| Have you ever wondered what Carvoeiro was like 35 years ago? Algarve Living Enlisted the
help of some friends of the writer, Lois Rowe, to find out, and they took us on a trip
down memory lane |
Charles
and Teresa were living in Wimbledon with their four children and decided they would like
to have their own holiday home somewhere in the sunshine, A friend who had just bought a
fishermans cottage near Carvoeiro, suggested they try the Algarve. In Autumn of 1963. the whole
family went to Portugal looking for a piece of building land. There was no airport at
Faro, so they flew to Lisbon and got train to Portimão. They stayed at the Hotel
Belavista in Praia do Rocha. Although the food was not very good, the rooms were well
appointed and they had glorious views over-looking the sea. |
| Ann liked to ride the her donkey, sometimes pulling a small
cart, down into Carvoeiro. the local boys ran alongside, trying to unseat her, but she not
only managed to hold her own but picked up quite an extensive vocabulary of Portuguese
swear words. In due course when Ann became more interested in boys than in Rosita, she was
eventually sold. The basic house was finished, with a cisterna for storing
water, which had to be bought. The water and gas were brought up the rough lane to the
house by mule cart. The telephone was installed before the house was completed, and the
last three numbers, denoted the number of subscribers in the area. It was 18, so
they were the 18th home in the village to have a phone.
Not far away, in a
primitive cottage lived an ex-army cook with his wife and child. They went to work for
Charles and Teresa, he as a cook and she as a maid. He was a good cook, but rather
eccentric in his appearance. He never wore any shoes and always had on a battered trilby,
both in and outside the house. He was also an excellent gardener and grew many different
fruit and vegetables. which he used for the table. One day, when the family were
entertaining guests, not very well versed in etiquette, he interrupted lunch by rushing in
to show the first melon of his crop.
Later the cook went
into business on his own and became a butcher but unfortunately he was not a good
financier and it didn't work out.
In the mid sixties
Carvoeiro had only one street, the Rua dos Pescadores. What is now the Rua do
Barranco was a reed lined river which ran into the sea. The only houses were those on Rua
dos Pescadores, Rua do Casino and the two streets on either side of the cliff. There was a
general store facing the beach, now the site of a bank, whilst a short way up the street
was a narrow greengrocers shop known as Hole in the Wall, which is still in existence.
Then, as now, it was possible to step down into the shop at one end and exit up a step at
the other. Thirty years ago it also dealt with all the mail and had a wind-up telephone
for the use of the public. Further up was a small newsagents shop. There was a municipal
market, now replaced by an apartment block, were fruit, vegetables, meat and bread could
be bought.
On the right side of
the beach was the Atlantico Restaurant. It had very little selection and
was mainly used by workmen. No wine was available, only beer. There was several bars, one
of which, Gloria's Taverna, also ran a taxi service. Just off the Rua do
Casino, was the Algarve's first night spot, Sob e Desce, "Up and Down",
which had been registered in 1961 as the first discotheque in Portugal. The
proprietor was an Irishman, also a Jazz buff, who played the saxophone Downstairs was
reserved for dancing whilst food was served upstairs. Breakfast was served on the terrace.
During the next twenty years, many famous artists and groups appeared at Sob e
Desce, including Georgie Fame, Cat Stevens, Donavan and Ronnie Scott. Later it
was renamed Whispers. Today it exists as The Jailhouse
and is still a late night live music bar open every night for most of the year.
Centianes, the
restaurant under the cliffs, was where all the social events took place and the return
journey up the cliff in the darkness, along a rocky path with no steps or rails was
extremely hazardous. The family who now run "0 Stop used to
bring sup- plies for the restaurant by pulley over the cliff.
From the Junta de
Freguesia and along side the Estrada do Farol was open country side. This was where
Charles and Teresa had their house built. There were no buses and only rough tracks. Once
the house was completed it was time to plan the garden. They still have a copy of the
Construction and Landscaping Contract, dated November 1966.
Lemon grapefruit,
and orange trees cost 50 esc each and a cart-load of manure was 700 esc. Pruning 155
Almond trees, 1 Carob tree and 9 Fig trees cane to 1,500 esc. and a new vine 70 feet long
was 140 esc.! Including all the labour for digging, spraying, and preparation the total
came to 13.884,75 esc., which Charles thought was rather expensive. Thirty years on
all the citrus trees, are still flourishing. When Charles and Teresa built their house it
was the only one in that area, but over the years it has become surrounded by houses,
apartments, and developments of all kinds, but they still have their glorious view across
Carvoeiro to Praia do Rocha, along with their memories of times past. - LOIS ROWE
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