Cala Figuera and the man of the first hour
It's fun to rummage through the photo box with Salvador Escalas. How much history fits into a shoebox! Personal memories emerge with every photo that the 78-year-old takes out of the box. "Oh, I was still pretty then!" he says in perfect German, or "this old rattletrap! We used it to drive tourists around the island." He smiles, thinks, is pleased.
Many young women can also be seen, with pinned-up hairstyles and flared skirts. "They were all my girlfriends, I was the cock of the walk." It's not just 60 years of his life that can be seen in the small black and white photos. It's 60 years of tourism history on Mallorca. Escalas has helped to shape it, here in Cala Figuera, where he lives with his German wife Ulla Escalas, née Potthast.
Escalas grew up in Santanyí. "Fortunately, I had poor parents," he says today, "so I was able to appreciate what I had later." He was one of the few of his generation to graduate from high school, studied at home, and his pharmacist gave him lessons and bought him books.
This trend has to do with the change in demand and the natural conditions of the narrow bay, explains Salvador's wife Ulla: "Cala Figuera doesn't have a beach, which is why the place doesn't interest conventional tourists who want to fall off their beds onto the beach." Others love the place precisely because of its fishing boat shelters and small houses by the water.
How much history fits into a shoebox!
Cala Figuera is one of the few coastal towns on Mallorca that has retained some of its original charm.
Ulla Potthast also fell for it in 1972. And she was also taken with Salvador Escalas. She actually wanted to study for her second state exam and had already been teaching math, physics and chemistry for a few years when she came to Mallorca at Easter "with a suitcase full of books". She went on to pass her state exams, but her life took a turn for the worse.
Village house Casa Mar in Santanyí with patio and barbecue
Cala Figuera, a tranquil fishing village with an eventful history
A year after the two met, Ulla moved from the Ruhr region to Mallorca in an R 4 "filled to the brim with my movable household goods", she recalls.
Salvador was a widower with two small children, Ulla became their new mother. To this day, the couple is dynamic and well-rehearsed, the partners complement each other, which is immediately noticeable. "German thoroughness versus Mallorcan inscrutability," says Salvador Escalas with a laugh, adding: "I now feel half German, half Spanish."
Ulla then ran the business with her husband for decades, as the "girl for everything", as she says, "Salvador looked after the guests and I was responsible for the running of the business."
Escalas was chairman of the hoteliers' association in Cala Figuera for many years and played a decisive role in the establishment of democracy after Franco's death in 1975. Escalas developed the program of the new centrist party UCD based on the German model.
He was already a member of the Partido Popular (PP), which won the municipal elections following the dissolution of the UCD in 1982. Since then, politicians from the conservative Popular Party have governed Santanyí without interruption. Salvador and Ulla have been enjoying life more intensively for a few years now. Every afternoon they have tea and cookies on the terrace, their cat Max also gets his snacks and they indulge in Mallorcan cuisine as often as they can. There are 135 cookbooks on the shelf.
17 years
Mayor
Per llepar'se els dits
When asked about his favorite food, he answers without thinking and in the deepest Mallorcan: Escaldums de matances and Arros brut.
If you are not familiar with these dishes, you should go in search of them, for example at C'an March in Manacor or at Can Tronca in Sant Joan (by reservation only).
"They cook the best rice dishes on the island," says Escalas, "you lick your fingers afterwards" - per llepar'se els dits.
Vacation home in Santanyí with private pool
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