Monday 3 December 2012

San Vito Lo Capo


13/11 d2 at El Bahira, San Vito Lo Capo

What a wonderful sleep!
Keen to see the exquisite rocky coast, we left our babes and snuck away for a bike grind  initially along the coast with very Arabic blue & sandy colours and flavour influences marked by abundant kebab rooms alongside the typical Italian bars & gelaterias.  Life was just starting with the bars serving their wonderful cafe and the smells of cornetti torturing us as we whizzed past aiming for the orange & green rocky, oddly carved peaks of the adjacent Riservo dello ZingaroWe passed inviting spacious looking white rancheros that could be in Spain or Mexico, their gardens decorated with gorgeous arrangements of cacti and large covered stone porches looking over a still, vast Mediterranean.  Sheep with fluffy coats & tails and skinny cows wander the country lanes.  Higher up there is not much but addictive views making turning around really hard.  We’ll come again tomorrow.





Back at camp we file in as streams of young healthy, largely German rock climbers and walkers stream out in pursuit of their rigorous cliffs and divers, loaded up with equipment head toward the spectacular blue ocean.

Our day grooved along so slowly and was wonderfully healing.  Kel & Jen worked first on all the slightly raggedy bits of the BK’s anatomy with Glen’s brilliantly equipped sewing kit, the boys watched some climbers, we cut nails and pushed back cuticles, Kel set up “The Three Broomstiks Cafe” (with pistachio & blue cornflour eggs; vanilla & marmalade eggs and rose water almond & lime eggs to name a few of the exotic menu items) at which Jen & Wil dined.  Jeff & Wil read and we culled our 14,000 photos to about 700, beginning our half hour slide show preparation for the interested few at home.



A simple lunch at 1630 of cornbread, veggies & olive paste filled us to fat and we slid down the other side of the day with darkness now coming at about 1700.  The kids rock hopped around the climbing wall watching the German athletes and then finished off with a twilight skate on the tennis courts, watched by the adults with the dregs of Etna wine in hand (can’t wait for a real, full bodied delicious Australian red).



Feeling profoundly lazy, we all settled in for a movie night and slept like babes thereafter.

14/11 d3 beneath the cliffs

The second day riding is always even better than the first in a new location.  Our resistance training was offered by a relentless early morning wind as we wound higher than yesterday, leaving behind civilization, hearing just our heaving breath, the birds and the wind.

A hot shower and 2 bowls of cereal later, we rolled into another slow day similar to yesterday, the only additions being another clean up of Ed inside & out and an evening viewing of our documentary called “Living Stone” about Gaudi’s Sagrada Familia in Barcelona.  It was such an exhilarating film where architects, stone masons, model designers, historians & artists from around the world over 3 generations have lovingly worked on something unique and spectacular together.  What was striking was their moist eyes and smiles when describing the profound enjoyment of their life’s work.


15/11 d4 San Vito Lo Capo

The moody skies made a trip around the tip of San Vito Lo Capo breathtaking. We still can’t quite understand why this area of Sicily, easily it’s most beautiful, unlike the rest of the island is rubbish free - maybe the mafia bosses have homes here? We stocked up on drinking water (first time this year!) but just a few fresh groceries (exhausting Ed’s extensive pantry now that we’re on the home run) on the way out of camp and drove our early morning bike route in the hopes of walking in the Riserva dello Zingaro, Sicily’s only and Italy’s most beautiful national park…..and it didn’t disappoint.  Free of summer crowds & sun-lovers, we had the place almost completely to ourselves.  Apparently there are about 40 bird species & 700 Mediterranean plant species including the rare Bonelli eagle (that we didn’t see) lushly occupying the wild coast line with its hidden coves of white pebbles and gel toothpaste blue water.  Some plant species are unique to this stretch of coast making this a truly wild & natural NP like those we love & miss back home.









Wil’s emphatic utterances of not taking his togs because it’s cloudy and cold were gleefully abandoned at the second beach where three Connberries stripped to undies delighting in the azure waters.  Mumma readied the Moroccan mint & licorice tea in our orange German ‘furnace’ (as Kel calls it) with almond, marmalade & ginger dunking biscotti and dried chick peas (or ‘cat’s piss’ as Jeff calls them - all the more for us!).  







Dried off in the sun with some vigorous calisthenics, we headed back to Ed, getting the fright of our lives as we approached from below.  When we left Ed he was parked bottom to the cliff (big bum actually a bit out over the sea!), handbrake well deployed, right in front of a decrepit old motorhome.  As we rounded a headland on our way back we looked up to see the decrepit one standing alone - no Ed!!!  Had the brake failed and he’d fallen into the sea?!  Jeff noticed it but said nothing to the others as he didn’t want to panic them.  Jen also noticed but said nothing for the same reason.  Shared panic helps nobody.  Upped the pace a little, rounded another bend and there he was, right where we left him, the decrepit one had been moved 200m back up the road to a more level spot.

They say San Vito Lo Capo goes off in summer and whilst still 21 degrees, it’s practically dead now so our search for aranchine was unfulfilled….and then around the corner, a gelateria!  Shared “taste for taste” the stupendous textures & flavours which carried us through the rest of the day of skating, playing with the stray cats (especially cute Licorice) & feathering our nest back home before more cards, a ‘woggie’ dinner of massive bocinccini, salami, artichoke, capsicum, chestnut paste & Sicilian corn bread.  

Another spectacular sunset highlighting the points & delicious shapes of the offshore Egadi archipelago …..some internet research (Tassie is ~ 2.5 x bigger than Sicily) and bedtime stories.






16/11 d5 San Vito Lo Capo

Our 10BX routine was performed on the tennis courts overlooking our island dotted Mediterranean bay.  Toward the end we were joined by our little people on skates.  After our outdoor “hot” shower (that only partially works if you blow & thump the hot water key box whilst holding your tongue to the left and stand on your R leg), we took cuppa #1 down to the skaters to watch the new tricks before our favourite time of day, breakfast over which we discussed Leonardo Di Vinci’s family background (he was illegitimate) and his genius in describing and modeling cardiac function 500 years before real demonstrative technology existed to show it.

We hung our threadbare but fresh smelling washing out in the sun, tinkered with Ed, played with the cats fashioning pine cone balls on strings for the kittens to chase, skated some more and had another cuppa.






Lunch = curried egg sandwiches + fruit and nuts, more play with the kittens, rotating the drying clothes into the sun and folding away the done ones (these well used clothes might just see the year out), then a short bike ride past the cliffs dotted with energetic climbers catching the afternoon rays, to a beautiful white smooth pebble beach with the turquoise Med lapping calmly.  











There we swam as the sun set over the Trapani/Erice bloomph, Jen meandered and crouched about marveling at the rolled smooth stones of all colour and shape, Jeff attempted some meditation, and the kids built pizza ovens out of the biggest boulders they could carry.  A few other revelers joined us to quietly watch the days end and bathe in the sea, and we were reminded again that this for us is the most beautiful part of Europe we’ve seen - for us it’s nature un-man-mangled that turns the crank.  Comparisons are best avoided but we did note that there would have been 20+ places around Australia that we enjoyed this much - homesickness is building!

17/11 d6 San Vito Lo Capo

The day started with a spectacular early run for the olds - went the other way from camp, accompanied joyfully the whole way by one of the stray mutts of the area.

Breakfast was delayed as we were summoned to the skating rink to check out the new tricks. So with body tingling after a shower and warm tea in hand we inspected the skills with awe.

Following a breakfast at 1000 (we’re all still relishing in a change to our morning routine ‘sans’ school!  Woo-hoo!), mother & son took a bike ride into San Vito Lo Capo township for bread & cheese…and arancini.  Finally successful with FOUR glorious fatty delights wrapped carefully on top of the other shopping and placed like fragile glass in the backpack, we set off home.....via a secret sneaky extra cafe stop arancini for the shoppers! 

Careful not to disturb the booty, Mumma rode home with a poker back spine to father & daughter who’d managed to secure our remaining Spain camping plans in Ed as well as squeezing in a few card games.  Jeff’s shoulders hung in dejection having been thrashed again by Lady Fortuna Kel at her game Sleeping Queens.

Unable to wait another second with the wee balls’ greasy aroma filling Ed, we sat to the delicacies before taking a bike ride to the fabulous waters of our home beach.  The kids worked on a fish catcher (never put to the test owing to advancing inclement weather) and the olds lay in the sun.









So the sunny day was slowly passed with cat play, washing Ed’s roof and hooking into an enormous lunch/dinner of chicken korma & rice.



Another skate, more fluffing photos and a family movie was all the remaining hours allowed……..Aahhh.

18/11 d7 at San Vito o Capo - Rained all day

Feeling a bit locked in, we were pleased to have done a hard early morning ride around the wonderful promontory to Riserva Zingaro.  Knowing the way, we moved a bit faster & a bit further without the wind to buffet us - always very satisfying.  A bit unsettling however to be cycling in the peaceful coastal morning quiet, the only sound that of chirruping birds, and the peace is shattered by gun shots.  Looking up the side of the hill there’s a lone gunman, about 100m away staring down us crazy foreigners on bikes.  We were somewhat relieved to see it was a shotgun he held and there was an energetic hunting dog bounding through the low scrub between us and the gunman, in search of the unfortunate bird.  Still, cycling in a hunting range is a little disconcerting!  Kept our heads a little lower and hugged the cliff a little closer on the ride home. 

That was enough adventure for 1 day!  The rest of day included snoozes, updating photos & slide show albums, cat play, watching a movie, reading, cooking up a prawn and spinach pasta, a last shower before getting stinky on our several days crossing the Med and a few cups of tea.

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