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Trip Report: Sicily - Doin’ the Ruins (with a slice of Roma thrown in)

Trip Report: Sicily - Doin’ the Ruins (with a slice of Roma thrown in)

Old Jun 13th, 2009, 01:23 PM
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Hi Ian - I travel solo, and prefer not to rent a car. Do you think Modica (and La Magnolie) would be a good base for two or three days using public transport?
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Old Jun 13th, 2009, 02:15 PM
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I don't know Le Magnolie, but you could easily make Modica a base for visiting Modica and Ragusa. Ragusa is less than half an hour away by bus.
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Old Jun 13th, 2009, 02:28 PM
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great report. bookmarking
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Old Jun 13th, 2009, 03:29 PM
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thursdaysd

Ragusa is 25 minutes by bus. There appeared to be great bus services to Cantania, Siracusa, Gela, Nota, Enna . . . even Palermo. I would also rate Modica as very safe so security is not an issue. There is also a train station. Both bus & train are only a 10 minute walk from La Magnolie. I didn't see any taxis in Modica but they must exist.

Ian
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Old Jun 14th, 2009, 05:27 AM
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Day 13 Menfi with Agrigento on the side

We were well rested after our ‘holiday’ & it was a beautiful day for a drive. We set out early with the commuters from Modica & beyond heading for the industrial zone in west Ragusa. E45 slowed to a crawl as a line of impatient cars followed a slow truck for 1/2 the 20 kms to Ragusa. I was impatient too. And yes, I passed when I shouldn’t have – like everybody else. Safely but . . . Then E45/SS115 turned west towards Comiso & most of the traffic died off. All we had to do was stay on this hwy all across the bottom of Sicily until Menfi with a jog out for the Agrigento temple site. Easy, right? Well, this road is never straight for more than 1 km at a time the whole way to Menfi. If you could capture it all in detail on Google Earth, you would see that it looks like an EKG. Not that I minded, but I did have a passenger who did offer mildly obscene suggestions for the Sicilian road engineers who designed this road.

We careened around some incredible twisties with 2 somewhat narrow lanes & edged with rock walls toward Comiso & then slowly dogged through center of this busy town as everybody made their way to work. The road straightened just a bit & we bypassed Vittoria & I took the opportunity to replenish the fuel. 47€ in diesel so far. Did I mention that the scenery is quite stunning on this drive? Mountains are always hovering in the distance. After Vittoria, it was a straight run – on the map anyway – to Gela. I would rate Gela as one of the armpits of Sicily. The hwy runs through a part of the town with multiple stop lights & lots of limited congestion. Trucks, buses & Sicilian soccer moms all compete for road space but you just have to plug along through it. Certainly not a pretty place. You bypass Licata to the north and Palme di Montechiaro to the south. Then on approach to Agrigento you go through a hideous touristy area with hotels & eateries lining the hwy. When that’s over & with a temple in sight on a hill to the northeast, you get to a rotary.

Your GPS might tell you to take the 2nd exit but you really want the 3rd. You see, there are 2 entrances to the temple area. One real & the other one real too but you aren’t supposed to enter at the ‘other’ real one. Confused? Let me explain . . . We exited at the 1st road & headed up the hill with the temple to our left on the brow of the hill we were climbing. The road twirls around as it goes up & you get to a bend to the right with a gate, a ticket office & a parking lot with a hand-lettered sign on the left. I missed this & headed down the hill where a museum (or something) is on the right. Sensing that I blew it & despite the GPS chirping about some nonsense, I turned around & went back. Sure enough, it appeared to be an entrance & I drove into the parking lot, paid my 2€ & parked with numerous others in a bumpy field intermingled with olive trees. The parking lot had a trailer toilet & charged 0.50€ to use it btw. We bought entrance tickets in the ticket office which you insert in the turnstile & it date stamps it & you are in the temple park. All is well, right? Actually no, but you won’t know it for a while. Read on . . .

We walked up the hill to the temple - the furthest one east – know as the Temple of Juno (Hera) Lacinia. Wow. Pretty spectacular setting. After taking 200 – 300 photos (it’s your 1st Agrigento temple right?) you set off down the stone Via Sacra for more.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...ento/juno1.jpg

Another temple is sight . . .

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...gento/path.jpg

The next one up is the star. The so-called Temple of Concord. It’s a fair jaunt down the hill & you pass some worked rock formations on the left that require some photo time too.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...ento/paleo.jpg

The rock star.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...to/concord.jpg

Now assuming you still have some room on your camera’s memory card, you keep moving on. Next up is the Temple of Eracle (Hercules). This one is a tumble down affair, so you probably go for art shots here like most.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...nto/eracle.jpg

After some misc buildings, you exit through a turnstile & reach the main entrance. Yes, this is the real one, not the unreal one that you used. More on this later. You cross the busy road & there is a parking lot, a café, misc vendors & free washrooms. Then you enter through another turnstile that needs your ticket again for the lower part of the site. Here you find the jumble of stones that was the Temple of Zeus Olimpico.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...gento/zeus.jpg

Then it is on to the actual city where numerous foundations cover a field. The remnants of the Temple of Castor & Pollux finish your temple photo opportunities. Note: modern Agrigento in the background.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...nto/castor.jpg

There are other things to see on the site – churches & such – but we had some more miles to cover. We returned to the busy main gate & walked across the road to the entrance to the hill to walk back to our car. We inserted our tickets in the turnstile & they were now dead. It would appear that they want you to start in the middle & do both loops, finishing in the middle. You can only validate the tickets twice – once for each half of the site. Hmm. I appealed to the hopelessly bored gate keeper about my car & she easily relented & let us through. But why do they let you buy tickets & enter at the end when ‘officially’ you can’t go back through? Answer: unknown. So we trudged up the Via Sacra – it’s a long way up when the sun is beating down – exited & retrieved our car from the now-obviously ‘unofficial’ parking lot.

As a historical aside, Sextus Pompey (son of Julius Caesar rival Pompey the Great) sometimes used Agrigento as a pirate base during his spat with Augustus around 40BC.

On the road again (kudos to Canned Heat – this tune always pops in my mind whenever I strike out on a new road) . . . we set off again for our coming digs in Menfi. Good roads again with lots of geographical eye candy. What a beautiful drive. The traffic was pretty light & the car’s passing ability was tested on numerous occasions. Of course, at the same time, Benzs & Alfa 149s seemed to enjoy leaving me in their dust regularly. The only 4 lane sections on this road were in the tunnels. Are you supposed to pass in the dark? Very strange why they haven’t put some slow vehicle lanes on some of the hills. Since the traffic was light, it was a non-issue for us but I can imagine that there are nice slow trucks with a substantial entourage on occasion. We stopped at a gas station/eatery around Montallegro for food but it was a pretty pitiful late lunch. The views spiced up dramatically south of Ribera. If you look north around here you can see pretty Caltabelloto perched on its mountain. That was a town I researched as a possible. The hwy sliced easily – albeit slowly with a bit more traffic - through a northern suburb of Sciacca & we were on our home stretch. At this point, I was following GPS co-ordinates 37°36'47.85"N / 13° 0'13.97"E. The Baglio San Vincenzo is rural & doesn’t have a proper street address so I had pegged it on Google Earth at home & written down the co-ords. We cut off the highway & wound up on a nice 2 lane road (that had a slow vehicle lane???) for several kms letting HER be our guide. This road was signed with an end in Palermo fwiw. The vistas here were the usual stunning btw. The GPS told me to turn right around a bend & lo & behold there was a sign for Baglio San Vincenzo pointing the way. We followed the GPS & the signs on a series of 1 lane paved roads that wound through farmland on a plateau studded with olive trees & vineyards with a windmill farm to the north on a brow of the hill. After 4 or 5 kms we pulled into the driveway.

Part 2 to follow . . .
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Old Jun 14th, 2009, 07:09 AM
  #46  
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Day 13 Menfi (Part 2)

The Baglio San Vincenzo is the home of the Lanzara winery. It is a rural farm with a large inner courtyard that dates from the 16th century. Much of the structure has been rebuilt over the centuries but parts of its church – yes, it has its own chapel – and a staircase etc remain & have been incorporated into the buildings.

They greeted us warmly & showed us the suite that we had rented – complete with a large veranda that is shared with the other suite. We had the Don Neli room named after one of the past owners of the estate.

This is a worked vineyard owned by a professor from Roma. Originally from Sicily, he bought the property in 2002. They produce wine & olive oil in a modern facility on site. Their fields are spread over the plateau & down the slopes on both sides. Two of the professor’s sisters run the Baglio.

The entrance.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...fi/baglio1.jpg

The courtyard left with the chapel in the background.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...fi/baglio2.jpg

The courtyard right with the old stairs. The arch under the stairs is the restaurant.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...fi/baglio3.jpg

Our living room.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...fi/baglio4.jpg

Bedroom.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...fi/baglio5.jpg

Bathroom with the slightly-strange shower massager combo.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...fi/baglio6.jpg

Veranda looking west – the other ½ is for the other suite.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...fi/baglio7.jpg

Veranda looking southeast with Menfi in the distance & the sea due south.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...fi/baglio8.jpg

After settling in (please don’t damage the crusty 16C stairs with your bags!) we wandered the grounds & had espresso & cappuccino in the great room beside reception that has sitting areas & a pool table for guests.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...fi/baglio9.jpg

Dinner was served at 8 pm. 3 courses with an appetizer, pasta with shrimp & small breaded pork or veal roulades on a skewer stuffed with egg & cheese etc (25€ pp) plus a bottle of Lanzara’s ’05 Cabernet for 16€. You are a relative captive for dinner since Menfi appears to have slim food options. But this was not a problem for us because the food was very good. The waitress was a bouncy English-speaking girl & she had an older man helping. There was only one other couple + child at dinner when we arrived & another couple wandered in a little later. We met the other sister (one checked us in) after dinner. Her daughter was getting married in the chapel on the coming Saturday & she inquired if we would be around to see the service at 11 am. She seemed to be encouraging us to stay for the ceremony but my wife thinks she wanted to make sure that we would leave in time before because they had a gaggle of guests coming. I like to think that I am right because she was so friendly. After dinner we sat on our veranda & watched the twinkling lights in the distance.
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Old Jun 14th, 2009, 07:38 AM
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great report, now I want to include Sicily in our next trip to Italy..........
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Old Jun 14th, 2009, 10:40 AM
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We're planning our next trip to Italy and looking into Sicily. This is so helpful. Thanks
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Old Jun 14th, 2009, 12:13 PM
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I'm really enjoying your photos but do you think you could put them all in 1 album with 1 link so people can scroll through rather than opening and closing windows to see them individually. Thanks!
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Old Jun 14th, 2009, 12:43 PM
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Day 14 Menfi

After yesterday’s long drive (3 ½ - hours with about 3 hrs at Agrigento) we needed to have a ‘soft’ day. The ruins of Selinunte were calling so we decided to drive over to view them & then we could go to the beach at Port Palo for lunch. It was only ½ hr pleasant drive to Selinunte. From the Baglio, you have to drive the one lane paved farm lanes to Menfi to get back on E45. Then after 10 kms or so you exit south to Selinunte which is another 6 kms or so right on the coast. Just follow the signs to a parking area & entrance center just after the rotary. This is a large site divided into 3 parts. One part – with the most intact temple – is on a hill about ¾ km to the rear of the entrance building. The acropolis sits on the next hill further west & closer to the sea about 2 kms away. Due to the distance, they let you drive into a secondary parking area beside the walls of the acropolis. We saw some people that walked it & felt very sorry for them in the sun. The third area we didn’t go to is found via a path that leads down the hill to the west.

The acropolis is a warren of foundations with a couple of temples thrown in - all enclosed in an outer bastion. They had a pretty nice view. One temple has some columns held up by scaffolding for some unsightly reason & the other is just a rock pile now. The house foundations stretching over the hill are choked with scrub plants but with there are some paths for the adventurous. Very different feel then from the ruins at Agrigento. Somehow more real but far more decrepit.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3.../selinute5.jpg

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3.../selinute1.jpg

The intact (rebuilt) temple is found on the other hill closer to the main car park with 2 more temples jumbled behind it. The intact one is very photogenic.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3.../selinute2.jpg

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3.../selinute3.jpg

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3.../selinute4.jpg

Then it was off in search of Porto Palo. We drove inland & picked up the rural route that winds (literally) up & down & around through farmland. After we cut off towards Port Palo, we went right & drove into PP proper & its Saracen tower on our 1st attempt. It sits on a bluff & we eyeballed a beach below to the east that looked promising. We drove back out & took the left fork this time & soon we were coming down the bluff to the beach service road (“Of course, MORE CURVES!!!!” – from my wife). One restaurant – Ristorante da Vittorio - had the biggest signs & we gave it a whirl. It was right at the end of the laneway so it’s hard to miss. The food was very good & about 12€ for a pasta primi. I had spaghetti with mussels & my wife had the prawns. Both dishes were fresh & quite good. We walked on the beach to stick our toes in the cold Mediterranean (I actually didn’t but she did). Only about 4 sunbathers on the whole beach.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...portopalo1.jpg

Then it was back through shuttered Menfi (lunchtime) & on to the Baglio for siesta. On the way we snapped a few more pics . . .

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...nfi/rural1.jpg

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...nfi/rural2.jpg

And the Baglio from a distance . . .

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...i/baglio11.jpg

After coffee, the reception’s ‘sister’ asked us if we wanted a tour of their winemaking facility. The professor’s daughter (yeah, it was starting to confuse us too) took us for an impromptu tour along with assorted other guests that had rolled in that afternoon including 4 Dutch couples. Lanzara is a very modern winemaker with a capacity of 1 million bottles. Dinner was a copy of the night before with different dishes (‘pig’) & a different wine - ’06 Lanzara Terre dell”Istrice – their Nero d’Avola/Cabernet blend. It was all very good once again. One of the Dutch women abruptly got bored with their resident ‘loudmouth’ & pounced on us for conversation. She was actually nice & told us that they were on a 4 day trek of Sicily. They drove to Genoa (9 hrs) & took the ferry to Palermo (20 hrs) so they could tour with their own car.

Later during coffee, we were introduced to the professor who was in residence since the family had started to roll in for the wedding. They were all very pleasant & made us quite welcome & he was very happy that I was enjoying his wines.

Clunk. Another good day under our belt.

Next up: Drive to Palermo with a stop at Segesta on the way . . .
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Old Jun 14th, 2009, 01:23 PM
  #51  
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adrienne

Once I get it all done, I will post it on our Travels website with the pictures as thumbnails. I personally like the pictures to be with the text so they are relatable.

I will see if I can bucket an album at some point . . .

Ian
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Old Jun 14th, 2009, 01:27 PM
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I should have provided the link . . .

http://members.rennlist.com/imcarthur/travels.htm

Ian
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Old Jun 14th, 2009, 01:42 PM
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Thank you Ian!
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Old Jun 14th, 2009, 03:19 PM
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Ian-
I cannot believe you ate at Da Vittorio! I had one of the most memorable meals ever there in 2003:
http://www.wired2theworld.com/sicily2003part5.html
There was no menu, just whatever they were serving for lunch that day. Course after course of seafood. Fantastic.
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Old Jun 15th, 2009, 03:37 AM
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Kristina

Yes, we came upon it quite by accident. They had a sign at every turn on the way to the Porto Palo beach area so we took a chance. Here is the restaurant from the beach:

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...a-vittorio.jpg

Ian
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Old Jun 15th, 2009, 03:49 AM
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Day 15 Palermo with a visit to Segesta

When I titled this ode ‘Doin’ the Ruins’ I was not joking. We enjoy poking around ruins. Probably me more than my wife but she drifts off & photographs flowers when she gets bored so we both have fun. I love trying to piece it all together & understand the lives lived before on these sites . . .

Anyways . . . we were off for Palermo. Yes, the Black Hole of driving in Western world according to many although it appears to share this title with Napoli. I have driven in Napoli accidentally & totally, absolutely lost, so I guess it’s time to get its evil twin under my belt.

We packed & said our goodbyes to the Baglio. It had gotten really windy the night before & that continued as the Baglio was abuzz with wedding preparations. The ‘sisters’ & much of their family wished us safe travels at breakfast. I would rate the Baglio San Vincenzo as a great place to relax. They are a touch rough around the edges but the family feel was there. The room was great (except . . . the garbage containers are under the front of the balcony . . .) The food was good. Limited selection of course but good. The 1st night they asked if we wanted fish or meat so I am sure that no one will go hungry. The breakfast was basic but adequate. We have found that breakfasts in Sicily do tend to be more basic than many other places we have visited. The people at the Baglio were excellent. All of them friendly & helpful. They were also only several weeks away from having a swimming pool finished which would certainly enhance a relaxing stay in the heat of the summer. And the Lanzara wines are quite good – I am actually drinking one now as I write this . . . and I wish them success in their endeavor.

Btw our room Don Neli was 150€ per night. I believe that they have a total of 12 rooms. Highly recommended.

Website: http://www.bagliosanvincenzo.it/

A last picture of the courtyard in front of the chapel . . .

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...i/baglio10.jpg

We easily found our way back to E45 for the journey to Castelvetrano where we spiked north on A90 which was a 4 lane road for the duration. Then it was clear sailing. As per usual our heads were doing the ‘Hey, look at that’ swivel for this drive. We exited onto E933 to go to Segesta. The mountains are pretty stunning here btw. Segesta exits immediately after a long tunnel but of course, my GPS blanked in the tunnel & I missed the exit. It was a 10 km drive to find an exit to turn around. When I did make the exit you almost immediately turn right. Then you have to turn right or left. I searched for a sign but of course, I missed it & went right. After 4 kms or so, I decided that we were inevitably heading in the wrong direction. Back to that intersection again, but this time I did see the sign & shortly after we pulled into the stony Segesta site parking lot. Tickets were bought & by inquiry, we found that there was a bus to take you up to the theater which was 2 kms or so up a monster hill. And yes, it is a monster hill. Some people did walk it but no thanks. The bus appears to cycle every 30 minutes but I could be wrong. From the upper bus lot, you swing up & to your right & there are some stone abodes that have been partially reconstruction. Then follow the path down & to the left to the theater. Absolutely incredible views everywhere. Wow. And the theater was NOT staging a production, so it wasn’t messed up like the one in Siracusa.
The theater

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...a/theater1.jpg

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...a/theater2.jpg

And the view

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...gesta/view.jpg

The lower ruin is the Temple. Just beautiful in its setting on the hill beside the gorge. Another Wow!

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...ta/temple1.jpg

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...ta/temple2.jpg

So there you have it. We had been ruined. Toarmina, Siracusa, Villa Romana della Casale, Agrigento, Selinunte & Segesta. We had visited them all. There were many other sites in Sicily that had tempted me but I just couldn’t work them in. Oh, well . . . maybe next time.

Now it was time to brace ourselves for the drive to Palermo. And into Palermo at that. I had booked the Hilton Villa Igliea which is on the waterfront at the west end of the harbor. When planning this trip, I quickly realized that hotel to airport transfers were not cheap because it was so far from the city center. So I decided to drop the car at the AVIS outlet near the sea terminal on Francesco Crispi rather than at the airport to save at least one way of the transfer costs . . .

Part 2 to follow . . .
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Old Jun 15th, 2009, 05:53 AM
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"hotel to airport transfers were not cheap" - I took the bus, which was fine, and I believe there's also a train.

Photos of Segesta are great - sorry I missed it - passed by on the bus to Trapani, but you can't see it from the road.
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Old Jun 15th, 2009, 01:19 PM
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Day 15 Palermo (Part 2)

[Errata: A90 above should be A29/E90]

While reading Sicily travel reports from posters, there was one consistent theme that was universal: Don’t drive it Palermo. Now I am a Road Warrior. My occupation requires me to drop into strange cities, rent a car & make my way around to customers, restaurants, hotels & airports. Of course, the bulk of this has been done throughout North America but I am pretty good at driving away from home. When our itinerary was coming together, our drive into Palermo happened to fall on a Saturday. This was good news because I could avoid the workday crush in the city. Since we didn’t know our timing for arrival, I booked the rental drop-off for the following morning: Sunday. It was a good plan & worked quite well . . .

When we left the Baglio in the morning, I planned to go to Segesta & then possibly – depending upon time & mood – stop in Monreale on the way in. We didn’t finish Segesta until about 1 pm so we decided to nix Monreale & go directly to the Hilton – which was another freebie from Hilton Honors btw. We figured that we could bus out on Sunday or Monday to Monreale.

It was a great drive into Palermo with the mountains towering above us on the right & the sea to the left for the drive along A29. The traffic started to pickup just west of the airport. Photo radar warnings on my GPS did too but they were warning about 130 km/hr etc & there was no fear that I was driving that speed. I exited the freeway when the GPS told me to & dove in.

Yes, traffic was chaotic. But after many days of Sicilian driving I was pretty used to it by now – although still somewhat apprehensive. Even in small towns this chaos is common but on a much smaller scale. And we had witnessed similar mania in Roma so it came as no surprise. One lane allows 2 vehicles side by side, 2 allows 3 etc. Motorcycles thread their way through stopped vehicles. Rotaries are a free-for-all but seem to work in some chaotic fashion. Stop signs mean slow slightly & blast through. You pass whenever you can, wherever you can – city street or rural hwy. To enter a road you just keep nosing out until a slight pause allows you to turn. Parking is next to impossible but any square inch is fair game. Anytime you pull over or attempt to turn around, some other driver will be impatiently waiting . . . and on . . . and on . . .

We had no difficult getting to the hotel except for its immediate locale. The street was under construction & reduced & 4 roads intersected at strange angles just in front of the hotel without the benefit of a traffic light or a rotary. This made it a bit of a zoo in front. I missed it on the 1st blast by & circled around the corner – with some difficulty. On the 2nd attempt, I sailed right into the valet area & shut it down. We had arrived. Insert sigh of relief here.

The Hilton Villa Igiea is a century old Liberty-style villa & sits in a so-so area (more later) in between a mountain & Palermo’s harbor. A grand hotel that has catered to the wealthy – and HH members – over the years. We checked in with ease & were ushered to our room. Since it was a freebie, we received a room on the side, with a nice view of a palm tree rather than the paying guests who often have patios & wonderful sea views. They scored huge points with my wife when only 5 minutes after getting into our room, a sweets & fruit tray arrived with a bottle of chilled water. Nice touch.

Villa Igiea

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...mo/igliea4.jpg

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...mo/igliea7.jpg

Our room # 210 – had a strange entryway that was totally useless.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...mo/igliea2.jpg

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...mo/igliea1.jpg

We booked Lo Scuderio for dinner at 8 pm & taxied over. Just 4 blocks from the hotel, we went through the most disgusting garbage filled streets I have ever seen anywhere. The smell was atrocious. My wife & I simultaneously looked at each in the back of the cab startled by the scene. There was garbage in piles, remnants of burnt garbage in piles & crap all over the gutters & sidewalk. It was appalling. Traffic & people were everywhere & going about their business as usual amidst this wasteland. Once we left the harbor area & got up by the prison, things improved dramatically & it was like any other grittier city, but it left its mark on us.

Lo Scuderia (Via Turati Filippo, 7 – 091581628) is across the street from Teatro Politeama. I read decent reviews somewhere. And a group of 6 Americans that were also staying at the Igiea must have read the same review because they came in 10 minutes after us. This restaurant felt like they were just going through the motions. The service, the food & the ambience just seemed tired somehow. We share an appetizer & a primi & had separate meat cortornos + the usual bottle of wine. Not cheap @ 82€. We had been spoiled in Modica & Siracusa with very good cheap meals. Splitting had become our routine because my wife is not a big eater & even I couldn’t handle all 3 courses in one sitting. But we could drink a bottle of Sicilian wine! I think we only had dessert once or twice because it was just too much food. I know, this should not be a problem . . . and it wasn’t, it’s just a fact. So I would rate Lo Scuderia a 6/10. Nothing terribly wrong – except the meat was tough – but no reason to seek it out.

The taxi driver that took us over offered to pick us up at 9:30 pm. We agreed & sure enough, he pulled up on time. His name was Carmelo (3898167849). He spoke passable English & bantered on. We expressed interest in going to see the Capuchin Catacombs & he said he would take us roundtrip for 30€. That was basically cab fare – maybe just a tad more. We set a time of 3 pm with him & I got his cell # in case we went into town earlier & didn’t need him etc.

Then it was back to our oasis . . . the Igiea . . . for the night.

Speaking of which, here’s a night shot of the pool area.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...mo/igliea9.jpg

More Palermo coming in Day 16
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Old Jun 15th, 2009, 04:30 PM
  #59  
Ian
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Day 16 Palermo

We awoke & had a good buffet breakfast – the best we had seen all holiday. We sat outside on the terrace with waiters milling around a finger-snap away. Yeah, I could get used to this. The grounds were truly outstanding & this little oasis (to use the word again) seemed miles & miles away from Palermo which was right outside the gate.

But of course, we had to venture out to drop the rental car off at AVIS. So once more, I suctioned the GPS in place & we sped out into Palermo. Well, we tried. The road in front of the hotel was solid with cars heading out of the city to the beach. I sat there waiting for the slightest break in traffic for at least 5 minutes if not longer. Finally I saw a hesitant driver & a 20 ft break in traffic & I nosed out & away. To avoid the nearby garbage cesspool, I retraced part of out incoming route & then hung a left towards the rental location. Traffic was actually reasonably light & a non-issue but I was tense & ready for vehicular battle. I filled the beast with diesel along the way for 17€. This brought the grand total to 60€ for fuel costs for the entire time of our rental. Unfortunately I forgot to record the mileage in or out but this seemed pretty cheap considering the price of fuel.

Then we negotiated our way to Francesco Crispi which I had seen the previous night on the way to dinner. With a quick turnaround on an overpass & I pulled it up on the boulevard right in front of AVIS on the north side of FC. Street parking would have been tough & I would have had to do it ½ on the boulevard anyway to allow traffic by. The shop was open with several renters. An Australian was trying to rent a car without his driver’s license. What’s up with that, mate? He had left it in his hotel room & had to phone someone to bring it because he was refused. While I was waiting a man came out of the AVIS garage & obviously asked the clerk: whose car was on the boulevard? He then launched at me with a stream of arrogant Italian & I calmly said “no capisce”. He gave up & sullenly wandered off. The car was deemed as ‘perfect’ & I secretly smiled thinking about the curbs I drove over & the wall I backed into & the poor clutch . . . Just as I was going to ask the clerk to call us a taxi, one pulled up outside – probably the Australian’s wife arriving with his license. Back to the Igiea we went. Our driving was over.

After this mid-morning excitement, we decided to catch some rays by the pool. This was a holiday after all & the Igiea certainly felt like a resort. We were feeling pretty lazy. We did wander down the street again (we had the night before for cigarettes & Coke) to get paninis from the shop around the corner. I say around the corner but it was actually down a very busy road that went around a bend & you had to walk on the street to get around parked cars that blocked the sidewalk & then dash across the street to the shops. This was well before the nasty area so we felt safe enough in the daytime hoofing around – just not too far though. The shop was closed on Sunday though so we grabbed lunch at the hotel. No cheap but the lunch/bar terrace is a joy to sit on watching the yachts below in the harbor. The food was just so-so – especially for the stiff price. Obviously the atmosphere was included in the tab.

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...ermo/view2.jpg

After some hemming & hawing, we got ready to go see the Capuchin Catacombs. We had seen this on some travel show & though it looked particularly macabre so we wanted to see it. Carmelo was waiting out front right on time, so off we went. I mentioned to him to please point out any other sites of interest that were enroute to the Monastery. He did one better but I am getting ahead of myself . . .

For those that haven’t heard about it, the Catacombe dei Cappuccini is under the monastery & is the ‘burial’ place for thousands of people. They are mummified & hanging from pegs in the wall – all dressed in their funereal finery. Truly, seriously bizarre. There are several hallways of this & many are categorized – professionals, clergy etc. And the star, a 2 year old girl perfectly preserved in 1920. The dates for most seem to be 1850s – 1890s. I will admit I snuck some pictures. Bad, bad me.

Capuchin Catacombs. Please excuse the slight fuzziness. I took them without flash so I wouldn’t hurt these works of ????????????????

And be forewarned: THESE ARE VERY STRANGE & POTENTIALLY DISTURBING

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...o/capuchin.jpg

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3.../capuchin2.jpg

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3.../capuchin3.jpg

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3.../capuchin4.jpg

Back out in the sunshine, it took a few moments to absorb what we had seen but Carmelo was nonchalant. “They were rich people & wanted to be preserved there.”

After that we got a great bonus. On his own initiative, Carmelo took us on a driving tour – with commentary – to all of the greatest hits in downtown Palermo. He pulled over each time so I could hop out for photos.

Palazzo dei Normanni

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...o/palermo1.jpg

Port Nuovo

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...o/palermo2.jpg

Cathedral

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...o/palermo4.jpg

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...o/palermo3.jpg

San Cataldo

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...o/palermo6.jpg

La Martorana

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...o/palermo7.jpg

Piazza Pretoria. Carmelo had some long explanation about the fountain & how shocking it was at one time or other because of the church on one side & the monastery on the other etc etc . . .

http://i67.photobucket.com/albums/h3...o/palermo5.jpg

He drove us by the Teatro Massimo & told us about the Godfather scene with Michael Corleone. And showed us the alleys across the street – now filled with eateries but pretty nasty places not too many years ago. And on the topic of the Mafia, he said there is no real problem there since they only have one Mafia in Palermo. Two would be a problem but not one. And he said that to get a driver’s license/cab license was easy in Palermo. You go to school & learn for 2 or 3 months or you just put 500€ into the right hands. It’s simple.

His tour took us through narrow alleys & streets to buildings & piazzas all over the old section of town. He showed us the banyan tree. And told us about Saint Rosalia. We saw it all without walking & with great stories – all from a local point of view. Better than the guide books – not as accurate I am sure - but still better. He dropped us back at the hotel & I gave him 40€ for his 2 hour tour. He was happy. We were happy.

For dinner, we decided to go with the atmosphere & pretend we belonged mingling with the Villa Igiea clientele. We had dinner on the terrace & then retired to the bar to listen to the piano player’s repertoire & sip cocktails. He only stumped me with one song all night as we sat under the stars watched the moon over the Gulfo di Palermo . . . I told my wife that she had to call me Don Ian from now on . . .

Coming up . . . Our Last Day in Sicily & Conclusion
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Old Jun 15th, 2009, 05:35 PM
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Ian,

Your impromtu tour with Carmelo sounds just great! What a treat. It's those things you remember and enjoy the most.
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