Evora on foot
For the afternoon, after checking on the bikes we walked around the town. Lots of narrow roads, most of which people drive along. So many one-way roads! I wonder how many people scrape the sides of their cars entering and exiting what I would normally consider an alley or a footpath!
We did find a “typical” Portuguese restaurant, and the ruins of a Roman temple, built in the first half of the first century AD as part of an urban renewal plan (thought by some in the past to have been a temple dedicated to Diana, but later believed to be consecrated to the cult of the Emperor).We did also find a couple of other food-related businesses.
Many of the restaurants open at 7:30 pm for supper, which is pretty late. So, we elected to make food in the hostel’s kitchen.