Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Ravello, Wednesday 4 June, Day 42


Today we tried to sleep in, but we couldn't resist the light and the view, so we sat soaking up the morning sun and the panorama for a while then headed down for breakfast on the terrace. The view and the fragrant lemon trees seem to make food taste better - those were the best corn flakes ever.

After a bit more lounging round we pottered off to explore the nearby garden of the Villa_Cimbrone. I knew nothing about it and had no expectations, but as we approached it past a cliff face covered in honey suckle and roses, all in bloom, I began to think it might be something special, and it was. The location is stunning, on a little peninsula of land pointing out above the sea, and the gardens have been laid out by some inspired gardeners. We spent an extremely happy couple of hours wandering, admiring the faux temples and statues, the rose gardens, the magnificent vistas, the artfully framed groves. There were even two massive gum trees, exuding the nostalgic scent of the Australian bush, to remind us of home. It is a truly beautiful place. We liked it so much we want to go back there tomorrow.

Today's pic is us on the Terrace of Infinity at the end of the garden, me clutching Anne in terror as the cliff drops sheer several hundred metres -at least - just behind us.



The Villa Cimborne would be a hard act to follow, and indeed our next stop, Villa Rufalo, seemed pretty average by comparison, a bit scrappy and shop soiled. They hold a music festival on the grounds, and build a platform on scaffolding out from the cliff face to accommodate the orchestras. I would be too terrified to play a note.

For dinner we went to a restaurant with a magnificent view in the opposite direction to last night, so we could watch the shadows slowly creeping up the face of the mountains opposite as the sun set. We had a good talk with an older English lady we had met briefly on the train coming into Salerno on Saturday. She was an inspiration, travelling by herself, with a walking stick from a recently broken ankle, but really having a good time.  She has spent the week here in Ravello, and next time round I think we would do the same. We had a lovely dinner, listened to the happy banter of a Danish family with two lovely young sons sitting at the table sitting next to us, and shuffled off down the enchanted streets back to our hotel, feeling very fond of Ravello.

We will be sorry to leave tomorrow.
 

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Ravello, Tuesday June 3, Day 41

This morning we got up bright and early and decanted a couple of days worth of stuff into two backpacks. After breakfast we left our bigger bags at the B&B, and headed off blissfully unencumbered for our mini trip to Ravello.

We caught the ferry to Amalfi which was packed with Italian school kids, about 12 or 13 years old from the look of them. It was a bit like being in the middle of a herd of sheep, as they seemed to make a continuous wall of sound, which reflected the collective emotion of the group, excitement, consternation, contentment. They were lovely kids though - Italian children are loved and valued, and it does them a lot of good. The trip along the coastline is well worth it, with little settlements, forts, and the fantastic mountains as backdrop.

In Amalfi we fortified ourselves with a coffee in a nice café overlooking the 'beach' - a patch of darkish pebbles a few hundred metres square, with the jetty on one side, bus stop on the other. A few hard core beach goers were lounging there or swimming. Makes me realise how lucky we are in Australia beach - wise.

We needed the charge from our coffee to fight our way onto the bus to Ravello. About 50% more people waiting than the bus would hold, and there was general mayhem in the crush to get on. The bus ride up the mountain was pretty exciting too - a tiny little road with hairpin switch backs, and cars and buses and motor scooters going in all directions. Some great sheer drops to contemplate on the way. Two girls behind us spent much of the trip clutching each other and exclaiming 'Mama Mia, oh, Mama Mia ...'. But we got to Ravello without mishap, and had lunch on the Duomo square to build up strength for the last climb up to our hotel, which perched high above the town, and way above the bay. Ravello is gorgeous!  Our hotel room has a sunny terrace with spectacular views back towards Salerno.

Ravello has been a destination for artists since the nineteenth century. There is a plaque on one nearby hotel recording that D.H.Lawrence wrote Lady Chatterley's Lover there. Wagner was a big Ravello fan. There is a lovely photo down in the main square of Humphrey Bogart on a donkey under a Ravello arch. He made a film here with Gina Lolabrigida which I really have to track down when we get home. The place has been a retreat and refuge for a very long time. You would have to be a very determined invader to attack someone holed up here, but it was overthrown by the Republic of Pisa in 1137.  The scenery is truly spectacular, the air is beautiful, and because it is so hard to get to, at this time of year at least it is very quiet. Unlike Salerno, the little streets are in good condition and very clean.

Here is a picture taken from the ferry looking up the mountain, with Ravello perched around the heights. We are somewhere way up there right now.




We had dinner in a restaurant admiring the terraces across the valley that generations have carved into the hillsides, watching the hues in the sky deepen, lights come on in the little clusters of buildings clinging to the rocky outcrops, and a lovely crescent moon appear.

We are looking forward to exploring the town and surrounds tomorrow.

Monday, June 2, 2014

Salerno, Monday, 2 June, Day 40


Today we hurried off early to catch the train to Paestum. A bit chaotic at the station, and the automated ticket machines had decided to go on strike in response to public demand, but a nice older lady saw me standing with furrowed brow trying to make sense of the notice, and pointed me in the right direction to buy the necessary tickets.

Paestum was originally a Greek city, Posiedium,  founded around 500-600 BC. Legend has it that Jason and the Argonauts, on their way back from seizing the Golden Fleece, had established a temple at the mouth of the nearby river, which led to the establishment of the Greek colony. After centuries of Greek inhabitation, which saw the construction of the impressive city walls and the temples to Minerva, Poseidon and Ceres, all of which stand to this day largely intact despite thousands of years of neglect, the city was taken over by the Romans, who added their own structures.  After the decline of the Western Roman Empire the city fell into decline. Malaria from the nearby wetlands caused the population to shift inland, and the city was largely abandoned for centuries. Interest was revived by people on the trand tour circuit, and Goethe and Shelley both visited. During world War 2, the American landings were made at nearby Paestrum Beach, and the Americans set up their command posqt at a nearby villa. There is footage in the museum of an American field hospital set up inside one of the temples.

It was special to be able to walk down the streets, through the houses, some of which still have the mosaic floors and shallow marble pools which were the focal points of the courtyards. The temples are impressively massive.



It was nice to be out in the country side as well, as we've been in cities pretty much the whole way. We had lunch at the most chaotic establishment of the trip so far, pottered round the few touristy shops, then headed back to catch the train back to Salerno. It was siesta time when we got back, the streets were quiet, the shops shut, and the lift was having its afternoon nap, so we dragged our tired sorry stumps back up the hill and settled down for a rest.

We had dinner at the lovely little restaurant that we discovered our the first day - lovely fresh sea food and a nice bottle of Ravello wine, then went in search of an ATM - a Bancomat in local parlance. I think Salerno has more churches than Bancomats. We only found one, which only had 50 Euro notes and was no good to us, but we passed numerous churches and shrines. Goes to show that mammon hasn't triumphed in Salerno yet.

Tomorrow we are leaving most of our luggage here, and catching the ferry to Amalfi, and the bus up to Ravello, where we will be staying for two nights.

Sunday, June 1, 2014

Salerno Sunday 1 June, Day 39


Today began with an amazing breakfast prepared by our young hostess at the B&B, freshly baked muffins, an apple cake, home made marmalade, tart, plus the usual stuff, cereal, yoghurt, fresh coffee. We sat around a large circular table looking out over the splendid view, comparing notes with some of the other guests.

After that breakfast we definitely needed to get some exercise. We set off up and down the little streets, visiting first the Museum of Medical History. The first medical teaching institute on the world was established in Salerno so the place has a long tradition, and the museum certainly has an extensive collection of medical implements. Not exactly the most cheerful place however. Lots of prints of appalling medical conditions and people having holes drilled in them or implements inserted in them.

From there, to lighten the mood we visited the crypt of the Duomo, with its door lintels composed of life sized skeleton carvings, just in case you missed the point and thought you were going into a pub. This weekend is a long weekend in Italy, the Festival de Republica tomorrow and the feast of the Pentecost last Thursday which is also a holiday here. I guess that is why Rome train station was so busy. One nice thing about the long weekend is that a number of the churches, including the crypt, had teams of lovely young art students stationed outside many of the churches who were just waiting for visitors so they could provide commentary and background. Their pride in the history of the buildings of the city was very nice to experience, though I am afraid we didn’t understand too much of what they were telling us. Next we headed on to the Duomo itself, believed by the faithful to be the last resting place of St Matthew, and he certainly has had a few resting places.

The church was built by Robert Guiscard, the extraordinary Norman freebooter who took over Southern Italy around 1035 – the carvings have a very Norman feel.

Moving on we visited yet another church, Chiesa di San Michele, with more charming guides, and admired the grilled gallery where the Sisters of St Claire, an enclosed order, could attend mass without being seen.

Highlight of the morning was the archeological museum, which amongst other things has artefacts from the excavation of a number of Greek and Etruscan burial sites from the area around Salerno. Most amazing Greek pottery including this vase, dating from late 6th Century BC.




After all that art and culture we were starving, and stopped at the first place we found, which was very nice. Managed to catch the elevator back up the hill before its siesta time, then we followed its example and had a siesta as well.

Late afternoon, we joined the passagiata along the sea front. It really is a very civilized past time, everyone can join in, dogs, children, older people like us, young people checking each other out. A fair chunk of the population of Salerno seemed to be down there enjoying the warm Sunday afternoon.

Tomorrow we plan to catch train to visit the nearby ancient town of Paestum.

Saturday, May 31, 2014

Salerno, Saturday 31 May, Day 38


We managed to be extremely efficient getting out of the Hotel early, and catching a bus just as we got to the stop, which meant that we got to Rome railway station more than an hour before our train departed. On a Saturday morning the station was packed both with people heading off somewhere, and a steady stream of other people whose role in life seemed to be to ask as many people as possible if they had a spare Euro. Some of them weren’t particularly polite about receiving a negative answer, and it was a relief to get on the train and be hurtled away from Rome at around 289 kilometres per hour. 

Under 2 hours later we were pulling onto Naples, then rolling past Vesuvius, then through a mighty long tunnel to emerge at Salerno. We headed off to walk to our hotel, which took us a bit longer than the GPS’s optimistic estimate of 28 minutes, due to us taking a few wrong choices at forks in the road, the steepness of the terrain, and the GPS’s inaccuracy. We missed our destination by about 200 metres today which caused us a bit of walking backwards and forwards.

After we checked in, we were feeling in serious need of lunch, and we set off to search for a restaurant recommended by the lady in our B & B.  Finding it however proved too hard for us in our enfeebled condition, so we stumbled into the first open restaurant we come across, and had one of the nicest meals of the trip so far. The food was great, and the Signora was lovely.

After what seems like weeks of blue skies and sunshine it started raining as we hit Naples, and as the day proceeded there were some mighty thunder storms over the mountains which ring the coast. Which gave us a perfect excuse to do not very much for the rest of the day.

The place we are staying has a magnificent view of the town, the port and the bay, and we spent the afternoon watching the lightning, listening to the rain pour down and the thunder reverberate off the mountains, enjoying the incredibly fragrant lemon blossom scented air, and, eventually, admiring the double rainbow over the nay which appeared near sunset.  Here is part of the view from our little terrace.


There is a lift we discovered, quite close to the B & B, so we caught that down to near sea level. (The lift, as is only right, has a siesta each day from 2.30 to 4.00pm)

After dinner we went for a walk along the sea front, admiring the crescent moon appearing over the mountains in one direction, and the huge electrical storm lighting up the sky far out to sea in the other. Found our way back to the lift through tiny winding streets, and managed to negotiate the rather bewildering series of locks to get back inside. So all good so far. We are very glad to be somewhere a bit quieter for a while. Lots to explore tomorrow.


Friday, May 30, 2014

Rome, Friday 30 May, Day 37

Today we wanted to slow the pace down a bit, as we were both noting a decrease in our genial spirits yesterday. It gets a bit tiring to have people trying to sell you things all the time, and it feels like the whole place has got busier in the time we've been here. Anyway, we slept in a whole 15 minutes and had luke warm showers as a result.

We planned an outing to mix culture with practicality, and caught a bus over to the area near the Piazza Della Republican, dropped our washing off at a sort of laundry service, then after an invigorating espresso - we've become hooked on them - walked to the church of St Maria del Vittoria, which is home to Bernini's famous sculpture, the Ecstasy_of_Saint_Teresa.  Appreciating the sculpture was made difficult by the crass commentary which a tour guide was delivering sotto voce to his client. I guess people have to make a living, but especially in a church where there is little other sound, it really detracts from the experience of other people.

We collected our washing then went to wait at the bus stop, which we shared with an older Italian gentleman with a shopping jeep, who had both no English and something amiss with his voice box, so we communicated with elaborate mime. After an interminable wait, our bus came along packed solid. It drove off leaving us all still waiting, to be followed by an empty bus with a sign saying the equivalent of 'not in service'. Our Italian friend taught us some new and very expressive gestures as the bus sailed past. After another interminable wait he gave up and trudged off into the crowd, so we decided to walk it as well.

It was actually an interesting walk though, over the Quirinal Hill of ancient Rome, past Trajan's_Column and the ruins of the Basilica_Ulpia.

Back at the hotel, Anne wanted to finish a book she borrowed from the hotel's collection. I walked through lots of little winding streets over to Castel_Sant'Angelo over the little bridge that has been carrying people since 134 AD, and was for centuries the only bridge across the river in Rome.

There's an internet meme put-bird-on-it which has come to cover 'any design trend which as reached its peak, and is bordering on saturation'. Today as I walked through the Castel, having crossed the Pont's Angel lined balustrades, past the space which was once called the "Courtyard of Executions" for obvious reasons but which now has a statue of an angel and so is called "Courtyard of the Angel", to the very Castle itself, with its massive statue of the Archangel Michael, I wondered if "put an angel on it" might not be equally appropriate.



There was however a very interesting exhibition which documented the Catholic Church's interest around the 16th century in the early Christian period and the surge of archaeological activity that went with it, in an attempt to demonstrate to erring Protestants that there was indeed continuity between the first Christians and the church of the day. Also had a 16th century guide book to the major sites of Rome, open at the page showing a plate of Trahan's Column.

For dinner we headed back to the little restaurant in the square near Santa Barbara di Librari, and, supporting my theory that the invasion has really begun, where last time we ate there we seemed to be the only non Romans, tonight the tourists were around 80% of the clientele.

We've really enjoyed our time in Rome, and right up to our last walk round tonight we are still discovering new areas we'd like to explore further. Next time, I think come earlier or later in the year though.

Tomorrow were are off to Salerno and the Amalfi Coast for a spot of R and R.

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Rome, Thursday 29 May, Day 36

Got up half an hour earlier and it was a different world down in the breakfast room with no students. We were out the door by 8.30 and wandered without a very fixed plan over towards the forum. Heading the shortest path in a straight line took us over the Capitoline Hill, and past the Capitoline_Museums.

It is claimed that these were the first museums in the world, and I wanted to show Anne the giant head and feet from the colossal statue of Constantine that is located in the courtyard there which I saw last time I was in Rome. It was free then, but now you pay 12 Euros, I guess that is progress. We paid up the entry fee, and it turned out to be way the best thing we have seen so far in Rome. The collection is phenomenal, from the bronze she wolf from 500 BC (a relative of the Chimera of Assezo I suspect) to the amazing 2nd century BC roman statue of the many breasted fertility goddess Diana Efesina (or the Efesian Artemis ), to the magnificent 4th Century BC bronze horse, to the views of Rome and the Forum from the terrace, to the super sized equestrian bronze statue of Marcus Aurelius, plus so much else besides, this one gets our 'museum of the journey' sticker by quite a margin. Lost some points for being almost deliberately confusing in layout and signage, but the collection and location more than made up for that, and it was all the nicer because we got in early before the rush. As an added bonus, there was a special exhibition of Michelangelo's work, which had drawings and sculptures which I had never seen before, including a marble bass relief which he completed at the age of 15.

Had pizza in the roof garden, then a bit of down time, then I headed back to visit the Forum. It really is extraordinary to walk down the same streets, and stand outside the buildings that have been the scene of so much history. The Curia, for example,  where the Roman Senate would meet, is pretty much intact, though the doors were purloined for a nearby church.

Before dinner we decided to revisit the Pantheon and to check out the Trevi Fountain, which turned out to be not such a great idea as the streets were choked with crowds of tourists and people trying to sell things to tourists. The Pantheon was filled with people chattering away excitedly and futilely taking photos with their flash on, all those little flashes getting lost in the vast dome. Despite the annoying fellow humans, the building itself is just wonderful. I realised tonight that it functions something like a sun dial as the light from the sun shines down through the open disk at the apex of the dome.




After the Pantheon we battled our way to the Trevi Fountain, which was an extraordinary scene - probably breaks some world record for the greatest number of people taking selfies in one place. My estimate is that less than 10% of the people there were actually looking at the Fountain.

It was good to get back to this side of town. Dinner in a restaurant with average food and nice wine. On the way home, we saw that the little church of Santa_Barbara_dei_Librai, which we have walked past many times and which has always been locked up, was open. It is a lovely little church, and provided just the antidote that we needed  to the tacky crowd scenes from earlier in the evening.