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Educational Travel Tours - High School and Middle School Trips for Teachers and Students | Questions? Call 1.888.310.7120
| Day 1 Start Tour | Day 2 Hola Madrid | Meet your Tour Director and check into hotel |  | Madrid city walk Life in Madrid is centered around talking, toasting and tapas-eating. In a walk through this crowded and social city, your Tour Director will help you get to know the lay of the land. Then stroll over to the Puerta del Sol, the bustling city center. Next, you'll relax at the Plaza Mayor, a grand square where every sort of human drama has taken place-trails of faith, public burnings of heretics, royal marriages, the canonization of saints and countless balls and bullfights. End at the Plaza de España for a stop at an outdoor café. , Puerta del Sol, Plaza Mayor, Plaza de España |  | Prado visit Visit the Museo del Prado, home of works by Spain's great masters, including Francisco Goya, Diego Velázquez, and El Greco. |
| Day 3 Madrid Landmarks | Madrid guided sightseeing tour Take a taste of Spain's cultural, political, and economic center with a tour led by a licensed local guide. See Madrid's mix of traditional and modern as you visit the Royal Palace, an 18th-century masterpiece. The enormous Baroque palace currently has more rooms (2,800) than any other European palace, but it was originally supposed to be four times as large. The palace is dripping with porcelain, jeweled clocks, amazing ceiling frescoes — the most magnificent, in the Throne Room, was done by the Venetian artist Tiepolo when he was in his seventies. Next take a look at the Neoclassical architecture of the Prado Museum and the Puerta de Alcala triumphal arch, built to honor Carlos III’s entry into Spain. , Royal Palace visit |  | Optional Toledo excursion $65 Long the spiritual capital of Spain, Toledo still captures the heart with its spectacular surround of ocher-colored mountains. El Greco created some of his greatest works here, including his most famous painting, "The Burial of Count Orgaz." You’ll also visit the city's cathedral, St. Mary's Synagogue, and the Church of Santo Tomé. |  | Tapas dinner Tapas purportedly originated when bartenders set a small plate ("tapa") over patrons' glasses of sherry and wine to keep the flies out. The bartenders starting piling the plate with cold cuts, olives, or salad, and the bite-size snack was born. (We're unsure how they kept the flies out of the cold-cuts... maybe that's how the sandwich was invented?) Over time these working-class snacks have become more elaborate, with each region adding its own specialties and cooking techniques to create unique tastes and combinations. |
| | Day 4 Madrid--Salamanca | Day 5 Salamanca--Oporto | Travel to Oporto via Braga & Guimarães See Portugal's religious capital at Braga, which erupts during Easter week with enormous colorful processions through the medieval streets. Guimarães is called the birthplace of Portugal; it was here that King Afonso Henriques began his reconquest of the country, leading it to expand to its current borders. The famous castle that dominates the skyline evokes this past, while the university students drinking coffee beneath its shadow guarantee the country a bright future. |
| | Day 6 Oporto Landmarks | Day 7 Oporto--Lisbon | Travel to Lisbon via Coimbra & Fátima Portugal's biggest university town, Coimbra has been a center of learning since 1290, when the country's first college was founded here. Fátima draws pilgrims rather than students. In 1917, three children saw several apparitions of the Virgin Mary in a field here, and the enormous basilica that was built in her honor attests to the continuing flood of pilgrims who visit the city each year. |
| Day 8 Lisbon Landmarks | Lisbon guided sightseeing tour Tour Europe's smallest capital, a port city once the entrance point for exotic wares from the far-flung corners of Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Now the city has a new vibrancy, with the opening of a new railway hub and the contrast of brash new modern buildings and restored medieval façades. Get lost in the Alfama, a maze of streets where houses are so close together, you can spread your arms and touch buildings on both sides of the street. Stroll the cobblestone pedestrian malls and Lisbon's main street, the Avenida da Liberdade. Get your portrait done by one of the sidewalk artists. See the new bridge, Ponte Vasco da Gama (built for Expo '98), which spans the Tagus river. Shop for handcrafts. Lisbon remains one of the best places to buy hand-made goods from around the world-embroidery, ceramics, silver, and tiles. |  | Alfama quarter visit, Castelo de São Jorge visit, Mosteiro dos Jerónimos visit |  | Optional Cascais, Estoril & Cabo Roca $60 |  | Fado evening Portugal's version of the Blues. Fado means "fate" or "destiny," and Fado songs generally tell the tale of lost love or glory. Head to a Fado house in the Bairro Alto and see the singers swathed in black, accompanied by 12-stringed guitars, crooning their hearts out. |
| | Day 9 Start Extension to Algarve | Day 10 Algarve | Algarve free time You'll find plenty to occupy your senses on the country's southern coast, known as "Portugal's Garden." Delight in fragrant almond, fig, lemon, and pomegranate trees, the sound of the surf pounding the best beaches in Portugal, Moorish and Roman ruins that create a fantastical visual setting, and the seafood available in the area's historical fishing villages. |
| | Day 11 End Tour |
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