The Adventures of the Anonymous Four in Naples and Rome
At some point had I clearly stopped paying attention when Husband was
booking the holiday and failed to notice that he had booked a flight which
meant we had to get up at 3.00am .
So at 3.00 am , up we
got. And jolly chuffed about that we all were. Remarkably, when we arrived at
Gatwick at the fine old hour 4.50am
there was already a reasonably significant queue at the Easy Jet check in. The
family in front of us included a teen aged girl who had particularly bad
‘morning hair’.
Having got through the check in queue we then joined another queue at
passport control where the smiling chappie in attendance commented to Husband
that he wasn’t going on holiday, but rather deserved a medal. I should perhaps
at this juncture mention that Stepchild the Elder and Stepchild the Younger
were accompanying us on the trip. Over the next few days Husband frequently
commented on how very right this young man had been.
At the security check we had to remove our shoes. I commented to Stepchild
the Elder that if she had managed to get an explosive device in her extremely
minimalist flip flops then I would be rather impressed and proud to be blown up
in the process. Perhaps I should have said nothing as she was soon afterward
selected (supposedly randomly) to be searched more thoroughly.
After all this queuing there was only just enough time to grab a quick
breakfast (at which point Stepchild the Younger was already eyeing up any
potential talent) before it was time to board the plane. This involved going
outside, where it was raining. As it was raining, we decided to leave the
country. Immediately.
The flight out went well – having said that, the vast majority of
flights go well. The ones that go badly don’t always leave survivors. To
entertain ourselves during the flight Husband informed Stepchild the Younger
that the hotel in Naples
was a convent run by nuns and we would have to attend mass every day. This was
not entirely a lie. The hotel was called Il Convento and used to be a convent.
Everything else was complete rubbish. However, for a while she did actually
believe him. We also passed some time discussing philosophy – or did we. Did we
only think we had been discussing it? It raised an interesting question in
respect of children who quite often cover their head in some way and believe
that if they can’t see anyone, then no one can see them. Therefore, did a child
know it had a back, even though it couldn’t see it. Nobody knew the answer,
despite of us having been children at some point. Unfortunately there were no other
suitable children available for comment.
We had a lovely view of the Alps and the west coast of Italy before
finally flying low over Rome (excellent views of the Coliseum and Vatican City)
before landing.
We ventured out of the plane onto the waiting bus. It was hot. The bus
drove us around the aeroplane to a door into the terminal building about 5m
away from where we had started.
We collected our suitcases – some of which appeared to have had a far
more arduous journey than us, and joined the very long queue for the car hire.
While waiting Stepchild the Younger got rather excited about seeing a nun
waiting at the airport – waiting for God one assumes.
Husband eventually reached the front of the queue and armed with some
rather dodgy directions we set off to find the hire car. It was a bit of a
walk, and this really should have been a clue about the holiday ahead. But we
didn’t realise it at the time. The car we got was an Opal Zafira and not the
Alpha Romeo that Husband had been hankering after. He dealt with the disappointment
well – only mentioning it a couple of times a day thereafter.
Finally, we set off for the long drive south to Naples and the girls promptly fell asleep.
Within minutes of getting onto the motorway we ground to a halt. Clearly a
significant halt. Cars were stopped for as far the eye could see (which
actually wasn’t that far as there was a bend ahead). However, the engines were
turned off, car doors thrown open and people were wandering about on the
motorway which implied they had been there for a few minutes.
Stepchild the Elder and Stepchild the Younger had now woken up and I
warned them we may sit here for a few hours (based on my last experience of
traffic jams in Italy ).
We listened to the radio to see if we could hear any traffic news – I did pick
up the name of the road we were on but rather inconveniently this was mentioned
after the details about the traffic problems on it. Before long we could see
people rushing back to their cars and assumed that the hold up would soon be
over. The cars started moving again and we passed a fireman standing on the
hard shoulder hosing the still smoking ground next to the motorway, blackened
by the fire which had been clearly been blazing there only minutes before.
We continued the drive south, past the high and barren Apennine Mountains
which run down the spine of Italy. As it had been a long day and lunch time was
upon us when we pulled off the motorway to Pontecorvo in search of food.
Pontecorvo was a small and unremarkable town. At the bottom of one street was
an attractive outside eating area. Assuming this was an eating establishment we
ventured inside – only to discover that this rather elaborate place was nothing
more than a coffee and ice cream bar. However, the owner did inform us that
there was a panini and pizza bar further up the road. We found the suggested
place and sat outside with large slices of pizza. What we didn’t realise was
that the tree we were sitting underneath was particularly prone to shedding
leaves, insects and general unidentified bits which liberally spread themselves
over us, the food and drinks. However, we had more or less eaten everything and
continued our way towards Naples .
The land around us reminded me of Sardinia
– mountainous and parched dry it appeared barren and yet it was green with
vines and crops, somehow managing to be fruitful in the punishing heat.
As we approached Naples
we came to the toll at the end of the motorway. The system of queuing for the
toll booths was an interesting one in that there was no system. A chaotic mish
mash of vehicles eventually spread out into booth specific lines a few metres
before each booth. Husband approached the booth and handed his ticket to the
man – and then dropped it. He got out of the car only to find that the ticket
had completely disappeared. He squeezed himself between the car and the tight
barriers of the toll aisle, eventually finding the ticket and getting extremely
dirty in the process. ‘I needed to stretch my legs’ he commented when he
finally got back into the car.
Having duly upset the people behind us to quite a considerable degree we
ventured onto the Naples
ring road and started to follow the directions to the hotel. There was a tiny
flaw in this plan. The directions asked us to come off at the junction for
Piazza Municipio. There was no such exit. The situation wasn’t helped by the
fact that our detailed map did not extend to the outskirts of Naples so I had no way of knowing where we
were. Before long we were heading out of Naples
and back towards Rome .
We went through the toll booth back onto the motorway and Husband then took the
first exit off to head back into Naples .
We were now on small cobbled roads that rumbled through vaguely interesting but
shabby residential streets. With no sign posts or clue as to where we were or
which we way we wanted to go we meandered on, occasionally reversing back up
dead end roads or being thwarted at one way streets. After considerable time
and an unnecessarily difficult and stressful journey we finally found the
elusive – and frankly unattractive – Piazza Municipio. The hotel was only a few
streets away in the Spanish quarter – a labyrinth of narrow cobbled streets
that crept up the steep hill in parallel criss-cross order – in stark contrast
to the balcony crammed chaos on the tall buildings above, strewn with washing
and flags. The streets themselves were crammed tightly with cars and lunatic
scooter drivers.
We were shown to our room. It was on the top floor and the friendly
manservant – who we nicknamed Mario - dutifully brought all our rather heavy
suitcases upstairs in the extremely tiny lift. On the plus side the room had an
outside balcony – complete with lemon tree However, it also had only two double
beds crammed together in one room. Husband strongly believed this was not what
he ordered and – still sore about not getting the Alpha Romeo – went downstairs
to complain. Before long Mario returned and took all the suitcases back down
two storeys to our new room which had a mezzanine floor with two beds for the
girls, overhanging the room with our bed. There was a balcony which could
comfortably accommodate one person and which dangled over the busy, narrow
street below. We could have jumped from our balcony to that of the house
opposite if we were called James Bond. We could much more easily have stolen the
washing which hung from their balcony. We did neither.
In both this room and the previous one I noticed ear plugs. I wondered
whether these were an acknowledgement of the flight path out of Naples airport which by
and large went right across the city at an altitude of around 3000 feet. The
planes were big. They were noisy and they were more or less every half hour.
Having freshened up we set out to wander around our new patch and find
somewhere for dinner. We headed towards Castel dell’Ovo or Castle Egg via
Castel Nuovo (Castle New, presumably to distinguish it from Castel Vecchio –
castle old. But there was no Castle Old). This was not an easy or pleasant
evening stroll. Firstly we had to negotiate the extremely busy, multiple laned
roads. There was a complete absence of anything that could be considered nice
or pretty to walk past. Everything seemed rather run down, dirty and just a bit
tired and shabby. We passed stalls of barbequed sweet corn amongst the litter,
dog turds and ample supplies of homeless people.
In the squares around Castel dell’Ovo were multiple places to eat. We
started with a drink at a coast side bar with a marvellous view of Vesuvius –
and where I became aware of the itch of a couple of insect bites on my ankle. We
selected a restaurant for dinner, more or less at random. Being by the sea, Husband
and I selected two mussel dishes for starters. They were delicious. I opted for
a pasta dish for main course which provided no clue whatsoever in the name
about what might be in it. However, that is part of the joy of travel – eating
obscure food. Everyone else opted for pizza, including one calzone which is a Naples speciality. Husband
had a seafood pizza which was liberally covered with shellfish, still in their
shells, and looked rather like hard work. My pasta was red and tasted quite
harmless. I am none the wiser about what might have been in it. Dinner was
accompanied by Vesuvius wine – which seemed appropriate as it loomed over us on
the horizon in a vaguely ominous way.
We wandered back to the hotel via Piazza del Plebiscito – a huge, unlit,
unpopulated, colonnaded square (although it was round) – pausing on the way to
buy an ice cream. Well, it was night time and still somewhere around 25◦C. We
ambled into the eerily lit Galleria Umberto 1 – a huge, high ceilinged steel
and glass arcade with a detailed mosaic floor. It was a shopping mall, but
seemed dull and deserted – not helped by it being night time and the shops
being closed.
Arriving back at the hotel we tumbled into bed for a much needed sleep.
We all slept badly. And then, at 7am the following morning there came an alarm
call which I do not recall ordering – a church that sounded as though it was in
the room let rip a cacophony of bell ringing. Not wanting to miss out, all
nearby churches joined in. This was Sunday morning in a catholic country. After
ensuring we were all completely awake, the deafening call to mass ended – with
half hourly reminders thereafter. The shutters on the balcony doors very
effectively kept out the light, heat and general noise (including the aeroplane
sounds) but were no match for this. Soon afterwards, I could just hear the
strains of psalms being chanted and promptly gave up any further attempt at
sleep. The others had managed to doze off again – except Stepchild the Younger,
so I went up stairs to tell her she was late for mass and we hadn’t been lying
after all. The reason for the earplugs was suddenly quite clear.
My insect bites had not improved overnight. In fact, it was reasonably
safe to say that they had got worse given that my leg and ankle had started to
swell.
We dressed and went downstairs for breakfast. There were two tables of
food – one was a traditional Italian breakfast which consisted largely of gooey
cakes, and the other was apparently English breakfast and offered up fresh
pineapple, cheese, cold meats and boiled eggs. The waitress brought us our
coffee – one small jug of hot coffee and one extremely large jug of hot milk.
This was all the clues I needed about the strength of the coffee. I put a mere
dribble into the cup and topped it up with milk – it still looked a little
darker than I would normally have had my coffee. Husband, being a brave chap
who views strong coffee with the same ‘go on, I dare you’ spirit with which
young men view a very hot curry, had a whole cup of black coffee. I doubted if
he would ever sleep again.
Our guide book had suggested that the tourist attractions of Vesuvius
and Capri were best avoided at weekends
because they are completely overrun with tourists. Therefore we decided to make
this our day in Naples
and wandered off through shadowy narrow streets and small squares towards
Spaccanapoli. This ancient street was apparently the place to come to get a
feel for Naples
and is one of the main shopping areas. The street is for the most part
pedestrianised although this doesn’t guarantee no traffic as evidenced by the
scooters that hurtled passed us. It was straight, long and narrow. The high
buildings prevented the early morning sun from lighting it, so it was also
quite dark. If this was meant to give a feel for the city, the feeling we got
was that it was closed. This was partly bad planning on our part – we hadn’t
really thought through what we day we would do what activity and had allowed
ourselves to be guided by the aptly named guide book. What it had failed to
remind us was that the city would be shut on Sundays – Catholic country, day of
rest and all that. There was, therefore, a small flaw in our original plan.
Quickly deciding that today would not be a shopping day we took a taxi
across to Castel dell’Ovo. This is the oldest castle in Napes and occupies the
tiny island of Megaris . The bridge across to the castle
did have a cooked egg on it which Husband suspected was the result of an
experiment into frying an egg on the hot pavement (now out of the shade the
heat of the sun was already picking up). The castle itself was quiet, ancient
and mildly dull. It looked far more impressive from afar. We walked up the steep path into it and looked
out over the bay from the many vantage points. I saw a man in a boat in the
blue sea below – presumably fishing, and cooed to Husband – ‘Can you see the
man in a boat’. He giggled and Stepchild the Younger demanded to know what so
funny. Naturally we didn’t tell her. It was while wandering around the ramparts
of this castle that we first identified the direct correlation between size of
top and size of belly on display.
After leaving the castle we had a quick drink and there started the
blight of chair leg – the distinct imprint of a chair seat pattern on the back
of ones thighs. We ambled along the promenade towards an area where people
seemed to be in the sea. There were sunbathers and swimmers all along the huge
sea defence boulders around Castel dell’Ovo but we could also see significant
amounts of detritus in the sea. All the way along the promenade were dark,
browned bodies sprawled on the rocks like limpets.
We found our way the most popular area which did have a whole 3m long
stretch of black sandy beach. It was an accidental beach that had been formed
by the coastal defences. Here there was a high built line of boulders a little
way off the coast which helped create the calm water ‘beach’ and also provided
a rather cool island for swimmers and divers to aim for. Dozens of people were
in the water. We paddled for a bit and then continued our stroll through Naples .
Our intention was to head towards the Funiculare di Chiaia which went up
to the top of the Vomero hill from where we would have a panoramic view of the
city and it’s threatening volcano.
We walked via the Villa Comunale gardens. Apparently on Sunday
afternoons this park is filled with smartly dressed families parading up and
down under the shady palms. All we saw were a boy and his father kicking a
football around in the shade of a huge, century-old bandstand. However, it was midday and extremely hot. Here and
there silent people lingered on the shaded benches. Something about mad dogs
and Englishmen and the heat of the mid day sun sprung to mind as we walked down
the baking, dry avenue in the full glare of the sun. Now and then a welcome
breeze would rush towards us – but this also blew up the dry sand from the path
and filled our eyes with grit.
To reach the funicular we needed to walk along a few streets which did
gradually creep up the hill, and I took the view that funicular was getting the
easy end of the bargain as we were climbing half the hill for it. But I was
wrong. A surprisingly efficient service carried us to the top of the hill,
climbing quickly through a long and incredibly steep tunnel.
Foolishly we had assumed that finding the hulking Castel Sant’Elmo would
be relatively easy. However, in the now expected absence of any signposts
whatsoever, we used our map to navigate our way to it.
Eventually we happened upon its walls and then had to try to find the
way in. The castle itself was closed but we could go up on the battlements and
even then the cashier refused to give any change for the admission fee so we
had to try and find the exact money. We were learning that people in Naples generally did not
aim to please.
All much in need of a drink or ice cream, we imagined that someone would
have thought of having a small refreshments establishment on the vast
battlements.
We came out of the lift onto a huge expanse of red bricked nothingness
with not so much as an ice cream stand. Naples
just did not absorb the tourist thing at all. I realised it was Sunday but the
city was almost silent, and in many of the streets we had been the only people.
It was not the busy, vibrant, throng of life that it claims to be. I didn’t
like Naples .
It was a densely populated city of poverty and barely controlled
anarchy. This is a city where the red lights at junctions command about as much
authority at Christmas tree decorations and where families ride three or four
to a scooter – children perched perilously on the foot plate. Quite often the
driver himself is a child and no scooter pays the slightest attention to one
way streets or no entry signs, to their own ultimate peril. The historic
churches and palazzi which liberally pepper the city are not as polished and
restored as those of Venice and Rome and it has a general air of shabby,
crumbling baroque. Apparently Naples
is improving. It was only in 1993 that the then mayor of the city embarked upon
a huge clean up campaign and improvements to the city’s infrastructure and
traffic congestion. I hadn’t been to the city prior to 1993 and so have no
comparison, but at the moment, none of the improvements are apparent. We had
also come to realise that in August all the locals go north into cooler
climates. Naples
was closed for August. And it felt like it.
We walked around to look at the panoramic view of the city and then went
back to the Funiculare Centrale.
On the way we stopped at a trattoria for a drink to the intense grievance of the proprietor. He gave us the drinks but pointed out with as much bad attitude as he could muster that this was a restaurant and not a bar, and he added a cover charge to the bill which was almost as much as the drinks themselves. We left in minutes. Had anyone bothered to provide a bar we would happily have used it. Also, given that it was late afternoon and there was a distinct absence of any other trade he may have been a little more gracious to accept whatever passing business he could get.
On the way we stopped at a trattoria for a drink to the intense grievance of the proprietor. He gave us the drinks but pointed out with as much bad attitude as he could muster that this was a restaurant and not a bar, and he added a cover charge to the bill which was almost as much as the drinks themselves. We left in minutes. Had anyone bothered to provide a bar we would happily have used it. Also, given that it was late afternoon and there was a distinct absence of any other trade he may have been a little more gracious to accept whatever passing business he could get.
The Funiculare Centrale took us almost the hotel door and we returned to
our room for a rest. My leg had by now swollen quite considerably and my foot
had swelled out between the restrictions of the straps of my sandals. My bites
had now turned into blisters. I pressed on one of them to try and pop it – the
blister liquid shot out straight into Husband’s face. We all thought it was
really funny but curiously Husband was less amused.
After a quick rest, we put on swim suits and headed back out the to
small beach area, via Via Chiaia. This was the expensive end of town with
designer shops lining the road, and was certainly the most attractive area that
we had wandered through.
The Chiaia district is an enclave of privilege. Its elegant streets are
a world away from the run-down tenement buildings of neighbouring areas and the
cramped dark streets of the Spanish Quarter.
We lay on the rocks while Stepchild the Elder and Stepchild the Younger
swam, and explored the boulder island, then returned to the hotel to change for
dinner.
We eventually found somewhere for dinner in Via Medina in a fantastic
old building with high timbered ceilings and paintings of ancient Naples completely
covering the walls. The menu was hand written and difficult to read which
significantly affected by ability to understand it.
Husband opted for deep fried seafood which came with a significant
amount of unidentified small and bony fish. The girls had pizza and again I
picked something that was a complete unknown. It turned out to be a pork chop
with cold artichokes. I was quite relieved when Stepchild the Elder couldn’t
eat all her pizza and I helped polish it off, still being quite hungry. We made
a small error with Stepchild the Younger’s pizza – ordering a pepperoni one and
slightly forgetting (until it was delivered) that in Italy pepperoni means peppers. So
she was presented with a pizza riddled with red peppers which she removed in
their entirety (and fed to Husband) before the eating the cheese pizza that
remained. The whole meal was served with the expected air of arrogance, disdain
and general bad attitude.
We retired to the hotel slowly as by now I could barely stand due to the
pain in my leg. It was now swollen from my knee all the way down my foot. That
night we had a better nights sleep but were still ruthlessly dragged into
consciousness by the 7am
bells, although this was quite clearly not the insistent Sunday call to
prayers.
My leg was still swollen, oozing and suppurating and closely resembling
an attack of the plague but it much less painful to walk so we stuck with our
original intention of going to Vesuvius after indulging more adventurously into
the ample supply of morning cakes. It needed to be a hearty breakfast to
provide us with the necessary energy for the exertions that lay ahead.
We collected the car and headed off in high spirits, confidently
navigating through the maze of crazy streets that is Naples . This confidence was short lived,
quickly disintegrating in the face of one way streets, extensive road works and
central reservations that prevented vital u-turns. Finally we got onto the
right track and allowed ourselves to be lulled into a false sense of security
with tempting sign posts for Vesuvius. However, these petered out with
depressing speed, assuming we would just know which way to turn at all
subsequent junctions. All we wanted to do was get onto the south bound
autostrada – which the guide book had implied was an easy thing to do. We were
already viewing said guidebook with scornful discredit. After an hour of
driving we were still in Naples
with the autostrada tantalisingly in view but with no obvious way of joining
it. We drove past it, under it, alongside it but never on it. Eventually we
pointed the car east (towards Vesuvius) and started following country roads in
an attempt just to get there. After a while we got onto an autostrada – no idea
which one or really which direction it was going in. But we were excited none
the less. We shouldn’t have been – it stopped after about 5 miles. Finally we
found a road which headed in the direction of the Vesuvius National Park
- this road ground to a depressing halt a quarter of the way up the wrong side
of the volcano. We passed a shop advertising Vesuvio Plastico. Husband
commented that he would be fine with that now. He would finger walk the rim and
tick it off as having been climbed.
Eventually and largely accidentally (after performing a very necessary
u-turn on a one way road) we arrived at a more promising sign post. Not wanting
to overexcite ourselves, we followed it. Soon, however, it really did seem as
though this was the right road as it narrowed, winding steeply up the mountain
slopes. Vines, liberally hanging with rich, red grapes were soon replaced by
ferns and stunted bushes growing through the lava rock which protruded darkly
from the grass that tried to grow on it. Numerous blind hair pin bends cling to
the steep slopes.
At 1000m we parked and booted up. It was still 25◦C here. Looming 1281m
above the bay of Naples, Vesuvius is an active volcano, threatening the densely
populated areas around its base – known as communi Vesuviani – where 1 million
people live and who would all be destroyed very quickly in the case of a medium
to large scale eruption. There is no doubt that Vesuvius will erupt again – the
question is when. Stepchild the Younger asked when I thought this would – all
things considered, I reckon it will erupt in 2015.
Vesuvius is of course most famous for its huge eruption of AD79 when it unceremoniously
destroyed all nearby towns and cities, including Pompeii and Herculaneum . Since then it has erupted around
a further three dozen times. The last eruption was in 1980 when it killed over
3000 people.
We talked at length about pyroclastic flows (which ultimately were
responsible for the comprehensive destruction of Herculaneum and almost instantaneous death of
its inhabitants). Had Vesuvius erupted about a week ago and destroyed Napes, I
would have been saddened. Now I think that what Naples needs is a significant pyroclastic
flow that destroys all before it. Naples
would benefit enormously from being completely flattened and being forced to start
again. It was God’s etch sketch and I assumed the only reason he hadn’t taken
advantage of it was perhaps some sort of guilt about the obvious weekly
devotions paid to him.
We climbed the winding path; covered in tiny loosely lumps of broken
lava rock. The walk up was not particularly difficult. I walked with Stepchild
the Younger who set a brisk pace. We paused at one turn to wait for Husband and
Stepchild the Elder, and admire the view. Stepchild the Younger was panting –
having exhausted herself with the fast pace. We were amused to see a nun coming
back down the path – presumably having had a word with the chap upstairs about
keeping a lid on the next eruption.
From the path we had an extensive view over the bay of Naples
before the clouds rolled quickly up the hill towards us. We reached the rim,
and looked over into the huge drop down to the crater. Sulphur smelling smoke rose continuously from
one of the fumeroles. The cloud continued to rush up the hillside and linger
evocatively over the crater. Every now and then it would suddenly lift and just
as suddenly drop down onto us again.
The path around the rim became narrow and uneven with moonscape knuckles
of lava rock reaching up around the edge of it. We bought some souvenirs at the
stalls conveniently housed on the crater rim, making use of the Bank of Dad and
raced back down.
Our original plan had been to go toPompeii and then Herculaneum on our return towards Naples . However, we had
passed a convincing sign to the Herculaneum
scavi (excavations) and we weren’t entirely sure we would ever find it again.
Our original plan had been to go to
The town was not destroyed by a shower of ash and rock like Pompeii , but by an
avalanche of molten debris which covered it in a deep layer of mud and extended
the land mass into the sea. As a result of being buried so rapidly in such
molten temperatures there has been phenomenal preservation of buildings and
materials. Wood, furniture, fabric and even a loaf of bread have all been
unearthed. Many of the buildings still have two storeys and the wall paintings
and mosaic floors are quite distinct. It was incredible what had survived. In
the baths, the mosaic floor had sunk into the under floor heating system, but
was still intact. There was a tragic air about the place, particularly in the
storage areas along the old coastline which is where a multitude of human
skeletons were found – the bones bent in heat shock and the skulls fractured
and broken from the brains within having boiled.
After minimal driving around small roads, following whatever signs we
were provided with, we actually got onto the autostrada and arrived in Pompeii after about 10
minutes. It was remarkably well signposted. The autostrada back to Naples was at the
entrance. We were owed this.
We had arrived at Pompeii
reasonably late in the date and they had run out of maps of the site – forcing
us to buy a guide book which had a map in it. There was also quite a good map
in the Naples
guide book which I had left in the car. Pompeii
was a thriving Roman town with a population of 20,000 until that fateful day in
AD79 when Vesuvius erupted, smothering its buildings and inhabitants in a thick
blanket of ash. A cosmopolitan place, it was popular as a holiday spot among
the Roman’s and well known as a ritzy seaside destination with grand villas and
rowdy brothels. Pompeii
remained hidden until 1748 when excavations began, resulting in the ghost city
that you can see today. And today you can still see the grooves worn in the
paving by trundling carts, cross the road via huge stepping stones designed to
keep you dry and clean, read graffiti on the walls and see the bread ovens
still standing in the baker’s shop. It is a vivid and moving experience.
The buildings in Pompeii
had been destroyed to a greater extent than those in Herculaneum . This was caused by the roofs of
the buildings finally giving in under the weight of the ash and pumice that
blew over from Vesuvius over the course of many hours.
Given the time and the long day we had had, we selected what areas we
wanted to visit. This included the theatres, the Garden of the Fugitives and
the brothel. The amphitheatre is the oldest one known anywhere and would have
been used to host gladiatorial games. The Garden contained the plaster cast
models of some of those who had died in AD79. All the bodies smothered by the
ash and pumice had been burnt away by the heat. The remaining spaces had been
filled with plaster resulting in the twisted, mangled death throes that we now
saw.
The brothel was rather fun and one of 25 places of prostitution in Pompeii . Naughty
paintings covered the walls and the building contained 5 small rooms with stone
based beds – remarkably short ones at that. There was also a very small
ablutions room, presumably for a quick rinse between clients. We did go to the
House of the Vetti which had a statue of Priapus, the god of fertility with an
outsized phallus. The statue now stands inside but was in fact a fountain, the
water jetting out of said phallus. There was also a wall painting of him
weighing it – and here after he was referred to as the willy weigher. However,
the House was closed so we saw none of these delights.
We had wondered how we would know when the site was closing – and also
what system they would operate to ensure no one was accidentally locked in. Husband
suggested that they would sound a noise. And within about half an hour, a sound
akin to an air raid siren did indeed sound.
To attend to the small matter of dinner we went to a restaurant just
outside the site where a rather excited man at the restaurant entrance leapt of
his chair and ran down the driveway before us to show us where to park. For the
first time I picked something that I recognised. The food was very good and Stepchild
the Elder finished her dinner for the first time – with minimal noshing
assistance.
Stepchild the Younger was concerned as she felt that her armpit hair was
becoming too long and unsightly, and she hadn’t packed a razor, but rather
hoped that Husband would lend her his. I asked to see the extent of this
hairiness and therefore the urgency of shaving required. She started to lift
her arms before suddenly shouting out ‘not in a restaurant, you moron’.
We got in the car and headed towards the conveniently available
autostrada entrance – the excited man bravely darting out to stop all the
traffic in the busy road so that we could cross it. I had already braced myself
for a difficult navigation back to the hotel. 15 minutes later we were back in Naples – which made the
time taken to get just to Vesuvius seem particularly annoying. However, we were
now off the autostrada but having reached the city we just kept going – the
road we were on pointed towards the port and our hotel was nearby so we
intended to follow it until a junction forced us to make an alternative
decision. Suddenly I could see the towers of Castel Nuovo ahead and uttered an
exclamation to express my delight, surprise and exasperation of the morning all
at once. I knew exactly where we were – and we returned to the hotel forthwith.
On the morrow we set off bright and early to catch the boat to Capri . I had left things in the car so we went to the car
park first to retrieve these. Then Husband realised he had left his sunglasses
in the hotel. Rather than all of us go back, I suggested that the girls and I
walk to Piazza Municipio to wait for him. He set off at a jog.
The piazza was filled with the city’s homeless, washing in the fountains
and talking to the stray dogs that lingered around them. A couple of street
cleaners – who were half heartedly cleaning the fountains – stared at us in
dumb surprise. It should have been a nice place, tree lined pathways and
grassed areas, but instead had ended up as a refuge for the dispossessed of all
species. Soon I could see Husband jogging his way back towards us, and we set
off for the port.
Having bought the tickets we waited at the appropriate mooring for the
aliscafi. There was no obvious system for boarding. It was very much a fight
and push your way to the front. At the bottom of the gangway our tickets were
checked (and I had all 4), but in the general shove and melee, how they knew
which tickets related to which person is anybody’s guess. As we pulled out of
the harbour we passed the QE2 which was moored up alongside the other cruise
ships. It was a proud and sad moment to see her.
About half way through the hour long crossing it became quite choppy. I
looked at Stepchild the Elder who was turning a fetching shade of green and
suddenly recalled that she isn’t good with boats. Oops. Husband was standing
outside anyway so she went to join him and felt a bit better.
At this point it is necessary to mention my father. He had been to Capri in one of his many European wanderings and had told
us that you can either take a funicular to Capri
or you could climb the steps to Anacapri where there also a cable car which
went to the top of Monte Solaro. He had done the steps and informed us that he
had sweated buckets and lost about 2 stone in the process but that it was well
worth doing.
Undeterred, I thought that the steps sounded rather fun. Husband
(although he will deny this) had agreed to look at the steps and make a
decision (you can clearly see the pathway up the sheer cliff face from the
port). Stepchild the Younger had liked the sound of the steps and Stepchild the
Elder had sensibly made no comment.
We followed the steeply rising road out of Marine Grande until we came
across a path called Scale Felice. I suspected that these scale were the ones
we wanted. Not wanting to unnecessarily over exert the others, I ran along the
path for a bit to look around the corner, and the next corner and then the
corner after that. It seemed like the right path. So I jogged back to get the
others – who had by now wondered where I had got to.
Initially the walk was fine – a gently sloping path with some small
steps, meandering through trees which protected us from the heat of the sun. Stepchild
the Younger started lizard spotting and everyone was having fun.
Then the climb suddenly got serious. Each step was much higher and now
and the path zig zagged very steeply up the cliff face. We had left the
welcoming shade of the trees and were now in the full glare of the hot morning
sun. It was exhausting and my legs ached furiously. Husband was suffering and
by now everyone denied having wanted to do the climb. Sweat was pouring off us
and unflattering comments were being made about my father.
We crossed under the road and onto the last leg of the climb. Soon the
end was in sight – or at least something that really would have to be the end
or I should be in terrible trouble. When we finally reached the top, we were
rewarded with a viewing platform from which you can see the town of Capri , the bay and the
turquoise sea. With soaring cliffs, emerald waters, lush vegetation and
whitewashed towns Capri is a capsule of
beauty.
This can also be seen by the multitude of American tourists who got here
by bus and are slightly startled by our dishevelled appearance and not so faint
aroma of sweat. I apologise to Husband and promise that there will be no more
steps during the holiday.
The rocky paradise of Anacapri high up on the slopes of Monte Solaro is
more rustic than Capri town – although with
the mass provision of shops and bars for tourists this wasn’t immediate
obvious. We wandered through Anacapri which was swarming with tourists and
suitably filled with tacky souvenir shops alongside plush jewellers and
limoncello outlets.
After lunch we took the cable car to the top of the hill. It is a
single, open seat cable car and one after the other we took our place. The
seats rose silently over plush vineyards filled with the sound of cicadas. I
looked behind me at the others – Stepchild the Younger called out to me and
lifted the not entirely protective arm on the front of the chair calling out
‘danger’. I told her to put it back – being the only thing to prevent her
falling out, feeble as it may have been. It was wonderfully quiet with fabulous
views over to Ischia and back to Vesuvius and Sorrento .
On arrival at the top there were a handful of steps to get to the viewing area – Husband pointed out that I had promised no further steps. From the top we were rewarded with fabulous views down the cliff to the blue green sea coves.
On arrival at the top there were a handful of steps to get to the viewing area – Husband pointed out that I had promised no further steps. From the top we were rewarded with fabulous views down the cliff to the blue green sea coves.
We took the cable car back down and located the bus for the Blue Grotto.
The bus curled down the winding narrow road causing great danger to all other
road users before arriving at the bottom of the cliff. The water incredibly
blue, and there was the unfortunate requirement to do down some steps towards
the grotto. Rather annoyingly the grotto was closed because the sea was too
high. We looked at the front of the cave, but the angle was such that you
couldn’t see into it. So we returned to Anacapri. The bus back was a lot
fuller, and a dumpy, mad woman who was frothing at the mouth moved Stepchild
the Younger out of her seat, chanting the mantra ‘sedermi’ (I sit).
The queue for the bus to Capri was
huge. We had a drink and during this time the queue did not reduce at all. Each
bus that passed was already full and so they didn’t even stop. After a brief
consultation we decided to wait for a taxi instead. Seconds after arriving at
the taxi rank, one appeared. A man from the bus queue ran over, to ask the driver
if we could share, but the driver insisted on taking us only. As we pulled out,
another person ran out to enquire about the cost but the taxi driver shouted
back at him that this was someone else’s taxi and shunned the enquiry. He was a
hero driver and we weren’t sure what had been quite so appealing about us. The
taxi was open topped, but with a red and white striped awning to keep the sun
off and make us feel as if we were sitting underneath a giant deck chair. Then
followed a crazy drive, hurtling down the hair pin bend roads, laying waste
timid moped drivers and stray dogs with abandon. The driver clearly had balls.
Blind corners presented no problem and certainly no requirement to slow down.
We rocketed through the edge of Capri - which incidentally allows no traffic
through the town - and down to the harbour.
I was rather impressed with my spray tan and Stepchild the Elder was now
developing the Neapolitan colouring that I had managed to avoid – i.e. shades
of white, red and brown (strawberry, vanilla and chocolate). Anyway, it was
very appropriate for Naples .
Having some time spare before the boat left, we went to the beach for a
paddle. There was no sand so it was uncomfortable and not entirely stable
paddling on the large stones; however the sea was fabulous – warm, blue and
clear. Stepchild the Elder came over a little wobbly on the stones and we
discussed our strategy for falling in – which basically was that we stand
together but fall alone. No one should make a grab for someone else in the
moment of falling. Just to be absolutely sure, I decided to move a couple of
paces further away. In doing so I promptly fell in the sea, sitting in it so
comprehensively that only the straps of my top remained dry. There was nothing
else to do but laugh – after all, that is what most of the people on the beach
were doing.
I sat in the sun to try and dry off a little. By the time we arrived
back at Naples
I was almost dry, except that my knickers were still wet and had created a damp
patch on my shorts which did look rather suspiciously as though I had wet
myself. Self consciously, we walked over the road to a pizzeria.
Crossing roads in most Italian cities does require a certain amount of
nerve – particularly so in Naples .
As we crossed the road I looked to me left and saw the tail lights of cars.
Assuming that the cars must therefore be coming from the right, I looked to my
right – and saw tail lights of cars. Now unclear about where the traffic was
coming from, I just walked, and walked fast to get across.
Dinner was very filling and Husband and I were unable to help the girls
finish their dinner. Under our suggestion, Stepchild the Elder adopted the
celebrity trick of cutting things up and moving them around the plate,
re-arranging the food in a nouvelle cuisine fashion to make it look as though
you have eaten more. So she cut her pizza into squares and promptly built the
leaning tower of pizza.
I mentioned quietly to Husband that I had a bite on my knee – which was
starting to swell.
Our plan for Wednesday had originally been to wander further around Naples . However, the city
was squalid, dirty and daubed everywhere with graffiti. The streets were
littered with rubbish and filled with the stench of dog wee and drains. There
was a significant population of stray dogs and homeless people.
Not wanting to spend further time in the city, we decided to go to Ischia and indulge in the thermal spas, a welcome
relaxation after the last couple of days. The boat went via Procida and finally
arrived at Ischia .
Ischia does not have the same rugged beauty as Capri
but has the advantage of long sandy beaches. The volcanic terrain produces
bubbling hot springs
prized for their therapeutic powers. Romans had flocked to Ischia ’s
spas, but within a century of the destruction of Pompeii Monte Epomeo (the
highest mountain on the island and one of its volcanoes) erupted destroying all
life on the island. The harbour at Ischia is a
natural boundary which once enclosed a volcanic lake.
We passed through Casamicciola Terme. The hottest springs gush forth
here at a temperature of 82◦C. Ischia as a
whole has 103 hot springs
and 67 fumaroles. Tucked away in the north
west corner of the island Negombo Thalasso
Thermal Park
has 15 pools, caves and baths built around San Montano beach.
We took a taxi to Negombo. The taxi was little more than a scooter that
had undergone a Top Gear experiment to give it a roof and seats for four. The
drive was terrifying and the scooter barely managed to climb the steep slopes
of this volcanic island, the engine roared away and gave of a slight aroma of burning
while the forward momentum got slower and slower. Finally we arrived at Negombo,
much more in need of relaxation than half an hour previously.
The pools were arranged along a series of levels up the cliff which
overlooked the beach, nestled in between palms and cactuses to give a jungle
feel. Here the problem was not so much chair leg as rock bum.
The pools varied in temperature from ambient up to 38◦C – which was
actually quite hot. We moved from pool to pool, inhaling the strong mineral
smells and watching the steam rise off the water. At one point it started to
rain slightly and lots of people got out – presumably in case they got wet.
Being very salty, it stung enormously when water got into your eyes. It was
also unpleasant if it got into your mouth and Stepchild the Younger did fill
many of the pools with copious amounts of saliva by constantly gobbing out any
water in her mouth. Many of the pools also included falls of water (which did
not help the water in eyes situation) but people sat under these falls for
several minutes to ease various joint and back pains.
Husband was particularly keen to try the therapeutic pool. This was set
into a cave and included a sauna. The water was incredibly hot. There was also
a very small therapy pool burrowed into a tiny, floor level cave and strongly
resembling a well. It was 2.5m deep and therefore entirely out of depth. Husband
considered getting into this pool, but there was no way we could have got him
out again. He realised this first, and wisely gave it a miss. There was an
optional cold water wash down to follow which was remarkably refreshing – once
the initial shock of the cold had passed. But I couldn’t convince the others
that this dousing was quite nice.
This was a good initiation for the Japanese maze which consisted of a
knee deep walk over pebbles through very very hot water following by an
equivalent walk through very very cold water. At one point the movement of
people came to a halt and after a few minutes a man in the cold part called out
‘presto, presto’.
I had hoped that the pools might do something for my insect bites. They
had certainly collected a lot of minerals and were now white in appearance –
not totally sure that was an improvement. However, every time I went into a
pool there was a pain in my leg akin to the feel of it being amputated.
All of us except Husband wanted to go into a cooler pool as the hot ones
were becoming too much.
On our last morning in Naples
we decided that the most sensible course of action would be to ask the hotel
receptionist how to get to the autostrada. It hadn’t occurred to us to ask
before, mainly because it hadn’t occurred to us that it could be so very
difficult.
After devouring chocolate covered croissant cake for breakfast we headed
off, going via the less attractive part of Naples – oh yes, a less attractive district
did indeed manage to exist. Rather annoyingly we found the autostrada within
minutes and headed back to Rome .
It was an uneventful drive except for the occasional swaths of smoke
from presumably recently burning fields, and the suggestion of a traffic queue
at exactly the same spot we had ground to a halt on the way down. The sky was
overcast with occasional drops of rain, but it was still over 30◦C.
We found the apartment in Rome
despite the directions giving completely incorrect left and right instructions
– although I had been accused of making the same errors when navigating Husband.
That was fine with me as research has found that women who don’t know their
left from right – or indeed right from left – have higher than average
intelligence and brain capability. Naturally I agree wholeheartedly with this
research.
The apartment was fabulous – three bedrooms, two bathrooms, a large
kitchen and living room and even a library. Furthermore it had mirrors in our
bathroom and bedroom which were, well, interestingly placed.
We wandered down the road to a restaurant near the forum which Husband
and I knew from a previous visit. It wasn’t open but the neighbouring one was. Husband
and I had steins of beer which I could barely lift and for the first time ever,
we all ate all of our lunch and even had pudding.
We spent the rest of the day ambling gently through the familiar streets
of Rome , to the
Trevi Fountain, Via Condotti, Spanish Steps and the Pantheon, popping into
numerous shops – including the Disney Store on Via Corso. Stepchild the Younger’s
ability to point at things in shops that she liked the look of was increasing
curtailed by her concern about showing her hairy armpits. Husband treated
himself to a new Italian leather wallet while the girls amused themselves
looking at the enormous range of leather gloves – available in every colour and
style. Stepchild the Elder had discovered that she really liked shopping –
particularly for bags.
At one larger than average ice cream shop we wandered around the
extensive selection, just to look. There was an enormous brown section – how
many different flavours of chocolate could one possibly need. Anyway, the sight
of it made Stepchild the Younger feel sick. That’s how much there was.
Several thousand other people were at the Trevi Fountain, but we managed
to elbow our way threw to the front and threw in the obligatory coins to ensure
a return to Rome .
It had certainly worked in the past, this being my 4th visit to the
city.
As the Spanish Steps included, well, steps, Husband and I sat at the
bottom watching a human statue wobbling about on the top of a bin while Stepchild
the Elder and Stepchild the Younger climbed the steps. We also got slightly
spattered with bubble scum from the bubbles being blown by the multitude of
middle eastern wandering salesmen. A young boy drummed to the make shift
audience sitting up the steps but was moved on when he started to walk around
asking for money.
When the girls returned they broke into an impromptu performance of
‘head, shoulders, knees and toes’ (testa, spalla, ginoccio e diti del piede – admittedly
it doesn’t have quite the same ring to it) using Husband’s hands to do the
moves on my body.
Stepchild the Younger wanted to follow every nun she saw. Given the
proximity to Vatican City
there were a few and I did start to worry about whether she would be able to
contain herself when we went to St Peter’s.
We had a drink at what appeared to be a restaurant to the complete
delight of the owner who cared not a jot that we didn’t want to eat. A large
array of nibbles was served with the drinks anyway. This was so different to Naples and so much closer
to all the other places in Italy
I have visited. The people were friendly and welcoming. We were spoilt for
choice with places to eat and drink. And everything was clearly signposted –
although I knew Rome
well enough by now not to need these for much of the time.
We meandered back towards the apartment via the forum. It was now closed
for the evening and the only things in it were a handful of stray cats and a
bat – to the delight of Stepchild the Younger. She informed us proudly that she
wanted to be a bat. I pointed out that she would be quite a rare species as she
was scared of the dark – and dark is kind of when bats hang out. She thought it
through, but was still determined that being a bat was the way forward.
The lift to the apartment was like something from Poirot– running up the
open stair well. On the way back to the apartment Husband opened the internal
door a little bit too soon and the lift ground to a halt. This slightly
alarming process was presumably a security measure. We could not get the lift
to go to our floor – inches away and instead had to go to the floor above and
back down again. Spending longer than necessary with three other people crammed
into a lift which would comfortably accommodate only one person and in 30◦C
heat was not entirely welcome and we all made sure Husband left the doors well
alone from then on.
Stepchild the Younger borrowed Husband’s razor to attend to her legs and
armpits. His razor vibrates which she rather liked and decided she wanted to
get one. I agreed that his vibrating razor was better. Husband glared at me.
Actually no, I don’t know what it’s like at all, I corrected myself. She told
us that her razor was a Venus. I had thought that they did make vibrating
Venuses – and at this point the discussion rapidly deteriorated. As it was GCSE
results day Stepchild the Elder was involved in a flurry of texts with her
friends.
The following morning we attempted to heat up the croissants we had
bought in the gas oven. This was rather dangerous as an awful lot of gas had to
have been released before it would have the decency to catch fire. As your arm
has to be a good way into the oven the whole process was destined to end in
disaster. Ever quick thinking I taped the match to the end of a wooden spoon
and managed to light the gas. However, the minute Husband opened the door to
put the croissants in, it went out, and completely refused to re-light. So the
croissants were toasted instead. The following morning I sat them whole on top
of the toaster where they warmed through quite satisfactorily.
The following day we took the metro to St Peter’s. As expected there
were a lot of nuns, monks and priests and we should perhaps have had a lead for
Stepchild the Younger. She decided that she preferred monks. We went into the
Basilica, passed the foolish tourists who were being turned away for wearing
strappy tops. We walked by smugly – and warmly, having donned appropriate
additional clothing.
We went up the cupola which involved a lift ride and then the small
matter of 320 steps which weaved around the edge of the dome through a
decidedly wonky and narrow passage before culminating in a particularly small
spiral staircase right to the top, and the welcome breeze of the outdoors.
We walked through Vatican City to Campo di Fiori – a fabulous daily
market where the colourful array of fresh vegetables are not EC shaped at all –
towards Piazza Navona for lunch, passing a shop window which displayed the
largest salami in the world.
During these perambulations we shopped till we dropped – quite literally
as Stepchild the Younger had been looking at all the shops with masks, and then
decided which one she liked but couldn’t quite recall which shop it was in and
thought it was one of the first ones. So we went round them all again. Husband’s
feet were very very sore having not entirely recovered from the Capri steps. His blister had now grown blister. But I
felt absolved. I may have caused the initial problem, but Stepchild the Younger
had made it get worse. Rather amusingly
there was a shoe shop by Trevi Fountain called Sore – no prizes for guessing
how their shoes made you feel.
We stopped for a welcome drink near some of the potential mask shops so
that we could send Stepchild the Elder and Stepchild the Younger off on their
own for a wander. Husband and I had iced coffee which was basically coffee ice
cream with a bit of cold coffee poured over it. It tasted fantastic and was
wonderfully refreshing.
We took the girls to St Ignatius church to see the dome which wasn’t
there at all – but was painted onto a flat ceiling to give the optical illusion
of a dome.
The weather was getting hotter and I was grateful for the cloud cover.
After a heavy day of retail therapy we returned to the apartment to relax and
cool down. Stepchild the Elder was doing crosswords and was getting herself
confused as at one point she asked us the chemical symbol for geranium.
We dressed up for dinner. As the apartment was near the metro and
everyone’s feet were sore, we took the metro into town in search of dinner. We
were in the Trevi Fountain area, and so went to see it by night before find a
rather nice restaurant for dinner. The girls rather fancied the waiter – even
more so when he served up some complimentary dessert wine after the meal which
they both rather liked. At some point there had been discussions about what was
in certain meals and if I got it wrong then my head would be served on a plate.
Stepchild the Younger preferred her chances with a pizza on the basis that at
least she knew what was in it.
The following day we were meant to be out by 10.00 and were running
late. Frenetic packing was going on when the apartment cleaner arrived – just
as we were leaving. It was the hottest day we had had so far and we had to lug
the suitcases to the station – which became a particularly hot and sticky
journey. We dumped them at the baggage deposit and headed back into town to
visit the Coliseum. There was of course a large queue, which we joined. And we
were part of it for a long time during which we managed to persuade Stepchild
the Younger that it went all the way round the theatre. However, while the
queue was under the arches we were at least out of the burning sun. Once inside
there was no mercy and we wandered around, jumping from shade to shade. After a
while, Husband and I sat in a shaded area and let the girls wander.
Afterwards we came out and went to some of the many tourist stalls
outside. Stepchild the Younger bought some last minute souvenirs and asked me
to hold out my hand. I did so, and she put a euro into my palm. For a second or
two I was confused, and then I realised that my hand was burning. Stepchild the
Younger laughed. The euro had been sitting in their money box in the sun and
was the hottest euro in the world.
We went for a long, lingering lunch – having plenty of time and it being far too hot to do much else. Our waiter only knew one thing in English which was ‘oh my god’ and he repeated this with amusing frequency.
Lunch over, we returned to the station and took a taxi back to the airport for our return to a cooler
NOTES
The above is a true story. At the time of writing Child the Elder was 16 and Child the Younger was 14. Some of the information about places visited is sourced from a variety of guide books. The author maintains rights over all other content.
No comments:
Post a Comment