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March Motoring Highlights

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Cars and Coffee Meeting. Credit: Ian Giles

March for the Classic & Sportscar Club was a great success with a really good run at the beginning of the month, finishing in Puerto de la Torre, Malaga, a great turnout for the Cars and Coffee meeting in Puerto Banus at YANX American diner and then to finish the month, an amazing weekend comprising two days of car runs and two nights with fabulous dinners at the beautiful Lake Vinuela Hotel.

The Classic & Sports Car Club of Andalucia

The March Classic & Sportscar Run

The March car run and lunch started with breakfast just outside Malaga. The route then headed for the mountains that border the City and went through Casabermeja, Colmenar, the Montes de Malaga, Villanueva and a coffee stop in Comares. That before descending past the lakes of Almogia and on in towards Malaga where the Finish lunch was at Restaurant Las Navas in Puerto de la Torre. All agreed that it had been a super route, and the reward was an excellent lunch!

A couple of Youngsters enjoying the CSCC Car Run!
A couple of Youngsters enjoying the CSCC Car Run! Credit: Ian Giles
Getting ready for the coffee stop…
Getting ready for the coffee stop… Credit: Ian Giles

The Lake Vinuela Weekend 

The Hotel base for the Lake Vinuela Weekend is quite stunning and has recently been refurbished to a high standard. With the lake now full of water and looking quite resplendent, it was the perfect backdrop for a weekend of fun and frivolity, cars, food, wines and stunning countryside.

The two days of routes, which started from the Hotel Tamisa Golf in Mijas Costa took in such places as Alfarnate to the oldest Inn in Andalucia, the spectacular climb up and out of Periana with its stunning views out over the coast and Lake Vinuela, a skirting of the amazing rock formations of the Torcal and much more spectacular countryside and quiet roads that are so enjoyable and plentiful in Andalucia.

On Day 1 the route headed out towards the lakes of El Chorro with a coffee stop by the lakes. A lunch stop followed at an old Venta in Villanueva de la Concepción, on the edge of the Torcal, which was much enjoyed before heading past Rio Gordo and an afternoon arrival at Lake Vinuela in time for some bar snacks and a bit of a rest. Soon after, the Cava was served as a prelude to a most enjoyable dinner with all participants sat together in the beautiful dining room at the Hotel. The Bar stayed open late…!

Saturday’s run started after a relaxed breakfast at 11.00 AM and headed to Alfarnate via the Periana Climb, which is spectacular, and the aforementioned Alfarnate Inn, the oldest in Andalucia, for a coffee stop. A run through the Zaffaraya pass led to a lunch stop at RioFrio, which was most enjoyable, before a gentle return to the Vinuela Hotel, bar snacks awaiting. Then, the boat was really pushed out with a spectacular dinner in the hotel that night and, of course, the Bar was open late…

As most participants agreed, what a perfect weekend!

Lake Viñuela Weekend. Credit: Ian Giles

Cars and Coffee meeting

The Club continued with it’s run of monthly ‘Cars and Coffee’ meetings at YANX American Diner in Centro Plaza, Puerto Banus mid-month. Again the event was very well supported, with a huge turnout of very interesting cars on each occasion.  Thankfully, warm sunshine was enjoyed on each occasion and the chances are good for similar weather at the next gathering, which will be on Sunday, April 19th in the same venue. No booking is necessary for these events, just turn up with your chosen steed between 10.00amand 1.00pm and enjoy the cars, the coffee and the company! An Entry fee of €15 per car gets €10 of vouchers to spend in YANX American Diner for coffees and breakfast etc.

Cars and Coffee meeting.
Cars and Coffee meeting. Credit: Ian Giles

April Classic & Sportscar Run

Coming up in April, on the 11th, the Club has another fantastic car run and lunch planned. The event will be based at the InMood Hotel in San Roque Golf Club. The Run will Start there on Saturday morning where breakfasts will be available. There will be a gentle, easy Run that will incorporate a Cava and a Coffee stop and some fast roads with very easy navigation. The event will then Finish at the InMood Hotel where we have an excellent lunch planned. Cost of lunch will be €50pp including a ‘Copa de Bienvenida’ on arrival, three-course lunch and wines/beers/ waters included.

There are a number of people going to stay at the Hotel on the Friday and/or the Saturday nights. Rooms can be booked directly with the Hotel   Make a weekend of it! Have a look at their website!

The best way to book rooms in this super 5-Star Hotel is through their website: https://www.inmoodsanroquehotel.com/, Tel: 856 92 48 96, or you can email to: recepcion.sanroque@inmoodhotels.com.

April Classic & Sportscar Run
April Classic & Sportscar Run. Credit: Ian Giles

TRACK DAY at Circuito Guadix

I am taking a group to Circuito Guadix for a Track Day on Sunday, April 12th. Always a terrific day out with an open pit lane from 09.30am to 5.00pm. It’s a marvellous circuit, busy but very safe, plenty of run-off areas and nothing to hit! Usually run in the sunshine, there is a cafeteria, helmets can be borrowed and there will be a couple of instructors (including me) on hand to help you through this. You can do unlimited laps in complete safety so. If you’d like to join the fun please give me a call or drop me an email. It’s a great way to exercise your chariot and find out what it’s and your limits are, in safety! This is a very inexpensive, fun day out and will cost only €250 per person.

TRACK Day at Guadix

Email me at csccspain@gmail.com.

Formula 1 news

After a great start to the season in Australia and China and this last weekend in Japan, the F1 circus is forced into a break of over a month due to the cancellation of the Bahrain and Saudi Grands Prix which should have been run in April.

The Drivers’ championship has Britain’s George Russell currently on top in his works Mercedes but Ferrari and McLaren are not far behind. Mercedes lead the prestigious constructors’ championship at this point, with the young Italian, Kimi Antonelli performing way above expectations and contributing much of the team’s points haul so far. It’s really too early to make any predictions! The one-month lay-off may also help the team’s workload in developing these cars as this takes place at a frantic pace at the best of times!

More from me next month…

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OECD Warns Spain For Taxing Workers Too Much

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Hard workers in Spain are facing a shrinking disposable income as the national tax burden continues to climb well above international averages. Recent data released by the OECD in the “Taxing Wages 2026” report confirms that a single worker without children now loses 41.4 per cent of their gross earnings to the government and social security.

The figures show Spain’s “tax wedge” (the difference between what an employer pays and what a worker actually receives) has reached its tenth highest level across the 38 nations of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Spanish tax pressure grew by 0.31 percentage points over the last year, a rate more than double the OECD average increase of 0.15.

Salary increases failing to match Tax growth

Workers experienced a real-term loss in purchasing power throughout 2025 because tax hikes overtook wage growth. Average salaries rose by 1.2 per cent, while personal income tax jumped by 1.5 per cent, resulting in a 0.3 per cent drop in what people could actually afford to buy. Spain remains one of only seven OECD countries where this specific imbalance led to a direct reduction in household wealth.

Most of this growth came from personal income tax, which rose by 0.25 percentage points in Spain despite falling slightly across the rest of the developed world. This trend suggests that even when employees receive a pay rise, the state claims a larger portion of the increase, leaving families with less money for daily essentials. The pay rise essentially goes to more tax, potentially eliminating the impetus to work harder.

Spain’s burden of high social security costs

Business owners also face heavy pressure, with employer social security contributions accounting for a massive 23.4 per cent of total labour costs. This figure dwarfs the OECD average of 13.5 per cent and creates a major barrier for companies looking to hire new staff. Higher business costs make Spain a more expensive place to operate compared to many neighbouring economies.

Personal income tax (IRPF) accounts for another 13.1 per cent of the gross salary, while employee social security contributions add a further 5 per cent to the total deduction. While the average developed nation requires a 13.5 per cent contribution from employers, Spain demands nearly double that amount, making it almost impossible for small businesses to expand their teams.

Failure to adjust for inflation costs workers

Financial experts at the General Council of Economists point to a lack of inflation indexing as a primary cause for these rising costs. Tax brackets have stayed static even as nominal wages increased, meaning many low-to-middle-income earners are pushed into higher tax bands without experiencing a genuine improvement in their lifestyle.

Many warn that this “fiscal drag” effectively erases the benefits of hard-won pay rises before the money ever reaches a bank account. In some cases, a pay increase can almost entirely disappear once tax benefits and subsidies are reduced or cut off due to the higher gross figure.

The OECD cautioned the Spanish government that such a heavy focus on workers’ taxation discourages job creation. They recommend moving toward alternative revenue sources, such as environmental levies or VAT, to help strengthen employment incentives. Belgium currently leads the world with a massive 52.5 per cent tax wedge, while countries like Colombia and Chile maintain much lower burdens at 0 per cent and 7.5 per cent, respectively.

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This Airline Ends Free Hand Luggage

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Passengers may soon pay extra for cabin bags on Brussels Airlines cheapest tickets Credit : www.brusselsairlines.com

Passengers booking the cheapest Brussels Airlines tickets on short and medium haul routes are about to see a major change. Free cabin bags will no longer be included on the lowest fare, meaning many travellers who want to bring a standard hand luggage case will have to pay more.

The move forms part of a wider shake up across the Lufthansa Group and is likely to affect people who have grown used to travelling with a trolley bag included in the cheapest ticket.

For budget conscious passengers, city breakers and expats making regular hops across Europe, it could make headline fares look cheaper while the final cost rises once luggage is added.

What is changing with Brussels Airlines fares

Until now, Brussels Airlines’ cheapest fare, known as Economy Light, included two items: one small personal item and one cabin bag. That meant travellers could normally bring a backpack or laptop bag, plus a small wheeled case that fitted airline cabin dimensions.

Under the new system, a fresh entry level fare called Economy Basic will only include a personal item, such as a handbag, laptop case or small backpack that fits under the seat.

Anyone wanting a larger overhead cabin bag will need to choose a higher fare or pay more.

In simple terms, the cheapest ticket becomes more restrictive. Airlines often present these changes as offering passengers more choice, but for many travellers it will feel like something once included now costs extra.

When the new baggage rules begin

Brussels Airlines says the new fare will be tested from 28 April, for journeys starting on 19 May, on selected routes. The long term aim is to roll it out across the airline’s continental network.

That means more routes across Europe are expected to adopt the new model once the trial period ends. Passengers booking in the coming weeks may want to check carefully which fare type appears during the booking process, especially if they assume cabin baggage is automatically included.

That assumption could become expensive.

Why airlines are doing this

Charging separately for baggage is hardly new in aviation. Low cost carriers have done it for years, and many passengers now compare ticket prices based on the headline fare first, then decide later whether to add luggage, seat selection or priority boarding.

Traditional airline groups have increasingly moved in the same direction. By separating services, airlines can advertise lower starting prices while earning extra revenue from optional add ons.

They also argue that some passengers travel light and should not pay for services they do not use. Brussels Airlines says the new fare gives day trippers and light travellers another low entry option.

That may be true for some. But for anyone carrying a normal cabin case, the total price may end up much closer to existing fares.

Who will notice the change most

Frequent travellers are often the quickest to spot these shifts. Many people travelling for work, short breaks or second home visits rely on cabin luggage to avoid check in queues and baggage reclaim.

For them, hand luggage is not a luxury. It is part of the basic trip. Expats travelling between Belgium, Spain, Italy, Portugal or other European destinations may also feel the impact, especially on regular weekend visits.

Families could notice it too. A cheap fare for several people can look attractive at first glance, but once bags are added the bill can change quickly. That is why comparing the full cost, not just the first price shown, matters more than ever.

Other airlines in the Lufthansa Group are following

This is not only about Brussels Airlines. The same basic fare model is also expected across other Lufthansa Group carriers, including Lufthansa, Swiss, Austrian Airlines, Discover Airlines, Lufthansa City Airlines and Air Dolomiti.

That gives the move wider significance across Europe. Millions of passengers fly with these brands every year, so the new baggage structure could become standard across a large part of the market. If successful, other airlines may study the results closely.

What travellers should check before booking

The key point is simple: read the fare conditions before paying. Look at what is included, the size of the personal item allowed and the cost of adding a cabin bag later.

In many cases, buying the next fare up from the start may work out better value than choosing the cheapest fare then adding extras one by one.

Travellers should also check return journeys carefully, as baggage terms can differ between airlines on connecting routes.

A cheaper ticket, or just a different price tag?

Airlines know customers love seeing a low fare on screen. What happens after that depends on what the passenger actually needs.

For someone travelling with only a laptop bag, the new system may suit perfectly. For everyone else, the cheapest fare may no longer be the cheapest journey.

That is the real change hidden behind the new Brussels Airlines pricing plan.

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Nube Floats Into Estepona

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Estepona is about to get a seriously stylish new addition. Nube, the new venue on Calle Playa del Cristo, is preparing for its soft opening on Friday, May 1, with Russian DJ Fedor Fomin delivering the tunes. 

Sitting perfectly close to Playa del Cristo, one of Estepona’s most popular beautiful stretches of sand, the location alone tells you everything you need to know about the vibe at the new beach club. It joins the long list of bars, restaurants and beach clubs that have popped up over time bringing more and more places to choose from for its ever growing community and visiting tourists. 

Nube paints the perfect picture of lazy lunches and sundowners

Nube has the serene look of all pale blues, cloud motifs and clean lines, it paints the picture in your mind of what to expect. A beach lounge that moves in a relaxed fashion from lazy lunches into sunset cocktails and on into a proper night out. It’s an all-day, all-evening venue that welcomes you in for hours of time to relax and enjoy. 

The restaurant offers fresh seafood and open fire cooking. The beach club with day beds and cocktails, the lounge terrace ideal for sundowners and then the evening comes alive with a night club and premium room for karaoke and private events. 

The soft opening hosts the sounds of Moscow-based DJ Fedor Fomin,whose parties are legendary across the Russian and European nightlife scene. He has been confirmed for the opening night bringing his mix of different musical genres from hip-hop to rock and pop, perfect for the launch of a brand new beach club for the season. If you fancy being first on the list to see the new place in town then head along on May 1. 

Nube is located at C. Playa del Cristo, 1V. For full details see the Nube Estepona website and for bookings call +34 610 133 121

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