Posts Tagged ‘Sicily’

Sicily – What a finale!

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

Etna is now exploding!! Pressure is building up so I’m waiting patiently for The Big One!!

Despite the wonderful variety of vegetables in the local markets they are not served in the restaurants! It is considered peasant food. However surprisingly we were offered raw broad beans for breakfast in one of our hotels!

wooden cart

When asked where I live back home many people (my generation & older) know the Isle of Wight as a 60’s Italian band called Dik Dik released a popular song about the Pop Festivals of the late 60’s/1970 & every other word is Hippies!!

Sicily now has a new president, Berlusconie. The last one was a naughty boy & his term finished two years early. Elections were held peacefully on 13th & 14th April.

The sirocco wind has been blowing from the SE (Sahara) which brings with it a fine pink coloured sand which obscures the views but brings the heat. Fortunately it doesn’t often last for long. Then the Mistral blows from the NW bringing clearer but cooler weather.

Since I first arrived I’ve been asked directions in Italiano! Must be that tour leader look on my face! The other day I discovered how to say nudist beach as I was asked where the spiaggia nudista was!!

May is the season of weddings. Couples get married every day of the week except Sundays. Saw several weddings in Syracuse & Taormina with brides wearing beautiful dresses & bridegrooms in flashy Italiano label suits.

On Oritiga Island (the original settlement of Syracuse) we also witnessed an Initiation Ceremony in a church for the Knights of St John.

Cathedral, Ortigia Island

The durum wheat which is grown everywhere is now being harvested so the lushness of the island is disappearing. The spring flowers are also beginning to fade although the poppies are now at their best, such a vivid red.

Although it’s been a great time of year to visit Sicilia with the flowers, blossom, lushness & reasonably good weather it’s also the time of incredibly noisy school groups!!

The education system in Sicilia is the same as mainland Italia except the schools have a longer summer holiday due to the long hot summers so they break up end of June for 3 months!! This means they have shorter Easter & Christmas holidays & no week off in February for skiing!

Taormina Greek Theatre

Several Greek theatres are used from May. In Syracuse the season of Greek plays began on 8th May until end of June. In Taormina the famous Film Festival is held from June plus many different concerts for all musical tastes. In recent years Elton John & Lisa Minelli have performed here.

Occasionally the audience is treated to an amazing concert in a Greek theatre with Mt Etna erupting in the background!

Went up Etna again Saturday morning. The guide told us how a week ago the volcanoligists thought there may be an eruption due to the build up of pressure but she had calmed down. There was a lot of white steam being emitted but we were told when it’s white it’s OK. You only start panicking when it turns blue!

Mt Etna

Later that evening we enjoyed our Last Supper on the seafront of Giardini Naxos. At 21.30 volcanic ash started raining from the sky! Etna was erupting!!!

What a finale!

Want to see Etna and all that Sicily has to offer? Try our ‘Classical Sicily‘ tour for some of the best preserved Graeco-Roman sights in the Mediterranean and some of the Islands other beautiful cultural highlights. Do you want to get even closer to Etna and the other Sicilian volcanoes? Try our ‘Sicilian Volcano Hike‘.

Easter in Sicily

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

Have completed my first tour in Sicilia. Despite the mixed unseasonable weather (we also had snow in the mountains) everyone had a great time.

The tour started in Syracuse on Good Friday where we went along to see the evening Good Friday procession. We were the Good Friday procession!! As we followed the priests around the town carrying the cross!!

Baroque Church , Noto

Onto Noto, one of my favorite Baroque cities in Sicilia. We were there on Easter Day morning in the sunshine with locals all in their Easter Sunday best. It was a great atmosphere but not an Easter Bunny in sight! Instead they make Easter sheep out of marzipan.

Piazza Armerina has an oldie worldie atmosphere especially in the evenings as we wander down the cobbled back streets with the impressive cathedral up on the hill all lit up.

The Roman Villa at Casale has some magnificent mosaics. Was once the Hunting Lodge of a wealthy local.

Next to Agrigento & the Valley of the Temples. There is supposedly more Greek temples in Sicilia than Greece! Temple of Zeus was the largest Greek theatre in the world & three times the size of the Pantheon in Athens!

The Greek site of Selinunte (with more temples) is the most extensive Greek site in Europe & overlooks the coast. Buggies are provided to tour around the site for those with weary legs!

Next stop Marsala where I tried a selection of Marsala wines ………… almond & even crema which has egg added to it to make it creamy!

Took a 10 minute boat ride across to San Pantaleo island & the Punic/Carthaginian settlement of Mozia. Visited the Tophet where children & animals were sacrificed to the God Baal Haman (similar to the one in Carthage).

Next to the medieval hill town of Erice. Another of my favorite visits on Sicilia. Climbed up King Frederick 2nd’s tower for some amazing views of the coast below & nearby islands. Tried some canolli, a local rich desert made with ricotta cheese by nuns!

Onwards to the Greek settlement of Segesta & guess what?? Another impressive temple in an amazing location.

On to the capital of Palermo, home to 1 million inhabitants. That’s a 5th of the population of Sicilia. Went to a Puppet Theatre which is one of Sicilia’s traditions. A medieval version of Punch & Judy with goodies & baddies.

Palermo Church

Further along the coast we visit the medieval harbour town of Cefalu. Another of my favorite spots with its Norman cathedral.

Cefalu

Finally to Letojanni where we stay in an ex-convent still run by 5 nuns. The information on the back of the room doors advises what to do WHEN there is an earthquake, not IF!!

Arranged our Last Supper at Victor’s on the seafront plus a special celebration meal for Mary’s 50th birthday. Asked for a gateau for 21 people. They seemed a little surprised. Said it needn’t be too large just enough for everyone to have a little bite. I then discovered to their relief ‘gatto’ is cat in Italian!! Torta is gateaux!! Whoops!!

Mt Etna
The Highlight for me was my first ascent of Mt Etna. One of the most active volcanoes in the world. Three times the size of Vesuvius at 3345m. Due to all the snow we took the cable car up to 2500m then did our own thing wandering around in the sunshine with amazing views 360 degrees. Should be on everybody’s ‘must do’ lists but it’s more impressive in the snow & sunshine. We were so lucky & hardly anybody up there first thing in the morning.

Find out more about Explore’s Classical Sicily – a 10 day tour of Sicily

Ciao from Sicilia!

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

Ciao from Sicilia!

Michele with Mount Etna in the background

The largest island in the Mediterranean.

Where everything is so green, the blossom is out & the spring flowers sway in the gentle breeze!!

My first impressions of Sicilia are good. Not only does it boost one of the most active volcanoes in the world, Mt Etna last erupted in September 2007 & I’m hoping it will erupt for me whilst I’m here!! There are many quaint medieval towns with Baroque buildings (17th & 18th centuries), cobbled streets & piazzas to enjoy a cafe whilst watching the world go by & some of the most important classical sites: Agrigento, Selinunte, Segesta & the Roman villa at Casale to name a few.

Temple of Concord, Agrigento

Sicilia has more UNESCO World Heritage sites than any where else in the world so there has been a lot of restoration & excavation work in recent years.

Thanks to Euro money there are some amazing roads with some of the highest bridges in Europe spanning across vast valleys & long tunnels through the mountains.

Sicily was one of the breadbaskets for the Roman Empire & still today the island is famous for its citrus fruits, almonds, pistachios, wines & olives.

90% of all Italy’s pistachios are grown on the northern & western slopes of Mt Etna.

The best almonds are grown around Agrigento & when the trees are in blossom in February an annual Almond Festival is held.

Ever tried the sweet Marsala wine? Discovered by an English man, John Woodhouse in the late 18th century. Made in a similar way to sherry in Jerez, Spain. Salute!!

Sicilian cuisine is renowned for being amongst the best in Italia.

Plenty of pasta, pizza, tasty meat, fish & seafood including sea urchins. The swordfish is particularly good at this time of year. Oranges & lemons have three crops a year so they are always in season.

Ice cream may have been invented in Sicily as snow was brought down from Etna to which honey & orange & lemon juice were added to create a wonderful dish.

Another local delicacy is brioche con gelato, basically an ice-cream butty which business men & children alike love to have for breakfast &/or lunch!!

Everything stops for the afternoon siesta then everybody comes out for the ‘passeggiata’. Men are seen sitting/standing around watching the world go by!

Plus for the time of year 20 degrees & sunny is very pleasant & it’s only going to get warmer!!

If you feel inspired to get to know the charming Sicily a bit more, then try our ‘Classical Sicily‘ tour.