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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 El Escorial & Segovia | Day 5 Madrid--Costa Del Sol | Travel to Costa del Sol via Talgo train |
| Day 6 Costa del Sol Beach Time | Optional Morocco full-day excursion (with lunch) $170 Experience Morocco’s diverse landscape—from the vast Sahara desert to the snow-capped Atlas Mountains to the verdant Mediterranean coast—and equally diverse culture. The country has 11 official languages, and its architecture, music, and art display African, French, Spanish, and Islamic influences. The country still has strong cultural ties with Spain, and a licensed local guide will steer you through the port town of Ceuta, still Spanish territory, and Tetouan, part of the Spanish protectorate through the first half of the 1900s. The towns are undeniably Moroccan, however, with donkeys and merchandise fighting for space in the chaotic maze of alleys in the Arab medina (old town) and customers haggling for goods in the bright open-air souks (markets). (Non-US Citizens should check with their embassy/consulates for entry requirements.) |
| Day 7 Costa del Sol Beach Time | Costa del Sol beach time |
| Day 8 Flight home | Limited air service from Malaga may cause flight itinerary changes |
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