Post by account_disabled on Feb 17, 2024 0:40:15 GMT -8
Haro Balloon flight in Haro. By Gema Rodrigo It's soft, very soft. You don't realize it and phew… Flying. Without noise, without the head stuck to the seat, without the rumination of wheels jumping from the asphalt. Fiuuu. And you fly. The Counts of Haro were important uncles. Very important. The Fernández de Velasco family, no less. Maybe that doesn't even sound familiar to you, but in the Middle Ages and Modern Age... big shots. Very fat. That, furthermore, they bred with other equally big fish, because these things of the noble community were very common at that time (and we have changed little). The Mendozas, be careful. Who, in turn, united their surname with those of de la Vega, before; with Luna's, later. Come on, what very long names, the kind that don't fit into the Twitter username .
Íñigo Fernández de Velasco and Mendoza de la Vega Lannister Stark Targaryen and Chimpún. Approximately, I'm sure you'll forgive my frivolity. Let's say that Haro was (almost) always a town of dominion . Come on, countrymen other than the King ruled there. At least in some matters. The first was Diego López de Haro, without having Cell Phone Number List begun the 12th century. Then monarchs, Plantagenets, Fadriques, Trastámaras, Alburquerques, Aragones, had these lands. And, in the end, the Fernández de Velascos. Come on, it was a juicy place. The lords used to do two things in those places they ruled. The first and most important was to squeeze everything they could, to milk the cow well, what lineage we have but bitches we long for. And then, almost on top of that... pimping out. The nobles wanted to show off and that is why they built mansions, palaces, towers, ennobled churches, made donations here and there, put their shields on walls , tapestries and servants.
Those are his traditions and must be respected. Flying over Haro in a balloon haro I do it from the air. By Gema Rodrigo When you go to ride a balloon there are a lot of things you don't know . You don't know if you'll be afraid (you want to believe you won't), you don't know if you'll be able to get into the boat (you want to believe so), you don't know where you're taking off from, you don't know how to land... You don't know, in general. We went balloon riding with Álvaro Ron, Director of Operations at Globos La Rioja . Maybe you think that “Director of Operations” is a grandiloquent expression, and it probably is, but Álvaro is one of those people who carries a business card in a DIN A4. He was organizing the Vitoria Jazz Festival, he studied to be a dentist, he has traveled, he has written, he works at a university, he tells hilarious stories about this and that, he rides a balloon.
Íñigo Fernández de Velasco and Mendoza de la Vega Lannister Stark Targaryen and Chimpún. Approximately, I'm sure you'll forgive my frivolity. Let's say that Haro was (almost) always a town of dominion . Come on, countrymen other than the King ruled there. At least in some matters. The first was Diego López de Haro, without having Cell Phone Number List begun the 12th century. Then monarchs, Plantagenets, Fadriques, Trastámaras, Alburquerques, Aragones, had these lands. And, in the end, the Fernández de Velascos. Come on, it was a juicy place. The lords used to do two things in those places they ruled. The first and most important was to squeeze everything they could, to milk the cow well, what lineage we have but bitches we long for. And then, almost on top of that... pimping out. The nobles wanted to show off and that is why they built mansions, palaces, towers, ennobled churches, made donations here and there, put their shields on walls , tapestries and servants.
Those are his traditions and must be respected. Flying over Haro in a balloon haro I do it from the air. By Gema Rodrigo When you go to ride a balloon there are a lot of things you don't know . You don't know if you'll be afraid (you want to believe you won't), you don't know if you'll be able to get into the boat (you want to believe so), you don't know where you're taking off from, you don't know how to land... You don't know, in general. We went balloon riding with Álvaro Ron, Director of Operations at Globos La Rioja . Maybe you think that “Director of Operations” is a grandiloquent expression, and it probably is, but Álvaro is one of those people who carries a business card in a DIN A4. He was organizing the Vitoria Jazz Festival, he studied to be a dentist, he has traveled, he has written, he works at a university, he tells hilarious stories about this and that, he rides a balloon.