Showing posts with label cave. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cave. Show all posts

Thursday, 29 February 2024

1994 Bari

5.8.94 Cozze

Bloody flies – the heat driving them – like us – mad.  Mid to high 30s, humid, sun like a knife.  Down here, staying in a house in Mola di Bari – street rather noisy, very hot in the afternoon.  Cozze by the sea wonderful (we swam for about 30’ today – very salty), but the beach a poor thing.  Mostly tufa stone (?) - some cut out in parallelepipeds – leaving curious and sharp shapes.  Litter and worse everywhere – the Italians being distinctly ungreen.

Flew down here from Garda/Verona.  £400 – but the older I get, the more I feel money is to be spent.  From Verona to Rome, Fiumicino – first time there.  Cool but quite small and lacking in character.  Then down to Bari.  The drive from the airport through the dry land, full of blocks of flats, building sites, rubble.  A poor land.  A sense of desperation in the air of being a long way form the rich north.  Interesting the dialect here: very sing-song, with vowels sliding strangely, but overall quite musical.  

The day’s plan here rather contrary to mine: start and finish late.  The first day here we were whisked off at 10pm to Polignano, a nearby village – beautiful old town, full of brilliant whitewashed houses – rather like the souk and old town of Essouira.  Fine views to the sea, no beach but sheer drops.

I have been rising early-ish at 6am to work in the few cool hours.  Outlining the Internet book – aided by the many Internet books I have read recently (around 25).  With portable and modem here – recently took out subscription to MC-Link, the first Internet service in Italy.  Via host, and no SLIP.  Still, I have been able to telnet to CIX – but only at 2400 baud – because also using Italpac X.25 network that only runs at 2400.  Otherwise it’s a direct line to Rome – but pricey.  Give that the line seems good (3400 characters per second achieved) I’ll probably lash out on a 28.8K modem when V.34 is approved (I almost wrote homologated…).  With the possibility of a regular Internet column for Computer Weekly I could be spending more time online.

Yesterday we went in the evening to the family orchard.  As well as figs (which grow in abundance here – black and green – dio sia lodato), pears (tiny, delicious) almonds (rather green), lemons, prickly pears (I think: called fichi d’India here) there were some amazing gelsi (mulberries).  A super-sweet, super-juicy blackberry, we picked them straight from the tree – and were covered in a blood-red juice.  In fact we wore old clothes specifically because of this: the dye is pretty strong.   Wonderful eating fruits straight from the tree.

Pizza in the evening with an extended family (aunts, uncles, cousins) around the table.  Very intensely familial here – almost too much.  Amusingly, one of the aunts wanted to reassured that everything here – the food, the fruit, the vegetables – was the best.

Today working, then into Bari to replace a part of the car we were using (a Citroën – diesel – so no acceleration with very heavy steering, and the weirdest array of controls imaginable).  Then a snooze (very necessary), to here for a huge swim – very cool, but not cold, very refreshing.  You realise in this heat what an achievement it is even thinking…

To Monopoli (yup, it exists).  A beautiful whitewashed courtyard of a monastery – arriving for the last 10’ of a jazz concert.  Stunningly simple facade of the church – reminds me of Mexico.  Palm tree majestic in the middle.

8.8.94 Conversano

Hot, fresh panzarotti, then spongato – a cappuccino and gelato.  Lovely stone city, fine old cathedral and castello.  White polished stone.  Streets full of young people, the elderly sitting on their chairs.  Cool tonight – only 28°C earlier, now 25°
C…  The Romanesque duomo reminds me of Pavia: three sections  connected simply but effectively.

9.8.94 Cozze

A day of sitting around, swimming (slightly: in the evening as the sun turns into a vermilion globe – otherwise light here is like a knife – to be avoided even by mad dogs and Englishmen).  The beach here reaches to rocks at the water’s edge – then plunges almost instantly to about two metres depth.  Taking long swims quite far out in the clear, clean water.  Very salty – and very tiring, but great for the body in general.

Food: today we tried ricci – sea urchins.  These black, spiny things are cracked open and you eat the orange paste inside.  Which I did – a bit odd.  But nothing so odd as the feeling I had when I saw that not only were the spines still moving on the other ones on my plate to be eaten, but the one whose being I had just scraped out was also still jigging about the plate.  I felt like I had just de-cerebrated a live monkey.  I couldn’t eat any more: wimpish and hypocritical perhaps, but at least it made me more aware of what veggies must feel when confronted by meat…

Back to Monopoli – figuratively speaking: a lovely warren of streets, with a church on every corner.  I had not realised the waves of occupation were so thick and enduring: Norman, Swabians(?), Aragonese, French et al.  A fascinating place it seems, Puglia, worth returning.

Conversano even prettier – fine castellocattedrale - lively evening scene.  And the panzarotti – which we eat this evening – to say nothing of the spectacular spongato – fine name.  Another family do tonight – all the aunts, uncles and cousins here.  A little trying – I just feign ignorance.

10.8.94 Castellana Grotte

Le Grotte – suddenly cold.  First hall – like a Hyatt atrium… Artificial it looks, so strange are the forms – the dripping stalactites on the walls of this huge cave – lit from above. Shafts of light in a biblical fashion.  People disappear into a hole in the rock face like something out of Tolkien.  Behind us, forms scramble down the steps like extras in an adventure film…

Through to another huge hall – imagine being the first person to see this… Vast, with a stony fringe along the top.  Seeing the file of people dwarfed by the stones – like the damned going down to hell.  Stalactites hang above us like rows of Damocletian swords.  Some walls looks like cathedral facades, others teem with writhing organic forms.  This journey – walking ever deeper into the earth – has a wonderfully symbolic feel to it.  A long, long passage – that perhaps goes on forever.

The forms always different, but always related – fractals.  To the final hall – more water dropping here – surprisingly absent otherwise.  La Grotta Bianca – beautiful creamy white, strange, spongy forms.  Two huge columns – cathedral-like.  Surprisingly unclaustrophobic even though we are thousands of metres from the entrance.  Quite well done – not too obtrusive the lighting on the path.  Amazing such a long, linear path exists – and with no stream running through it.

11.8.94 Bari airport

Up horrendously early (not in se – but given the rhythm here, where lunch is eaten at 3pm, and dinner at 9pm) to here.  Yesterday into Bari – carefully removing all wallets, bags, rings, jewellery etc.  Apparently Bari is worse than Mexico, New Delhi, Jakarta etc put together.

Interesting conversation about those who thieve here.  About markets where children are sold: for working on the farms.  Of ten in a room, of kids with only one pair of trousers, kids leaving schools at some early age to tend sheep. Unemployment in Puglia is around 50% - and worse among the young.  The only industry here is steel…  I must confess I’d not realised that things were so medieval – the divide between northern Italy and here is truly immense.

Old port of Bari – rather like Palermo I remember.  Fine lungomare with ornate triple-lamp lights.  Ancient walls mostly intact.  To San Nicola – fine, simple Romanesque church with internal buttresses across the nave.  Very high, even at the crossing of nave and aisles.  Outside a police car – to protect any foolhardy Barinese tourists.  Then to cattedrale – also Romanesque, very plain.  Interesting pulpit: one panel half-finished à la Michelangelo, the others never started – who knows what happened when and why?

Then for a walk in the “new” gridded city – still a few cops around just in case.  Resisted temptation to buy more books.  Learnt today that Bari was hottest major city in Italy: 37
°C. Yow.

Monday, 25 October 2021

2021 Gibraltar

19.10.21

On the 9th floor of the Eliott 
Hotel, looking out across the Bay of Gibraltar from the near-empty hotel restaurant.  Spain in the hazy distance, tankers moored or moving.  Cloudy but pleasantly warm in this Mediterranean outpost of the UK.  The tell-tale sign that all is not as it should be: they drive on the right here…

Gibraltar seemed the perfect post-Brexit/Covid trip.  Short – just three nights here – but enough time to see more or less everything.  Safe – Gibraltar has one of the lowest incidences of Covid.  And weird: a little chunk of limestone that will be forever England (well, not if the Spaniards have anything to do with it). An alienated piece of the EU, just a few kilometres from Africa…

The flight was good but horribly early: 7.10am take-off meant getting up at 3am.  At least it was Terminal 5, Heathrow, one of my favourites.  Swooping from the east of the Rock, its gaunt vertical face, around to Gibraltar Bay, where the improbable runway sticks out into the sea.  No room for error.

Then the inevitable checks.  Mostly done before leaving, online.  Very efficient: after you have submitted your Passenger Location Form, you are taken straight to the test booking site.  On the ground, less impressive.  First, you queue at passport control; then you queue for your lateral flow test; then you find there are no taxis left to take you into town.  So you walk.  It's not far, but there's a unique obstacle holding up vehicles and people.  Planes are taking off, and the runway cuts across the road.  So the road is closed while the planes take off – rather close.

Finally, the barrier lifts, and off we go.  Strange to see UK road signs, but cars on the right.  Also many signs in Spanish, not unreasonably.  We walk through the Landport Tunnel, once the only land route in.  then along Main Street.  Which turns out to be a perfect distillation of English seaside towns like Blackpool or Bournemouth.  Small, tacky, full of horrible "souvenirs" – and people who look as if they would buy them.  Mostly old.

In Grand Casemates Square – the Piazza San Marco of Gibraltar.  Here via the dock area – not just ugly, but oppressively chaotic – no plan, no style.  Huge blocks of buildings closing off the way – no road through.  Here vaguely attractive, open at least.  Moorish Castle just visible, Main Street ahead of us.  Huge building to the right, looks like the abandoned concrete hulks of Chișinău.  This place is weird.

20.10.21

Out to the cable car base.  Following Main Street, I was surprised to see its character change once it became for cars – vastly better.  Where the pedestrianised part is twee and naff, the part to the south has some good buildings.  Passing by St. Jago's Arch, things fall apart – hard to find the sense of roads, with the paucity of street names hardly a help.  But we finally made it to the cable car to find zero queue and just a couple of people waiting inside the cabin.  £30 each for the full works, but Moody's Second Law of Tourism applies…

The ride up quick and smooth, though I am not totally convinced by this technology.  The upper cable station nothing special, aside from its location, which is stunning.  The views from the two platforms just fantastic, with the harbour and runway laid out clearly, Spain in the distance, and Morocco looming out of the haze.

Three apes nearby, picking over carrots, apples and watermelon.  Magnificent beasts, with a golden-brown fur.  Pretty indifferent to humans, more interested in food or finding fleas on each other.  The biggest (alpha?) males were superbly disdainful as we walked past them.  A Spanish family foolishly had a plastic bag, and the apes were keen to inspect it.  The bloke shooed them away, but was unwise to bring it.

Along to the Skywalk – pretty dull, but some nice views south.  The eastern side of the Rock is pretty impressively precipitous.  Further south to St. Michael's Cave.  Better than I expected – really majestic forms, rather spoilt by the lighting's garish effects.  A dozen minibuses outside disgorging people.  We moved off down to the Apes' Den – where there were sadly no apes.  But we had seen plenty elsewhere.

We decide to descend to the town, rather than ascend to take the cable car.  A long way, but shielded from the sun by the Rock, with great views.  I saw a couple of planes swinging round from the south to land – tiny dots moving over the sea and Spanish mainland.  The tankers and container ships playing to and fro.  The filthy pollution they create is evident.  Yesterday, we saw an obscenely large P&O cruise ship pull out – a ridiculous floating hotel, with hotel and cold running Covid: I wouldn't go one even if you paid me.

Finally down to the town, and to The Angry Friar, opposite The Convent – the Governor's Residence.  Just as we were about to order, the power went off – something that happens here apparently.  After salad and sandwiches, back here to the hotel to rest.

In Jury's, nice atmosphere. In the afternoon, to the botanic gardens by the cable car station.  Lots of interesting plants and trees, but a strange feeling of chaos, of things not hanging together, which seems to be the dominant theme here.  Then to the harbour – the new one – and the Harbour View restaurant.  Next to flash catamaran.  Gibraltar should be more like this, although I noted with disapproval that the marina was "private" – enclosing the commons.  Tut.

21.10.21

Up on the Rock again, staring across at the mountains of Morocco.  Brilliant sunshine, fresh breeze, nobody else up here.  Wonderful – surely one of the greatest views on earth.  We were so near to Morocco that our phones switched from Gibtel to a Moroccan provider… 

Exploring the northern part of the Rock.  Along to the Great Siege Tunnels.  Amazing achievement, with great views of airport where planes take off infrequently, but impressively.  Before each take-off, a police car clears the road, with siren blaring.  

Two things seem more common here than I expected: people speaking Spanish, and people smoking...it's like going back in time to the UK in the 1970s.  Which seems appropriate.

Back in the Water Front, where we had a drink yesterday, but now for supper.  Busy, lots of people who look as if they belong with the very swish boats in the marina.  But getting here from the hotel was madness.  This town seems designed to stop easy access anywhere.  There are long physical obstacles – bastions from the past, blocks of offices or flats from the present – that require huge detours to pass around.  This is the worst-designed place I have every visited.

22.10.21

In Grand Casemates Square, sitting in the sun as it rises from behind the Rock.  The fact that the city is in the shade for several hours lends it a very particular quality.  As does the number of old people hobbling along with walking sticks. 

Yesterday, I forgot to mention that on the way down from the Great Siege tunnels, we visited the Moorish Castle.  Just a bare shell now, but impressive enough in its own way.  A useful reminder of the Moorish heritage here – even down to its name [according to Wikipedia, the name is derived from Arabic: جبل طارق‎, romanized: Jabal Ṭāriq, lit. 'Mount of Tariq' (named after the 8th-century Moorish military leader Tariq ibn Ziyad)].

Now in the ultra-swish, rather empty airport building.  But its main feature is the north side of the Rock in all its gleaming limestone glory.  Certainly a memorable sight – the White Cliffs of Dover packed into a single, soaring spire – rather like the similarly shaped church in Reyjavik – but much bigger.  Rather let down by the dull and stumpy flats and hotels at its base, dwarfed by Nature.

This morning, we walked around the city.  I always want to call it a town – city sounds too grand, but it has not one, but two cathedrals.  The Roman Catholic one (very dull) and the Anglican one, which has an appropriately Moorish cut to its ecclesiastical job (sic).  Inevitably, it reminds me of Mezquita in Cordoba, but a pale, genteel version.

The thing is, there really isn't that much to see in Gibraltar.  Except the Rock, of course, and its delightful apes.  And indeed, the view from the top in clear weather is certainly one of my top sights – along with that from Gergeti Church in Georgia, from the Sugarloaf Mountain in Rio, and from the top of Mount Batur in Bali.