Two round plugs, the continental European standard. 220V, 50Hz.
BTW, to make your visit to Granada even better: get yourself a copy of Washington Irving´s _Tales of the Alhambra_. Start reading before your trip. Finish under the shadow of the gardens in the Alhambra. j On 8/20/05, John Likes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Thank you all for the responses, and yes, "cerveza" works fairly well in > Mexico as well. :-). > > By the way, does anyone know what the electrical plugs look like? I'll need > to bring the right adapter. > > J.W.L. > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Juan Buhler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: <[email protected]> > Sent: Friday, August 19, 2005 1:41 PM > Subject: Re: 3rd time lucky. > > > On 8/19/05, Carlos Royo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > Lucas suggested the "Paradores" chain of hotels. They're excellent, > > although really expensive. Instead, you can choose whatever medium prize > > hotels you please, because hotels in Spain are good to excellent, > > provided you don't choose the cheapest possible accomodation. Even in > > that case, many places are decent. > > One of the best experiences I had was in a small hostal (a family-run > little hotel) in Córdoba. Beautiful moorish house, I had my own little > room, and breakfast in the moorish patio, served by the owner, all > included for 23 euros. > > Or for the adventurous, or at least young at heart: > > http://www.hospitalityclub.org > > It is a hospitality exchange community. I´ve stayed with locals in > Sevilla, Granada, Barcelona, Prague, and now I´ll spend a few days > with someone in Budapest. Excellent way to actually see a place, hang > out with locals, eat at the not-touristy spots, and make friends on > the way. > > Cheers, > > j > > -- > Juan Buhler > http://www.jbuhler.com > photoblog at http://photoblog.jbuhler.com > > > > -- Juan Buhler http://www.jbuhler.com photoblog at http://photoblog.jbuhler.com

