12.16.2012

Pompeii through Slovenia


October 13 – November 13

So, as I was last saying, we were being escorted to Pompeii by the graciousness of the local Police. We got there quickly and safely.

We have seen Vesuvius, the culprit that put this city to sleep forever in 79 A.D. Now, it is beautiful and quiet, as is Pompeii, which is 50 hectares of uncovered city. Still to be excavated is the remaining 16. So, it is big! An almost whole city from Roman times. Of course much of it is not in its whole state but there is a wealth of architecture to be seen... in all states. It is easy to visualize the busy city. The main streets are wider than those leading into the residences. Room for chariots and parades and people scurrying to and from the main market square every day. Water almost constantly cleans the streets, running downhill. To cross the street at the corners, the people stepped from the narrow sidewalks to blocks of stepping stones to keep their shoes and clothing from getting wet. David, Deb and I are there 3 ½ hours exploring all the nooks and crannies that held reminders of some of its 20,000 inhabitants. Many lived in elegance. Examples of painted walls...murals and symbols of the families... and of mosaic walls, floors, tables were in abundance...the original art! And sculptures/statues with missing noses, arms etc. but still lovely in their classic styles. Vesuvius stands watch over all from one end of the lovely classic forum. We saw the amphitheater where the town gathered for every occasion...and it seemed the crowd roared from their seats. And a smaller steeper amphitheater where plays were offered. In the Roman baths we could see how the floors were heated by hot water pipes beneath them. Along the streets, in front of homes, there were bits and pieces of pottery, silverware, urns, jewelry, even toys. Each home (casa)had a large garden space behind. Room for animals. We walked through parts of 8 districts (Regios). Through reconstructed parks and fields. Tall trees line some areas, looking like they have always been there. It was truly a wonderful experience. Tragic, but a gift to all of us who follow such a rich civilization.

The hotel for Deb tonight is the jewel in the crown...and we found it simply by following signs through scruffy streets, finally landing on the hillside at the Rosenthal. David and I sleep underground in their garage! Deb sends a bottle of wine to us by way of a pleasant young employee...from the castle to the dungeon!

Sunday, our last day to play together. Let's make it a good one. We head very slowly in the direction of the Rome airport. Mid morning we stop in a small river town. Coffee and pastry at a cafe bar on the little main square. We share our space with the local men...their daily meeting spot. They are animated Italian men. Good company. Church bells ring across the road and the sanctuary fills. Outside on our square, children play on bikes round and round the obligatory statue. Two on a bike. Ice cream in their hands. Squeals of laughter as they almost take a tumble. A plaque on the wall is somewhat curious to us. It has a swastika on it. We ask a passer-by. He tells us that this plaque is here to remind the town people that Hitler bombed this town one November day.

One more stop. Spurlunga. A white hill town two hours southwest of Rome. A few scribbles on our map, a suggestion from some helpful person, has sent us here. Below the town there are lovely sand beaches. The Mediterranean is still fairly warm. So we walk for a while. A few swimmers are bobbing in the waves, children dart in and out like sandpipers...not wanting to get too wet! Most folks seem happy sleeping on their beach chairs, books and magazines slipped to the sand, or hugged to the chest. We drive up to the hill town. First things first. A gelato to carry with us as we start into the narrow stone pedestrian streets of residences and shops. It is quiet and enfolds us in its worn history. Down and in and out and around. We are finally lost. A family is coming up the stairs toward us. “Where are we? How do we get out of here?” They tell us to just keep going. “All pathways lead back to the starting point!” This is a family from Long Island. A couple with two boys and parents who own a home in a town not far away. They are right. It was a circuitous route but we found our van.

We learn that there are many caves in the cliffs reaching under this city. Spelunking is popular. I will leave that to others who are not concerned about closed-in spaces!

Our ride to Rome is gorgeous. The route leads us through a tunnel of trees for miles and miles. Flat straight roads with tall pine trees planted on each side. For beauty and shade. Blue mountains march to the east of us. White billowing clouds lazily roll across their tops. “Ice Cream Castles in the Air”. Then, from its outside edges, the city begins to build. More houses, apartment buildings, businesses....and what? A real elephant and a real giraffe? Great visual advertising for the circus along the road a bit with white tent, colored pennants flying. Do you think the elephant and friend giraffe are happy? I suppose they could be.

The sun sets as we turn into the Golden Tulip Hotel. David and I are treated to a fine dinner in the restaurant and we say “goodbye...and thank you...and we had a great time together...take good care of yourself...we will miss you”. Hefty warm hugs. Deb has been a great partner in our adventure.

October 15
Deb must be in the air on her way to Paris. We are having a hard time getting going. She has been part of our daily plans, offering fun suggestions. Our first thought is to catch up on our emails so we drive to a sea town not far away...Ostia. When that is done we still feel lost. Maybe we should go with the flow and be slow and lazy today. Sunshine and blue skies. “Let's go to the beach and take a snooze!” So with blanket and books in hand we do this. There is quite a breeze...we don't sleep...we get sand in our pockets, in our hair and in our ears, so we give up and decide on a different plan. There are two hill towns that we still have time to see before we head to Slovenia to pick up our friend Diana. I put Cirvita in the GPS. After driving for almost two hours we find ourselves in the wrong Cirvita. A seedy little spot by the side of a small dark road. There is more than one town with the name Cirvita. Too late to search out the right Cirvita, we “turn in” for the night.

We wake to cold air as we are high in the mountains. I have to roll down my jeans and put socks on. And where is my warm jacket? David pulls on a wool sweater. Actually, I love this change. We can't figure out which is the “right” Cirvita so instead we head to the other hill town, Orvieto. While we drive, we play a game. WHAT WORD OR PHRASE WOULD YOU USE TO DESCRIBE ITALY?

CYPRESS/ PINE/ HILLS/ MOUNTAINS/ BEACH/ PROSCUITO/ FRESH PRODUCE/ GELATO/ PROMENADES/ WILD DRIVERS/ OLIVE TREES/ VINEYARDS/ SIDEWALK CAFES/ WHITE VILLAGES/ BEAUTIFUL SUITS AND SHOES/ BEAUTIFUL SEXY WOMEN/ GRIZZLED MEN/ PASTA/ 3WHEELED VEHICLES/ VESPAS/ ROMAN RUINS/ HILL TOWNS/ OCEAN/ FABULOUS CLOUDS/ BRIDGES/ TUNNELS/ BARS/ SUN GLASSES/ FUN-LOVING FAMILIES/ ITALIAN DESIGN/ PAINTED POTTERY/ OLD TOWNS/ SUNSHINE/ STONE HUTS/ ART~OLD AND NEW/ GREAT WINES/ LEATHER BAGS/ MARKET DAYS/ PASSIONATE PEOPLE

So we have made our way to Orvieto, up the funicular to the hill town. First stop is an uphill walk to the church. The Piazza Duomo has a front facade that is full of a variety of busy stuff to look at. Bible illustrations start from the left...Creation...Tree of Jesse...New Testament...The Last Judgment...so many things to look at in each story that it is actually fun. Each supporting pillar is topped by unique symbols of the evangelists...Matthew as an Angel...Mark as a Lion...Luke as a Bull...John as an Eagle. The interior is interesting with its black and white stripes but the outside is the best, even showing off some Gothic pinnacle prickles.

A walk through town and a beer seems like a good idea. I think we are still on slow mode today. The town is just as satisfying as all the other narrow stone streets and buildings we have wandered through. We never tire. The old is unique and handsome to us. We stop in a produce shop. Tiny. Everything in it is perfect...and a bit more expensive because it is on the top of this hill. And here we meet new friends, Kathy and David. Both of us are holding on to our Rick Steve's ITALY travel books. We begin to talk in the middle of that small space and can't seem to stop. Finally, the other David says, “Can I buy you a drink so we can continue this conversation in a better place?” So we enjoy each others company immensely at an outside table until there is no sun left and we are cold. Kathy and David are from San Leandro, California. David and David have much in common and the stories kept coming. We certainly found a great match to spend our afternoon with.

Before we leave town we buy four bottles of Orvieto white wine, total cost 11 euros.

October 17
We have found our way to the right Cirvita! This is the hill town that you will remember in Rick's videos. It is unique because you have to walk a long causeway from one hill to another to get to it...uphill. The further you go the steeper it gets. There are hills all around us but they have sloughed off their sandy make-up until the whole area looks like a huge sand pile with some points or ridges still standing with plant growth on top. It has happened in Cirvita too. A good part of the castle has slid into the abyss below. It is lunch time. A few places are still open out of season. We choose the one with the blazing wood fire in the fireplace and order wine with tomato and basil brochettes with a small amount of olive oil drizzled on top. (Pecorino cheese on the side.) Oh my gosh what a taste...all this on some good toast ...thick fried bakery bread. Try it! And we split an apple dessert! Now we are fortified to move forward.

This is the smallest of towns...I think 10 inhabitants still live here and most of them are very old. One of these old people was a woman, dressed in colorful old clothing. Shoes and thick stockings, a skirt of a flower pattern and a bright red sweater over it all. One foot was gnarled and misshapen. One arm hung at her side with the inert hand lying in her lap. She wore a scarf over her grey hair. When she smiled most of her teeth were missing. She was sitting at a gateway asking for money to have her picture taken or to enter her garden. (I am not sure it was even her garden.) She was worth a photograph...and we paid. Cats and more cats everywhere. Kittens so cute we wanted to pick one up and take her “home”.

October 18
Today we prepare for the coming of our friend Diana. We find ourselves in the outskirts of Padova where we wash and dry our clothes and bedding at a laundromat. David gets a haircut. The van gets vacuumed. We buy fresh fruit and vegetables at a produce market store. We begin to pick up some apples when the proprietor comes over and says, “Don't touch the goods. The Italians put their hands all over the fresh produce. Let me work for you. You just tell me what you want.” He was friendly and jovial and it was easy for us to let him “work for us”. We learn that he was a champion horse jumper and see photos of him on horseback in competition. He seems just a happy farmer to us. Who knows what accomplishments have been made in the lives of those we meet from day to day. Isn't it wonderful! He dearly loved his horses. “They have emotion. They are wonderful animals”. His last words to us were...”Italian politicians are stupid!”

Tonight we sleep off the freeway in a rest stop. Gas station, restaurant, truckers and cars. Lots going on. Lots of lights. We have already been warned not to sleep in these places...but we take it lightly. At four- thirty in the morning David awakes to find a thief in our car, leaning into the front seats. We could have jumped him if we could have found our wits, but instead we only scared him and he left behind our packs, car documents, David's passport...on the ground near the van. He got our computer. I confronted a couple parked close by. She was stuffing something into the back seat, under piles of bags and boxes. On top of their car wrapped and taped boxes were roped securely. The license plate...Romania. And yes, I have to say they were gypsies. When David wrote down their license number the woman went nuts and lunged at him...broke the pen in half! Then they got into their car and drove away. We called the police, who were very nice and took down all the information. Of course they alerted other patrols to watch for the car but they told us that there was not much hope to get it back. Our money and cards(hidden), phone and cameras remained untouched. I guess you could say we were lucky.

Okay, this was my fault. I was writing into the night, in the front passenger seat. I was noticeable. Head lamp and glow of the computer screen. It was 1:30 when I crawled into the back bed. AND I FORGOT TO LOCK THE DOORS! It was a frightening experience to be sound asleep...with someone already in your car. I no longer sit up front to write. We both check the locks at night. And I lost a months worth of blog writing which is why I am so far behind. I had to reconstruct it all up to this point. A difficult task.

October19
On to better things. Today is the day we meet Diana in Ljubljana, Slovenia. We first drive to Trieste, which is on the sea, still in Italy. Getting to this city is a bit like the Amalfi coast towns...down steep grades. We pass by a very tall tower with an angel on top of it. Very impressive. Perhaps it is there to protect the folks who fish or have other occupations that require being on a sea whether still or stormy. It seems a working city, not a tourist place. We walk a bit. I get my hair cut because I see a barber sitting in his chair reading a paper. He needs something to do! He is good and fast. I much prefer the atmosphere compared to a womens salon. We learn that there are many caves here where the citizens of Trieste hid the Polish and Czech Jewish people during WWII. Jews came here knowing that it was a safe place. Imagine, having to flea to the warmth of a cave?

We cross into Slovenia. No closed border. It is part of the EU. Autumn is here! Green, yellow and orange leaves still on the trees. It is our first glimpse of this season. There are mountains. Big ones. With snow caps. We did not know what Slovenia would be like. It is beautiful. We set the GPS for Diana's hotel, Hotel Slon. It is on the main street in the very center of Ljubljana. The reception desk calls her room for us and while we wait I notice that Bill Clinton has been here. A proud and prominent photograph announces the fact. Diana comes toward us with a big smile. We are actually here together in Ljubljana! After all the plans and emails. Let's check out the old part of town and have dinner together!

Yes, I know I always say that this is the best town... or that is the most beautiful city... or this one has the most ambiance. Or the square is so amazing. Or the river is so beautiful and the bridges that go over the river are fabulous and the neighborhoods are cozy and the architecture of the buildings is incredible. Well, yes... that is true BUT this is the city that has it ALL!

We walk out of the hotel, turn left and left again at the first street...a few blocks on a slight incline through shops and eateries to the big pink church on the square. The pink church will always serve as a familiar place to head for, as do the three bridges that cross the river there...three in one spot. Take your pick! It is a remarkably fun idea. All three of us are stunned at what we see and experience in this city of cities. Music is always present... music from good musicians playing on the streets... a trumpeter playing jazz... a drummer, and on a bit further a crowd has gathered around a crooning voice in song. We walk over the Dragon bridge. Two large wonderful dragons at each end...green with patina. The Dragon is this towns mascot/emblem. After dinner at an outside table we head back and come upon a beautiful woman dancing with fire sticks in the very center spot in the square. It is marked...the center. If you want to be in the middle of everything... you know where to go...but you better be ready with a song or a dance. There is a monumental statue of a famous Slovenian poet, Presheren, standing off to the side. A muse flies above him, giving him some ideas I think! It is the meeting place of friends. “Meet you at the statue.” More folks stroll into the square and across the bridges. The later it gets the energy rises. Diana has had a long long day on airplanes so it is early to bed for her, and we are most always game for that.

October 20
In the morning we meet Diana to walk and get to know this city more. She has already been to the daily open market and is eager to show it to us. We explore different streets than the night before, and we go to the market and shop for meat and cheese. Diana has already bought some food to share with us. We follow a plan to see all the Art Nouveau buildings...all in a walkable distance. Such fun...like playing a game. The architecture is wildly wonderful...if you love the style. And we do. And then there is an outrageous building painted like a traditional cloth pattern. (Just for your information...along the way I catch a phrase written on a stone wall in black...”Capitalism makes me ill”). We go to the castle which is above us perched on the hill. I think it is the getting there that is the draw. And maybe the view. Nothing too much happening, but then, it is off season. We have been told about a really nice neighborhood a few minutes in another direction. A group of tightly packed, nicely kept small ancient homes on pedestrian streets. They keep a pea patch garden going amongst them. And flanking the houses, over a canal, is the greatest little funky business district. One restaurant is painted outside in a gold and colored Klimt style motif. And just up the street, a hostel/cafe is completely covered in bright colored murals. Outside tables are full, even in the cold. This feels like our kind of place. What would it be like to live here? We also visit a Roman wall not far from this neighborhood. And we choose to have a little lunch in a sweet warm corner cafe. Diana takes a few hours to rest while David and I visit the National Museum and again it is refreshing to see works of East European artists, this time, impressionists. Dinner at our “house”, parked not far from the hotel. Diana squeezes into the van and we dine around our table. She is a trooper! I think she even likes our cooking!

October 21
The three of us are loaded in the van. We have given Diana instructions that she is to be our tour guide so she has studied and suggests our course, which we all agree to... SE to see Iron Age sites, Monasteries and art, then generally North to the mountains followed by SW to the Adriatic.

The Sumacs are bright red with large cone shaped seed “packages”. Little birds dart about, all in a jumble of flapping and gliding from sky to bush to ground. It is misty. Hawks are on fences, waiting for a bit of ground movement to snatch away a meal. Firewood is neatly stacked. Bottles hang on pear trees! Are the farmers getting a head start on brandy making? There seems a sense of well being. But is that my projection? I know the economy is very bad and folks live on the edge. I guess it is my wish that they still have food, family, friends, shelter and a sense of contentment. David and Diana are chatting in the front seats as we drive. I am happy back on the “couch”...quietly observing. There are covered drying racks near the barns. Alfalfa and corn hang to dry. Funny shaped gourds decorate a fence row. Above the wide barn doors, shapes have been cut out to decorate...horses, stars, hearts. Castles are beginning to be Ho Hum. Too many.

We stop in Dolenjske Toplice for lunch of some good warm soup. I choose beat root. Hit the spot! The restaurant is dear, and the waiter, adorable! The healing waters of this very old spa resort are still used. We hike on an archaeological path to Cvinger, an Iron Age fortified settlement (First Millennium BC) up on top of a hill. It feels good to be walking, first through the town, then on the trail through the woods in the crisp air. There is not much evidence of the village...bits of the surrounding fortified wall. Explanatory signs tell us where the hill fort was, the smelting zone and the barrows. The iron made in Cvinger was used in trade between peoples of Italy, the Alps and the Balkans. It is amazing to me what can be found out about their lives through the gathering of artifacts and bones. We know that their staple food was meat...sheep, goats, pigs and cattle...and also grains...wheat, millet and barley...and mustard. The excavated bones show that hunting was only used for supplementary food. Also found: pottery, jewelry, bronze vessels and tools. It must be thrilling to be working on a “dig”, to actually find something, dust it off, analyze it.

October 22
Diana has really done her homework. We must go to Sticna (Stitchna) monastery. Founded in 1136 for the Cistercian order...it became very important for education and manuscript production. This monastery was well fortified and so, today, it remains a sturdy structure. For about 115 years it was not used but in 1889 Cistercuian monks reclaimed it. The church is still used for worship. A guide took us though parts of the monastery and the church. There are still monks living here. That is probably the reason for todays beauty. Recovery of the painted walls, statues and columns and a highly decorated sanctuary made this tour exciting for me and my camera. I seem to be attracted to the art aspect of these religious spaces. The craft of its creators. I am not pulled to know the history very deeply, as it is the sort of thing I forget pretty quickly, especially with the amount of sites we are visiting. I am constantly aware of the hold religion had on the older world peoples. Their beliefs (and some of their fears) outwardly show.

Diana is so good at finding good inexpensive lodgings. 15 to 35 euros per night. And they are all clean, comfortable and friendly. Most of the time breakfast comes with the room. It is fun to research and then find them, putting the address into the GPS. The one we are at tonight, was suggested by our Sticna Monastery tour leader. We are parked outside Diana's room at an Agro/Tourism farm. We have dinner in the car tonight. It seems to be our usual routine now. One night I fixed a cabbage and chicken salad which Diana has added to her list of favorite meals. This is the basic:
Fresh cooked chicken, meat torn in pieces
Thin sliced cabbage
Cut up orange
Peanuts
Candied ginger bits
A small amount of mayonnaise
Olive oil and apple cider vinegar
A big dash of curry
Lots of pepper and a little salt

October 23
Today we are heading to Nova Mesto but first make a stop at the unique Trifare Pilgrimage Center at Rosalnice. Three churches are behind one wall, all different denominations... for the Slovenians, the Croatians and Greek Orthodox...built to cope with the surge of pilgrims. The contemporary cemetery surrounding them is very unique. Marble flat tops of different designs of decoration but always an area open to accommodate garden plantings. Candles inside protective vases are placed on the marble. Headstones are behind and they tell of the lineage of the families, all remembered in one plot.

Nova Mesto. A town to live in, a great square that is really used by locals. We use the library for email catch-up. We also visit the Dolenjske Bronze Age Museum. A little beauty of a museum. It supports our hike to Cvinger, giving us much more information about iron-age villages. Our imaginations and understanding are widened. A classroom of 15 year olds is on a tour. Some listen but most don't.

Today the drive is sensational. As usual, David and Diana are chatting and I am quietly observing from my seat in the back of the “bus”. Everyone has flowers still growing from window boxes or pots on the doorsteps. It seems too cold to have such a nice showing. The most popular are the red geraniums cascading in such profusion below the windows. You cannot see the sills, nor the planters, just the red of flowers and green of leaves. Other favorites are salvia, roses and petunias...all red, red, red. It is the time for clean-up for winter. Many folks are out in their yards with rakes and wheel barrows. We ride through wine country. Grape leaves are yellow now. Fields are stripped and clean. It is definitely wool scarf weather. Small roads to destinations are the most enjoyable. Baby lambs in Autumn. Now through deciduous woods. Leaves wafting slowly to the ground, spotting the grass with color. The trunks are slim and tall, the foliage grows high on the top. There is mist between the trunks...a mysterious see-through forest. Leaf scattered trails disappear around bends, inviting an autumn walk. We overnight in Semic.

October 24
Diana has been up awhile. She has been to the bakery to buy her breakfast, some fresh sugary wonder, and has taken it across the street for a good cup of coffee to go with it! She adores this part of travel. It includes people watching.

We drive on. The barns are black in this area. Black with age, black with coal oil as a preservative. Yellow marigolds and white chrysanthemums hang on in the garden plantings. Quick little birds bounce around in the pine trees...green needles flagging rust. Black eyed Susans. Pumpkins on porches. Do they celebrate Halloween? Brown and white goats, sturdy thick horses, cats out in the fields mousing. Corn strung up at front doors, looking a bit like bananas to me.

Oh, oh. We are lost. We stop by a restaurant for some help with directions. Immediately, before we can get out of the car, a waiter is by our side. “You are lost, I presume.” (Beautiful English) There is always help around when needed, angels dressed as humans.

With new information we are off again. We drive through a small town. Little children and their teachers are on there way to somewhere on the main street. Each class member has a bright green baseball cap and matching over-the-head tunic over their coats. So dear! The boys tightly hold hands with the girls, in twos.

We come close to our destination. Konstanjevica na Krki is a small village on an island. We walk along the main street. David and I find a tiny painting that will remind us of the area and fit nicely into our van living room! Diana explores the town on her own and we meet back at the van.

Our destination is off the island, another Cistercian Monastery but this is now an art museum like no other. Our first stop was a show of neon paintings. We were in the dark with infrared lighting which picked up the responsive paint the artist had used. What an experience! The paintings were huge. You had the feel that you were walking around in the dark of night and all the stars had turned color and were telling you stories. I liked it! Most of the rest of the exhibits were works of famous Slovenian artists working in a wide variety of mediums and styles. The paintings were hung and sculptures placed, in rooms as you walk around the cloister...three floors worth! Franz Kralj was most featured. (1895 – 1960) He could work in any medium very well. In general...the spaces are packed with really wonderful work. Lifetimes of serious work. I found this art museum to be such a rich inspiring experience...I could almost taste it it was so delicious!

Outside on the lawns were very big wooden sculptures. Thick and strong European style. These are created on the spot once a year by invited artists. What a great idea!

THOUGHTS and OBSERVATIONS:
>These money belts we wear. They are a pain in the butt, but...they keep us from worry. However, sometimes several check-out grocery girls have nearly fainted as David digs into his pants while they wait to be paid!
>The cabbages are really big...not just a big head...bigger! Too big to put into a grocery bag. Also they are very dense and heavy. We had to ask a market produce person to please cut it into four! (1/4 = size of 1.)

October 25
Brezice. Diana has earmarked “Knight's Hall” as a MUST SEE. It is inside a renaissance complex that is now a fine museum. We take our time going through it but Diana can wait no longer and scurries ahead. She returns to get David and leads him to the Knight's Hall, telling him to close his eyes until she tells him to open them. WOW! This sight stops us all in our tracks. It is still used for local gatherings of government officials...just as it was used for the gathering of Knights who would come far and wide to attend an event. The paintings and frescoes are amazing. They cover every inch of wall and ceiling. Just as it used to be! Our imaginations run wild. Chairs are set and ready for their entrance. This is a find. Thanks Diana!

Churches in the area villages are painted butter yellow with white trim. The bell towers seem taller. We turn north and follow along a small river. We are getting higher into the snow capped mountains as we make our way toward Lake Bled. It is definitely colder but the air is the rosy golden color of autumn. A halcyon day. We stay the night in Kamnik.

October 26
Kamnik is a lovely old Medieval town to walk through. One building is wrapped, curled and looped with orange electrical tubing. The meaning? We used to be able to see electrical wire and now, in this digital time, everything is unseen. We used to be a lot more free, we could spend many hours alone without anyone knowing where we are. (I realize that to some people this is a good thing, but not necessary good for them.)

We buy produce from a fresh market for salad tonight. The owner gives us three oranges (and I must say that they were juicy and tasty). We buy milk and cookies for tea. There are extra flower shops open. One kind of arrangement seems to be the most popular. “Excuse me”, I say, “but can you tell me what everyone is buying flowers for today?” Two ladies are glad to pantomime that November first is a time to remember those who have died. There will be two days of holiday celebrated. It is called Memorial Day I think but is not just for victims of war. I duck into a yarn, ribbon and embroidery shop. I am always looking for interesting yarn but in these small towns there does not seem to be anything out of the ordinary.

We get on our way again. I notice that some of the hay drying racks have been added to, to be a good cover for stacked wood. An older husband and wife are in their small fields hand picking the left overs after harvest. Today it is potatoes. Hills surrounding us hover between a leafy dark rose/gold and conifer black/green.

We reach the town of Bled and can now see that famous scene of small island in the midst of lake. It is beautiful, even to us who are used to such things. The forest surrounding this lake is deciduous, so the fluffy fall leaf colors add another dimension. We walk around the lake, which is a bit larger than Seattles Green Lake. However it has a fairy tale feel with a cliff-top castle and a church on a tiny island. The island was first important as a Pagans' shrine. I like the thought of that! It is misty with vapors. Ah, but those vapors turn into rain toward the end of our walk. It is all so very picturesque! We can take the rain...we are from the Pacific NW.! We opted out on the gondola ride to the island and the 99 steps to the church. Just a bit too touristy for us.

October 27
It rained! Cats! Dogs! No let-up! All night long.... and continued. Okay. That is enough. We Pacific Northwesters are heading to the Coast, the Adriatic Sea. (Did anyone say we liked rain?) We stop in Koper to walk its old streets. The weather is still rainy. We duck into shops and exchange some words with vacationers. “Oh, you are the Evergreen People!” They must have seen our van in the parking lot and picked us out as belonging to it...not too hard! Diana buys a National Fast Food favorite. A burek. A flaky crust filled with cheese and chopped spinach. We were looking for a bagette sandwich. Wecan only find cheese and meatballs on limp bread! Then Diana insists on buying us gelatos to cheer us up on this grey day.

Next Slovenian coast town, Izola. There are black flags flying from some of the boats in the harbor. Maybe one of their skipper friends has passed on? Boats in other harbors have flown the same small black flags.

We all love to walk in the old town streets, this time toward a church we could see at the top of the hill, then down a different street to the harbor. Oh no! This is not the harbor we know! We have landed at the opposite side of the hill to where we started. Lost. We asked 7 young men who were out walking together. They all spoke English but still, were unable to get the directions across. So we just wandered in the direction they pointed to and finally saw something familiar to anchor ourselves to. Ahh. This is our harbor. There is the pleasure boat, California Queen.

Today I am a bit out of sorts. Tired, quiet, no energy. And I keep making mistakes while knitting.

October 28
Sunday. We are in Piran. Today it is rainy and windy but this could be a really wonderful place, so we walk anyway. We park in an uphill parking garage and take an elevator down, almost to the sea level. We didn't get wet yet! We walk along the waterfront for 10 minutes and reach the town square. It is always a must to check out the town square. It is the center of community activity. People walk across it at many angles with shopping bags in hand...or just a newspaper and a little bulging bakery bag. Always there are two or three men together and at least one of them is animated about something and another has his hands clasped behind his back. They all have jaunty hats on. Little tiny kids can't help chase the pigeons. Everyone carries umbrellas. And the patterns on them are fabulous! Many have the traditional hook handle and when it is not raining they turn into canes. There is a statue, monument or fountain holding forth in the center, usually with some form of seating. Always there are friends or families sitting here. Such a welcoming place to be. And if you are the kind that does not want to miss anything, you will be here at least once a day. (Usually before the bakery closes!)

From the square we head past the old town along the harbor jammed with boats, past the pastel painted buildings out to the point of a peninsula. This is a picture perfect working fishing port, and sailing community...and just the spot for lovers of any kind of boat and the sea.

Before heading back to our van we visit two museums, modern art and sculpture. At the latter the saleslady is delighted to be talking to folks from America. During one marriage she was in Berkeley for nine years. That episode concluded and she is back where she grew up. What a character! Her California stories went on a bit too long but she did finally send us along to lunch next door in a cozy spot out of the rain. Pizza.

We are so near the Croatian border. We must go and see the salt flats. We go through a Slovenian border, show our passports, get stamped and waved through. Then we are supposed to turn to the right before the Croatian border but we did not understand this and went right through the Croatian border...our passports stamped a second time. Oh my, now we have to be silly vacationers and turn right around and go back! But people are always willing to talk to us, even officials. We asked him if he had been to the USA? “No but I will. I want to go to the Florida Keys, to go to Ernest Hemingway's Bar!” It is now too late to walk to the flats, visit the museum there, and walk back....so here we go, back through the Slovenian border and get our passports stamped again!

October 29
Enough of this. Let's get back to Ljubljana. It is Monday. Diana leaves us later today. On the highway we see snow topped cars! Then snow on the ground. Snow on top of trees still filled with colored leaves. We manage to miss the active storm, the snow no longer falls. Back in Ljubljana we want to play some more! Just a few more hours in this city. We walk to a down town neighborhood. Old kept-up small houses closely packed on small streets. A pea patch in their midst. The business district is wild. A restaurant exterior painted in Klimt style. A hostel/bar covered in bright swirling murals. A sidewalk cafe is full. even in the cold. Across a little canal bridge, we stop for tea and creme cafes in a small quiet residential coffee bar, then walk to the Roman wall. David and I could live here! Now we must take Diana to the airport and see that she gets safely to her plane. What will we do without our guide and dear friend, Diana?

So here is what we do. It is very hard to get back on the track of two travelers. We take care of business first. Check our emails. Donna has sent us our new computer...3 to 5 days...”but don't be surprised if it takes two weeks!”...says the postal clerk.


P.S. Diana is the author of the book SHARED WALLS Seattle Apartment Buildings 1900 – 1939 Diana E. James

THOUGHTS and OBSERVATIONS:
>As we walked around the edge of Lake Bled we noticed lone or groups of fishermen. They were all dressed the same in camouflage suits. Many of them had tents. Their fishing poles/lines were set out on holders, always more than one. They had chairs to make themselves comfortable in. Some read books. Others talked. I think this is a way to relax and the gear seems to be a MUST HAVE.
>We asked one person where he would like to go when he makes his planned trip to the USA. “I have a dream. You might think this is really silly but I want to take Route 66 from Chicago to L.A...in a motor home!
>I am feeling more and more at home in this world.

October 30 – November 13
Well, it took two weeks for the computer to get into our hands. It sat at the post office for awhile waiting for us to pay a tax on it. We were not notified as should be. But, we lived here in this wonderful Ljubljana for an extended time and it really did feel like this was getting to be home away from home. Not only did we spend a lot of time in our favorite part of town, going to exhibits and shopping at the market or time in the book store or a movie (Hope Rising)...but we beat a path to Fusine, a district out of the main part of town. Here we found a community of many 12 story apartments with parks and all the amenities needed. It afforded us free quiet parking and our special spot, the local library. A library where both of us could use a computer every day (as I was trying to reconstruct a month of blog!). Lijana (Leanna) was behind the desk the first afternoon we arrived. Then came a two day holiday. When we returned we found that she was so worried about us! Sleeping in our car! We forget that we look old to some, old enough to know better! Dear Lijana took us into her care. “All travelers need help”, she said. While we worked in the library Lijana brought us tea and cookies! She brought Slovenian Childrens' books to show me. She and her friend Zdenka invited us to dinner at Zdenka's apartment. They fed and fed us with traditional Slovenian foods. They took us on an excursion to the center of Slovenia, a ride up into the mountains. And to a memorial complex that had been designed by Plecnikove Zale, an accomplished architect and favorite of the Slovenian people. Lijana had us to dinner at her apartment one evening. I think we were together for about 5 hours looking at her art and photos and talking about our lives. For those of you who were part of the Sunbow Community...Lijana would fit right in. My heart nearly broke to say goodbye. We are hoping that maybe she can join us in our travels. We have a little stone in the shape of a heart that she gave to us. It rides along on a window sill and keeps us safe.

We also visited a good many exhibits and attended concerts during those days.
    • DESIGN RELATIONS a biannual design exhibition. It happens in venues all over the city. We went to one site and saw some good innovative designs built around being green... so RECYCLING is the main element in these projects along with design and function

  • MODERN ART GALLERY a gallery filled with what you would expect... and what you would not expect... an exhibit by Marco Pogacnik, The Art of Life. This artist is interested in the energy of everything. He recognizes and pinpoints spots in the world that have an abundance of this energy...such as stone cairns in Britain, or as close as points around Ljubljana. I have a little book given to me by Lijana, that identifies these places with notes on what to look for. His pieces in this show focused on energy and nature. When we left the gallery I remarked to David...”I wouldn't be surprised if our friend in Seattle, Milenko Matanovic, knows Marco Pogacnik.”


  • CONTEMPORARY ART GALLERY a great modern building and really good and interesting exhibits, some so far out they were just too tough to figure out. But the craziness of them is what pulls you in. We walked into one room which featured the OHO Group. A very important group in Slovenian art, starting in the 60s I think. New art, new ideas. They are still revered. I find a name alongside a photograph...Milenko Matanovic! “David! Come look at this!” Milenko lives in the Seattle area and continues to do important work installing art with groups in communities and between countries. There were several of his early works displayed. Such fun for us to see some of his first ideas. Along with Milenko there are three other artists...one of them Marko Pogacnik, the same person exhibiting in The Modern Art Gallery.


  • RUSSIAN CULTURAL CENTER a husband and wife exhibiting paintings. The woman was giving a class on batiks when we arrived. Her silk scarves were fascinating, revealing images crowded on to the silk... telling childrens stories. The best I have ever seen.


  • CITY ARCHAEOLOGY MUSEUM which mainly showed the history of the city.


  • PHOTO EXHIBIT held in a convention center. These photos depicted the early days of a nearby city. Pretty interesting. Different than old photos of the States.


  • PHILHARMONIC HALL where we heard a most fun and energetic concert of traditional band music by retired members of the symphony orchestra. So, most of the musicians were older and having a grand time playing music together.


  • Student solo cello concert that was more than excellent!


  • Also, we visited the American Embassy twice. Hard to get into...ID, guards, screening etc. but once in, it was a pleasant experience. We also visited the Turkish Embassy to check on safety and ask advice about traveling there. We rang the bell at the outside sidewalk gate and a man in a suit came out to get us. A bit different experience, no fear! They couldn't have been nicer to us. A good long talk and a bag of goodies...maps and magazines and brochures... and advice. “You have nothing to worry about in Turkey. It is a very safe country and the people are very nice.” We are set for Turkey.

    If you are looking for a wonderful place to spend a week or two... Slovenia is it. It is a small country, easy to see everything and you will fall in love with Ljubljana, I promise!

    11.19.2012

    Austria to Pompei

    Austria. Such a neat and tidy place. Do the folks that live here have a common aesthetic? No trash, no weeds. Even the emerald green fields are all cropped the same length. No long straggly grasses.
     
    Vienna!
    A freeway crunch getting here. Morning traffic. The GPS. A big help. We put the closest tram station to the city center into our GPS and found a place for our car close-by. Now we are ready to use easy public transportation in and out of the city. Hands down the most beautiful and interesting city yet. It is not ordinary. There is a lot of space for people, even cars. Wide roads. Wide pedestrian walk ways. Beautiful Baroque buildings everywhere, heavy embellishment, around every corner. It is the afternoon when we first step off the tram. It is not long before a salesman for concerts finds us. And like regular tourists we take the bait. Well, wouldn't you like to hear Mozart and Strauss in Vienna!? After walking the center of town we visit the Leopold Museum. This museum has the largest collection of Egon Shiele's work. It is thrilling to see. Klimt and many other excellent well known artists are also on exhibit.

    Time to head to the concert. Hmmmmm. The music was good, just sort of rote, led by a female Andre Riu, smiling and playing her violin. You could tell that she had done this every night for a few years. The tourist groups were seated last and filled the beautiful little concert hall. They chatted and visited til the curtain went up...then again at intermission when they were offered champagne. It comes with the tour. I did enjoy the ballet...but, we will not buy tickets on the street again! 


    The next day...more street wandering and sitting at an outdoor cafe. This is the part I like best, feeling the city vibrate. In our wanderings we find an art glass gallery. I am not a fan of glass. In fact, by now it bores me. Chilhuli and copies. But here, in this gallery, I would have bought had it not been so expensive and too heavy to ship home. The pieces are very diverse, created by glass artists from all over the world. It was a surprise treat.

    We head toward the museum block. The Hapsburg Palace compound turned MuseumsQuarter. The Kunst museum is the most beautiful building I have been in. If you have money like the Hapsburgs, you can spend it how you please and it pleased them to decorate this Baroque 
    building to the max. The most exciting part to me was to climb a scaffolding up into a dome area and see the Sessessionists, brothers Gustav and Ernest Klimt's, painted murals up close. There is something magic about being next to an original piece of art. Art done by someone you admire. From here we find our way to the Albertina museum. There are stairs leading to the main floor. On approaching them we did not realize these were stairs! Wildly painted colored stripes (Later I see the painting that inspired this). I hurried to see the Impressionists while David made his way to see a photo exhibit by American, Joel Sternfeld, a social commentary on America. David thought it was excellent.
    Last day... Two more museums before we leave in the afternoon. These two are situated near our car. A short walk to the Upper Belvedere (once a prince's palace) which has the best collection of Gustav Klimt's work. The Kiss, JudithThe Embrace. All that gold and mosaic work that creeps into his work. I theorize that he was inspired by seeing all the religious art, icons etc...full of gold and mosaics. There are many early works of his in this exhibit that show his truly amazing skill at realism, both drawing and painting. Shiele is also represented here, and Van Gogh and Manet.
    A couple of blocks further and we are at the 21 Contemporary museum and school. The architecture is modern and really well done...even featuring a delightful outdoor/indoor cafe which we take advantage of. The work on exhibit was not that good ...at least in our estimation. Maybe it just lacked in maturity. Three days here seems enough for now. Museums offer wonderful insights and inspiration but they are also exhausting. We should come back. There is so much more to see. This is what we missed: Hundertwasser. Museum of Modern Art. Sesession Building with Klimt's 30 meter long painting/interpretation of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony.
     
    Our next stop was to be Salzburg but we could not bring ourselves to immediatly "do" another city. It is small roads, small towns and nature that we are longing for so we head to Hallstatt. But first we stop at a VW car dealer to get our oil changed. The wait was enjoyable. David and I and Margit Heigler, a local English teacher, sat with coffee in hand and discussed our countries, politics (she is an Obama fan like most Europeans), and capitalism. She sees the ugliness of capitalism creeping into their society. Greed.
     
    Hallstatt! For those of you who like to watch Rick Steve's travel videos, you know this one. A beautiful little mountain town sitting on the edge of a lake. Actually totally surrounded by mountains. Most travelers would get off a train and catch a small ferry across the lake to this community. However, we came in our van through long long tunnels, underneath the mountains. We arrived in the afternoon and explored the town. Uphill we wind through canyon-like stone narrow streets. It is an "artsy" place, both shops and the homes /apartments ...stacked in hobit fashion, organically grown on top of each other leaving a huge variety of spaces to occupy. David and I get lost from each other. But how many streets can there be to get lost in? There is only one portal in and out of town that we know of. I wait on a bench by the quiet dark water. Swans are slowly paddling along the edge, their dusky white images seem to be floating on air. Once back together we decide that we will move on. We have seen and done enough to satisfy. We find a spot to park and sleep in the dark.
     
    I wake to woods that remind me of the Canadian Group of Seven. The autumn sort, with leaves that dot the canvas. We drink coffee with chocolate in it and listen to Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue. Genius created everlasting music. And coming from the speakers all around us inside the van. A great way to start the day. From woods we go to tree-lined meadows and then ascend into the Austrian Alps. Rock peaks like the Grand Tietons. Fresh snow piled up on the north sides. Glaciers, waterfalls. This area is called the Grossglockner Hochalpenstrasse. Up steep-sided switchbacks akin to the Going to the Sun highway in Glacier National Park, USA. Huge cirques loom very close. David remarks that the view from this height is rather staggering! A roadster rally of neat little cars goes by. Some have their convertible tops down but the occupants are bedecked in hats, coats and scarves. Motorbikes roar by. They have their very own peak to climb. A pilgrimage for them. And bicycles. Strong bodies peddle like machines. They have been training for this. I notice altitude signs. 2,273 meters and climbing. At 2,504 I forget to keep track. The scene around us is seriously awesome!

    Now we are descending. Alpine villages with inviting chalets. Larches, milky glacier colored rivers, tall church spires. Little hay barns are scattered over velveteen meadows. No need to bring the hay in from the fields. There are building yards here filled with wood planks. The wood decorates the cement chalets. Cut out patterns on eves and balconies. We stop in Leinz, a mountain town, and are sent by the Tourist Information Office to the Bruck Castle. What a find! It is full of fabulous art, mainly done by three local artists in the early 1900's. Albin Effer-Lienz (whose work we saw in Vienna), Alfons Walde and Werner Berg. I bought a book of the latter's work so I can take this inspiration home with me. Now it is hidden in the depths of the van somewhere not to surface until we come home!
     
     
    THOUGHTS and OBSERVATIONS:
    >You can tell the difference between a painter and a "heavy hitter" painter right away. The message runs much deeper, the use of medium is better. The idea and the follow through work.
    >There is a feeling of lightness-of-being in Austria.
    >A car full of young people passed us. Thumbs up, big smiles and waves. It is that license plate of ours again. They love to think that Americans would be interested in traveling their country. By the way, I have a nice size Canadian flag stuck right next to the American license plate.
    >I have to laugh. The inside of our van is bedecked with art postcards, black and white prints, paintings and art photos...and any 3D memoriabilia that will stick to the walls. It is beginning to look like the inside of an Orthodox church!
    >Some folks live on the middle lands of the earth, others must be on the edge...mountains, sea and desert.
    >It seems that most of Europe's people love Americans and the USA. Canada isn't mentioned as often...but we know that the world loves Canada!

    More never-ending mountains. Lots of ski areas with lifts taking off from the town streets. We do find that often the snow is man-made these days. The terms machine snow and natural snow are used as if both are equal. We are now in the Italian Alps. Our first stop, Cortina. A rich person's ski town. On and into the Dolomites, white chalky mountains that are very beautiful in the mist. Down and out of the mountains, it looks like California. The town we stop in is Conegliane. It is Saturday night and all the stores are open. We look for WIFI and are not successful. Most countries make it so easy to find but Italy seems the exception. And nobody speaks English here. Well, that is what we are here for...to experience different cultures!

    The freeway we are on is set up like other EU countries. If you receive money for the roads you must follow the EU rules. It does make it easier for us in the familiarity of driving from country to country. The rest stops are unlike what we are used to at home. They are commercial with gas stations and restaurants. Places for the truckers to stop, eat, get a shower and sleep. There are some restaurants that stretch across the freeways overhead, like bridges. They can be accessed by both freeway directions.

    Manatova. Someone along the way has told us to come here. It is not in any guide books so we take the suggestion thinking that locals know best. It is small and old and has a history. It is walkable. There are some great squares to congregate in. People are promenading. It is wonderful entertainment. Beautiful Italian women, handsome men, dressed like celebrities. Well maybe they are? Five inch heels. Tight jeans. This town has Eutruscan and Roman beginnings around its three lakes. We visit the Ducal Palace (Palazzo Ducale). For much of its life it has belonged to the powerful Gonzaga family. The interior is beautifully turned into an exhibit of frescoes. At one point in this castles time, all the frescoes were plastered over and white washed as was the trend. Today we walk from one carefully uncovered painted wall section to the next, as if we were walking in a regular museum with paintings hanging. And above us, there are important bits and pieces of the old walls uncovered. Each room is so tastefully exposed. No furniture to pull your eyes away from those early paintings. I love the whitish finish over the paint...left over from plaster removal.
    Let's walk some more. Out on this square, I kick a stone out of place...a cobblestone that has been there for so long! I bend to pick it up and put it back into place. As I straighten a come face to face with a man who is smiling at me, a little acknowledgement that he approves. I need a gelato. I always need a gelato. David abstains. There is music everywhere we turn. A classic harp. Panpipes from the Andes. A brass quartet playing wonderful strong harmonies. We enter a small private art gallery. The work in here is good. Rocco, the owner, is about to leave for Oregon to set up one of his artist's exhibit there. He is talkative and very friendly and offers to show us, on our map, places that he loves. Places like Montova, small with ambience.

    Another eye to eye encounter. Two old women are struggling to get a young girl's wheelchair over a curb. I move to help. The girl is hunched over but manages to turn her head my way. She does not speak but her eyes say that she is grateful and my smile says I am grateful, too.
     
    Sienna. We are to meet our friend Deb. We do not know the name of her hotel but have arranged with her to call us. No word. Hmmmm? How will this play out? Silly me, my phone was put on vibration from being at the concert in Vienna. Until I put it in my pocket, I did not get her call, the 4th call! So now we know where to find her. There she is! Her dear little self waving at us. She is short, cute and she would like to have you know that she has blond naturally curly hair. Deb is a former English teacher, editor, retired UCC minister who now makes liturgical banners and stoles. She chose to visit Siena and Asissi once again. For us it is our first Italian hill town.
    We all get settled in our hotel and then follow Deb to the famous Campo central square where we find a table with a view at the top of this sloped gathering place. This is where everything happens. In fact, once a year there are horse races held where we are sitting, on the flat walking/eating place surrounding the large "round square". Dirt and sand is brought in and the 17 Siena neighborhoods choose a horse and rider to represent them. The winning neighborhood celebrates all year! Well, we missed that spectacle but we are happy where we are. No sand and dirt but in a front row seat anyway. We order a drink and some nibbles. Swish! The white tablecloth is removed! In an hour and a half when we order dinner, swish, the white starched tablecloth is back on the table. I guess we have to eat to deserve the elegance! We eat and talk and laugh....for four hours! Heading back to the hotel in the dark of night but through gayly lit streets, we are drawn in by the shops that we will surely visit tomorrow. What is it about a hill town that is so inticing?
    After a good hotel breakfast, we head up the hill and enter some of those shops. The leather purses are irresisitable. Italian style. Deb leaves with a dark blue sort of squished bucket with pink accents and lining. I leave with a small plain black leather purse with 3 zips and a strap I can wear diagonally across my body. Now my camera and phone have a safe home. A birthday gift from Deb.

    THOUGHTS and OBSERVATIONS:
    >Lots of graffiti along the way. A much better quality than I am used to seeing. Not that I think it is fair to use the property of someone else to display your work...but as it is, some of it is very good. It even has some social comment to it. A space for young artists to show their work. I photograph close-ups of bits and pieces of it.
    >Van height. 1.96 meters. Sometimes we cannot go underground to parking spaces. We see many colored scrapes on the cement garage ceilings.
    >I love the fact that inside a non-descript grey building there is often a surprise. Lace curtains are the hint from the outside; inside... beautiful old furniture, carpets, books, lamps. Sort of like people, there most often is an unknown beauty inside.
     
    We have our map which takes us up hill through the much loved stone streets. We shop at a ceramic shop, run by a most charming older lady. It is fun to deal with her. David and I only wish for some of her large decorated plates. Too heavy and expensive to ship home, too large to store in the van. But, Deb satisfies our need by buying a sweet Italian painted plate and bowl for her home. It is yummy stuff, so irresistable. She has a fabulous wood/chalet type home, decorated with her chosen travel pieces and other great objects. Her home decor leans toward folk... so comfortably so. Spiritual folk. Shopping with her always satisfies my own needs!
     
    We daddle and gawk and finally come to the Duomo (Cathedral). I am so surprised by its bold black and white striped exterior. The stripes seem such a modern look, so....our time. Dark green/black marble stacked on the white. Thick, fat stripes. It is powerful. But this was created in 1215! Inside, it is jam-packed with art, starting with sculptures by Bernini and Michelangelo. The floors are outrageous. Usually they are covered with carpet, but this month the carpet is rolled up for visitors to enjoy the mosaics. We have our own Reverend Rose with us to comment on the stories, illustrated in colored mosiacs. There are symbols and meanings we would surely miss...and of course we miss much of it anyway. There is a side library dedicated to a Siena favorite. Piccolini. He became Pope Pius II.
    Back through the streets. Gelatos, shops, lunch. David leads. I am lost. We will see a few more things in the morning before we head to Assisi.
     
    The Pinacoteca Art Museum is one of two things we choose to do. The other, the Church of San Dominico. In the Pinacoteca we see the progression of art from Gothic to Rennaisance. I pay an extra small fee to use my camera. This is heaven on earth for me. Wonderful elegant pieces. I begin to shoot faces of Mary. Faces that speak to me. Each artist has a different take on what this Lady might look like. We all find so much richness in our wanderings. Deb tells David about the meanings of many paintings. I can hear their back and forth chatter as I move about looking for images for my lens. It is an excellent museum that I would go through again.

    The Church of San DomInico. This church is where you will find tributes to St. Catherine. She is the Patron Saint of Siena because she persuaded Pope Gregory XI to move the Papacy from Avignon back to Rome. (Her thumb and head can be observed in this church!) In this otherwise very plain interior, the 17 district flags hang, softening both noise and the visual experience.
     
    Asissi! The home of that dear humble Saint Francis, friend of nature, animals...all creation. His message: Slow down, let go of materialism. He taught by example. As a boy, Francesco Bernardone was a soldier and was captured by the Perugians. During his one year in prison he became the person we all know about. His counterpart was Saint Clare. She was an 18 year old rich girl when she sneaked away from her parent's home to meet Saint Francis, who welcomed her into the order. He cut her hair and gave her the simple robes of a monk. She began the order of Poor Clares.
     
    We are here at this time because it is the celebration of the Feast of Saint Francis. Deb has reserved a hotel room very near the main square, Piazza del Comune. In the early evening of our first day we settle ourselves at a table in the square for a snack and wine. Loud, very intentional drumming begins up the hill. Unexpected by us, the celebration has begun! A procession, lead by the drummers, enters the square. Medieval Lords and Ladies, cross-bow soldiers, a flag team, women dancers in pastel flowing robes. A crowd forms so we join them with our wine glasses in hand. This show is put on to please the Lords and Ladies, as it would have been in the medieval times. The dancers dance, the flag team throws flags to each other, high in the air, the drummers march in patterns...we whistle and applaud! There is a cross-bow exhibition, a forger, a printmaker, a coin stamper. This is the fun part of the celebration. Tomorrow will be more serious.
     
    At 8:30 in the morning, we three meet at Piazza del Comune, where Deb is enjoying a breakfast of coffee and pastry. We are expecting to join the people in their march to the Basilica of Saint Francis which should start at the clocks ring of nine. Dignitaries gather. They are suited up in their best. Wide ribbon emblem banners diagonally cross their chests. The clock bongs out nine times... but nothing happens. We wait until 10:00 when all participants are gathered. Clock strikes 10:00, a bugel sounds and everyone is off. The common people (like us) stand at the side. The dignitaries start, then the Lords and Ladies, jr. and sr., the cross-bow soldiers, the drummers, the flag holders, the dancers and the school children! Down the cobbled street, it is a ways to the Bascilica. Deb is long gone! She wants a front row seat to see the service offered today. We begin to walk alongside the children until we are close to the front of the procession. We want a good seat, too!
     
    But when we arrive at the front of the church we are not welcomed in. We do not have any proof that we have been invited to attend. Deb is outraged. "St. Francis would not have stood for this! He stood for the common people." There is a very small old nun in front of me. Her anxious but still hopeful face is hard to watch. She is not allowed through the temporary guard gates either. There is a rumor that there is room in the lower level. A large screen shows the service that is going on in the sanctuary. We make our way down and find there are no seats. Standing room only. We watch for awhile, but to David and I the ritual has no meaning. Deb makes contact, at the Bascilica Information office, with a man from the US who is about to become a monk in the Franciscan Order. They have a long discussion and she leaves feeling a bit better about this issue. It is hard. She has come a long way to be part of it. Let's take a break back at the square.
     
    In the afternoon we decide that maybe now we will be able to view the Basilica and visit the site of the burial place of St.Francis. We choose an archway on the square to be our contact place in case we get lost from each other then start back down the hill. The shops along the way are inticing, calling us in to browse. It is here that I get separated from David and Deb. I turn around and they are gone. After waiting 45 minutes where I think they will see me, I head back to the appointed archway. Nobody there. Oh well. I will have a good afternoon anyway. I will check back later. I find a photo shop to replace my 16 mg memory stick which has completed its duty. Now I am off to see a couple of museums and take some serious pictures! The first is an archeological museum...underground..parts of a Roman road, temple and bits and pieces of gathered relics. It is a bit hard to grasp, but still worth some photos of Roman decoration. Then, further down the street, the Pinacoteca Museum. 13 to 17 century frescoes. A crumbling madonna by Giotto. A quiet place that would not interest most. My camera loved it.
    A few of the stores interest me. Beautiful pottery, especially some uniquely painted tiles. Scarves are always a problem with me. Lush colors and designs. Buy me, buy me! Clothing shops, fun and gorgeous, but window shopping is as far as I get. Maybe I should check the archway once again. Yes, there is Deb. David has gone to see if I am in the van. Not an easy task. It is down some streets and stairs, some escalators that only work going up, down another street to the elevator to our car which is beneath the city. We wait at the arch. He is gone a long time and admits to getting lost. But here we are together again. Now we can begin our search for the most inviting dinner restaurant. They are all hidden in back streets. We look at menues. Is there anything to interest us? Is it cozy? Ambience, with just the perfect lighting? We find the best...we are seated under a a huge tree, the branches over us like an arbor. Lights catch the leaves as they move in a breeze. Yes, this is perfect. The food? I know it was Italian good, but it was the tree that lifted our spirits.
     
    With prior arrangements the next morning we are to pick up Deb at the archway. But, this is day three of the Feast Celebration and there is a huge market blocking all the streets. We have no choice but to park underground once more and take the elevator, escalator, stairs and streets to find our friend. We leave today. Asissi has indeed proved its praise.

    Now what? We all decide that we would like to travel down the east coast of Italy. Less people, beautiful coast, maybe a little more relaxed. We will come back north along the more popular Amalfi coast. We drive under three mountains and through 28 tunnels to get to our stop on the coast. Giulinova. A summer resort town, palm trees, long sand beaches, wide sidewalks and lots of parking. The weather is still comfortably warm. Deb's hotel room has a view to the aqua sea. Even our parked van has a seaside home. This is the Adriatic. The beach is irresistable. Shoes in hand we walk in the sand to the edge where the lapping waves are gentle and wadeable...and warm. On the horizon we see a multitude of white dots which we assume are fishingboats...they are still visable when darkness falls. And at this time, the community and its visitors begin the nightly ritual, walking or bicycling along the strand.
     
    In the morning we join Deb for coffee at outdoor tables outside her hotel. Great conversation ensues with a Philadelphia family at the next table. Carol and Bill and their daughter Janet. It continues through until lunch time!
    David works on the computer. Deb and I make lunch in the van and take it to the beach where we find a couple of stray chairs to sit on and eat our picnic. Close by there are men playing cards in their usual beach hideout. Deb makes up a story about them as we eat. She is good at it and believes her own stories!
     
    Beyond the sea, east over the Adriatic, are the coasts of Croatia and Albania. Who would ever think we would be here? Not us! They are places we hear about on the radio or read about in good thick novels. Again, I am so thankful that we made this step to travel extensively.
     
    This experience is much different than that of hill towns. We relax. We do not have to chase and find sites written about in guide books. We eat seafood. Lick gelatos. Walk. Snooze. Morning coffees. Evening wine. And stay an extra day!
     
    It is Sunday. The coast south is waiting for us. Today, 15 tunnels to Viest. This town is on the outside edge of what looks like a spur on the Italian boot. It does not feel like a resort, even though it has an aqua sea and a long sandy beach where Deb gets settled into a hotel. We walk to the city center which sits on top of a high white limestone cliff. We are just in time to walk in the evening promenade, down the main street to the sea and back up the other side. It is fun being part of the action. We choose a cafe for a light dinner and the parade continues in front of us until we are ready for some time in our "homes" before bed.
     
    Monday morning we are off again. It is an impressive drive today. Sometimes we are high above the sea, sometimes low with the water shining beside us. Some plants, their foliage and flowers, are not recognizable to us. Large bushes, almost trees, with either white or red pink blossoms. Also, small ground clusters of tiny mixed red, orange and yellow flowers. Why do I aways want to know their names?

    I smell fermentation in the air. Someone is making wine! Flat ground. Vineyards everywhere. Ahead looms a roadside sign. FASHION DISTRICT AHEAD... where could that possibly be? We are in the midst of olive trees, that pretty silvery grey foliage on a lovely shaped tree and prickly pear cactus in bloom. Stone huts appear in the near-by fields, more and more of them. Round, with low roofs. No mortar, dry-built. A few years ago we saw similar in the hills of France, 11th Century shepherd huts. Here is an old old olive orchard. The trunks are huge and twisted and have separated to form a hollow area inside.
     
    Next town down the coast is Otranto. Another sweet seaside town. Each one I remember so fondly. Each has something different to offer a traveler. Deb finds a hotel in the middle of the town activity and we enjoy a bottle of wine on her balcony while she entertains us to tears with stories of her first year of teaching high school. Here is one: There was a particularly lazy boy in her class. He did not participate, always put his head down on his desk. She did not know how to change this. While out of her classroom she heard some of the kids talking...one calling the other a turd. TURD? Never heard that word?? She came to the conclusion that it must be a short form of TURTLE. One day in class she had had enough of this boy's indifference and laziness. Out of her mouth came..."Mike, you TURD! SIT UP!" The classroom went silent in shock. Did their teacher really say TURD?!! Well Mike immediately bolted upright, saucer-eyed. He never slumped over his desk again. (Of course the student's name is ficticious and the words are mine, retold. I am sure it is not as funny as Deb's telling. You should know that Deb was an innocent rookie teacher, coming from a very unworldly upbringing in a smallish town. I can tell you though, that she has overcomed this unworldliness!)
     
    Otranto has a small river flowing into the sea at its center. There is a large piazza here, on the edge of the sea with walkways coming and going. Cafes and businesses line the town side of this square. I take advantage of a photo shop and have four CDs made from my first camera memory stick. 16 GB worth. I would be devastated if I lost those images...my inspiration for some great paintings! Already they are falling into categories. THE SURFACES OF EUROPE * FACES OF MARY * GRAFFITI CLOSE-UPS * DECORATION*
     
    Behind the square is a Basilica famous for its mosiac floors which illustrate Heaven on one side, Hell on the other and in the middle, the kingdom of animals. Behind the main altar are skeleton heads and bones carefully stacked into a pattern behind glass. At first I thought that they were beautiful William Morris hanging fabrics! These bones are those of the martyrs who refused to convert. I am glad that I did not live in this time of fearful religions. Ghastly imagery built on guilt and fear. The art itself can be well done, even beautiful, but what it stands for is not in my realm of worship.
    Two men are swimming across the bay, back and forth, many times. I wonder what they are training for? Perhaps a longer swim? To Greece or Albania? Our camper is parked next to the bay. A brisk sea, waves in our ears to sleep by.

    Time is looming when Deb must leave us so we cut across the high heel of the boot to Gallipoli but only have time to see it from the windows of the van. We are more anxious to spend some time in Manduria where someone has tipped us off that great wine is made there. We find a winery to taste the fruits of these local vineyards. A very large company, making two million bottles a year. It is a family endeavor first started 50 years earlier by the grandfather, then passed to the father and now the son and daughter run it. We taste about six wines and leave with a case of some very delicious favorites that we enjoy for many days.
     
    Moving on to Taranto, which is on the Taranto Gulf between the heel and the toe of the boot, facing the Ionian Sea. This is a very large industrial town. Steel, Oil, Cement. There are Evergreen container ships waiting in the bay, a familiar name to the B.C,/ Washington coast. Chinese. Huge blocks of apartments stand in the outskirts, on tram or undergroung lines ready to whisk the commuters to their jobs. We are looking for Deb's Best Western Hotel but we are in a bad storm. Wind and rain and dusk. The rain is so heavy that it appears like fog in front of us. Scary. We do find the hotel and a place for the van and through the night the storm continues. Webs of lightening. Crashes of thunder. Hard rain. But it only enhances the coziness in our camper bed.
    Deb has talked to the receptionists in the hotel and they have told her that before we leave this area, we must visit Martina Franca and Alberobello. So we head to the former first. It does not feel like a place of worth as we enter but as usual our first impressions are fransformed. Always the old town awaits us. This is the site of the very best of baroque decoration/architecture. We find a place to park and cannot find the parking meter. Soon a young man comes to us with a time-stamped parking ticket...he will collect on it when we return. In place of meters, these city employees are everywhere in the city, patrolling the streets. A few blocks away is what we came for. After visiting the Information center we follow a self-walk map though Old Town. First on the list, the Ducal palace. Lots of frescoes but as Deb says, the artist is definately not Michelangelo. Still, often the primitive or folk flavor is the charm. On exiting, we are on a large square. The map leads us into the tiny cobbled streets, through smaller piazzas. Buildings are painted white. Appartments are perched lopsidedly on top of others. Laundry hangs, colors against the white. Short streets go nowhere. Long streets twist and wind until we are unsure of where we really are. But! The examples of Baroque are certainly everywhere. Happy sculpted children carrying flowers. Men and women portrayed in merriment. Clear, clean, well crafted white art. Ribbons, flowers, decoration. A walk to remember vividly. The town is closed down for its two hour siesta but the tinkle of glass or silverware on plates and conversation and laughter comes from small discreet restaurants and private open windows. In the closed shop windows there are beautiful clothes and shoes displayed. Jewelry, leather...all fine Italian design and make. This has been a good stop...BUT...
     
    AlBEROBELLO! You must come to Alberobello. First I will tell you about the Trulli, amazing little structures ...dry stone huts of the countryside are pressed together to become a town. The Count who ruled this district, decreed that no more building be done without paying taxes, thus the Trulli owners were prepared to knock these dry stacked stone dwellings down for royal inspections and rebuild them when the inspector was done! There are 400 trulli in this part of the city and 1000 more in another part. Drywall, white-washed and plastered inside and out, they are still lived in! What an amazing beautiful community! Something out of fairy tales. The round shape, of different diameters, is built to the ceiling height then is brought inward to form a cone. The cone is left with rock exposed which makes the designs even more appealing. On the top there are short spires with a family emblem or symbol perched on top. Some stone roofs have large white symbols painted on them also. No one is really sure who built these! They are fun and irresistable. The insides are bright and clean and simple. To make more room for a family they simply add another trullo right on to the original. Some were even tall enough to have a second floor. One was set up like a museum. Baking ovens, butter churns, soup pots and ladels, looms, hanging herbs...anything one needs to make a house a home. So you live within circles and cones. Well Deb could not resist and bought herself a night inside one. Adorable interior with bath. She said that she had her best sleep yet.
     
    The town itself is small and welcoming. We eat a wonderful meal on the square in the evening. For me, Portobello mushroom pasta with a lovely white sauce and a salad with the very best (and very expensive) balsemic vinegar. Around the square there are lace-like white snowflake structures standing very tall. We can see that Christmas lights are still attached. The holiday season must be breathtaking here. Such spirit in the town.
     
    In the morning we are surprised to see a market set up both in the square and down the hill a few steps. Lots of lovely things to look at. The locals seem to buy their jeans here...and shirts, sweaters, tunic tops. Deb finds fabric for a new table cloth. David and I are invited to vote on some choices. Some of you will see this fabulous fabric while eating at her table. She finds a scarf that looks great with her red-pink shirt while David and I are off at the food market buying cheeses, meats and produce. We loved this town! There were plenty of English speakers here...Americans (Bo and Julie from Ohi) and Canadians (8 cyclists from Ontario).
     
    Once again we are on our way, this time toward the west coast. We pass through a town where homes were built into the caves. Olive trees are ready to drop their fruit and huge nets have been placed on the ground to catch them. Most towns we see on this route sit atop steep hills where enemies could be seen coming from a long way. Craggy mountains show in the near distance behind closer cliff-faced mountains. The weather is changing. Spots of sun sneak through the dark clouds that roll over the great heights.
     
    We reach Amalfi in the evening and begin to look for a hotel. We pass through a hopping busy town center which is perched on the steep hillside. After an encounter at a very snooty upscale hotel, we put hotel Bristol in our GPS and take a carnival ride...straight down, straight up a very steep grade. The hotel is perfect. David and I find our "lodgings" by the side of a busy road.
     
    The Amalfi coast...Scary! Funny! Wild! We drive from Amalfi to Positano, south to north and then to Sorrento. Don't look down! Look to the right .... at the canyons moving up to the mountain tops. There is no getting away from it...both sides are steep. Hard rain. We pass mosaic and ceramic shops. Someone has made little houses that sit on the uphill rocks, like a toy village. At least we are traveling on the inside lane. Stairs lead up into the woods. Stairs lead down to communities. Lots of tunnels and overhanging rock. Buses! How do those drivers do it? Around sharp skinny corners. On the edge of nothingness? Taxis, like cats, seem to stretch to fit through any space. Motorcycles weaving in and out. Even a few bicyclists and runners! Crazy people? Or do they all have an extra traffic sense that we have not tapped into...though David has certainly honed his driving and parking skills.
     
    Lunch stop on a high promentory, looking back on where we have been. Provaloni and proscuito on fresh brown bread. Cut up peach and orange for dessert. Good red wine. We are sitting in the car eating. Thunder and lightening. What a sight! We forge ahead.
     
    THOUGHTS and OBSERVATIONS:
    >Piano. Here it has a different meaning. level, plain, like a floor.
    >I have not thought much about differences in language before...having only French in High School. Many of us use the same alphabet. Same sounds can be made using completely different letter combinations, in Slovenia....č = ch, Ljubljana...j means y..Lyublyana for example.....or combinations that we have never tried to say like our new friend Zdenka. Try saying that! But that sound is really not too different than "st" in still.
    >Cars rule! Park on the curb or up on the sidewalk....just don't hem anyone in!
    Sorrento. Deb is in the Dania hotel, again overlooking the sea. We have wine on the terrace before we drive to a neighborhood to set up for dinner for the three of us in the van. This is a good example of two different lifestyles we are practising! And it works wonderfully! We find a parking lot in which to stay the night. Miraculously it is flat. In the morning we watch the locals coming and going. Nobody seems to pay for parking except the few of us who don't belong here. Many of the people seem to have little bags with them... something is inside. They return fairly quickly, no bag in hand. A day of Italian tradition? Maybe religious? We pick up Deb and find a travel agent. She needs to set up for her trip home, flights and hotels. We give that job to a very competent lady who books it all and we are free to have some more fun. We are on our way to Pompeii! But....Deb refuses to believe that our GPS will take us there. She is having great difficulty trusting it. (And sometimes I can't blame her!) She somehow entices two police officers to take us! "Follow us!" they say.