are people with a disability, and who are in need of clear access to these spaces. United States War Memorial at around 1.00pm.

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


news ‘UPSKIRTING’ BILL UNANIMOUSLY PASSED IN PARLIAMENT A bill has been unanimously passed in Parliament today to make upskirting a specific criminal offence in Gibraltar. The Minister for Health, Care and Justice, the Honourable Neil F. Costa MP, announced the publication of the Bill in June of 2018, following significant media attention in the United Kingdom, where a campaign was led by victim Gina Martin. Ms Martin was at a music festival in London, when two men took indecent photographs of her by angling their phone cameras under her skirt when she was distracted. These images were then shared by the men on WhatsApp. This new legislation will ensure that convicted offenders are placed in the sex offenders register, as upskirting will be listed as

a sexual offence. Minister Costa said: “It is important for Gibraltar to criminalise this vile behaviour. These odious acts cause victims great distress and humiliation, a fact that this Government takes very seriously and is reflected in the penalty that will be imposed on the perpetrators of such behaviour”. Minister Sacramento said, “Upskirting is an invasion of privacy which leaves victims feeling degraded and distressed. We must do everything possible to protect women and girls from sexual offences and ensure that those committing such offences are punished and that perpetrators of this type of offence are added to the sex offenders register.”

WATERPORT POWER STATION EMISSIONS In advance of the colder weather, Engine No 2 at Waterport Power Station undertook its last ever scheduled maintenance late last month. On start-up, a problem was identified in the Automatic Voltage Regulator, which led to the engine idling and emitting smoke on several occasions. The Gibraltar Electricity Authority has apologised for the inconvenience caused. This, however, is the last time that one of the old engines in Waterport Power Station will undergo such maintenance, as preparations are well advanced for the new North Mole Power Station to come into operation. This week the first of the dual fired-engines undergoes its first ‘reliability run’ on diesel and will be feeding continuously into the grid for seven days. Once the process is completed for all three dual-fired engines the commissioning of the gas-fired engines will proceed.

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

15


news FEE WAIVERS FOR OAPs The Minister for Health, Care and Justice is pleased to announce an amendment to the Lasting Powers of Attorney (Registration) Regulations 2018, which waives certain fees if the individual requiring the Lasting Power of Attorney is in receipt only of an old age pension under the Social Security (Open Long Term Benefits Scheme) Act 1996 or the Social Security (Closed Long Term Benefits and Scheme) Act 1997, rent relief under the Housing Act 2007 or minimum income guarantee payments under the Social Assistance Fund. The waived fees are those payable upon registration, repeat application and revocation of a Lasting Power of Attorney, in addition to the search fees of the register. Minister for Health, Care and Justice, the Honourable Neil F. Costa MP said: “This waiver of fees seeks to make the Lasting Power of Attorney more accessible to all who might want to avail themselves of a very useful life planning tool. I would like to sincerely thank Mr Manolo Ruiz of the Senior Citizens Association, who raised this important issue with me. It is thanks to his valuable work in advocating for his members that this important amendment to the regulations has been introduced.”

16

SMILES ALL ROUND FOR GIB SAMS 1ST ANNIVERSARY AT OCEAN VILLAGE The weather was a sunny 23C when World Smile Day took place on Saturday 6th October at Ocean Village, with the aim of raising funds and awareness for the Gib Sams charity which helps people suffering with their mental health and suicidal thoughts. The funfilled day included Face Painting, Bouncy Castle and an exciting Treasure Hunt where Spiderman and Catboy joined the many happy children looking for the elusive treasure! All of the bars and restaurants joined in the fun and Jessica Mendez, the lucky winner of the World Smile Day competition, won a package of gift vouchers to eat, drink and relax in Ocean Village. The support from all the businesses for this first Gib Sams event at Ocean Village was universal and greatly appreciated.

The stunning Princess Belle joined the party along with Buzz Light Year and a Ninja Turtle along with famous genies Shimmer & Shine, all taking photos with the Gib Sams photo frame to raise awareness for this fantastic cause. The total amount raised from the day was £451.33. Marie Lou Guerrero, Founder of Gib Sams said: “We would like to thank Ocean Village, especially Emilia Hazell-Smith, for organizing the very successful World Smile Day event for the 1st Anniversary of Gib Sams to help us raise funds and awareness for the charity. Every penny helps us get closer to achieving our aims and helps us help those who really need it. We want everyone in Gibraltar to know its OK not to be OK.”

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


news THE ARCHES BEFORE

THE ARCHES AFTER

HERITAGE AWARD The Gibraltar Heritage Trust is pleased to announce the recipients of this year’s Heritage Awards. The first Group Heritage Award is awarded to The Arches in recognition of the restoration and redevelopment of ‘The Arches’ formally known as ‘The Gibraltar Police Barracks’. The building is a rare local example of neoclassical architecture with Tuscan order columns and arcaded arches. The second Group Heritage Award is awarded to Plata Villa, for the building previously known as Old St Joseph’s School. Originally a private home and then an orphanage, this school building was opened especially children evacuees returning to the Rock in 1944. The third Group Heritage Award is awarded to MH Blands for the publication of ‘The Story of Gibraltar’ with Christopher Lloyd. The book charts Gibraltar’s history from the earliest times to present day in a unique newspaper reporting format for children.

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

The first Individual Heritage Award is awarded to local business James Sanguinetti & Son. The business has been restoring furniture since 1870 resulting in three generations handling and learning the trade. The second Individual Heritage Award is awarded to Grape Vine House, at 23 Naval Hospital Road, owned by Gil Podesta. This Gibraltar vernacular property has been beautifully restored over decades by Mr Podesta from a near derelict state.

PLATA VILLA BEFORE

The first Special Commendation is awarded to George Valarino for his publication ‘This is Gibraltar’. The former head of GBC reflects on 60 years of broadcasting history on the Rock. The second Special Commendation is awarded to Orion House, George’s Lane for the restoration of a Gibraltarian Town House, which has been converted into 4 apartments, retaining a retail outlet on the ground floor. The third Special Commendation is awarded to Justin Bautista for the creation and publication of a series of Gibraltarian recipe books under the brand of ‘Mama Lotties’.

PLATA VILLA AFTER

‘THE STORY OF GIBRALTAR’

17


© KT BRUCE - GIBRALTAR LITERARY FESTIVAL 2018

around town

18

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


around town

©EMILIA HAZELLSMITH - WORLD SMILE DAY AT OCEAN VILLAGE FOR GIB SAMS

19

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 2018


www.gibraltarlawyers.com

ISOLAS Trusted Since 1892 Property • Family • Corporate & Commercial • Taxation • Litigation • Trusts Wills & Probate • Shipping • Private Client • Wealth management • Sports law & management

For further information contact: info@isolas.gi

ISOLAS LLP Portland House Glacis Road PO Box 204 Gibraltar. Tel: +350 2000 1892 Celebrating 125 years of ISOLAS


business THE MILLENNIAL MINDSET How this generation moves when it comes to money management.

BY ALEXANDER TOM

M ‘

illennial’ is the name given to the generation born between the years of 1984 and 2000. Today, various industries are experiencing the effects of heightened expectations and demands of millennials through technological advancements, wider choice and lower prices. Their love for technology and innovation has led to changes in behaviours and priorities when it comes to investing. As principal consumers, millennials are expected to make up three quarters of the worlds working population by 2025, and therefore will grow into an important target market GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

for wealth management firms. The mindset of millennials has been largely shaped by the recession of 2008/09. Millennials had come of age over this period, either as young professionals or as students, thus steering towards a more risk averse investment strategy.

managers are no exception. Constant access to the internet and live information has led to the significant rise in the use of online wealth management services.

The mindset of ҇​҇89% of millennials has millennials feel recession been largely shaped the has made them by the recession of more financially conservative 2008/09.

Furthermore, technological advancements continue to disrupt business models and wealth

generations.

than previous

҇​҇

67% of millennials want computer-generated recommendations as a basic component 21


business of wealth management service provision.

҇​҇

90% of millennials believe that in today’s political environment, they would prefer to invest in ways which will positively impact the environment. Further to this, I conducted my own market research to gain a deeper insight into the mindset of millennials and proposed recommendations for wealth managers by identifying necessary adjustments to successfully serve the newera of investors. The market research was targeted mainly towards younger millennials (aged 18-28) and consisted of an online questionnaire of 17 multiple choice questions which I distributed through my network. After two weeks I collected 300 responses and had to cap the questionnaire.

Wealth managers must assess their business models to successfully serve the millennial generation.

Key Results

҇​҇

89% of respondents describe their knowledge of financial markets and investing as very basic/moderate.

ing it within their hypothetical portfolio of 200,000GBP.

҇​҇

60% of respondents would also include financial assets (equities, bonds) in their portfolio, but only 22% would invest in smaller cap equities.

҇​҇ Start up and cryptocurrency was voted most ҇popular ҇ Property investment opportunities scored as a financial opportunity with 83% of respondents includ-

26% and 22%.

a scale of 1-10, the av҇erage ҇ Onrespondent scored 6.35

when considering the social/ ecological impact of the company when investing.

҇​҇

79% of respondents would prefer to invest for a medium-longer term time period.

҇​҇

78% of responses have a lower-medium risk tolerancesupporting the idea of millennials being a risk averse generation when investing.

THE TIME IS NOW, AS SUSTAINABLE INVESTMENTS SEE TRIPLE DIGIT GROWTH NUMBERS SINCE 2012

22

҇​҇

Regardless of the rise in popularity of online investment platforms, 91% of respondents GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


business stated that they would seek investment advice from a regulated financial advisor. Recommendations for Wealth Managers The consequences of the change in mindset is imperative; wealth managers must therefore assess their business models and adjust the way in which advisors interact with clients to successfully serve the millennial generation. Recommendations include:

҇​҇ Determine client’s level of knowledge of financial markets

and investing from the outset the advisor may wish to prepare educational videos on the various alternative product offerings which the client may not have previously been aware of (e.g. structured products).

҇​҇

Advisors should be equipped with the knowledge and ideas to enable the new-era investor to maintain a strong financial performance as well as have a positive impact on society and the environment.

IF YOU WERE TO INVEST £10,000 IN ONE INVESTMENT TYPE, WHICH OF THE FOLLOWING WOULD YOU PUT YOUR MONEY INTO?

ents to have access to portfolio information 24/7. Overall, it is clear that the mindset of millennials towards money management is different from previous generations. Less risky financial opportunities are of clear interest, however, there also seems to be growing aware-

ness of alternative investment opportunities such as cryptocurrency. This shift in preferences, values and behaviors therefore calls for increased need for financial service providers to diversify strategies in order to stay afloat such a highly competitive market.

҇​҇

From the outset, advisors should appreciate the millennial risk paradox of - they are cautious with traditional investments such as bonds and equities however have a desire to invest in start-up and cryptocurrency opportunities. Emphasis must be placed on the need for diversification within a portfolio and avoid any miscommunication when determining the risk tolerance of the individual.

҇​҇

Integration of technology wealth advisors must begin to investigate into technological platforms which will enable cliGIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

23


business

THE ROLE OF THE NED Secrets from the boardroom.

O

ne of the lesser-known roles in a firm is that of the Non-Executive Director (NED). While an Executive Director is a member of the board of a firm or organisation who also has management responsibilities, a Non-Executive Director is a board member who is practically an ‘outsider’, without a managerial role or involvement in the daily operations of the company or organisation. Before we dive deeper into the role of a non-executive director, it is important to say that there is no legal distinction between executive and

24

non-executive directors. As a consequence, NEDs have the same legal duties, responsibilities and potential liabilities as their executive counterparts (at least in the UK Corporate Governance Code). Clearly, it is appreciated that NEDs cannot give the same continuous attention to the business of the company. However, it is important that they show the same commitment to its success as their executive colleagues. Indeed, in the UK, under the Corporate Governance Code, at least half of the board directors in larger companies should be non-execs. Smaller companies should have at least two. The

composition of leading companies such as HSBC, which has 14 non-execs, and Barclays, with 10, shows the value these companies place on their contribution. The role of a board member is increasingly complex, and requires specific skills and knowledge. It is not merely the natural extension of an executive career. Although the law defines few prerequisites for becoming a company director, those who wish to exercise their role in a professional manner will recognise the need for a significant investment in their own skills and competencies before accepting a board-level mandate. Non-execs must be prepared to GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


business

commit the time needed to fulfil the demands of the job and be aware of their duties and responsibilities. This is likely to be 15 to 25 days a year. It is hard work, especially in the first few months and will involve much more than simply attending scheduled meetings and reading in preparation for them. Prior to accepting a non-executive appointment, the prospective appointee must ensure they have a comprehensive understanding of the company they are about to join and have undertaken their own due diligence. Once appointed, a NED should ensure that they keep up to date with developments in the company and the relevant business sector. The UK Corporate Governance codes states, “Non-executive directors should have sufficient time to meet their board responsibilities. They should provide constructive challenge, strategic guidance,

offer specialist advice and hold management to account.”

All directors should be capable of seeing company and business issues in a broad perspective. Nonetheless, NEDs are usually chosen because they have a breadth of experience, are of an appropriate calibre and have particular personal qualities. Additionally, they may have some specialist knowledge that will provide the board with valuable insights or, perhaps, key contacts in related industries. Of the utmost importance is their independence of the company management and any of its ‘interested parties’. This means they can bring a degree of objectivity to the board’s deliberations, and play a valuable

It is important that they show the same commitment to its success as their executive colleagues.

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

NEDs are usually chosen because they have a breadth of experience, are of an appropriate calibre and have particular personal qualities.

role in monitoring executive management.

From our experience as NEDs on several Gibraltar based companies, we can say that above all, good non-execs need diplomatic skills. They need ‘emotional intelligence’ - the ability to evaluate people’s characteristics and their agendas quickly and thoroughly. They should never appear to be domineering, especially when dealing with executive directors who are unused to being challenged. Equally, they should never forget that it is their job to hold the board to account. The Key Responsibilities of NEDs Essentially the NED’s role is to provide a creative contribution to the board by providing independent oversight and constructive challenge to the executive directors. More generally, the key responsibilities of NEDs can be 25


Image source: lawgazette.co.uk

business

said to include the following:

҇​҇ Strategic Direction As an ‘outsider’, the non-executive director may have a clearer or wider view of external factors affecting the company and its business environment than the executive directors. The normal role of the NED in strategy formation is therefore to provide a creative and informed contribution and to act as a constructive critic in looking at the objectives and plans devised by the chief executive and the executive team.

made towards achieving the determined company strategy and objectives. They have a prime role in appointing, and where necessary removing, executive directors and in succession planning.

As an ‘outsider’, the non-executive director may have a clearer or wider view of external factors affecting the company and its business environment.

҇​҇

Remuneration

NEDs are also responsible for determining appropriate levels of remuneration of executive directors. In large companies this is carried out by a remuneration committee, the objective of which is to ensure there is an independent process for setting the remuneration of executive directors.

҇​҇ Monitoring Performance

҇​҇ Communication

NEDs should take responsibility for monitoring the performance of executive management, especially with regard to the progress

The company and its board can benefit from outside contacts and opinions. An important function for NEDs, therefore,

26

can be to help connect the business and board with networks of potentially useful people and organisations.

҇​҇ Risk and Audit NEDs should satisfy themselves on the integrity of financial information and that financial controls and systems of risk management are robust and defensible. In large companies NEDs often sit on a company’s Audit Committee.

ERAN SHAY, Managing Director & AYELET MAMO SHAY, Business Development Director of Benefit Business Solutions Ltd. (+350) 200 73669 general@benefitgibraltar.com

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


La Reserva de Sotogrande is the first residential community of its kind on the Costa del Sol, a paradise for families with a sophisticated selection of leisure activities and services as well as an exquisite portfolio of residences.

Tel. +34 856 560 922 ¡ Email: lareserva.residencial@sotogrande.com ¡ lareservaclubsotogrande.com


Buying a new home?

Trust our property team to guide you through the small print. Starting out on the property ladder can be daunting, so we’ve put together a package that makes the process financially manageable, whilst giving you all the reassurance you need that your interests are being properly taken care of. Simple explanations and sound advice provided by our dedicated and professional property team.

Call us on

Hassans stands out from the crowd

to receive competitive rates on your purchase or sale

57/63 Line Wall Road, PO Box 199, Gibraltar. T: +350 200 79000 F: +350 200 71966 business@hassans.gi www.gibraltarlaw.com

20079000 or email us on

property@hassans.gi

“Hassans is widely considered to be the market’s leading firm, both in terms of size and depth of experience…” Legal 500 EMEA Edition.


property

PROPERTY INVESTMENT ABROAD Part I: France, Côte d´Azur.

T

he world has somehow become a small place and modern technology has changed, making life and business in general terms considerably easier, if not far more accessible. It is a true fact that most Central and Northern Europeans travel south as soon as they can to buy or rent property in the sun. They try and get away from rainy and cloudy, even freezing, conditions and relocate to balmier weather locations in Italy, Greece, France, Spain or Portugal. Following a recent inspection trip to France we shall look into the south, and in particular the charming Côte d´Azur, as a possible destination to invest in property abroad. The Côte d´Azur has to be one of the most beautiful places in Europe, offering a large amount of property GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

choices to suit different budgets. Prices in Cannes and Cap d´Antibes can be extremely high, but there are small apartments that could well suit your needs, produce rental yields of 5% upwards, and will not set you back much more than €250,000 for a decent 1-bedroom flat close to the beautiful waters of the Mediterranean Sea. The city of Nice, being a lot larger, has much more choice, with prices ranging from €3500€4000 per square metre as with prime locations in Gibraltar, to €10,000 and upwards on the seafront or prime areas closer to Monaco and Menton. We are talking properties that can reach

15 or even 20 million euros. For nature lovers desiring more off the beaten track areas, you probably want to head to St Tropez - a most wonderful and enchanting historic village west of Cannes. We are of course talking about la crème de la crème when considering St Tropez; there are wonderful alternatives a little further south or inland which are more affordable. France is always a highly desirable tourist destination and keeps a healthy and continuous flow of clients to rent short term via OTA companies like Airbnb or HomeAway to name but a few.

For nature lovers desiring more off the beaten track areas, you probably want to head to St Tropez - a most wonderful and enchanting historic village.

29


property

around the globe. The weather is excellent with 300+ days of sunshine per year, close to the conditions along the Costa del Sol in Spain or Gibraltar. It is interesting to know that today as I write this article we had day temperatures of 19°C in Gibraltar and exactly the same 19°C in Marseille.

pockets and preferences. Water temperatures in season are warm and the sea is gin clear most of the time. French gastronomy and wines are still rated as probably the best, although competition is fierce out there.

Beaches are excellent, both private and public, to suit all tastes, pockets and preferences.

And why would we invest in France? France is a major European economy and is politically stable. It has a remarkable democracy with perhaps the most civilized elections systems 30

Infrastructures are superb possibly amongst the best in Europe. Malaga has direct flights to Marseille in the south of Provence and Nice in the heart of the Côte d´Azur. You can make the air journey in a little more than one and a half hours. Awesome and easy.

And what about buying charges and taxes? Good things cost money, they say in France. Purchase taxes are considerably higher than in Gibraltar. You have the local taxes plus the notaire fees and what have you. Think of 10% of the purchase price as a minimum, close to what you pay in Spain. You would then have to consider renting taxes. All foreigners who own property in France are liable to French income tax which stands at about 20% - not far off from Gibraltar

It’s no wonder celebrities like Elton John, Pablo Picasso, Somerset Maugham and Aristotle Onassis made the Côte d´Azur their main residence.

Beaches are excellent, both private and public, to suit all tastes,

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


property

income tax. But in addition, a new recent tax has now been established - Social Levies – which amounts to a further 15.5% on your rental profits. From a tax point of view this is basically a third of your net income. The good news is you can set it off your main country of residence taxes. The same amount of tax applies to capital gains tax once you sell your property. As we all know well, taxes are quintessentially unavoidable. Another option is setting up a French company where taxes benefit low-income small companies, but get considerably larger if you own a large portfolio of property. Whichever way you look at it, it is basically less tax-attractive than Gibraltar where capital gains tax on property does not apply, but very similar to Spain, Italy or the UK.

Sardinian officials due to a cholera epidemic in Italy. He stayed in the charming fishing village of Cannes for the winter months, and enjoyed the balmy weather and wonderful sun of the Côte d´Azur so much that he spent each winter of the following 34 years in Cannes, making it fashionable with the English Aristocracy from then onwards. The Russian Imperial family and aristocracy followed suit along fellow peers of Northern Europe. Winters are a delight, and Cannes is the home of perhaps the most glamorous film festival in the world, held each year in May. It’s no wonder celebrities like Elton John, Pablo Picasso, Somerset Maugham and Aristotle Onassis made the Côte d´Azur their main residence.

Lord Brougham discovered Cannes and Nice in the early XIX Century, circa 1835, when he was heading to Nice, and was not allowed to continue by

But not everything is perfect. Nightlife is not comparable to what we have in Spain. But it has other attractions: as much art as you wish, and

You can even ski in the Alps in May in the morning and swim in the sea in the afternoon.

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

beautiful countryside, similar to certain areas of Spain. You can even ski in the Alps in May in the morning and swim in the sea in the afternoon. You should consider France as an option and not as competition. All countries in Europe have lots of things to offer.

JORGE V.REIN PARLADE MBA Business Consultant +350 54045282 jorgeparlade@aol.com

31



life HIDDEN GIBRALTAR

A walk through Gibraltar’s forgotten Upper Town.

BY STEFANO BLANCA SCIACALUGA

M

ain Street is boring, unless you want to play a real-life game of Frogger with Mein Schiff passengers. All it takes is a larger-than-normal influx of tourists on a Saturday morning to convert an otherwise pleasant stroll into something straight out of a Hieronymus Bosch depiction of hell. Maybe the average Gibraltarian of my age, and younger, aren’t aware of the alternative routes to Main Street. It’s just part of a simple trade-off: dodging tourists (and locals alike), versus

feeling a little bit of a burn in your legs. So let me guide you through an off the beaten track walk around hidden Gibraltar, for those days when you have more time on your hands.

The square isn’t in its best shape, but you’ll see the potential straight away.

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

Road to the Lines

Start your walk at Casemates, quite possibly the best place to start off to convince yourself that taking an alternative north-south route is a good idea. Take Crutchett’s Ramp (past Valmar Pharmacy), and Demaya’s Ramp and up onto Road to the Lines. Yes, you’ll feel the burn and

you’ll be out of breath, but at the end of Road to the Lines - a street lined with nice, but sadly derelict buildings - you’ll find a little square with some concrete benches. The square isn’t in its best shape, but you’ll see the potential straight away. Calle Comedia Area (Castle Street, Castle Ramp & New Passage) Carry on past the little square at the end of Road to the Lines and through a narrow passageway that will lead you to the top of our famous outdoor escalator that never works, but sometimes does, but probably won’t when you get there. You’re now on Castle 33


life SACRED HEART CHURCH

LIBRARY STEPS

walk down Castle Ramp to Castle Street (Calle Comedia) and New Passage; both good options. The latter is best if you’ve realised walking up and down stairs and hills is not for you, in which case you can sit on the steps of Calle Comedia and order some food and drink from The Kasbar, and if walking has made you delirious even get a tattoo from the parlour next door.

at the end of Castle Road, Sacred Heart Church. Every Gibraltarian has been to the Cathedral, it’s easy to get to, but few Gibraltarians brave the walk to Sacred Heart Church, and what a shame that is! Gothic by design, this church from the late 1800s is arguably nicer, inside and out, than all the other churches in Gibraltar.

Gothic by design, this church from the late 1800s is arguably nicer, inside and out, than all the other churches in Gibraltar.

Castle Road

CASTLE STEPS

Ramp, which has been vastly improved in the last few years, with residents fixing up their façades and putting out a whole lot of plants, giving it a very Spanish/ Italian Mediterranean town feel. Now, you can either take some stairs up to Lower Castle Road or 34

If you decided to brave the stairs to Castle Road (not to be, but easily, confused with Castle Steet, Castle Ramp, Lower Castle Road, Upper Castle Road…) you’re in for a treat, because there are a few interesting places to get lost in around here: Paradise Ramp and the offshoots of Willis’s Road (if you want to go up even further), Chicardo’s Passage, the beautiful restoration of the old Police Barracks into what is now called The Arches and the best bit, right

Carter’s Just metres from Sacred Heart Church is Carter’s, one of the few shops in the Upper Town (if we consider the limits of this to be above Governor’s Street). At a crossroads, Carter’s is the best place to stop a second, admire the church from below and decide whether you’re going to call it quits or carry on. If you decide to call it quits there GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


life FLAT BASTION

FLAT BASTION

are two options: You can get back down to Governor’s Street down one side of Prince Edward’s Road, where you’ll be able to see some of Gibraltar’s best hidden properties if you peek through the gate and doors on Library Steps; don’t be afraid. If you decide to take the other side of Prince Edward’s Road it will take you all the way down to the Trafalgar Cemetery, which is another great walk.

downhill. Now, if you’ve done a fair bit of exploring, especially around the offshoots of the streets I’ve mentioned, this 400 by 50 metre area is the real prize. Flat Bastion Road, apart from some nice views of the bay, isn’t all that nice or great, but it’s the little streets leading down from Flat Bastion Road to Prince Edward’s Road below that are the real hidden gems of Gibraltar. Stairs leading to places you would never imagine people lived in, buildings towering over each other in competition for a nice view of the bay, wild plants growing out of the most unexpected of places, complete silence broken by the sound of dishes or a television, and then you emerge by Hargreaves and the Trafalgar Cemetery. I can assure you that once you explore one of these little streets you will want to go back for more... get those legs moving!

Stairs leading to places you would never imagine people lived in, wild plants growing out of the most unexpected of places...

Feeling adventurous? Next to Sacred Heart Church are little nooks and crannies such as Lime Kiln Road, Lime Kiln Steps and the Union Jack painted Devil’s Gap Road, which curiously isn’t actually a road. Between Flat Bastion Road and Prince Edward’s Road

Now here comes the fun! Walk past Devil’s Gap Road and you’re on Flat Bastion Road, which runs parallel to Prince Edward’s Road, only going uphill rather than GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

FLAT BASTION

35


life

MAKING GIBRALTAR MORE ACCESSIBLE International Day of People with Disabilities.

BY MINISTRY OF EQUALITY

T

he 3rd of December is the International Day of People with Disabilities. The observance of this day was first proclaimed in 1992 and it aims to promote an understanding of disability issues and mobilise support for the dignity, rights and well-being of persons with disabilities. Right from the word go, the GSLP/ Liberal government has given a focus on accessibility to people with disabilities that has not previously been seen in Gibraltar. The intention was very clear from the start with the introduction, for the first time ever, of a Minister with responsibility for Equality. In order to better understand the angle with which we have focused our efforts, we have taken into account the view that in order to make the lives of people with disabilities better, we have made the transition from a medical model to the social model. This means that we have to alter society’s views and physical aspects

36

in order to be more inclusive instead of trying to medically help someone with a disability. This does not mean that if something can be done medically, it won’t be done. We have to remember that not all disabilities are visually evident, the first thing we automatically seem to think of when we think of people with disabilities are people with mobility impairments and their wheelchairs. This is the stereotypical view and there are many other hidden disabilities which also need to be accounted for, for example hearing or visual impairments and learning disabilities like autism.

ent social changes that the current government has introduced in order to improve the lives of people with disabilities. The first sign that this government was taking inclusion seriously was the provision of a spectator stand for people with disabilities and a British Sign Language Interpreter at the Gibraltar National Day in 2012, these have been provided in National Day events ever since. Furthermore, designated areas at the 2013 Gibraltar Cavalcade were provided for the elderly and for people with disabilities and have been done since.

Many other hidden disabilities also need to be accounted for, for example hearing or visual impairments and learning disabilities like autism.

We will give examples of the differ-

A major overhaul of Gibraltar’s beaches was undertaken during GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


life 2013. Beaches were made more accessible to people with mobility impairments with the introduction of different amenities and equipment which included pergolas with different amphibious equipment, mobility mats providing access from the pergolas directly to the shoreline, accessible toilets and changing rooms and most significantly, the introduction of changing places to name a few examples. Beach attendants were introduced in order to provide assistance with the use of the equipment and to assist with transfers to and from the beach equipment when users with disabilities wanted to bathe in the sea or pool in Camp Bay. These features have ensured that people with mobility impairments can also enjoy the experience of going to the beach and have a choice of different ones to go to.

Hours at the Gibraltar Fair. Due to sensory overloads from bright lights and loud noises which affect people with Autism and other disabilities, people affected by this and also their families, would avoid going to the fair. By having the sensory adjustments, many have been able to enjoy the fair for the first time ever. We have found that these adjustments have been very successful and evidence of this has been the excellent feedback received.

Making Gibraltar a more inclusive society is something that is incumbent for all of us.

Other adjustments which have been seen in the public domain which show collaborations with the private sector includes the sensory screenings at the Leisure Cinemas. Entertainment Captioning Glasses and headphones, to improve the entertainment experience of deaf, hard of hearing, blind or visually impaired audience members have also been provided at the Leisure Cinemas. Last year also saw the introduction of sensory performances to the Gibraltar International Magic Show programme; this was as a result of one of the organisers of the event attending one of the Ministry’s “Making Live Events Accessible” seminars. 2017 saw the introduction of the Easy Access Pass and Sensory GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

The most significant achievement has been the introduction of legislation to strengthen the position of people with disabilities. The 1992 Disabled People Act was found to be outdated and did not meet this government’s requirements for a modern inclusive society. A new Act was drafted and last year saw the much anticipated Disability Act (Agnes Law) being enacted. The act is modelled on the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Even though the fundamental right of not being unfairly discriminated against is already enshrined in the constitution, the new act provides further safeguards and it also clarifies existing obligations.

refurbished include provisions to make them more accessible. In order to raise as much awareness as possible, to supplement the new legislation and to prepare government departments in meeting their obligations under the new legislation, the government has been organising training sessions in relation to making buildings, live events and businesses more accessible for a number of years for the public sector. Such training has also been made available to the private sector. A number of booklets have also been published which provide information on the new Document Part R Legislation, language and etiquette and also on improving accessibility at the workplace and welcoming customers with disabilities. The government was also aware of the hunger for more information on learning disabilities and autism. For this reason it organised seminars for both the public and private sector and also for non-government organisations and sporting associations keen to improve their services to all their members. It is clearly evident that the government has been working tirelessly to improve the lives of people with disabilities by making aspects of daily life more accessible and by raising awareness. In turn, we all have to be more conscious and considerate of the needs and requirements of others and we have to make society and the physical aspects of it, including our buildings, more accessible. Making Gibraltar a more inclusive society is something that is incumbent for all of us.

These adjustments have been very successful and evidence of this has been the excellent feedback received.

The government also enacted the Building Rules Approved Document R this year. This legislation addresses all aspects of building and its aim is to improve accessibility to buildings and structures. This was a much needed piece of legislation to ensure that all new buildings and buildings being

37


life

LONGING TO LEARN IN GHANA

The last few weeks in Louise Barea’s life could be considered a case study in providence. Within three weeks of landing in Ghana, she was founding a charity with a large team of volunteers. Suffice to say, a lot has taken place in a short amount of time and within that short time, she has built a foundation to help the children in the fishing village of Kewunor in the Volta region of Ghana that Louise describes as “a little piece of paradise in an impoverished land”.

BY JEREMY GOMEZ

T

he roots of this story begin in 2013, when Louise first joined a group of volunteers to help build two classrooms and teach for two months. The following year, she returned to build four more classrooms, and it was here that she cemented the relationships she had made on her first visit.

intended, to educate the young people of Kewunor; but as word spread, so did the population of the school. In the four years from her 2014 visit, the school had grown from 10 to 370 students as children from two other villages began attending the school. The children had a strong desire to learn as they paid roughly 18.5 pence to attend (an average daily income for their families was around 30 pence).

Louise had learnt that the school was being used to educate the young people of Kewunor; but as word spread, so did the population of the school.

Over the years to the present day, she has received messages over social media updating her on the state of the school, and found that the situation was worsening. Through her friends in Ghana, Louise had learnt that the school was being used as it was 38

The teachers did what they could with what they had to ensure that they could teach those who laboured to learn. With the popularity of the school came new

problems; two further rooms that were being built were left without a roof or floor (and one incomplete wall) due to complications with the funding, the school was unable to provide all the textbooks required for this huge increase in numbers, and there appeared to be 6-8 children per desk. This year, Louise returned to Kewunor to see what needed to be done and how she could help. The first step was to calculate the amount of textbooks needed and travel to the capital, Accra to purchase them. Louise, with the help of her friend turned project manager Sammy, found that 1,500 textbooks per subject were needed. So after buying what she could with her own funds, Louise set up a GoFundMe page with the hope of raising of raising £1,000 and began to blog about her experience and the conditions that GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


life

the children were learning in on Instagram (username: louisebarea). Within a day and a half, she had £1,500 and the donations were not stopping. In considering what could be done with all the money that was coming in, she resolved to fix the school. She spoke with a plasterer, whom she had previously worked with, and started to complete what had been left undone. She then asked the children what they needed, and these hungry minds told her that they needed food. Louise then organised with the locals of Kewunor and fed the children (one of which who was top of his class had not eaten in four days). The money kept coming through the more the people of Gibraltar became aware of the situation through Louise’s social media. As the time came for Louise to return home on the 28th of October, a trip to see a

place that was on her mind and in her dreams became a mission to improve the lives of the children in Ghana. Within days of her return, a website was up and running for a charity she had founded in Ghana (helpmelearnafrica.com), where people could donate but also enlist to help. She had met with lawyers and created bank accounts to collect the donations officially.

She then asked the children what they needed, and these hungry minds told her that they needed food.

The plan now is to build a library by July 2019 and she needed a team to do this. Within three weeks of her return home, she had group of 39 volunteers. Eight of these 39 volunteers are a team of professional contractors from local company InVision, and with their help, she not only had the expertise to build the library but she had an architect designing it.

A trip to see a place that was on her mind and in her dreams became a mission to improve the lives of the children in Ghana.

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

The doors are still open to be a part of this project that will

continue to make an impact in the lives of the Ghanian people of Kewunor, and to meet the 370 children that Louise knows by name. She will be holding a meeting for prospective volunteers on the 20th of December. If you would like to be a part of this mission, all you need to do is enlist on the website to receive more information. For more information or to get involved with this worthy cause, visit helpmelearnafrica.com. 39


life

A CRYSTALCLEAR CHRISTMAS

Gibraltar’s glass blowers prepare for a colour-filled Christmas.

BY PETER SCHIRMER

W

alk into Casemates when a cruise liner is in port, and the chances are you will see tourists photographing the full-sized figure of a glass-blower that stands outside the workshop and retail outlet of Gibraltar’s only ‘secondary industry’ - one of the world’s few remaining glass manufacturers that will produce small batches of customised crystal to order. The works, the shop, and the ‘museum’ – telling the story of glass – are a magnet for visitors… and largely ignored by most Gibraltarians. “It’s the old thing of a prophet not being recognized in his own country,” smiles Paul Montegriffo, one of Gibraltar Crystal’s founders and a joint managing director. “We are a magnet for tourists – some come back cruise after cruise – but although we have local customers, few Gibraltarians actually come to see the process.” Across the world this Christmas, as champagne flutes are raised or gin and tonics sipped to celebrate the festive season, someone will 40

be holding a cut-crystal or coloured hand-made glass produced by Gibraltar Crystal. For, in the 23 years since it opened its doors to the public, its master glass blowers have produced tens of thousands of champagne flutes, exported to almost every corner of the globe. These, in the weeks running up to Christmas, are still high on the want list of many of the firm’s customers – folk who have visited Gibraltar, bought local crystal, and order more… nowadays by e-mail or through the glass-maker’s website.

Though visiting tourists comprise the bulk of Rock Crystal’s customers, more than a third of the firm’s sales are exported using enough bubble-wrap to cover a metre-wide path half way round the Rock. This clearly works well, for there are fewer than one in a hundred breakages in the thousands of pieces exported.

As champagne flutes are raised or gin and tonics sipped, someone will be holding a cut-crystal or coloured handmade glass produced by Gibraltar Crystal.

“The Internet has widened our market enormously,” Stuart Menez, Montegriffo’s co-founder and fellow managing director, looks up from the roll of bubble-wrap as an order for half a dozen blackstemmed gin glasses is packed in readiness for fast delivery to New York.

With Christmas just around the corner, the sales and display area is a-gleam with sophisticated glassware, produced by a team of master glass-blowers who have produced more than one million crystalware pieces.

“In recent years, the demand for coloured crystal – and particularly for the stems of goblets – has outstripped cut glass,” Montegriffo explains. “Particularly among gin drinkers – who also relate the stem colour to their brands – Hendrick’s GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


life gin enthusiasts go for black stems, Bombay Saphire drinkers for light blue, and Gordons’ for bright yellow.” The steady growth in international demand for Gibraltar Crystal products has led to significant changes to the type of furnace to push temperatures up to 1,180°C. The initial diesel-fired furnaces – built by master-glass blowers Paul Alexander and Stuart Quick whom had been recruited from the UK and are still with the firm – were switched to the more efficient propane-gas, and four years ago a new main furnace, powered by electricity, was built from scratch.

AGAINST A BACKGROUND OF FURNACES, THE FOUR MASTER GLASS-BLOWERS AT WORK

More than a third of the firm’s sales are exported using enough bubblewrap to cover a metre-wide path half way round the Rock.

‘”here were several electricity-fired furnaces on the market, but they were too small for our requirements, so, with the help of Paul, Stuart, and the engineer who originally advised us, we built our own,” Montegriffo tells me.

It was Paul who heads the production team who crafted the unique ‘cranberry bowl’ which the then Chief Minister Peter Caruana presented to Princess Anne during her tercentenary visit to the Rock, telling the Princess Royal that the firm was Gibraltar’s “only secondary industry”.

set up before the refurbishment of the square and its surrounding buildings. Though these were run down, the complex of arched rooms and vaults which the entrepreneurs were able to lease and refurbish – partly with European Union funding – provided ideal premises. As well as the two barrack vaults, a network of cellars under Line Wall Road accommodate workshops for cutting and finishing glassware as well as storage for the 20 tonnes of glass ‘pellets’ imported from Germany in 5-tonne batches four times a year.

“If the glass cools too quickly – or becomes overheated – it can explode.”

They were fortunate in their choice of site for the works – situated in one of two vaulted former barrack rooms in Casemates, where it was GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

The even temperatures of the cellars are ideal for the 24-hour slow cooling process for the blown pieces. “If the glass cools too quickly – or becomes over-heated – it can explode,” Montegriffo explains.

THE VOLCANO RANGE OF FINE GLASS ART CREATED BY PAUL ALEXANDER TAKES ITS NAME FROM THE MOLTEN IGNEOUS FLOWS THAT CREATE UNIQUE VIVID REDS AND ORANGES

Though most modern glassware is mass-produced – by moulding and casting or by computerised machinery that can imitate some of the glass-blower’s skills – the finest glass, particularly crystal, is still produced by hand, melted in furnaces and blown and shaped using the same methods and similar tools to those which the original medieval craftsmen used. Some of this is reflected in the display on the history of glass in the small ‘museum’ which fronts the furnace room. 41


life

THE BIG EVENT OF THE YEAR

As I awoke, I could not believe the day had finally arrived… “It’s Christmas, it’s Christmas! It’s here today, it’s Christmas!” It took me a while to engage my brain as I recovered from my deep slumber until I realised, it was indeed Christmas.

BY RICHARD CARTWRIGHT

I

’m probably wrong (though it doesn’t seem so to me, observing my grandchildren opening their presents year on year) but the Christmas excitement seems as relished today as it was when I was a child. I clearly remember the countdown as the calendar rolled into December and preparations in the home jumped into gear: flour and water, cutting up left over coloured paper used for making kites into thin strips, remnants you’d kept stored for this big occasion, pasting away on the kitchen table looping them together one by one to form a chain and hanging them up from wall to wall. Your mum then sending you off to the place nearby where they had large ovens where many families

would take their turkeys, lamb or what have you, because not many homes had large enough ones. You had to book by late November or very early December if you wanted to have your food cooked in time for that special day. Thinking of sawdust sprinkled on grocery shop floors and bars on rainy days reminds me of Christmas too, and of course the toy shops, especially Sanguinetti on Cornwall’s Lane, as well as Cazes and the Emporium, both on Main Street. They were a joy to visit. I recall writing to Santa and posting my letter in the post box at the Cazes store hoping to get the Royal Marines Band lead figures, which I longed for throughout

The smell of chestnuts roasting on the tower of saucepans standing on a street corner would fill your nostrils.

42

the year as I stared at the box of bandsmen in Sanguinetti’s window. And as the days slowly went by and numbers on the December calendar moved on up, getting closer and closer to the 25th, the smell of chestnuts roasting on the tower of saucepans standing on a street corner next to the `edible nut’ vendor would fill your nostrils. During that run-up to Christmas day, my annual sneaky ritual of taking a Christmas goodie such as a polvorón or mantecado from mum’s ‘Christmas cupboard’ would be executed, and it all added to the incredible festive atmosphere truly heralding that the Big Day was nigh! During those weeks in late November and early December, mums would begin to stock up that Christmas shelf or corner in one of their kitchen cupboards with nuts, dry fruits, and the ever popular Spanish tasty treats like, polvorones, rosquitos, alfajores, turron… Not to mention the fruitcake, GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


life a Christmas pudding, a bottle of anis, extra flour, sugar and butter for baking and other bits and pieces. It was all an event which went on with great expectation for the imminent, longed-for day of the Christmas season.

today, as I recall my grandchildren when they were much younger watching from the sidelines, is an over-the-top amount of presents coming at the kids from all sides, to the point they begin to rip off wrappers, take a quick look at the item, fiddle with it for a a moment or two, discard the it and move on to the next gift 15 times over! They don’t seem to appreciate what they’re getting and probably have something similar which was given to them last Christmas or at any given time throughout the year because granny or granddad are invariably Mother and Father Christmas every six weeks or so during the year!

During those weeks mums would begin to stock up with nuts, dry fruits, polvorones, rosquitos, alfajores, turron… Not to mention the fruitcake.

Christmas presents were modest in my household as in many homes then during the 50s and 60s. I remember getting a rifle with a wooden handle and tin barrel one Christmas that had a cork for a bullet attached to a piece of string fixed to the rifle so that your precious `bullet’ didn’t go astray down a drain or in a hole somewhere. That year, my neighbour gave me a plastic water pistol to complement my armoury. As a second present I would probably get a pair of socks. I was a happy bunny! We’d then go out onto the neighbourhood street to show our friends what Santa had brought us and they’d do the same. Unlike today when some kids get everything and more, most of the kids during my time would pretty much receive gifts relative to their parent’s monthly income and what little they’d been able to save over the many months leading up to Christmas. However, on my street, there was a kid whose parents were quite well off and he, one Christmas, was given a spanking new, shiny, tricycle the rest of us only dreamed we would one day get... or never get. Somehow we were never jealous of the rich boy. We were happy with our lot and simply got on with it playing with our modest gifts. What we see

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

Nowadays the older ones get the latest digital gadgets, expensive iPhones or tablets and perhaps a motor scooter to boot. There also seems to be an increase of presents being given on the Feast of the Epiphany on the 5th or 6th of January, which I don’t recall being so much the case in my day. But I suppose one has to concede, if it can be afforded and everybody’s happy, so be it, good luck to them and enjoy; it’s Christmas after all.

dressing up in your pyjamas or other attire, grabbing a tambourine, a ‘sambomba’ (a type of clay pot - vase shaped, held under your arm - with a short cane poked through the skin cover that produced a bass-y sound when you ran your wet hand up and down the cane), an anis bottle which you stroked with a spoon on its uneven surface with protruding bits making a crinkly-cranky noise and perhaps, if you were lucky, a proper musician who had a guitar or mandolin would come along to complete the group - the comparsa. So off you went from door to door singing festive tunes in the hope those doors would open to offer you a glass of Malaga wine and a Christmas goodie. As you travelled along the streets on a chilly, crisp, Christmas night you’d meet up with other like minded individuals and their comparsas, some a little worse for wear, clearly having been out for much of the evening and obviously successful at being met by open doors... It certainly was, to coin the well worn phrase, ‘the season of good will’ bringing glad tidings. However, I suppose it probably is as exciting for the young now too, as they look forward to Christmastime perhaps in a different way. As I recall yuletide during those halcyon days the atmosphere as the Big Day approached was tangible, it was there fast approaching and you could feel it. It was a wonderful time of the year... the Christmas spirit had indeed arrived!

The place had large ovens where many families would take their turkeys, lamb or what have you, because not many homes had large enough ones.

But reminiscing a little more, the build up to the happy day as I remember it, was enhanced by

43


SOVEREIGN CORPORATE SERVICES Establish and Support your Business Market Entry Corporate Insurance Packages SOVEREIGN PRIVATE CLIENT Family Office Wealth Management Asset Protection Insurance SOVEREIGN RETIREMENT PLANNING Global Personal and Occupational Pensions

SovereignGroup.com To contact us email: gib@SovereignGroup.com or call +350 200 76173


life

A ZOOKEEPERS DIARY Our monthly spotlight on the superstars at the Alameda Wildlife Conservation Park‌ and their keepers!

Wildlife Alamerdvaation Park Conse

BY JESS LEAPER

T

he Alameda Wildlife Conservation Park has been around since 1994, but it was first opened to the public in 2003 with Steve Bryant, manager at that time, at the helm. Steve had come to Gibraltar in search of the infamous Barbary macaques, but found more than he bargained for when he stumbled across the small collection of animals within the Alameda Botanic Gardens. He had approached the Director of the Alameda Gardens at that time, Professor John Cortes, to discuss the Barbary macaques but ended up visiting the Wildlife Park too. Steve has worked in well-known zoos for most of his GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

life, and at that time was working in Shaldon Zoo in the UK, a small specialist exotics collection in Devon. His first impression of the Alameda Wildlife Park was a mixture of awe and dismay. Dismay at the awful reality of the illegal pet trade and animal trafficking that lead to the confiscation of most of these animals now at the Wildlife Park. It was obvious the animals were well loved and local volunteers from GOHNS (Gibraltar Ornithological & Natural History Society) had worked tirelessly to create enclosures to house these animals with the funding they were given. Steve saw the potential for more and took the leap of faith to leave

the UK behind in order to invest some of his time in this small but vibrant little park. After a few discussions with the Director on strategies for moving forward, using his contacts in UK, Steve managed to persuade a team from ZSL to visit on a working holiday in 2002 to help revive and build on the work already carried out by volunteers at the park. A year later the dream became a reality and the Alameda Wildlife Conservation Park was opened to the public. After two years as the Park Manager, Steve was forced to leave Gibraltar in 2005 due to 45


life personal reasons, but vowed to keep in touch and to return one day.

n-S or Africaatie’ Sulcatarto ‘K to ise

pur

Duke the Burmes thon is around 10 ftelopy ng!

iguana ing to ethheabitat. d n e t t n tl ya Steve Bsroft -shelled tur and 46

Over the years, Steve has kept his promise and has since been back to help out and has been part of the Steering Committee of the Zoo for the past 4 years, also helping the AWCP to attain its BIAZA (British & Irish Association of Zoos & Aquaria) accreditation last year. Fourteen years later, he is now back as a permanent member of the team. At this stage in the development of the AWCP, Steve’s knowledge and vast experience of an array of species, not to mention his practical and maintenance skills, is invaluable. Part of his remit will be to use his skills to help drive the progress of the Strategic Plan for the zoo even further, helping to improve the habitats and spaces for the animals. He has also been set the task to help develop the reptile section of the park which has been one of the smaller sections of the park but has some increasingly tricky residents, requiring 12 11 1 specialist 10 2 knowledge 9 3 and handling. 8 4 7 6 5 9:00 am - As

this is a relatively late start-time for a zoo keeper, Steve is often in the park and stuck into his tasks well before the clock strikes nine. After an initial catch up with Steve Perry, the senior keeper of the park, the first task is to check the reptile section - mainly the snakes and the reptiles in the tunnel area. Most days there will be list of maintenance tasks to work through, from fixing barriers to sealing up leaks and checking

electrics; especially important for reptiles during the winter months. Reptiles are more often than not from warm climates, and therefore require a source of heat that adequately replicates the suns UV rays, along with a good base ambient heat and the correct humidity for the species. This is something many novice pet owners tend to get wrong. All of the reptiles at the park are ex-pets; some of them became unmanageable for the owners. For this reason the wildlife park urges people to think twice before taking on a reptile as a pet. It is an expensive and sometimes complicated undertaking, and more often than not, the animal quietly suffers inadequate care and sickness is often 11 12 1 not spotted un10 2 til it’s too late. 9 3

8

4

12:00pm - After all the checks are complete, all the reptiles will be fed their specialist diets with particular attention paid to supplements, especially calcium, which is vital for the metabolic health of most reptiles. It is also time to prepare the snake food for the afternoon. There are currently five snakes at the AWCP, ranging from small corn snakes just over a metre long, to an albino Burmese Python (Duke) who has grown to an impressive 10 feet! Working with large snakes like this requires strict protocols. For the larger snakes, a minimum of two trained keepers must be present whilst working in the enclosure. Currently, Duke’s enclosure is only safe to enter whilst he has a very large rat to feed on. Steve’s experience in numerous larger zoo collections lends itself to this task. Steve re-

7 6 5

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


life

Once the rats are defrosted and warmed to body temperature they can be offered to the snakes. Whilst they are feeding, the enclosure can be cleaned and maintained. It is important not to disturb or move the snakes during or just after feeding, as they are prone to regurgitate if stressed. This would help the snake to escape danger in the wild if disturbed during a feeding session. Snakes can manage to swallow prey much larger than their jaw, they do so by dislocating the jaw bone temporarily to allow the mass to pass through. This can leave them vulnerable to predators as the digestive process can be quite prolonged. GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

Steve is also involved with collection planning for the AWCP. The Wildlife Park will, over time, look to take on other endangered or other important species to further its conservation education message. “Amphibians are in desperate trouble the world over, for a variety of reasons. Like many species, habitat loss has been devastating for these animals,” states Steve. The AWCP is planning an amphibian display in the near future. One of the primary roles of the AWCP over the years has been Conservation Education; raising awareness of the plight of endangered species around the world and inspiring others to care for the world in which we live.

n ed Drago

eard Central B

Leopard Gecko

Sponsoring an animal at the AWCP is a fantastic way to help this worthy cause and makes a perfect gift for Christmas! For just £30 you will receive an adoption certificate, a cuddly toy (or aluminium water bottle), a magnet, a photo and info sheet all in our charity tote bag! For more information on this and the work of the AWCP, visit www.awcp.gi. Get 10% off Sponsorship packages with this tear-off voucher code. Valid until 31st December 2018.

uana

Green Ig

#A W CP 10

2:00pm - Time to prepare the snake feeds. On most occasions, the snakes will all take their feedrats or mice (delivered frozen by Roller pet shop every month). “The main reason a snake will refuse to feed on a feeding schedule is because they are about to shed their skin. However, it could be due to incorrect environmental factors, or even illness.” Before a snake sheds its skin, the eyes will become milky and the snake will not move around so much. A smaller snake will shed a complete skin every few weeks, larger snakes, two to four times a year.

3:00pm - Once all the reptiles are taken care of, it is time to resume maintenance tasks. Given the time of year, this is often securing and sealing enclosures to prevent water ingress and also the important job of providing shelter and warmth for the animals over the winter months.

11 12 1 10 2 9 3 8 4 7 6 5

1 PA 0% CK O AGFF ES SPO W N IT S O H R CO S H D IP E:

veals: “Having worked with a wide variety of exotic species, including great apes, large hoofstock, and an 18-foot reticulated python, Duke still represents a challenge if not properly managed. With the correct protocols in place, most 11 12 1 dangerous 10 2 animals can 9 3 be managed in 8 4 captivity.” 7 6 5

47


environment

THE HOLOTHURIANS

Over the last two years, one of the most popular invertebrates along the Gibraltar coastline have been the Holothurians. This was unexpected, especially with some of the other candidates: the octopus, starfish, and Triton snails. It goes to show the importance of keeping our environmental assumptions at bay, especially when teaching children.

BY LEWIS STAGNETTO, THE NAUTILUS PROJECT

W

hen looking at a Holothurian, or sea cucumber, you would be forgiven for thinking that the animal was a worm of some description. Although a member of the Echinoderms (spiny skin), these animals initially seem to lack the pentagonal symmetry which is externally visible in their cousins: the starfish, the brittle stars, and the sea urchins. It is in fact present, but one needs to look at the internal structures in order to see it. As an example, they have five feeding tentacles which they extend outside the opening on one side that we would associate with a mouth. Gibraltar is home to five species of sea cucumber with the ones most commonly found being Holothuria tubulosa, the common sea cucumber, and Holothuria forskali, the cotton spinner. Both species can be easily found off

48

all of our local beaches with the highest abundances on the western side. Obviously, these two species live in a shallower depth range which is why they are so easily spotted. The remaining three species tend to live either on sandy beds or in much deeper water, making spotting them a rarer occurrence.

to objects, similar to the suckers on an octopus except they extend out. The have an endo-skeleton made up of calcareous ossicles within the skin. This is further supported by water pressure which maintains the shape of animal, much like a water balloon in the sea.

They have five feeding tentacles which they extend outside the opening on one side that we would associate with a mouth.

Typically up to 30cm long, Holothurians are detritivores and hoover up the organic matter that accumulates within the sediments. They play an important role in recycling and are a good indication that the ecosystem in question is in balance. All sea cucumbers have tubular feet; a series of sucker-type structures which they use to stick

The cotton spinner has a series of tricks up its backside to warn off potential predators. In the short term they have a bundle of Cuvierian tubules which produce sticky glue-like strands called saponins. In some species the saponins are actually their internal organs. This substance has such a strong adhesive property that most potential predators leave the cucumber well alone

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


environment due to the level of discomfort it can cause if entangled within it. A lesser-known defence is that these cucumbers store parasitic copepods, Asterocheres boecki, within their tubules or body walls. This combined with the saponins can be ejected from their behinds as a way of warding off any predator which might be considering a nibble.

is that of all the phyla of invertebrates it is the Echinoderms, and subsequently the Holothurians, which share a common ancestor with the chordates. The Chordates are the precursor to the vertebrates and consequently Holothurians are one of our closest living invertebrate relatives - a fact that is very hard to believe when looking at them.

As unbelievable as it might seem, Holothurians also have a type of brain. It is not as centralised and as developed as our brains, but it is a ring of neural tissue which was the precursor for our brains. This simple brain is associated with feeding, but studies have demonstrated that it is superfluous for the animal’s survival. Furthermore, the animals have no defined senses associated with their nervous system. However, there is some evidence to demonstrate that they are sensitive to both touch and light.

Human cultures across the world have commonly harvested Holothurians for food and even medicine. Within the Mediterranean, however, it is only the edible cucumber Parastichopus regalis that was considered to be a culinary delicacy in the Victorian era. Today it’s pretty rare to see it locally on a food menu, although globally still consumed in China and Japan. Heston Blumenthal famously experimented with recipes for these animals on his cooking programme and was quoted as saying: “If I am going to use this strange sea creature in my feast, I have got to find a way of drawing out its flavour without freaking my guests out by the way it looks!”.

They play an important role in recycling and are a good indication that the ecosystem in question is in balance.

This combined with the saponins can be ejected from their behinds as a way of warding off any predator considering a nibble.

Sea cucumbers are dioecious, distinct male and female forms, and subsequently eggs must be fertilised before the young begin to develop. The eggs are fertilised inside the body cavity and young Holothurians develop with it until they grow large enough to escape from a small rupture in the body wall.

Another incredibly interesting fact GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

Despite its ugly duckling appearance, Gibraltar’s Holothurians have proved a hit in the local school educational outings, with many projects confirming this bias in favour of them. Gibraltar might

PHYLUM: Echinodermata

CLASS: Holothuroidae

HABITAT: Rocky and sandy shores

DIET: Detritivores

INTERESTING FACT: One of our closest living invertebrate relative.

not be serving up sea cucumber stew anytime soon, but environmentally these animals have secured a future by winning local hearts. If you have not had the pleasure of an encounter yet, then please feel encouraged to visit them at beach near you. But be warned, if you decide to disturb them they might have something to say about it – and they are stickier than you might imagine! 49


Need more space? Buying a home is one of the most important decisions in your life. So you want to get it right. Even though things can be complicated, you can count on us to get you a quick response. Finding the perfect home is not easy – we think the financing should be.

JYSKE BANK (GIBRALTAR) LTD. · 76, Main Street · P.O. Box 143 · Gibraltar Tel. +350 606 33322 · Fax +350 200 76782 · info@jyskebank.gi · www.jyskebank.gi Jyske Bank (Gibraltar) Ltd. is licensed by the Financial Services Commission, Licence No. FSC 001 00B. Services and products are not available to everybody, for instance not to residents of the US.


scene

RINA’S PICTURE PERFECT CHRISTMAS

A leisurely walk in the woods on a snowy day led photographer Rina Devine to discover a winter wonderland in Greater Manchester, and snap the perfect postcard of the white-blanketed countryside around a village and its steeple, framed by bare tree branches, a rustic fence, on which a red robin landed just on time to provide a charming splash of colour.

BY ELENA SCIALTIEL

T

he robin was what first attracted my attention, so I set up my tripod quickly to snap it on the vast background, fretting it would fly away, but it was in no hurry and just perched on the picket for a while, singing,” Rina says. Indeed, the only perk missing from this Christmas card quaint tableau is sound, but if you watch closely, you may almost hear the birdsong carrying your best season’s greetings to your family and friends through the icy air. Rina reminisces about her childhood in Coatbridge, Scotland, when at the first sight of flakes, kids would wrap up warm and GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

shoot out for a snowball fight or a sledge ride: “Later, when I had kids of my own, once it snowed so much that we were knee-deep in it. The best feeling was returning home after taking them to school in the dark winter mornings, and just sitting in front of the fireplace. Sometimes we were snowed in and couldn’t get to the baker’s, so we had to bake bread at home.”

tombstones, she relocated to Gibraltar 14 years ago and joined the Photographic Society just to challenge herself to ‘something new’. She attended their beginners’ course and - hey presto! - she became an award-winning photographer, producing some of her favourite photos such as Stairway and Watching Gibraltar’s Identity Disappear, campaigning for the conservation of the Old Town’s unique character.

She attended their beginners’ course and hey presto - she became an award-winning photographer!

A former store owner who sold everything from groceries to

51


art foreground brings the flavor together well, fit for a Mediterranean lifestyle advert.

STRANGERS IN THE NIGHT

monochrome vast landscapes and intense portraits from a land of stark light, briefly exhibited at the Gibraltar Art Gallery on Cannon Lane.

RINA DEVINE

She participated in the GBC’s special program Wise Eyes on the Road, produced by Luis Ruiz in 2017, documenting her and four other local photographers’ ten-day voyage across the Atlas Mountains and to the Sahara desert. Needleless to say, this venture generated a great selection of full-colour and

52

Rina’s got a keen eye for artistic composition and special effects, both with still life and creative stunts like the inventive Staple City: this recreates the illusion of NewYork-like moonscape by piling and aligning metal staples of different sizes and length along a small puddle on a black background. “I stirred the water with a toothpick, and photographed a print inside the water to add the river effect and play with reflection, then edited and merged in Photoshop.”

Flowers are captured in full bloom, but more often they are picked when already touched by a hint of decadence, as Rina feels the poetry of withering is a metaphor for life’s transient beauty. “I love getting close to the subject, using macro; the world in small is wondrous to appreciate.” Roses, sunflowers, lilies and sunflowers, yellow poppies, often textured for added drama, in soft hues on the backdrop of china cups brimming with tea, make elegant Edwardian greeting cards and posters. As she grew confident with the camera, Rina’s interest shifted to Gibraltar’s heritage, which she wants to document in detail “before it fades away”, so she is an avid visitor to the Northern Defences’ tunnels - where she uses long exposure for images, and light painting, a technique that relies on torchlight in dark places. Digitally retouched and highlighted, the photos turn out to be nothing short of a good old ghost story. A keen eye for texture and architectural detail in the Upper Town’s every nook and cranny characterises Rina’s most iconic production, focusing on wrought-iron balconies, staircases, louvered shutters, wooden doors, lampposts and tiles - the more they’re riddled with flaky paint, rust and chipped steps the more her fancy is tickled. She wanders about alleys and

This venture generated a great selection of full-colour and monochrome vast landscapes and intense portraits from a land of stark light.

Her still life is both luxuriant and delicate, picking on the luster that vegetables like bell peppers and tomatoes allow, with the Mediterranean twist of fresh basil leaves and fragrant garlic, whose chiaroscuro in the

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


art ramps, peeps in open portals and passages, explores inner patios and secret gardens, where she sets up her tripod and transposes into pixels the mood that she feels to be Gibraltar’s very essence. Shots are artistically retouched with Photoshop, as she loves adding layered textures to them, to extol their temperament and bring out hidden facets.

local ‘shutter-happy’ community, Rina set up her cottage industry a few years back, and now she sells her prints at the Artisans’ Market in Casemates on Saturdays and Ocean Village on Sundays. “All my souvenirs are locally produced, as I manufacture at home prints, postcards, greeting cards, mugs, coasters, plates, jigsaw puzzles, fridge magnets and CD clocks. They feature my own artwork and can be customised with inspirational phrases or dedications,” she says. Her photos can also be printed on canvas for the true painting look. “I like to use coarse canvas, because it adds texture and the retro feel.”

Rina’s interest shifted to Gibraltar’s heritage, which she wants to document in detail “before it fades away”.

Her favourite palette seems to converge to pastels, giving some of her cityscapes the colourised old photo effect, while sometimes she simply opts for monochrome, when geometry or shape and not colour is the main subject matter. When a detail is manipulated, multiplied and rearranged into abstract composition, it is magnified to take centre stage and morph from its practical function, as a car manifold for example, to objet d’art. Her favourite photo remains the one she snapped in Seville on a foggy night: “It was winter, and quite nippy, but I stood in a cobbled alley enveloped in mist for a long while, waiting for someone to walk by under the eerie streetlight,” she says. Her efforts were rewarded by a couple, whose silhouettes are projected like a hologram at vanishing point, and provide the darkest spot in a scarcely lit composition where highlights are sprinkled around the damp surfaces, creating a surreal hard-boiled detective book-cover or movie-poster effect.

STAPLE CITY SKYLINE

Rina’s souvenirs are available at the Gibraltar Museum and Heritage Trust shops, and her stall will be at the Boulevard’s Christmas Market throughout December. Rina’s portfolio can be viewed and advanced orders placed on her website RinaDevinePhotography.co.uk. SNOW SCENE

GIBRALTAR STAIRWAY

On the wave of the interest that her unique perspective on Gibraltar has raised within the GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

53


scene

JAZZING UP THE HOLIDAYS

The Ministry of Culture announce The Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Orchestra will perform at the Gibraltar International Jazz Festival in St Michael’s Cave on Saturday 8th December.

F

ounded in London in 1959, Ronnie Scott’s is one of the world’s most famous jazz clubs. Since the early days of Sarah Vaughn, Count Basie and Miles Davis, the club continues to present the biggest names in jazz as well as the hotly-tipped rising stars, visionary artists and the ‘next big thing’. Headlining the event will be the UK’s finest big band, The Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Orchestra, teeming with first-call players and appearing under the musical directorship of award-winning bandleader Pete Long. The Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Orchestra is comprised of some of the greatest talents in the UK jazz scene, and presents countless themed shows featuring the music of Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Woody Herman, Stan Kenton, The RatPack and Benny Goodman to name just a few. The band can often be experienced at Ronnie Scott’s in London, and have per-

54

formed at countless festivals and outdoor events worldwide. World-famous jazz vocalist, Georgina Jackson, will join the band in St Michael’s Cave. Having sung on Radio 2’s Big Band Special and the BBC Concert Orchestra, she is now resident vocalist with Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Orchestra and is also in great demand with her highly entertaining trumpet/vocal trio shows.

Jackson on a couple of occasions, on behalf of Children in Need. Her marvellous voice and musicianship, with Ronnie Scott’s band, has been a delight.”The Late Sir Terry Wogan

“I’ve had the pleasure of sharing the Savoy stage with Georgina Jackson on a couple of occasions, on behalf of Children in Need. Her marvellous voice and musicianship, with Ronnie Scott’s band, has been a delight.”

- The Late Sir Terry Wogan

“I’ve had the pleasure of sharing the Savoy stage with Georgina

trumpet player.

Georgina began her musical career working as a professional trumpet player almost everywhere up, down, left and right of the UK. Working for years with many famous faces, such as Frank Sinatra Junior, Nancy Sinatra and Seal and touring Big Bands in Concert Halls, television and radio, Georgina learned her trade as a lead

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


scene MALFUNKTION

Georgina and The Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Orchestra will be joined by local jazz band, Malfunktion led by Gibraltarian Saxophonist Nick Gonzalez. The band is extremely popular in Gibraltar and Spain, with a style that moves away from the traditional Jazz sound to the more uptempo Funk Fusion arrangements. On the 8th December they will perform a vibrant and high energy set in St Michael’s Cave.

based entities in The Gibraltar International Jazz Festival including master classes, which will present a unique opportunity for our Gibraltarian musicians to learn from some of the world’s greatest jazz names.”

The band is popular with a style that moves away from the traditional Jazz sound to the more uptempo Funk Fusion.

Limited tickets on sale at gibraltarinternationaljazzfestival.com.

GEORGINA JACKSON

Optional tickets for a shuttle bus service to St. Michael’s Cave also available. RS JAZZ ORCHESTRA

Minister for Culture, Steven Linares, said, “I am delighted that The Ministry of Culture have aligned Gibraltar with one of the world’s most respected jazz acts and bands. Thanks to this partnership I look forward to a fantastic evening of music in December 2018. I am also looking forward to watching local jazz musicians perform alongside international acts. We have a number of plans in store to involve GibraltarGIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

55


music

MORE ON MOREA It would appear that Morea hasn’t ‘had enough’, after all.

BY ELENA SCIALTIEL

G

ibraltar International Song Festival 2018 winner Morea, who enthralled a packed audience last June with her dramatic Italian song Ne Ho Abbastanza (I’ve had enough) is releasing a new EP this winter, featuring six songs accounting her version of “the many faces of love and emotions of the common people”. “The tracks carry different themes: I’d say it is a mix of stories that most of us may have experienced or can relate to,” Morea, stage name of Neapolitan Maria Antonietta Pennino, says. “One in particular is about bullying, and it tells of someone who is trying to break others down gratuitously and maliciously, but the power of love and tenacity eventually conquer all.” Hoping to see a teaser single lifted from the EP available for downloading on her birthday this month, but realistically expecting it to slide 56

into the new year at the end of January, the twenty-eight-yearold melodic singer is still finalising details with her composers, and busy at the recording studio. Although the overall title of the EP hasn’t been disclosed yet by the producers, the six songs are revving to hit the airwaves as Debole (weak), Agosto (August), Mille Parole (thousand words), Al Centro (at the centre), Ancora Nostro (still ours) – and still a working title – and of course Ne Ho Abbastanza, which embodies the best of traditional Neapolitan song transposed in the 21st century with its contemporary arrangements and timeless topics, and indeed makes the most of Morea’s impressive vocal range.

Music and lyrics are composed and arranged by the group Canzoni Inedite (unreleased songs), which includes her favourite authors Marco Canigiula, Marco Di Martino and Francesco Sponta. The EP’s songs are mainly pop, “melodic but catchy”, instantly memorable for their general feeling without having to necessarily understand the lyrics in full, because the sound is akin to European commercial music, especially Spanish or Portuguese. “I hope that my voice will play a big part in stirring positive emotions. I believe that mine and Spanish songs have in common the warmth of the melody and the veracity of the sentiment we input in performing them.”

“I believe that mine and Spanish songs have in common the warmth of the melody and the veracity of the sentiment.”

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


music Maria Antonietta’s passion for singing started at an early age, and at twelve she was serious about her vocal education; soon she was participating in variety and road shows, and singing in a gospel choir. As a teenager she entered several prestigious nationwide competitions, including the Mia Martini Prize and Castrocaro, performing both modern pop and traditional folk songs. Eventually she won the Best Voice and Radio awards at two consecutive editions of the Giffoni Festival in the late Noughties. She featured in the 2008 Italian version of the X-Factor and later that year she was selected as best voice at the Apple & Tequila Festival too, which led to her being signed to an independent label for five years. Her next big project is entering the exclusive pre-selection process for Italy’s most prestigious song festival. It’s held every February in the resort city of San Remo, Liguria, not far from the French border (also famous for its glamorous lifestyle, casino and flower greenhouses), whose ‘new singers’ category is the best nursery for up-and-coming talent waiting to be scouted and afforded the glitzy stage as a springboard to stardom.

place in the latter. Looking back to her experience in Gibraltar, Morea describes it as ‘artistically significant’, because she was able to ‘interface with different cultures from a musical point of view’, and the publicity derived from it has boosted her live career and promoted her music beyond regional borders. Her short stay on the Rock made an impact on her, with the impression of being an extraordinary place where one can fully breathe in a safety and blithe atmosphere. She would like to return here for another gig soon, without the pressure of competition, just as an old friend, and perhaps even get inspired for a song dedicated to the Rock and its people, whom she says she keeps close to her heart.

The Rock made an impact on her, with the impression of being an extraordinary place where one can fully breathe in a safety and blithe atmosphere.

Morea and her team of authors submitted her entry to the Gibraltar International Song Festival upon advice of Federico Martello, a fellow artist who participated in the 2016 and 2017 editions, impressing audiences and judges alike, and landing third GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

Visit Morea’s Facebook page Maria Antonietta Pennino for release date, videos and information on her forthcoming gigs. 57


scene

THE ART BEHIND THE MUSIC

We sit down for an exclusive interview with musical legends and artists Brian Travers from UB40 and John Illsley from Dire Straits, who unveiled the artist proofs of their album covers for Beautiful You and For the Many at the Kempinski Hotel Bahía in Estepona on the 22nd of November 2018. These artworks are part of an exhibition of 20 pieces of the artists’ works, which will be on display at the hotel until the 10th of January 2019.

BY SOPHIE CLIFTON-TUCKER

B

rian Travers is perhaps best known as being a founder member and saxophonist of the reggae band UB40. He has spent over 35 years both recording and touring during which they have sold over 120 million albums. Brian was educated at Birmingham’s Moseley School of Art. After 20 years residing in the rural Worcestershire, he returned to his roots in Moseley where he now paints ‘abstract’ canvases, Perspex sheets, stainless steel and creates painted glass and ceramic objet d’art. John Illsley John Illsley is an English musician who rose to fame as the bass guitarist of the critically acclaimed band Dire Straits. With Dire Straits, John has been the recipient of multiple BRIT and Grammy Awards and a Heritage Award. As one of

58

the founding band members, with Mark Knopfler, his brother David and drummer Pick Withers, John played a major role in the development of the Dire Straits’ sound. During their time together as Dire Straits they sold over 120 million albums and toured extensively across the world. When Dire Straits took a couple of well-earned breaks, John released two albums: Never Told a Soul (1984) and Glass (1988). When Dire Straits finished touring in 1993 John became heavily involved in the art world. Having carved a reputation for himself as a painter, John had solo exhibitions

in London, New York, Sydney and across Europe. He is currently working on a new solo album which will be released next year, entitled Coming Up for Air.

“We are very different expressionists both as musicians and artists, and of course we both understand how it feels to spend a lifetime performing to huge crowds.”

What brought you both together for this exhibition? How did the idea come about?

John - Brian and I did a small show in London earlier this year and we enjoyed each other’s company and paintings, then this opportunity came up to do another. Brian - Adam Sargent my curator heard about John Illsley of Dire Straits, the fact that like myself he

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


scene plays music and paints, and suggested a show. He’s a lovely guy and understood where we were coming from; we are very different expressionists both as musicians and artists and of course we both understand how it feels to spend a lifetime performing to huge crowds. When we are painting it’s just you and the expression. No audience, no one to listen to or play along with; just you and the paint, the medium… and most importantly the idea. It’s very therapeutic for me at least, and like music, ‘it hurts no one’. It’s a very peaceful way to express oneself and hugely satisfying even if it’s only the artist feeling the vibe. What is your favourite medium of expression?

“We called the band UB40 which stood for ‘Unemployment Benefit form 40’ - the dole card we used to claim a meagre living!”

J: Oil is my favourite medium; it has an elasticity that is both unpredictable and exciting.

B: I use any kind of paint, from oils, to enamels, to acrylics, to household emulsion, to mud, to sand, to gold dust, diamond dust – anything that makes the mark I’m searching for. I like to think of myself as an abstract expressionist. An image of a face or landscape is not hugely satisfying for me - it either looks like the subject or it doesn’t! I’m more interested in the abstract as a means to provoke thought in a way that hasn’t been seen before. I make sculptures, pictures in the sand, scratches on rocks… I’m still searching for new and innovative ways to express my message. I’ve used dirt from the First World War trenches in Flanders Fields to add authenticity and 100-yearGIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

old DNA to a painting commemorating and remembering the men and women who died in that war. I’ve used coal dust from a mountain of coal slag from the site of a disaster in 1966 where a whole mountain of coal waste collapsed onto a school in a Merthyr Tydfil in Wales killed 140 children. Right now I’m making paintings from thousands of miniature plastic soldiers on canvas. I may melt them with a hot flame, I’m not sure yet. I’m still searching for the investment to make bronze public art in celebration of the world’s beautiful people and their achievements. So in answer to your question, I’m still searching. How does this form of the arts differ from musical composition, if it all? B: Great question. They are incredibly similar in as much as the artist tries to express himself to the viewer or listener. We try to

let the audience feel our feelings in a way they can relate to and sympathise or celebrate with us; let them know we are like-minded souls. Music being the most abstract of all the arts, you can’t see it, you can’t touch, but it touches us in the most beautiful way. The abstract exists purely to provoke thought. What first inspired you to paint/compose? J: Pierre Bonnard and Chuck Berry. B: I’ve painted and drawn since I was a small child, mostly to make my mother happy - she always made me feel good about the pictures. As they say ‘nothing succeeds like success’, so it pushed me into doing it more often. At 11 years old I attended the Moseley Road school of Art in Birmingham until I was 16, then girls, music and exploring life took over! But I never stopped painting. My classmates from art school and I started a little band. As we couldn’t get jobs back in those dark depressed days in the 1970s, we called the band UB40 which stood for ‘Unemployment 59


scene J: Mostly abstract, some still lifes, and guitar paintings and prints.

cian. Now I get the time - usually when everyone else is asleep between 3am to sunrise - to paint. In solitude lies solemnity.

“I keep innovating and changing. Repeating oneself can trap your art in a cul de sac of no return.”

What led you onto the path of music? What led you back to art?

BRIAN TRAVERS

Benefit form 40’ - the dole card that we and a few million others used to claim a meagre living to simply survive! As luck would have it, our first record Food For Thought was a worldwide hit. 40 years and 140 million record sales later... of course being irresponsible lovers of life we spent all the money, but we still tour globally to sell-out crowds. The record business has changed dramatically but I still live and feel privileged to be a musi-

J: Music had been important to me since I was 14 years old, but despite being in many bands off and on for 10 years it was meeting Mark that made it make sense and led us to create Dire Straits.

“Music never hurts anyone, even when it makes us cry.”

60

B: Every show I paint I attempt to move 180 degrees away from the last show in style. I’ve been called 27 painters in one! I keep innovating and changing to keep myself interested and keep learning. Repeating oneself can trap your art in a cul de sac of no return. So if I paint an abstract show of 3 metre wide pictures in technicolour, it will inevitably be followed by a series of smaller black and white figurative studies. The subject matter can be inspired by a news item, a joke in the pub, a sad or happy story on the radio, a long lost love, a child laughing with his or her friends, a beautiful kind gesture overheard in a public place… I’m never sure where or when the next inspiration will take control.

I never went to art school, but I had a wonderfully inspiring teacher who opened my eyes to looking at the world in a unique way. Dire Straits stopping performing in 1993 drove me back to painting. What sort of works have you been exhibiting around the world?

Does music influence your artwork? How so? J: Well it’s always playing when I’m painting, so I think it has some influence on the work. B: Of course. I play music when I paint; for example, Joaquín Rodrigo’s Concerto de Aranjuez recorded by Gil Evan and Miles Davies inspired 8 large abstracts called Sketches of Spain. I tried to depict the movement, the atmosphere, the inspired rhythm that’s created by flamenco dancers as they break the still air that is around us, using only red, yellow and black. GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


life How do musical/artistic styles of the 21st century differ to those of the 20th? B: In a million ways, but the same 12 notes are used by Beethoven, Paco de Lucia, Segovia, Elvis Zoreskey, Pablo Cassals, Mozart, Justin Beiber, and The Beatles, which goes to show how very abstract music as a form of artistic expression is, and it should always change. Our job as musicians is to always discover new ways of playing the notes; those precious gems that wait patiently for us musicians to discover them. Music never hurts anyone, even when it makes us cry. How do you decide on the artwork for the covers for your albums? B: It’s always different. For many years I have purchased complete shows by an artist and used them for the whole campaign around selling a record. I was asked by my bandmates to paint our latest album to be released on February 8th 2019. The album’s called For the Many after Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour Party tag line ‘for the many, not the few’. I painted a skyline to remember the victims of the Grenfell Tower block inferno in London that killed all the residents due to government neglect of the less privileged. I painted it with an abstract explosion of bravery, tenacity, love, pain, fear, resignation spilling over the city. We are releasing 40 limited editions of the album cover artwork to celebrate UB40’s 40th anniversary.

In answer to your question, I look for inspired art images to wrap our art in. Who needs to see musicians’ faces? We’ve all seen them before…

“Oil is my favourite medium; it has an elasticity that is both unpredictable and exciting.”

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

How would Sultans of Swing convert to canvas?

J: Interesting question… Maybe black and white, in a smoky atmosphere. If you were to compose a song about Gibraltar, what genre and tempo would you choose? What sort of words might form the lyrics? J: Pretty laid back, and celebrating culture and history. *** This exhibition is part of the Kempinski Hotel Bahía’s Art Series of events. The exhibition of 20 pieces of Brian Travers’ and John

JOHN ILLSELY

Illsley’s works, will be on display at the hotel until the 10th of January 2019. Free guided tours of the exhibition can also be arranged. The Kempinski Hotel Bahia in Estepona celebrates its 20th anniversary next year. The luxury frontline beach resort has 145 rooms (including 17 suites) overlooking the Mediterranean Sea and features subtropical gardens and pools, as well as trendy culinary concepts and an exclusive Kempinski Spa. For more information, visit kempinski.com/en/ marbella/hotel-bahia. 61


BROOKLYN, UNITED STATES


leisure

FIVE CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY DESTINATIONS December is dominated by dark nights, damp mornings, and dreary afternoons. Christmas and New Year are the main events of the month to brighten things up a bit, so here are five destinations to take the festivities to the next level.

BY CHRIS HEDLEY

N

ew York

An idea propagated by the American film industry is that New York is like real life, but bigger and better than you can live it, and on your visit to the Big Apple you’ll find this concept hard to refute. The buildings are even taller than you imagined, the winter is colder than you might expect, and the Christmas lights are as beautifully elaborate as they are sickeningly blinding. If there’s ever a place to fill up your holiday cheer, the Americans have got

you covered. The cold weather increases your chances of a white Christmas to further add to the atmosphere, and the tree outside the Rockefeller Centre is likely to be the biggest you’ll see. Why not partake in a little bit of ice skating while you take in the backdrop? It’s difficult not to run around the city with the enthusiasm of Kevin McCallister, minus the fear of

two pesky burglars with a vendetta against you. Don’t leave the tourism all to yourself though, combine your love of Christmas and movies by hopping onto the Christmas movie walking tour on a payas-you-like basis.

It’s difficult not to run around the city with the enthusiasm of Kevin McCallister.

After morning mass, a big meal, and the exchanging of presents, it’s time to look forward to the next event: New Years.

63


travel CENTRAL PARK, NEW YORK

TREE OUTSIDE THE ROCKEFELLER CENTRE

The decorations are still up in Times Square and the streets are rammed with people eagerly awaiting the dropping of the ball. Make sure your bladder is empty before venturing out onto the streets, as a toilet break will find you at the back of the line when the time to recite Robbie Burns finally arrives. If you’re 64

not fussed about Times Square, head to Brooklyn for a view of the fireworks over the city, or New Jersey for a display with the Statue of Liberty offering a decent backdrop. Sydney Sydney is a well-established

destination on any New Year’s list, but what about the rest of December? The coastal city offers a twist on the traditional festive holiday, principally because you’ll be heading there in the summer heat. With that in mind, spend the run up to the big day lazing on the beach, sparing few thoughts for your friends at home in their coats and scarfs as they lament their decision not to follow you to the Southern Hemisphere. Get an early night on the 22nd: the next morning you’ll be filling up with coffee and heading down to Sydney Fish market at 5am for the Seafood Marathon lasting all the way through to 5pm on Christmas Eve. Of course, the main event of this trip is the world renowned New Year’s fireworks. Get in amongst the other 1.5 million or so other people down at the harbour. As one of the first places in the world to ring in the year, The Aussie’s have an obligation to set the stan-

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


travel

SYDNEY PEOPLE CELEBRATE CHRISTMAS AT BONDI BEACH

dard for the rest of us, and they do it ‘pretty bloody well, mate’! The fireworks are synchronised to music as they explode off the harbour bridge and surrounding areas, including the Opera House. The lights soar into the sky and cascade from the bridge into the water for twelve full minutes to signify the twelve months of the year. After it’s all done, high on your list of resolutions will be to return again next year. Reykjavik

The lights soar into the sky and cascade into the water for twelve full minutes to signify the twelve months of the year.

If you’re anything like me, you like to embrace the seasons in all their glory. This means heading to the beach in the summer, and finding somewhere cold and preferably with snow in the winter. Here there clue

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

65


travel REYKJAVIK

Icelanders don’t care much for Santa Claus, instead they have the ‘Yule Lads’ - thirteen little rascals each with their own naughty personality.

is in the title; Iceland inherently promises a higher probability of a snowy Jól (Icelandic for the Christmas holiday season). Interestingly, Icelanders don’t care much for Santa Claus, instead they have the ‘Yule Lads’ - thirteen little rascals each with their own naughty personality, who only come out of their caves around Christmas time. If you see a cartoon image of a scruffy old boy projected on a city wall, it’s likely one of the Lads.

Similar to New York, a square in the city centre is set aside for ice skating, or if you have your own skates with you (for some reason), you can head over to the frozen pond and zip around to your heart’s content. Other novelty methods of transport are available in this part of the world. Renting a snowmobile or taking a ride in an off road buggy will get your heart rate up a bit in an attempt to keep you warm, or opt for a more 66

tranquil day out by riding a little Icelandic horse. Whichever you choose, you’re going to have a Jól-ly good time. There are also some Christmas markets to mill around with you mulled wine, the most popular being in Hafnarfjörður (try and say that after an eggnog), complete with small wooden houses and handmade crafts.

tempt light up the night sky. Who needs the sun? One of the best places to observe the spectacle is Víghóll, with near 360 degree views of what seems like the entire population’s own personal display, creating a truly unique worldly experience. Fireworks not your thing? No worries, you’re in Iceland, and Mother Nature has her own light display on offer. Nip on a bus or drive out of the city into the countryside in an attempt to catch the famed northern lights for a natural New Year light show.

The locals stock up with an exuberant supply of gunpowder filled rockets and attempt light up the night sky. Who needs the sun?

The best part of the New Year celebrations in Reykjavik is the firework display. Unlike the government-funded (about $7 million) display in Sydney, The locals here in Iceland like to take matters into their own hands by stocking up with an exuberant supply of gunpowder filled rockets and at-

Hong Kong

This might seem like a wildcard, but stay with me. It seems like the people of Hong Kong also have their own Christmas characters, although Santa is big here too, as they seem to opt for just dressing up a bit funny with a red jacket. Maybe like a Christmas duck or chicken. Aside from the visual aspect

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


travel HONG KONG NIGHT VIEW

(every shopping centre heavily decorated, multimedia symphony of lights etc.) there are a bunch of Christmassy things to get involved in. The Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra puts on a Christmas special, as does the Honk Kong ballet. You could even pop into the Winner Building and try your hand at crafting your own wreath and other seasonal arrangements. Disneyland achieves an impressive feat of making your visit to the park even more cheerful than usual. If you find yourself in Sha Tin surrounded by a herd of runners in red suits and long grey beards, it’s not the end. You’ve stumbled across the Great Santa Run - quite the sight. With all these activities, many people choose to partake in what Hong Kong is famous for, shopping. You can get lost for days and weeks on end with the plethora of sprawl-

ing shopping centres selling all the gifts you can fit in your stocking and more.

A big part of Christmas over here, like anywhere, is the food. If you can stretch your budget to visit a posh hotel you’ll be reward with a two million course meal which serves everything remotely edible. There’s also a place called The Pulse, which tries to recreate where Santa might be enjoying his feast by erecting ‘igloos’ in which you can dine. Novel. And Christmas markets. Oh the Christmas markets. Of course you can find the tradition German market here, but you can also find markets from other nationalities such as Italy or Finland.

Christmas Day isn’t really a thing, with the main tradition being that families and couples go to KFC together and eat fried chicken (really).

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

The Pulse tries to recreate where Santa might be enjoying his feast by erecting ‘igloos’ in which you can dine.

Although Chinese New Year is the bigger event in this part of the world, the display on December 31st is nothing to turn your nose up at. A street party on Tsim Sha Tsui Pier begins at ten o’clock, and an hour before midnight the display starts with explosions of light every fifteen minutes. When twelve o’clock rolls around, a stretch of the harbour over a kilometre long flares up. Even some of the boats in the harbour are equipped with fireworks to add to the depth of the display. Tokyo Sticking around Asia, another wildcard surfaces. Celebrating Christmas in a country where Christianity never really took off might not seem like the foundations of a great celebration. Christmas Day isn’t really a thing, with the main tradition being that families and couples go to KFC together and eat fried 67


travel chicken (really). The overwhelming feeling over this period in Tokyo, aside from a meal based on an original Kentucky recipe, is one of romance. Each district has its own elaborate light decorations adorning the buildings, walls, floor, sky… everything. You’ll also stumble across the odd Christmas market dotted around the city, just to distinguish the decorations for your run-of-the-mill light festival. Notable sights are the wide boulevard of Takeshita Street in Harajuku and the Skytree in

TOKYO SKYLINE WITH TOKYO SKY TREE

to bring you luck and prosperity for the coming year. Tradition dictates that the bell is to be rung one hundred and seven times on New Year’s Eve, then once more just as January 1st arrives, to represent each of the worldly desires in the teachings of Buddhism. Most temples will let everyone have a go on the bell though. If you’re more of a party-goer, head to the iconic Shibuya crossing for the countdown before heading out to one of the areas numerous bars.

TOKYO CITY, JAPAN CELEBRATES NEW YEAR

Sumida. No prizes for guessing what that is lit up to resemble. Of course, similar to Hong Kong, you could always visit Tokyo Disneyland, transformed to fit the occasion, if you can handle that much happiness. New Year is one of the most important times of the year for the Japanese. The number one thing on their to do list is to get together on the 31st of December 68

The bell is to be rung one hundred and seven times on New Year’s Eve, then once more just as January 1st arrives

or 1st of January and have a good old fashioned feast. For this reason, either search out long lost friends who may be living there, or arrive a couple of weeks early and make some fast friends so you can get in on the action. After the food, follow the locals to a nearby temple to ring a big bell in order

There is one thing to take away from this whether you are religious or not. We should try to remember to spend the holiday period with the ones we love, be it friends or family, instead of succumbing to making the holiday about feeding the insatiable spectre of consumerism that lies ever present in us all. Happy Holidays!

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


Need to get to Malaga Airport? Daily airport shuttle to Malaga Airport Gibraltar to Malaga Airport daily shuttle now available

ÂŁ25.00 one way | ÂŁ45.00 return

Blands Travel are now offering two daily shuttle services to and from Malaga Airport

Gibraltar Midtown Coach Park to Malaga Airport 07:30/14:30 hours daily Malaga Airport to Gibraltar Midtown Coach Park 11:00/20:00 hours daily

To reserve your shuttle please contact: (+350) 2005 0932 or travel@blandstravel.com


leisure

‘TIS THE SEASON TO BE BUDGETING

If you can hear the cha-ching of the cash registers down Main Street and Christmas music jingles already, you know what that means – spending season is upon us. The joyous holiday is here, filling us with a generous nature of buying presents we know will make those around us beam with happiness. It is always fun to hunt for popular gifts. But there comes the eternal conundrum that accompanies this time of year: how much should we spend on Christmas gifts?

BY RESHAM KHIANI

W

hat happens in the weeks leading up to Christmas that causes you

to spend too much? For starters, a barrage of advertisements sometimes entices you to spend more than you want. The value of online shopping has nearly doubled in just the past three years. And new events 70

such as Black Friday and Cyber Monday mean that we spend more in November too, particularly as many shops have moved from one-day to week-long events to tempt us to buy our gifts earlier.

How much should realistically leave your pocket for the family, friends and coworkers in your life?

Last year a survey was done on how much we shell out in Europe as the year ends. The results done by statista.com

showed in 2017, UK, Spain and Germany came in the top three European countries for spending on Christmas gifts. The average spend last year was £279.43. Consumers in the UK spent the most on clothing and footwear gifts last Christmas, accounting for, accounting for £53.63. Toy purchases will amount to £50.21 on average per consumer. You may also fall into the trap of comparing how much you spend to others in your inner and outer circles. You could even make a GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


leisure budget. One that is based on how much you’d actually like to spend. But then the big question is, how much should realistically leave your pocket for the family, friends and coworkers in your life? There’s the stocking fillers for your children, presents for nieces and nephews, siblings, even cousins, adding up to £30. And don’t forget you may be tempted to buy that piece of jewellery or an expensive watch for your partner that stretches anything from £100-£500. Then on top of that there’s the obligatory presents - either a bottle of wine, scented candle or donation to the collection for your children’s teachers or charities for the homeless. The list is growing and soon the bills start arriving, and you realise you’re burning through money like chestnuts left too long over an open fire. The Christmas message of being generous tends to lend a false sense of security that it is ok to spend because, after all, ´tis the season of kindness. Gibraltar is known for its generous nature, but dealing with debt in the bleak months of January can turn the kindest soul into a bundle of nerves.

you’ve known someone, that present can increase spending. As long as it’s motivated by the joy of giving rather than the pressure, and it doesn’t take a toll on your finance for the rest of the year, there’s no ‘wrong’ amount to spend on Christmas. Just remember, presents do not need to be expensive.

Soon the bills start arriving, and you realise you’re burning through money like chestnuts left too long over an open fire.

5 Ways to Budget for Christmas

҇​҇

Kelly Whalen, author of money-saving blog The Centsible Life, advises to sign up to an online tracking service such as Mint - a holiday-budget calculator. Depending on your gross annual income, the service will help you allocate your money.

҇​҇

Eliminate last-minute shopping splurges by putting your shopping dates on the calendar.

the peo҇ple҇Askaround Items come and you go, but experiences what they would to receive. create emotional like No point spendconnections that ing £30 or £40 stay with us for a on something that will not be lifetime. used or even

Gift giving is, and always will be, subjective. For each unique person, an original present is required, and depending on long GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

recycled.

҇​҇

Make a list of who you need to buy for and whenever you see goods at decent prices, grab, wrap, and hide them away in the secret ‘Christmas cupboard’.

҇​҇

Bring cash so that you don’t exceed the spending limit on your credit card.

Whatever you do, aim to create experiences and not just give ‘stuff’. Items come and go, but experiences create emotional connections that stay with us for a lifetime. In the end not only will you be giving better gifts, but you might save some money in the long run. Below are 16 thrifty pocket-friendly gift ideas:

• Pay for a babysitter session • Homemade soaps • Scented candles • Natural sugar scrubs • Handmade chocolates • Making your own jewellery • Homemade food hampers • Sweet jars • Photo collage or album • Knit a Christmas jumper • Gift cards and vouchers • Collecting treasured family recipes in a pretty box • Christmas decorations • DIY pocket hand warmers • Christmas lanterns • DIY advent calendars 71


The health benefits of CBD oil

GEORGE LINARES (MPharm) Calpe Pharmacy Ltd 93 Main St calpepharmacy@live.co.uk

To CBD or NOT to CBD? That is the question on everybody’s lips. But what is this product? And could it help you?

WHAT IS CBD OIL? Cannabidiol (CBD) is a cannabinoid found in hemp and cannabis that has been shown to be particularly beneficial when dealing with pain, inflammation and other illnesses. Industrial hemp strains used by all reputable EU companies contain a THC content that is so low (under 0.2% – the legal limit under EU law), it is deemed to be non-psychoactive. THC is the sole psychoactive cannabinoid. CBD has no psychoactive effects whatsoever. However, it is a godsend for people looking to exploit the potential benefits of cannabinoids, without the associated and/or unwanted ‘high’. WHAT CAN IT BE USED FOR? As a pharmacist I have been recommending CBD oil in low dos-

ages for predominantly insomnia and/or anxiety, and it has proven to be very effective for patients. At higher dosages I have found that patients have had great relief from the conditions fibromyalgia, autism, and epilepsy. I have also found that patients with arthritis, psoriasis, or eczema have benefitted from applying the topical skin balm. ARE THERE ANY SIDE EFFECTS? To date, there have been no known side effects, which means it is great for me to recommend to people for a variety of conditions as there are also no toxicity issues. However, due to its cardiovascular benefits I advise that people taking blood thinning medication such as Warfarin or Eliquis for example, not take it without consulting with their doctor first as a precautionary measure.

HOW DO I TAKE CBD OIL? You can take CBD oil via oral ingestion, sublingual (under the tongue) absorption, inhalation, topical absorption (cream), or as a suppository. The most commonly found preparation is CBD oil which is placed under the tongue and left there for 30-60 seconds to be absorbed sublingually. WHAT TO LOOK OUT FOR WHEN BUYING CBD OIL? When buying CBD oil you should be careful about which brand you buy, as some do not state the percentage content of CBD, and might state something like ‘Hemp extract’ content which is very unclear. Hemp extract will contain CBD, but my concern with this is that you do not know exactly how much CBD it does contain, and therefore I cannot recommend different strengths for different conditions as I would be doing so blindly.



fashion

FESTIVE PARTYWEAR

MARABOU CLIP FRAME BAG TOPSHOP, £27.00

It feels like only yesterday that we were signing off yet another year, but the countdown to 2019 is officially on. Time to raid the wardrobe for your best glitzy garb…

BY JULIA COELHO

I

t’s that time of the year when a scroll through your diary makes you seem busier than ever; I’m already tired just thinking about it. Several family soirees, a carol concert, the annual boozy lunches with friends, and a couple of work parties all pencilled in, and before you know it, not only are you fully-booked, but also in desperate need for some brand new festive outfits. I’m not complaining though; party season is the best excuse to go all-out when it comes to dressing up. The more organised among you may already be well on your way to having it all figured out, but if you’re anything like me, it’s time to get your act together and avoid the last-minute panicked shopping frenzy. I find that work parties are particularly tricky to navigate - it’s not always easy to nail the necessary balance between looking smartyet-stylish and festive all at the same time, while also being Duskready should the occasion call for it. I find that animal print can often tread that fine line perfectly; it’s understated enough, but also loud

74

and fun, and has the ability to give any outfit a glamorous and chic edge. You’ll be happy to know that animal print actually dominated a huge number of runways last season, and as one of winter’s major trends, there’s no surprise that there are a substantial number of options available on the high-street. Unsurprisingly, leopard print coats and shoes are two of the most prevalent ways this trend will manifest itself, perfect for those of you who don’t want to make it the featuring aspect of your look. But from snake and zebra to faux-croc and cheetah, there are a plethora of prints to choose from in absolutely all tones and styles. In a similar vein, transitioning from casual to formal, or desk to drinks, can be fairly simple. Just whack on a pair of heels, and add a red lip or a pair of sparkly earrings, and you’re good to go. On the opposite end of the spectrum, we have New Year’s Eve, which is a particularly fancy affair for the majority of us. Regardless of what I choose to wear, no matter how glam or understated, the

story goes the same year in, year out: I buy a fairly expensive dress, wear it that one night, and then it lies dormant in my cupboard for months to come, and, let’s get real, I’m probably not going to wear the majority of them ever again. But it doesn’t really have to be that way. Firstly, it’s not economically smart, but it’s also not sustainable, and there are plenty of versatile dresses, jumpsuits, you name it, available on the high street, that are easy to get several wears out of. Maxi dresses are continually made to feel like the only safe option, and it can often be easy to feel the pressure to adhere to the expectations that come with festive fashion. While I absolutely love a good old maxi, there are so many other awesome head-turning styles out there up for grabs. Mini dresses are set to be a hot ticket this year, from satin and velvet to sequins and embellishments, worn with elaborate jewellery and shoes, nothing is off limits in the mini dress department. If you’re not a dress person, then why not opt for a flowy jumpsuit GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


BUNNY FEATHER STILETTO HEELS IN BLACK PUBLIC DESIRE, £29.99

Y.A.S. LEOPARD PRINT COAT ASOS, £90.00

STUDDED LEATHER HIGH HEEL SHOES ZARA, £69.99 PRETTY LITTLE THING – ZIP FRONT FAUX LEATHER SKIRT IN SNAKE ASOS, £25.00

It’s understated enough but also has the ability to give any outfit a glamorous and chic edge. ASOS DESIGN – CAMI JUMPSUIT WITH WIDE LEG IN SNAKE PRINT ASOS, £40.00

ASOS DESIGN – HATTY BARELY THERE HEELED SANDALS ASOS, £28.00

HIGH HEEL STRAPPY SANDALS ZARA, £29.99

Red is one of the few colours that apparently suits absolutely all skin tones, scientifically speaking.

KISS THE SKY – LEOPARD CAMI WITH LACE TRIM ASOS, £18.00

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

SEQUINNED FRINGE DRESS ZARA, £39.99

75


ASOS DESIGN – MONO CHECK SUIT ASOS, £76.00

FLYIN PLATFORM HEELS IN SILVER PUBLIC DESIRE, £34.99

METALLIC EFFECT BAG BERSHKA, £17.99

SPOT SATIN FRILL DRESS TOPSHOP, £49.00

MISSGUIDED – SKATER MINI DRESS IN FLORAL RED ASOS, £25.00

SEQUINNED MINI BAG ZARA, £29.99

ROCKY GLITTER BLOCK HEEL SANDALS TOPSHOP, £49.00

ASOS DESIGN – PLEATED TRAPEZE MINI DRESS ASOS, £32.00 RIVER ISLAND – BOUCLE BLAZER AND SKIRT ASOS, £68.00 & £35.00

76

Just whack on a pair of heels, and add a red lip or a pair of sparkly earrings, and you’re good to go.

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


fashion or a sharp checked suit? I’ve always said I’d love to brave a snazzy suit one day for New Year’s Eve, although I’m not quite sure I’d be able to pull one off quite as well as suit-connoisseurs like Blake Lively or Cate Blanchett. On the colour front, and it may not come as a huge surprise to any of you, red is what’s happening this year. You may be the type of girl who confidently wears red all year round, but it must be said that forthcoming festive functions invite for such a bold and powerful, but also fun, colour. Also, a side note; red is one of the few colours that apparently suits absolutely all skin tones, scientifically speaking.

MAYFAIR ONMAIN

don’t have to look much further than Zara and Topshop to find a fabulous pair this year!

In the accessories world, mini bags seem to be all the rage these days, and while I find them mostly impractical on every other day of the year, I’d say they may be just right for an event like New Year’s Eve; a night where you don’t want to be lugging anything clunky or heavy around, and only really need a minimal number of items for safekeeping. Shoes, as much as I love them, are something I always leave to the last minute without fail. The high-street is absolutely smashing it on the shoe front right now; offering everything from 90s-inspired chunkies, to elegant pointed-toes, and funky embellished disco styles. You really

December is one of those few months that are absolutely jampacked with all sorts of events that require different styles and levels of formality. But one thing’s for sure, it’s one of the few times in the year that gives you license to pull out all the stops and go overboard without so much as raising an eyebrow! Sparkly chandelier earrings and platform heels? Heck yes. Metallic gold mini dress for lunch? Go on then! There are no rules. It’s time to loosen up, have fun, and end the year on a good note.

The Good Hair Guide to being The Belle of the Bauble! By Mayfair On Main’s Creative Director Pauline Olivera

As the festive season is now upon us, for those of us who are accustomed to looking good throughout the year, when it comes to making an extra special effort for the work Christmas parties and New Year celebrations choosing that special look can sometimes leave us in a quandary. If you are planning your special occasion hair then here are a few tips to help you decide. The outfit, especially the neckline and back can play a big part in your final decision, as often a low back or off the shoulder straps usually favors a Hair Up-Do. For those of us sporting shorter hair, remember that an experienced stylist can work wonders nowadays, so don’t despair as experienced stylists can use padding and hair extensions where necessary to help create your desired look. In this situation it is imperative to book a consultation with your stylist ahead of your appointment to discuss your options and necessary additions.

If you prefer to enhance your short style, perhaps you can consider a bit of sparkle with a hair accessory or some glitzy jewels and/or glitter. For a more subtle look an addition of some glitzy or long drop earrings can add that final touch. For those of us with longer hair who prefer to have your luscious locks in full glory perhaps a half-up-do or side or partial braid style may be more suitable, again with some added glitz. It is always advisable especially if you are unsure on style to take along a few pictures to give some guidance your stylist. Some stylists prefer to wash hair and style on the day, others prefer the hair to be washed prior to the salon visit whilst there are some stylists who prefer to work on unwashed hair so it is always advisable to ask ahead of your visit to avoid extra time and costs. To avoid disappointment call Mayfair On Main on 00350 (200) 75913 to book your Special Occasion hair consultation and appointment. The team at MoM hope you enjoy the festive season!

Gibraltar’s luxury hair salon experience where quality and service matter MOM For more information or to enjoy the Mayfair On Main experience, call the salon on 00350 20075913 286 Main Street, Gibraltar, GX11 1AA • info@mayfaironmain.gi • www.mayfaironmain.gi

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

77


finance

DHL Express is the global market leader in the international express business, so you probably already know that we can deliver your documents and parcels from Gibraltar to virtually every country in the world. What you might not know is that we can also take care of all your importing requirements.

For further information please contact: DHL Gibraltar Unit 36 Harbours Deck, New Harbours, Gibraltar Tel: 200 72210 Email: GIBSN@dhl.com GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE • JUNE 2014

31


wine

THE TWELVE WINES OF CHRISTMAS Venison stew and a cheeky little number…

BY ANDREW LICUDI DipWSET

S

oon it will be Christmas. We are surrounded by ancient trees. Massive trunks covered in lichen and moss. Its chilly and fallen leaves rustle underfoot as the procession moves deeper into the forest. Next we are heading down a slope – in front of us, a perfectly constructed circle of twisted, knarled branches. Leading the procession is a young man and woman. He is slim with shoulder-length hair wearing no clothes except for flimsy trousers tied at the waist. He is barefoot. His ribs clearly visible above a flat stomach which shows no signs of the ravages time will bring. The woman is tall and elegant and wears a beautiful, tightly-fitting, full length, strappy dress of silvery material with patches of wispy gauze here and there. As she moves forward the pieces of ghostly mesh flutter, shimmering like fishy scales of silvery brightness. On her head is a garland of forest foliage dotted with orange and white berries interspersed with dark green, waxy leaves. Her milky-white skin and bare shoulders accentuating the simplicity of her leafy tiara and freezing GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

surroundings. The air is heavy; the only sound that of distant crows announcing they are leaving the forest to roost as night-time approaches. The young couple walk into the centre of the circle where a middle-aged woman, wearing an Aztec hat, waits for them. Her dress of silky purple material, layered hither and thither, make her look like a forest blue-bell though her legs end with sturdy boots. Soon she is calling on the spirits of the east and the west and that of the south and the north. The young man’s face looks impassive whilst his torso visibly shivers as the temperature falls.

Like marriages, one is never sure how wine from Pinot Noir is going to turn out. In this case the Domaine de Valmoissine 2015 by Louis Latour proved an excellent accompaniment to the venison stew. Lovely perfumed nose with cherries and strawberries on the palate and a very refined finish cheekily mimicking good Burgundy for £10 a bottle! The wine comes from the Vars region in France. Who would have thought that refined Pinot could be made so near the Mediterranean? I was delighted to discover that Anglos in Main Street stock Laherte Freres Champagne. This is what is known by enthusiasts as a Grower Champagne. In recent years many smaller growers, who use to sell their grapes to the Grande Marques, now make their own wines.

The pieces of ghostly mesh flutter, shimmering like fishy scales of silvery brightness.

Soon the vows are read and the couple are man and wife and we clap joyfully and we head back out of the forest to a tent of circus-proportions where an enormous stew of wild venison, lashings of mash and black kale and as much wine as we could wish for wait for us.

These wines considered artisanal, made in small quantities, can offer outstanding value for money. Anglos have their Les Empreintes 79


wine ue Bordeaux and seriously good white Burgundy. All at fair prices.

Non-Vintage for £33.50 and Les Vignes d’Autrefois 2009 for £37.50. Ironically the Laherte wines are displayed next to Mumm Champagne the largest producer in the world. It is reckoned that 1 in 10 bottles of Champagne consumed worldwide is Mumm.

2011 is on sale at Anglos for £11.70. Other wines I particularly like at Anglos are Tondonia Reserva 2005 £22.75, Peppoli Chianti 2016 £12.95, La Gitana Pastrana Sherry £10.9. Anglos also have a good selection of French wines including some expensive, top notch, clarets.

After a holiday in northern Spain, a good friend of mine - a knowledgeable wine geek with an impressive cellar - complained that modern Spanish wines tend to be strong, over-extracted and simple, and couldn’t wait to get back home to drink some “proper wine”. He went on to say that the only decent wine he had tasted during his stay was Viña Alberdi from La Rioja Alta. I agree wholeheartedly with his sentiments and I will be writing about this next month. If you want to see if you agree with my friend Viña Alberdi Reserva

Marks and Spencer rarely disappoint. Whether you buy socks or wines you are likely to get excellent value for money. Their wine selection is small but many regions are represented and its clear their wines have been hand-picked by very knowledgeable tasters.

Who would have thought that refined Pinot could be made so near the Mediterranean?

80

The Wine Cellar in Irish Town is another good hunting ground for Christmas wines. They have a wide selection from Clarets, Riojas, English Sparklers to Burgundies and some very good German Rieslings. Their staff are very helpful but their range is so varied you may want to check out some of the wines out yourself before you buy. The last time I asked, the Cellar did not provide a wine list which would have made choosing wines from your armchair simple. Perhaps they do now. Some of the wines worth looking include are Gassies (Margaux) 2011 £18, the second wine of Rauzan Gassies and Vincent Dampt Les Lys 1r Cru Chablis White £24.00. The other Main Street stalwart, Lewis Stagnetto, have a good selection of wines. Actually, I should sound more enthusiastic about this family-run business as they have wines affording serious value for money. Their CUNE Imperial Reserva 2011 £18 is a wonderful example of the Rioja style and professional ratings place the 2011 amongst the top wines in Spain costing ten times as much! Other bargains include CUNE Gran Reserva 2009 £13.50, Monte Real Reserva 2009 £10.50. I recently tasted several Imperials from the 1940s and Monte Real from the 50s showing how long-lived these wines can be.

I always feel Christmas is a justifiable excuse to open a bottle of Port.

In the past I have bought German Rieslings, excellent-val-

Sacarellos seem to have a smaller selection than usual this year though by the time you read this, GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


wine

more wines may have been added in preparation for Christmas. If you prefer modern- styled wines their Roda range can provide mouth-filling voluptuousness with their fruit-driven qualities. Roda I 2010 Reserva £32.50, Roda 2012 Reserva £19.50

Expect to pay north of fifty or sixty pounds for Vintage Port. If your budget doesn’t stretch that far do not despair - there is a comparable, delicious alternative. It’s called Crusted Port - a British invention! (See November 2017 Gib Magazine - available online.)

Look out for their Barbadillo range of sherries. Every visit to My Wines has been a positive experience. I do like to browse wine lists before I go to restaurants unfortunately My Wines give no indication on line of the wines they stock. Nevertheless, their range of wines is good and they are happy to guide your choices dependant on what you like. Their tapas are excellent.

Crusted Ports are blends from several vintages and will not designate a year on the label though there may be an indication when it was bottled. They would have been bottled unfiltered, which like Vintage Port, will require decanting. Like Vintage Port it has the potential to mature and improve in bottle for decades. All the top producers now make Crusted Ports. Morrisons have Grahams Crusted Port for around £18. A bargain!

I always feel Christmas is a justifiable excuse to open a bottle of Port. We have a good selection of port in Gibraltar including top-ofthe-range Vintage Ports.

That’s it for 2018. I hope I haven’t bored too many of you with my scribblings. If I have sparked an interest in wine in just one person, I consider my job done.

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

81


Traditional Afternoon Tea Served in sophisticated surroundings at the elegant Rock Hotel Lounge Bar. Treat yourself to a quintessential experience.

3 Europa Road, Gibraltar Events: +350 200 73000/events@rockhotel.gi www.rockhotelgibraltar.com


recipes Recipe by bbcgoodfood.com

CHRISTMAS WREATH

Bake our vegan Christmas wreath with spinach, pine nuts, and tofu as a centrepiece for Christmas Day. Adorn with festive cranberries and dill.

INGREDIENTS 250g spinach 250g silken tofu 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil, plus extra for brushing 50g pine nuts, toasted Nutmeg gratings 2 fat garlic cloves, crushed 2 lemons , zested 1 small pack dill 1 tbsp sour cherries ½ tbsp dried cranberries, plus a few extra Flour, for rolling 500g block shortcrust pastry (we used vegan Jus-Rol) Almond milk, for brushing METHOD 1. Put spinach in a colander; pour over boiling water and leave to wilt. Once cool, wring out the excess moisture using a clean tea towel, then chop and put in a large bowl. Stir in the tofu, oil, pine nuts, nutmeg, garlic, lemon zest, chopped dill and fruit. Season generously and set aside. 2. On a well-floured surface, roll the pastry out into a 60x20cm GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

rectangle. Leaving a 1cm border, spoon the spinach mixture along the length of the pastry, leaving a 2cm gap at both short ends. Fold in the two short ends to stop filling escaping and roll the pastry to enclose the filling and create a long sausage shape. Join the two ends together to create a wreath and stick together with a little almond milk. Transfer wreath to a tray lined with baking parchment and chill for 20 min. 3. Heat oven to 200°C. Using a sharp knife, slash top of wreath. Mix a little almond milk with some olive oil and brush all over the wreath. Bake for 40-45 min until golden-brown. Once cooled, decorate with the reserved dill fronds and some dried cranberries. 83


recipes Recipe by The Gibraltar Vegan instagram.com/thegibraltarvegan

VEGAN CRANBERRY CHEESE

A firm favourite at Christmas time, sweet cranberries combined with a cheesy taste is always a winner.

However, if cranberries are not your thing then you can use dried apricot, dried pineapple, in fact whatever dried fruit you like. This cheese can keep for three days if refrigerated. INGREDIENTS 120g cashew nuts 225ml water 30g cranberries 7.5g agar 4½ tbsp nutritional yeast 3 tbsp fresh lemon juice 1 tsp Himalayan pink salt ½ tsp garlic powder 2¼ tbsp olive oil METHOD 1. Apart from the cranberries, add all the ingredients into a blender. If you use cashew nut pieces and have a high powered blender there is no need to soak the cashew nuts beforehand. However, if you 84

do not, then soak the cashew nuts overnight. If you are stuck for time or forgot to soak them, then boil the cashew nuts for 15 minutes and leave to cool down. 2. Blend until you have a very smooth mixture. 3. Do not use whole cranberries, either half or quarter them, whichever you prefer. 4. Pour the mixture (cheese) into a saucepan and heat it at a medium-high heat. This will activate the agar. Stir continuously to ensure it does not burn. 5. Once the cheese is sticking together and forming a paste, add the cranberries.

6. Mix the cheese well. 7. Remove from the heat and place it either directly into a dish that you will serve the cheese from or into a dish that is lined with grease proof paper if you are going to serve the cheese as you would on a cheese board. 8. Let it cool down before popping it in the fridge. It is ready to eat within two hours, but I found it tasted best if chilled overnight. 9. Serve with crackers or fresh bread. GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


recipes Recipe by bbcgoodfood.com

VEGAN MINCE PIES

The perfect pies for a Christmas party, with a cherry and hazelnut filling that everyone will love!

INGREDIENTS For the filling: 1 large apple, peeled and grated 200g mixed dried fruit 390g jar black cherries in kirsch 100g skinless hazelnuts, roasted and roughly chopped 1 orange, zested and juiced 1 tsp cinnamon/ginger/allspice 150g dark brown sugar For the pastry: 400g flour 200g coconut oil, straight from the fridge (as solid as possible) 20g icing sugar, plus extra for dusting 50ml ice-cold vodka 50ml non-dairy milk for brushing METHOD 1. Heat oven to 180°C. Tip all

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

mince ingredients into a dish/ tray – mix with half the kirsch. Mix Cover with a lid or foil and bake for 35-40 mins until all the sugar has melted, the mixture is bubbling slightly at the edges and the liquid has reduced (the mixture firms a bit as it cools, so be careful not to over-reduce). Set aside to cool completely. 2. Tip the flour and coconut oil into a food processor and pulse until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs. Add the sugar, then pour in the vodka and 2 tbsp ice-cold water and pulse until the pastry is just coming together. Add another 2 tbsp water if a little dry, then tip the dough onto a clean surface and pat into a disc with your hands. Wrap in cling film and chill in the fridge for at least 30 mins. 3. Cut off one-third of the pastry and keep covered under a tea towel. Cut the rest into five chunks then roll out on a wellfloured surface to a thickness

of 0.5cm. Cut out circles using a 9cm cookie cutter and line 18 holes of two 12-hole cupcake tins. Repeat with the rest. 4. Put a heaped spoonful of mincemeat in the middle of each circle, then put the pies in the fridge. Take the remaining pastry from under the tea towel and roll out to 0.5cm thickness. Transfer to a baking sheet lined with baking parchment. Chill for 15 mins to firm up. 5. Remove the pastry sheet from the fridge and use an 8cm cookie cutter to cut out nine circles, then use a star cutter to cut out the middles. Bring the mince pies out of the fridge and top half of them with the stars and the other half with the stamped-out circles. Use your fingers to seal the tops and bases, then brush the tops with milk. Bake for 30 mins until the pastry is crisp and the tops are golden. Cool a little, then dust with icing sugar. 85


restaurants, bars & pubs CASA PEPE

NUNOS ITALIAN

CAFÉ SOLO

A delightful terrace, bar, restaurant on the prestigious Queensway Quay Marina. Wonderful location for business meetings, weddings, anniversaries and other special occasions. Specialising in fresh fish caught locally with daily specials including seabass, dorada, sole, and bream, plus a very comprehensive a la carte menu. Also available are tapas and raciones (double size tapas) to share (or not!) prior to a main course. Mixed paellas also available, as well as fish cooked in rock salt, whole suckling pig and baby lamb to order.

Nunos Italian Restaurant, overlooking the Mediterranean, is popular with hotel guests, tourists and local residents. This 2 rosette rated, AA restaurant is renowned for its eclectic interior, intimate atmosphere and fine cuisine. Savour a wide selection of freshly prepared Italian delicacies, including bread, pasta, meat and fish, followed by delicious desserts. In the summer months, the hotel offers alfresco dining for private parties in the Garden Grill. Sitting nestled in the colonial garden you can enjoy a mouth-watering menu of charcoal-grilled meats and freshly prepared salads in candlelit surroundings.

Modern Italian eatery set in lively Casemates square. Everything from chicory and crispy pancetta salad with walnuts, pears and blue cheese dressing, or king prawn, mozzarella and mango salad to pastas (eg: linguine with serrano ham, king prawns and rocket; smoked salmon and crayfish ravioli with saffron and spinach cream) to salads (eg: Vesuvio spicy beef, cherry tomatoes, roasted peppers and red onions; and Romana chorizo, black pudding, egg and pancetta) and pizzas (eg: Quatto Stagioni topped with mozzarella, ham, chicken, pepperoni and mushroom) and specialities such as salmon fishcakes, beef medallions and duck. Daily specials on blackboard. No smoking.

Open: Tues-Sat lunch & evening, Sunday lunch only, closed Mondays. Casa Pepe, 18 Queensway Quay Marina, Tel/Fax: 200 46967 casa.pepe.gib@gmail.com. www.casapepegib.com

Open: Mon-Sun 1-3pm lunch, 7–11pm dinner Nunos Italian Restaurant and Terrace Caleta Hotel, Catalan Bay Tel: 200 76501

Café Solo

Email: reservations@caletahotel.gi

Grand Casemates Square. Tel: 200 44449

THE LOUNGE

SOLO BAR & GRILL

JURY’S CAFÉ-WINE BAR

Stylish Lounge Gastro Bar on Queensway Quay Marina serving best quality food prepared by passionate, qualified chefs. Popular quiz on Sundays from 7pm and a relaxed friendly atmosphere. A separate Lounge Bar Area serving a wide range of hot drinks, wines, beers, spirits and cocktails at reasonable prices, with large TV’s for sports and events coverage.

Solo Bar and Grill is a stylish and modern eatery — perfect for business functions or lunches — and part of the popular Cafe Solo stable. Serving everything from Goats’ Cheese Salad, Mediterranean Pâté and Cajun Langoustines to Beer Battered John Dory, or Harissa Chicken, and Chargrilled Sirloin Steak. This is a delightful venue in Europort with a cosy mezzanine level and terrace seating. Well worth a visit, or two! Available for private functions and corporate events — call 200 62828 to book your function or event.

Next to the Law Courts, with a terrace seating area, Jury’s has a selection of Ciabattas, paninis, baguettes and wraps, plus popular sharing dishes, such as Your Honour’s platter. Jacket potatoes, main courses, pasta and some innocent salads too. For those with a sweet tooth, there are tantalising homemade desserts, Ben & Jerry’s ice cream, as well as Lavazza coffees and frappes.

Open: 12-8pm. Solo Bar & Grill, Eurotowers Tel: 200 62828

275 Main Street. Tel: 200 67898 www.jurysgibraltar.com

Open: 10am-late Mon - Sun Be sure to arrive early to ensure a seat! The Lounge, 17 Ragged Staff Wharf, Queensway Quay Marina Tel: 200 61118 info@thelounge.gi

86

Open: 7am-midnight Mon-Sat, 9am-midnight Sun.

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


restaurants, bars & pubs BRIDGE BAR & GRILL

O’REILLY’S

LORD NELSON

Located on the water’s edge, Ocean Village, just across the bridge from O’Reilly’s. This bar & grill is a fusion of an American themed menu with Tarifa chill out style. Open for breakfast from 9am serving healthy options, freshly squeezed orange juice and Italian Lavazza coffee. Try the spicy Caribbean rum ribs, southern fried chicken bucket, the popular Texas burger or a selection of tasty salads and homemade desser t s. London Pride, San Miguel & Carling beer on draught, live sports.

Traditional Irish bar with full HD spor t s coverage and Irish breakfast from 8am (Sunday from 9am). Guinness on draught. Food includes salads, jackets, beef & Guinness pie, Kildare chicken, chicken brochette, gourmet burgers, wraps, children menu, homemade desser t s, daily specials and more. And just like in Ireland there’s no smoking inside, so a great atmosphere for all.

Situated in the corner of Casemates Square, the bar is a celebration of the life of Lord Nelson. See the collection of nautical art & memorabilia, including a brass pin from HMS Victory itself. HMS crews’ breakfast served from 10am, full menu including steak & ale pie, traditional fish & chips & much more served all day until 10pm.

Bridge Bar & Grill Ocean Village Tel: 200 66446 www.bridgebargibraltar.com

O’Reilly’s Ocean Village. Tel: 200 67888 www.oreillysgibraltar.com

Jam session Thursday, live top local band on Friday & Karaoke Saturday nights. Lord Nelson Bar Brasserie

10 Casemates Tel: 200 50009 Visit: www.lordnelson.gi

ALL’S WELL

STAR BAR

GIBRALTAR ARMS

In the fashionable Casemates square stands Gibraltar’s last historical themed pub, named for the 18th-century practice of locking gates to the city at night when the guard called ‘All’s Well’. Their food menu caters to all cravings; whether it’s fish and chips, a homemade pie, or maybe even a delicious sharing platter, they have it all. All’s Well have an amazing range of bottled beers as well as being the only pub in Gibraltar to offer craft beer on tap. Happy hour is daily from 7-9pm. Large terrace. Karaoke Mondays & Wednesdays until late.

Gibraltar’s oldest bar, just off Main St. Small cosy and famous for its full English breakfast from 8am (9am on Sunday). A full menu including fish & chips, until 10pm. The home of Star Coffee, draught beers include Heineken, Old Speckled Hen, Murphys and Strongbow cider. Managed by Hunter Twins from Stafford, England, also home to Med Golf & Tottenham Hotspur supporters club.

On Main Street opposite the cathedral, enjoy a meal, coffee or a cool beer on the terrace and watch the world go by! Bar decorated with rare military plaques from regiments and navy ships visiting Gibraltar. Full breakfast menu served from 7am, draught beers on tap include Old Speckled Hen bitter, Murphys Irish stout, Heineken lager and Strongbow cider.

All’s Well, Casemates Square. Tel: 200 72987

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

Star Bar Parliament Lane. Tel: 200 75924 Visit: www.starbargibraltar.com

Gibraltar Arms 184 Main Street. Tel: 200 72133 Visit: www.gibraltararms.com

87


information EMERGENCY SERVICES EMERGENCY CALLS ONLY: ALL EMERGENCIES................................. 112 FIRE...............................................................190 AMBULANCE.............................................190 POLICE.................................................................199

Business Information Financial Serv. Commission Tel: 200 40283/4 Chamber of Commerce Tel: 200 78376 Federation Small Business Tel: 200 47722 Company Registry.Tel: 200 78193 Useful Numbers Airport (general info.) . Tel: 200 12345 Hospital, St Bernards. . Tel: 200 79700 Weather information. . Tel: 5-3416 Frontier Queue Update Tel: 200 42777 Gibraltar Museum Tel: 200 74289 18/20 Bomb House Lane 10am-6pm (Sat 10am-2pm). Admission: Adults £2/Children under 12 - £1. Exhibitions also at Casemates gallery.

Police 200 72500

Gibraltar Services Police Emergency Nos: (5) 5026 / (5) 3598

Gibraltar Garrison Library Tel: 200 77418 2 Library Ramp Mon-Fri: 9am-5pm. Free Library tour offered every Friday at 11am. chris.tavares@gibraltargarrisonlibrary.gi

Gibraltar Public Holidays 2018

Registry Office Tel: 200 72289 It’s possible to get married within 48 hours. A fact taken advantage of by stars such as Sean Connery & John Lennon.

Good Friday

Friday 30 th Mar

Easter Monday

Monday 2nd Apr

New Year’s Day Commonwealth Day

Monday 1st Jan Monday 12th Mar

Workers Memorial Day Monday 30th Apr May Day

Tuesday 1st May

Rock Tours by Taxi Tel: 200 70052 As well as offering normal fares, taxis provide Rock Tours taking in the Upper Rock, Europa Point etc.

Spring Bank Holiday

Monday 28 th May

Queen’s Birthday

Monday 11th June

John Mackintosh Hall Tel: 200 75669 Includes cafeteria, theatre, exhibition rooms and library. 308 Main Street 9.30am - 11pm Mon-Fri.

Late Summer Bank Holiday

Monday 27th Aug

Gibraltar National Day Monday 10 th Sept Christmas Day Boxing Day

Tuesday 25th Dec Wednesday 26 th Dec

SUPPORT GROUPS ADHD Gibraltar adhdgibraltar@gmail.com facebook.com/ADHDGibraltar/ Alcoholics Anonymous meet 7pm Tues & Thurs at Nazareth House Tel: 200 73774.

COPE Support group for people with Multiple Sclerosis, Fibromyalgia or Rheumatoid Arthritis. Meetings at Catholic Community Centre Book Shop at 7.30pm first Thur of each month. Tel: 200 51469 Email: copeadsupport@hotmail.com

A Step Forward support for single, separated, divorced/widowed people, meet 8pm Mon at St Andrew’s Church.

Dignity At Work Now Confidential support and advice for those who are being bullied at work. Tel: 57799000.

Mummy & Me Breastfeeding Support Group those who are pregnant, breastfeeding or have breastfed to get together for coffee / support. Partners and older children welcome. Meets 1st Wed / month at Chilton Court Community Hall at 1.30pm. Enquiries and support 54014517.

Families Anonymous Support group for relatives and friends concerned about the use of drugs or related behavioural problems. Meet weekly on Thurs at 9pm at Gladys Perez Centre, 304A Main Street, Tel: 54007676 or 54014484.

Childline Gibraltar confidential phone line for children in need. Freephone 8008 - 7 days a week 5pm - 9pm Citizens’ Advice Bureau Open Mon-Thur 9:30am-4:00pm, Fri 9:30am- 3:30pm. Tel: 200 40006 Email: info@cab.gi or visit at 10 Governor’s Lane. Free & confidential, impartial & independent advice and info.

88

Gibraltar Cardiac Rehabilitation and Support Group meets on the first Tues of every month at 8.30pm at John Mac Hall, except for Jul & Aug. Gibraltar Dyslexia Support Group 72 Prince Edwards Rd Tel: 200 78509 Mobile: 54007924 website: www.gdsg.co.uk Gibraltar Marriage Care Free relationship counselling, including pre-marriage education (under auspices of Catholic Church, but open to all). Tel: 200 71717.

Gibraltar Society for the Visually Impaired Tel: 200 50111 (24hr answering service). Hope miscarriage support Tel: 200 41817. Mummy & Me Breastfeeding Support: Meets every Thursday 12:30 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. Narcotics Anonymous Tel: 200 70720 Parental Support Group helping parents and grandparents with restrictive access to their children and grandchildren. Tel: 200 46536, 200 76618, or 54019602. Psychological Support Group, PO Box 161, Nazareth House. Meet Tuesdays at 7pm, Fridays 8pm. Tel: Yolanda 54015553 With Dignity Gibraltar support for separated, divorced/widowed or single people. Meet Weds 9pm, Catholic Community Centre, Line Wall Rd. Outings/activities. Women in Need Voluntary organisation for all victims of domestic violence. Refuge available. Tel: 200 42581 (24 hrs).

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

The Gibraltar Magazine is published and produced by Rock Publishing Ltd, Gibraltar. Tel: (+350) 200 77748

NON-URGENT CALLS: Ambulance Station 200 75728


BY SARAH MILES

TAKEN A GREAT PHOTO OF GIB AND THINK EVERYONE SHOULD SEE IT? Email your high resolution photo to editor@thegibraltarmagazine.com and you might see it published here!


satire

THE FATHER OF POLITICS

Pushy passengers press Zeus into politics.

BY PETER SCHIRMER

I ‘

’m going to stand for Parliament.’ Zeus’s words, accompanied by a fortuitous roll of seasonal thunder among the hills beyond Sotogrande, electrified the breakfast table. A communal gasp was followed by a long stunned silence, broken only by a second thunder-clap and the rattle of winter rain against the glass of the penthouse patio. The Olympian family were accustomed to the sudden whims and fancies of the Father of the Gods. But this was different. This was politics. And if there was one overriding rule to which the gods had adhered since the days of Plato and Socrates, it was that politics was an area of human folly in which they never became involved. Even Hera, who could have written a doctoral thesis on the tortuous workings of her husband’s mind,

90

was flabbergasted. The ups and downs, the swings and roundabouts of the so-called ‘democratic process’ - with its roots in an Athens which still honoured the Olympian pantheon - had been a constant source of celestial amusement. Through the millennia Zeus had mocked, belittled, and derided politicians of every persuasion, but never, NEVER had he considered joining their ranks. ‘I’ve had enough... and it seems to me the only way to get things sorted is to do it myself,’ Zeus continued as if unaware of the impact of his verbal thunderbolt. ‘I shall stand for Parliament... exert some influence on No 6... twist some arms... get things done,’ He took a final bite of anchovy toast slathered with Roses lime marmalade, and winced as he attempted to lick a driblet from an arthritic index finger.

‘I think you need to be a Gibraltarian, and a taxpayer to stand for parliament.’ Athena broke the family silence. ‘And our records – duly computerised and remarkably transparent - show that you meet neither of these essential qualifications,’ Hermes mimicked the aloof bureaucratic tone of voice that his co-workers in the Post Office parcels section used to quieten quarrelsome customers. ‘And what’s to need sorting?’ Artemis’s mistreatment of vernacular English had worsened since joining the Association of Spanish Cleaning Ladies (‘More as a gesture of solidarity with the Sisterhood, for I am no charlady,’ she had explained to Hebe at the time). ‘She’s right, you know Pops,’ Aphrodite chipped in. ‘We’re GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


satire better off than ever we were on Olympus; have a nice, dry and comfortable; and the crowd-funding ICO to assist imaginary startups is sailing steadily on the Efuss Sea. But Zeus brushed aside the interruptions.

given a ticket and told to wait until his number was called; and when, after a long wait, it was his turn, he was treated not by a potential Miss Gibraltar, but by a motherly grey-haired sister who had tut-tutted over his liver-spots and told him he looked unhealthy and should change his diet.

me their seat. It’s just not good enough. Clearly they’re not taught to respect age,’ he had huffed and puffed. ‘And when I remonstrated with one of them, he merely laughed – and asked me where my red coat and reindeer were...’

That was too much for the Father of the Gods. The following morning Zeus had set off to St Bernard’s Hospital where he hoped to button-hole the Health Minister to complain at the lack of preferential treatment. He had taken a bus... and he’d had to stand in both directions.

‘WALK!’ thundered Zeus as his anger finally erupted. ‘You take your life into your hands – if you’re not tripping over the cracked and broken paving stones of Glacis Road, or breaking a leg or ankle in a pot-hole, you’re likely to knocked down by a motor-cyclist or scooter rider shooting the red lights at a crossing.’

Even Hera, who could have written a doctoral thesis on the tortuous workings of her husband’s mind, was flabbergasted.

‘The bus services...and the escalators at the Primary Care Centre. That’s what needs to be sorted and I’m going to see that it’s done,’ he rumbled.

And Hera recognised not only the first tremors of a volcanic eruption, but the source of her husband’s ire. For the past week Zeus had grumbled about two encounters with the Gibraltar Health Authority, each time involving slightly more effort than his customary strolls from Marina Bay to Casemates to collect his favourite meal of newspaper-wrapped fish and chips, heavily laced with coarse Spanish vinegar. The first had been his reluctant attendance at the Primary Care Centre for a winter’s ‘flu jab – persuaded to attend by Hera’s assurance that the Centre was populated by nubile and attractive young nurses. The escalator taking the public from the first to the second floor had been ‘out of order’. (A regular occurrence, according to several breathless elderly folk struggling up the unmoving steps with him.) This had been irritation enough. Then, to cap it – the ultimate indignity. He had been jostled into a line by a man with tattooed arms; GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

‘You know, Pops. If you’re so set against buses, you could always walk.’ Poseidon’s intervention ended Hera’s reverie.

He seldom travelled by bus. There was little to interest him beyond his daily stroll to Casemates – and he preferred to loll on the ‘posturepaedic’ chaise longues placed strategically in front of the 50-inch TV set, or under the awning of the penthouse balcony with its commanding view across the Bay.

‘And now the winter rains have begun the drains can’t cope,’ Apollo joined the conversation. ‘It’s not just the mini lakes that form alongside the pavements, it’s the bl**dy motorists. Some deliberately rush through the water pushing out waves that soak any pedestrian within range. I was drenched by a Spanish sports-car yesterday. Dreadful’

But the pillar-box red vehicles and their passengers had become his newest bête noir.

‘In England motorists who do that can be fined £1000,’ said Hebe.

‘There are seats clearly labelled as being for the elderly or infirm,’ he had shouted his complaint to all within earshot as he stepped through the penthouse front door. ‘But there were perfectly healthy mortals seated in every one of them – either ill-mannered children or young men and women. Not one of them offered

Zeus nodded. The thought that a careless motorist had soaked his clothes-conscious son had cheered him up, lightened his mood.

He had taken a bus... and he’d had to stand in both directions.

‘Perhaps I’ll look into that sort of legislation when I become an MP,’ he said. ‘”Protect a Pedestrian” would be a great slogan.’

91


Looking to pass your driving test? Look no further!

Fully qualified driving instructor.

Would you like to meet other people with a Hearing Loss? If you are deaf or hard of hearing, have Tinnitus or Meniere’s, life can be challenging and you may feel isolated.

The Hearing Loss Support Group includes people like you, who share information and friendly advice over coffee. Join us for a chat on the last Monday of every month from 5pm at the Atlantic Suites Coffee Shop.

NEXT MEETING:

Discount for block bookings. +350 54078320

littleenglish. LANGUAGE CLASSES ENGLISH, SPANISH, FRENCH & MORE . CORPORATE LANGUAGE COURSES . EXAM PREP & AFTER-SCHOOL LESSONS Classes for adults & children from just £10!

@littleenglishgibraltar www.littleenglish.eu

29 City Mill Lane info@littleenglish.eu

We are user led and support people who are deaf or hard of hearing, have Tinnitus (ringing in the ears) or Meniere’s (vertigo and a sudden drop in hearing).

hit@gibtelecom.net Gib Deaf (+350) 20066755 P.O. Box 90220, Gibraltar GX11 1AA


clubs & activities Arts & Crafts Cross Stitch Club: John Mackintosh Hall, 1st Floor, Mon 6-8pm, fee £1. Gibraltar Arts & Crafts Association: Children: Mon&Fri 12.30-2pm, Mon-Fri 3.45-5.15pm Adults: Wed 5.45-7.15, Sat 10.30 to 12.30, Tel: 20073865 email: gibartsandcrafts@hotmail.com Knit and Natter Group: Tues 11am-3pm, Thurs 5.30-7.30pm, at Arts & Crafts Shop, Casemates balcony. Free to join and refreshments provided. Tel: 20073865. The Arts Centre: Prince Edward’s Road, Art classes for children and adults. For more info call Tel: 200 79788. The Fine Arts Association Gallery: At Casemates. Open 10am-2pm, 3-6pm Mon-Fri, Sat 11am-1pm. The Gibraltar Decorative and Fine Arts Society: Affiliated to UK NADFAS meets third Wed of the month at 6.30pm at Eliott Hotel - lecturers & experts from the UK talk on Art etc. Contact: Chairman Claus Olesen 200 02024 claus.olesen@sghambros.com. Membership Ian Le Breton 200 76173 ilebreton@SovereignGroup.com Board Games Calpe Chess Club & Junior Club: meets in Studio 1, John Mackintosh Hall Thursday, Juniors: 5p.m. - 7 p.m. / Tuesday & Thursday 7p.m. - 10:30 The Gibraltar Scrabble Club: Meets on Tuesdays at 3pm. Tel: Vin 20073660 or Roy 20075995. All welcome. The Subbuteo Club: Meets in Charles Hunt Room, John Mackintosh Hall. Dance Adult Dance Classes: Wed evenings at Kings Bastion Leisure Centre from 7-8.30pm. Contact Dilip on 200 78714. Art in Movement Centre: Hip-hop/Break Dance, Contemporary Dance, Pilates, Capoeira, Acrobatics, Street Kids & Tods, Modern Dance. Performance and Film opportunities. Judo & Jujitsu Classes: Tue/ Thur with Sensei Conroy. All ages. Budokai Martial Arts Centre, Wellington Front. www. artinmovement.net FB: Art In Movement A.I.M, tel 54025041 or 54007457 Ballet, Modern Theatre, Contemporary & Hip-hop: weekly at Danza Academy. Training from 3 years to Adult Advanced. 68/2 Prince Edward’s Rd Tel: 54027111. Bellydance Classes, all levels, Tue 8-9pm at the Ocean Village Gym (non–members welcome). Contact 54005593. DSA Old & Modern Sequence Dancing: Sessions at Central Hall Fri 8.30pm, beginners 8pm. Tel: 200 78901 or tony@ gibraltar.gi Everybody welcome. Modern & Latin American Sequence Dancing: Mon at Catholic Community Centre 8pm. Tel. Andrew 200 78901. Modern, Contemporary, Lyrical, Flexibility, Hip Hop & Dance Theatre: Classes weekly at Urban Dance Studio, 2 Jumpers Bastion. Tel: Yalta 54012212 or Jolene 54015125. Rockkickers Linedance Club: Governor’s Meadow 1st School. www.rockkickers.com Salsa Gibraltar Salsa: Tues at Laguna Social Club, Laguna Estate. Beginners 7-8.30pm. Intermediates 8.30-10pm. Tel: Mike 54472000 or info@salsagibraltar.com Zumba Classes at Urban Dance: Jumpers Bastion, with certified instructor Tyron Walker. Tel: 20063959 or 54012212 or Twitter: @UrbanDanceGib History & Heritage The Gibraltar Heritage Trust: Main Guard, 13 John Mackintosh Sq. Tel: 200 42844. The Gibraltar Classic Vehicle Association: Dedicated to the preservation of Rock’s transport/motoring heritage. Assists members in restoration / maintenance of classic vehicles. New members welcome. Tel: 200 44643. Garrison Library Tours: at 11am on Fri, duration 1h 50mins. Tel: 20077418. History Alive: Historical re-enactment parade. Main Street up to Casemates Square every Sat at 12 noon. Music Gibraltar National Choir and Gibraltar Junior National Choir: Rehearses at the Holy Trinity Cathedral. Tel: 54831000. The Calpe Band: Mon & Wed. For musicians of brass/woodwind instruments of all standards/ages/abilities 7-9pm. Tel:

54017070 or thecalpeband@gmail.com Jazz Nights: Thurs at 9pm at O’Callaghan Eliott Hotel. Tel: 200 70500. Outdoor Activities The Duke of Edinburgh’s International Award Gibraltar: Exciting self-development programme for young people worldwide equipping them with life skills to make a difference to themselves, their communities and the world. Contact: Award House, North Mole Road, PO Box: 1260. mjpizza@ gibtelecom.net, www.thedukes.gi. Social Clubs The Rotary Club of Gibraltar meets the Rock Hotel, 7pm Tuesday evenings. Guests welcome. For contact or info www.rotaryclubgibraltar.com Royal Antediluvian Order of Buffaloes: (Gibraltar Province) meets RAOB Club, 72/9 Prince Edward’s Road - Provincial Grand Lodge, Thu/month, 7.30pm. William Tilley 2371, Thurs 8.30pm. Buena Vista 9975, monthly, Social Lodge. www.akearn1.wix. com/raob-gibraltar, william.tilley.lodge@ hotmail.co.uk, Clive, tel: 58008074 Special Interest Clubs & Societies Creative Writers Group: meets up on Tuesday mornings at 10.30 in O’Reilley’s Irish Bar and it is free to attend. Tel: Carla 54006696. Gibraltar Book Club: For info Tel: Parissa 54022808. Gibraltar Horticultural Society: meets 1st Thurs of month 6pm, J.M. Hall. Spring Flower Show, slide shows, flower arrangement demos, outings to garden centres, annual Alameda Gardens tour. All welcome. Gibraltar Philosophical Society: devoted to intellectually stimulating debate. Frequent lectures and seminars on a range of topics. Tel: 54008426 or Facebook: facebook.com/gibphilosophy Gibraltar Photographic Society: Meets on Mondays at 7:00 p.m. Wellington Front. Induction courses, talks, discussions, competitions etc. For details contact the secretary on, leslinares@gibtelecom.net Harley Davidson Owners’ Club: www.hdcgib.com Lions Club of Gibraltar: Meets 2nd and 4th Wed of the month at 50 Line Wall Road. www.lionsclubofgibraltar.com St John’s Ambulance: Adult Volunteers Training Sessions from 8-10pm on Tues. Tel: 200 77390 or training@stjohn.gi The Royal British Legion: For info or membership contact the Branch Secretary 20074604 or write to PO Box 332. UN Association of Gibraltar: PO Box 599, 22a Main Street. Tel: 200 52108. Sports Supporters Clubs Tottenham Hotspur Supporters Club: Meets at Star Bar, Parliament Lane, when Spurs games are televised - call prior to matches to check game is televised. Great food for a lunch if KO is early or an early supper if the game is later. Gibraltar Arsenal Supporters Club: Meets match days upstairs at Time Out Café, Eurotowers. Gooners of all ages welcome. For info/news visit www.GibGooners.com Tel: 54010681 (Bill) or 54164000 (John). Gibraltar Hammers: Meets on match days at the Victoria Stadium Bar, Bayside Road. All league games are shown live. All West Ham supporters and their families are welcome. For details visit www.gibraltarhammers.com or gibraltarhammers@hotmail.com Sports & Fitness Artistic Gymnastics: Gibraltar Artistic Gymnastics Association. Tel: Angela 200 70611 or Sally 200 74661. Athletics: Gibraltar Amateur Athletics Association holds competitions through year for juniors, adults and veterans. Two main clubs (Calpeans 200 71807, Lourdians 200 75180) training sessions at Victoria Stadium. Badminton: Recreational badminton weekdays at Victoria Stadium (Tel: 200 78409 for allocations). Gibraltar Badminton Association (affiliated to BWF& BE) junior club/tournaments, senior leagues/ recreational. www.badmintongibraltar.com Ballet Barre Fitness: Adults on Wed 10am & Fri 6pm at The Arts Centre. Tel: 54033465 or pilatesgibraltar@hotmail.com Basketball: Gibraltar Amateur Basketball Association (affiliated FIBA) leagues/ training

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

for minis, passarelle, cadets, seniors and adults at a variety of levels. Tel: John 200 77253, Randy 200 40727. Boxing: Gibraltar Amateur Boxing Association (member IABA) gym on Rosia Rd. Over 13s welcome. Tuition with ex-pro boxer Ernest Victory. Tel: 56382000 or 20042788. Cheerleading: Gibraltar Cheerleading Association, girls and boys of all ages. Cheerleading and street cheer/hip-hop at Victoria Stadium. Recreational / competitive levels. Tel: 58008338. Canoeing: Gibraltar Canoeing Association. Tel: Nigel 200 52917 or Arturo 54025033. Cricket: Gibraltar Cricket, National Governing Body & Associate Member of ICC. Governs International & Domestic Men’s, Women’s, Boys’ & Girls’ cricket- league & cup competitions and in-school coaching. www.gibraltarcricket.com, info@gibcricket. com, Twitter: @Gibraltar_Crick Cycling: Gibraltar Cycling Association various cycling tours. Darts: Gibraltar Darts Association (full member of WDF & affiliate of BDO). We cater for men, ladies & youth who take part in leagues, competitions and a youth academy for the correct development of the sport. Tel: Darren 54027171 Secretary, Alex 54021672 Youth Rep, Justin 54022622 President. Email: info@ gibraltardarts.com Football: Gibraltar Football Association leagues/competitions for all ages OctoberMay. Futsal in summer, Victoria Stadium. Tel: 20042941 www.gibraltarfa.com Gaelic Football Club (Irish sport): Males any age welcome. Get fit, play sport, meet new friends, travel around Spain/Europe and play an exciting and competitive sport. Training every Wed on the MOD pitch on Devil’s Tower Road at 7pm. Andalucia League with Seville and Marbella to play matches home and away monthly. Visit www.gibraltargaels. com or secretary.gibraltar.europe@gaa.ie Hockey: Gibraltar Hockey Association (members FIH & EHF) high standard competitions/training for adults/juniors. Tel: Eric 200 74156 or Peter 200 72730 for info. Iaido: teaches the Japanese sword (Katana), classes every week. www.iaidogibraltar.com Ice Skating: Gibraltar Rock Stars Figure Skating Club lessons every Tuesday evening & Saturday morning, all levels including adults. Contact grsfsc@gmail.com or 58700000 Iwa Dojo, Kendo & Jujitsu: Classes every week, for kids/adults. Tel: 54529000 www. iwadojo.com or dbocarisa@iwadojo.com Judo and Ju-jitsu: Gibraltar Budokai Judo Association UKMAF recognised instructors for all ages and levels at Budokai Martial Arts Centre, Wellington Front. Tel: Charlie 20043319. Ju-jitsu: Gibraltar Ju-jitsu Academy training and grading for juniors/seniors held during the evening at 4 North Jumpers Bastion. Tel: 54011007. Karate-do Shotokai: Gibraltar Karate-do Shotokai Association - Karate training for junior & seniors at Clubhouse, Shotokai karate centre, 41H Town Range. Monday: 9:30 p.m. & Wednesday 9:45 p.m. Karate: Shotokan karate midday Mon beginners, other students 8.30pm. Thurs 8.30pm. In town at temporary dojo or privately by arrangement. Contact Frankie 54038127 or info@fhmedia.co.uk. Motorboat Racing: Gibraltar Motorboat Racing Association Tel: Wayne 200 75211. Muay Thai and Muay Boran Club: Tues & Thur at Boyd’s Kings Bastion Leisure Centre at 6:30pm, Tel: John – 54024707 FB: Gibraltar Muay Thai Netball: Gibraltar Netball Association (affiliated FENA & IFNA) competitions through year, senior/junior leagues. Tel: 20041874. Petanque: Gibraltar Petanque Association. New members welcome. Tel: 54002652. Pilates: Intermediate Pilates: Tues & Fri 9.30am, beginners Pilates: Fri 10.50am at the Shotokai Centre, 41H Town Range. Tel: 54033465 or pilatesgibraltar@hotmail.com Gibraltar Pool Association: (Member of the EBA) home and away league played on Thurs throughout the season, various tournaments played on a yearly basis both nationally and internationally, Tel: 56925000 gibpool@ gibtelecom.net, www.gib8ball.com

Rhythmic Gymnastics: Gibraltar Rhythmic Gymnastics Association runs sessions from 4 years of age, weekday evenings. Tel: 56000772 or Sally 200 74661. Rugby: Gibraltar Rugby caters for all ages from 4 years old to veterans (over 35’s). It organises competitions and sessions for Juniors; 4 x Senior Clubs; Veterans team; Touch Rugby and a Referees Society. Email admin@gibraltarrfu. com or visit www.gibraltarrfu.com Sailing: Gibraltar Yachting Association junior/ senior competitive programme (April - Oct) Tel: Royal Gibraltar Yacht Club at 200 78897. Shooting: Gibraltar Shooting Federation. Rifle, Europa Point Range (Stephanie 54020760); Clay pigeon, East Side (Harry 200 74354); Pistol, near Royal Naval Hospital (Louis 54095000). Snooker: Members of European Billiards & Snooker Association - facilities at Jumpers Bastion with 3 tables. Professional coaching for juniors/seniors. Organised leagues/ tournaments and participation in international competitions. Tel: 56262000 / 54000068, or info@gibraltarsnooker.com Squash: Gibraltar Squash Association, Squash Centre, South Pavilion Road (members WSF & ESF). Adult and junior tournaments and coaching. Tel: 200 44922. Sub-Aqua: Gibraltar Sub-Aqua Association taster dives for over 14s, tuition from local clubs. Voluntary sports clubs: Noah’s Dive Club and 888s Dive Club. Tel: 54991000. Commercial sports diving schools available. Time - Thursday 12:30 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.. Telephone, Jenssen Ellul - 54027122 Swimming: Gibraltar Amateur Swimming Association (member FINA & LEN) opens its pool for leisure swimming. Junior lessons, squad for committed swimmers, water polo. Pool open Mon&Thurs: 7-10am, 12.30-4pm. Tue, Wed, Fri: 7-10am, 12:30-5pm. Sat: 3-5pm. Sun: closed. Mon to Fri from 5-6pm groups training. 6-7.30 squad training. Mon, Wed, Fri 7.30-8.30 swimming joggers, Tues & Thurs 7:30-8:30 junior Water polo. Mon, Tues & Thurs 8:30-10pm Adult water polo. Tel: 200 72869. Table Tennis: Gibraltar Table Tennis Association training and playing sessions, Victoria Stadium, Tues 6-10pm and Thurs 8-11pm with coaching and league competition. Tel: 56070000 or 20060720. Taekwondo: Gibraltar Taekwondo Association classes/gradings Tel: Mari 20044142 or www. gibraltartaekwondo.org Tai Chi: Tai Chi for children and adults. MonThur 6.30-8pm at Kings Bastion Leisure Centre and Sat 9am-1pm at the Yoga Centre, 33 Town Range. Tel: Dilip 200 78714. Tennis: Gibraltar Tennis Association, Sandpits Tennis Club. Junior development programme. Courses for adults, leagues and competitions. Tel: Louis 200 77035. Ten-Pin Bowling: At King’s Bowl in the King’s Bastion Leisure Centre every day. Gibraltar Ten Pin Bowling (members FIQ & WTBA) leagues, training for juniors and squad. Tel: 200 52442. Triathlon: Hercules Triathlon Club organises swimming, running and cycling training sessions and competes regularly in Andalucia and Internationally. Contact chris.walker@york. gi or Facebook “Hercules Triathlon Club” Volleyball: Gibraltar Volleyball Association training, indoor leagues, beach volleyball competition, 3 v 3 competition, juniors and seniors. Tel: 54001973 or 54885000. Yoga: Integral Yoga Centre runs a full programme of classes from Mon-Fri at 33 Town Range. Tel: 200 41389. All welcome. Theatrical Groups Gibraltar Amateur Drama Association: Meet at Ince’s Hall Theatre Complex, 310 Main Street. Tel: 20042237. Trafalgar Theatre Group: Meets 2nd Wed of month, Garrison Library 8pm. All welcome.

93


information

CRUISE SCHEDULE DECEMBER 2018 ARRIVAL

VESSEL

ETD

PASS

OPERATOR

CAPACITY

Fri 07/12, 08:00

MEIN SCHIFF 2

18:00

German

TUI Cruises

Sun 09/12, 11:00

GEMINI

19:00

British

Celestial Cruises

800

Mon 10/12, 07:00

PACIFIC PRINCESS

21:00

American

Princess Cruises

672

Wed 12/12, 08:00

TBA - M.C.

17:00

-

-

Wed 12/12, 12:00

VENTURA

18:00

British

P&O

Fri 14/12, 07:00

TBA - M.C.

17:00

-

-

-

Thu 20/12, 08:00

MEIN SCHIFF 2

18:00

German

TUI Cruises

-

Thu 20/12, 11:00

GEMINI

18:00

British

Celestial Cruises

800

Wed 26/12, 08:00

MARCO POLO

20:00

British

Cruise & Maritime Voyages

850

Wed 26/12, 09:00

COLUMBUS

15:00

British

Cruise & Maritime Voyages

1400

Fri 28/12, 08:00

MSC MAGNIFICA

15:00

Italian

Msc Crociere

3223

Sun 30/12, 07:00

VENTURA

23:00

British

P&O

3096

27 Nov ‘18 – 03 Dec ‘18

04 Dec ‘18 – 10 Dec ‘18

DUTY PHARMACY OPENING HOURS

11 Dec‘18 – 17 Dec ‘18

Monday to Friday (7pm to 9pm) Weekends & public holidays (11am to 1pm & 6pm to 8pm)

18 Dec ‘18 – 24 Dec ‘18

For updates, check facebook.com/PharmaGuide

25 Dec ‘18 – 31 Dec ‘18

-

3096

Trafalgar Pharmacy

48-50 Main Street  200 71710

Waterport Pharmacy

Unit 14 Crow Daisy House  200 71710

Calpe Pharmacy ICC

Unit G9, ICC  200 7977

Wesley Pharmacy

299a Main Street  200 67567

Family Pharmacy

151 Main Street  200 68861

CHESS PUZZLE ANSWER: After 1Rg3 Black has no defence against White’s numerous threats.

94

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


information

DAY

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

FLIGHT NO.

AIRLINE

FROM

ARRIVES

FLIGHT NO. DEPARTS

TO

EZY8901

easyJet

Gatwick

11:00

EZY8902

11:30

Gatwick

BA492

British Airways

Heathrow

12:20

BA493

13:10

Heathrow

BA490

British Airways

Heathrow

16:30

BA491

17:30

Heathrow

EZY8901*

easyJet

Gatwick

11:00

EZY8902*

11:30

Gatwick

BA492*

British Airways

Heathrow

12:20

BA493*

13:05

Heathrow

EZY2245*

easyJet

Luton

15.55

EZY2246*

16.30

Luton

BA490*

British Airways

Heathrow

16:30

BA491*

17:30

Heathrow

EZY6299 *

easyJet

Bristol

19:30

EZY6300*

20:00

Bristol

EZY8901

easyJet

Gatwick

11:00

EZY8902

11:30

Gatwick

BA492

British Airways

Heathrow

12:20

BA493

13:10

Heathrow

EZY2245**

easyJet

Luton

13:00

EZY2246**

13:35

Luton

BA490

British Airways

Heathrow

16:30

BA491

17:30

Heathrow

EZY1963

easyJet

Manchester

16:55

EZY1964

17:35

Manchester

EZY8901

easyJet

Gatwick

11:00

EZY8902

11:30

Gatwick

AT990

Royal Air Maroc

Tangier

12:00

AT991

12:50

Tangier

BA492

British Airways

Heathrow

12:20

BA493

13:10

Heathrow

BA490

British Airways

Heathrow

16:30

BA491

17:30

Heathrow

EZY6299

easyJet

Bristol

19:30

EZY6300

20:00

Bristol

EZY8901

easyJet

Gatwick

11:00

EZY8902

11:30

Gatwick

BA490

British Airways

Heathrow

16:30

BA491

17:35

Heathrow

EZY6299

easyJet

Bristol

19:30

EZY6300

20:00

Bristol

EZY8901

easyJet

Gatwick

11:55

EZY8902

12:25

Gatwick

BA492

British Airways

Heathrow

14:25

BA493

15:15

Heathrow

BA490

British Airways

Heathrow

16:30

BA491

17:30

Heathrow

EZY6299

easyJet

Bristol

10:55

EZY6300

11:25

Bristol

EZY8901

easyJet

Gatwick

11:15

EZY8902

11:45

Gatwick

EZY1963

easyJet

Manchester

11:30

EZY1964

12:00

Manchester

BA492

British Airways

Heathrow

14:25

BA493

15:15

Heathrow

BA490

British Airways

Heathrow

16:30

BA491

17:30

Heathrow

AT990

Royal Air Maroc

Tangier

18:55

AT991

19:45

Tangier

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

* Does not operate on 25 December ** Operates on 26 December only

FLIGHT SCHEDULE DECEMBER 2018

95


Tel: 200 43134 Fax: 200 50648 Convent Gardens, Convent Garden Ramp

WE'VE HIDDEN A

SOMEWHERE WITHIN THE MAGAZINE...

CAN YOU FIND HIM? email monkey@thegibraltarmagazine.com with his location by 20th December

AND YOU COULD WIN A HUNGRY MONKEY VOUCHER!!! Last month's winner: Daphne Correa-Dalli hungrymonkey.gi | info@hungrymonkey.gi | +(350) 200 78814 /hungrymonkey.gi/

88

ROCK SOLID ADVICE FROM A NAME YOU C AN TRUS T

SPECIALISTS IN EXPATRIATE FINANCIAL SERVICES: Retirement Planning Financial Planning Tax and Residency Planning Investment Management CALL OR MAIL TO ARRANGE AN INITIAL MEETING AT OUR OFFICES 200 50982

or email

G IBR A LTA R H E A D OFFICE

|

enquiries@fiduciarywealth.eu

www.fiduciarywealth.eu

Por tland House, Glacis Road, Gibr al t ar, GX11 1A A

|

+350 20 0 50982

Fiduciary Wealth Management Limited is regulated and authorised by the Gibraltar Financial Services Commission under Licence No. FSC000962B.


the missing pawn, V.Gashimov-E. Tomashevsky, FIDE World Cup, Khanty-Mansiysk 2011. 11 ... f6 12 c3 Kh8 13 Bc2 Qd7 14 Nb3 Anand plays for a d3-d4 break. He has played too cautiously to claim an opening edge. 14 ... a5 15 a4 bxa4 16 Rxa4 Ncb4 Caruana sacrifices a pawn to pick up the bishop pair in an open position. 17 Rxa5 Nxc2 18 Qxc2 Nb6 19 Rxa8 Rxa8 20 Nbd2 g5

Anand hopes to use e4 as an outpost for his knight but underestimates the cost of weakening his e3-square. His unpleasant but perhaps best option is to sit passively with 36 Re1 Ra4 37 Kf1.

CHESS COLUMN

BY GRANDMASTER RAY KEENE OBE

Anand-Caruana; Tal Memorial, Moscow 2013; Ruy Lopez 1 e4 e5 2 Nf3 Nc6 3 Bb5 a6 4 Ba4 Nf6 5 0-0 Be7 6 Re1 b5 7 Bb3 0-0 8 h3 Bb7 8 ... d5 here, in Marshall-style, is playable, but perhaps in a slightly inferior version since h2-h3 tends to be more favourable for White than the usual c2-c3. 9 d3 d5 Caruana plays in Marshall Gambit fashion anyway. 10 exd5 Nxd5 11 Nbd2 Anand plays it super-safe and refuses the pawn grab on e5. The critical line runs 11 Nxe5 Nd4! 12 Nd2 c5 13 c3 Nxb3 14 Nxb3 Qc7, when Black’s bishop pair offers decent compensation for GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018

36 ... Bc5+ 37 Kf1 Be3 38 Ke2 Bc4+ 39 Ke1 Re8 40 Kd1 Bxd2 41 Kxd2 Re2+ 42 Kd1 Rxg2 43 Bd4 Be2+ 44 Ke1 Bxf3 Caruana commits himself to a risky pawn push to enhance his kingside attack, yet this is not a move choice distorted by an overly optimistic assessment. A pure strategist would be more tempted by the safer 20 ... c5, locking down White’s d3-pawn as a target. 21 Nh2 Rd8 22 d4 exd4 23 cxd4 Bb4 24 Re2 Qxd4 25 Ndf1 Now Anand just has a bad position with no material to compensate. Correct is 25 Qxc7 Qd5 26 Nhf3 Na8! 27 Qc2 Rc8 28 Qd1 and White’s extra pawn compensates for his otherwise passive position. 25 ... Qc5 26 Qxc5 Bxc5 27 Rc2 Bd6 28 Ng4 Kg7 29 Bd2 Kg6 30 Nge3 f5 Black’s plan is to keep expanding on the kingside.

After the fall of both his g- and f-pawns, it becomes clear that White has no hope in the ending. 45 Rxc7 Re2+ 46 Kf1 Rh2 47 Rg7+ Kf5 White resigns

PUZZLE White to play. Caruana v Anand Olympiad Batumi 2018 What is his winning move?

Answer on page 94

This months high level game is a clash between two super grandmasters who have both participated in the Gibraltar Masters.

31 Nc4 Nxc4 32 Rxc4 Ra8 33 Rc1 f4 34 Bc3 h5 35 Nd2 Bd5 36 f3

97


coffee time CROSSWORD 1

2

ACROSS

3

4

7

5

6

8

9

10

12

11

13

14

15

16 17

18

19

20

1) Father of Jesus (6) 4) Regal (5) 7 Where Jesus’s parents stayed the night of his birth (6) 8) Number of 18s between Jesus’s birth and the coming of the 9 (6) 9) Three visitors shortly after birth of Jesus (4) 10) Protection from the elements (8) 12) Several stages of whisky making (11) 17) Over an extended period (2,6) 19) See 13d 20) Constellation; farm implement (6) 21) African country (6) 22) Take (an exam) again (5) 23) For the time being (3,3)

21

DOWN 22

23

SUDOKU 8

5 9

2

2

9 1 3

7

5

5

7

7 5

4 9

4

1

5

8

9 3 8

3

Either SNAP and SEND your completed crossword to editor@thegibraltarmagazine.com or RETURN TO THE CLIPPER by 20th December

1

4

1

1) Great War naval battle (7) 2) Gives up (7) 3) Taking for granted without proof (9) 4) Oarsman (5) 5) Seasonal chocolate cake (4-3) 6) Freedom; drift towards the wind (6) 11) One of the 9 (9) 13) &19) Resembles (of an item or concept) (2,5,4) 14) Without boundaries; type of poker (2,5) 15) Eastern religion (7) 16) One of the 9 (6) 18) Dark part of the day (5)

9

& YOU COULD WIN lunch for two at

Last month’s crossword winner: Natasha Passano 98

GIBRALTAR MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2018


DING INCLU KED COO AST KF BREA

ATES R M ROO M £95 FRO

i n f o @ h i e x g i b r a l t a r. c o m

Book your room now at w w w . h i e x p r e s s . c o m

(+350) 200 67890

And high speed internet access

FREE WI-FI

Wa l k i n g d i s t a n ce to a i r p o r t, tow n c e n t r e a n d O c e a n Vi l l a g e

S U P E R B L O C AT I O N B A S E D AT 2 1 - 2 3 D E V I L’ S T O W E R R O A D

Included in room rates

E N G L I S H A N D C O N T I N E N TA L B U F F E T B R E A K FA S T

Including interconnecting and accessible rooms

120 STYLISH AND C O M F O R TA B L E B E D R O O M S

Generation 4



Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.