 |
A hallway in the Palazzo Doria Pamphilj in Rome. It is still home to family members; the audio tour
is narrated by a man who grew up in the palace. We wonder if it was his Porsche that was parked in a
ground-floor area of the palace. |
All leisure travel is a splurge, whether it’s a weekend at a
country B and B or a grand tour of European capitals. In 2018, Jane and I
took our splurging to a new level: three months in Italy. We closed up our apartment in San Diego, turning
off the refrigerator and suspending our TV/Internet service to cut costs. Then,
early on April 17, we were off.
We started in Rome, renting an apartment through Airbnb for
six weeks. During this time we visited every church of any significance except
for St. Peter’s Basilica, which we had seen on a previous visit, and we toured
palaces and hit many museums, including the Vatican Museums and the Sistine
Chapel. We used our two-bedroom apartment (literally steps from the Forum, the
Palatine Hill and the Circus Maximus) to host friends from Colorado as well as
Jane’s sister from New York and her daughter.
After Rome, we headed south, eventually picking up a rental
car that took us as far as Palermo, Sicily. We stopped in several places along
the Adriatic Coast and along the instep of Italy’s boot. Here’s an outline of
our trip:
Tuesday, April 17: Fly from San Diego to
Rome, leaving at 6:25 a.m. and connecting through Dallas/Fort Worth. Arriving in Rome at 7:15 a.m. on April 18.
Wednesday, April 18: Breakfast in Rome and
then meet an Airbnb person at our apartment on Via Dei Fienili. We are at first disappointed by the condition
of the apartment, especially the furnishings, but the Airbnb guy contacts the
owner’s representative who makes everything OK – she even got us a new Ikea
sofa and end tables.
Tuesday, April 24: Before leaving the U.S.,
we bought tickets to see an abridged performance of “Rigaletto” at the
Stadium of Domitian. 8:30 p.m. The
“stadium” is in the underground ruins of a Roman sports venue; the iconic
Piazza Navona was built above it. Four singers and several arias did not tell
the opera’s entire story, but it was a pleasant evening in a unique setting.
Saturday, May 12: Our Colorado friends Mary and Dick arrive late morning
bearing tickets for a football (soccer) match the next day.
Sunday, May 13: We all watched Roma and Juventus of Turin
play to a 0-0 tie at Stadio Olimpico. The crowd was as entertaining as the
game.
The other highlight of their visit was a day in Tivoli and touring the Villa d'Este and Hadrian's Villa.
 |
The most spectacular of many fountains at the 17th-century Villa d'Este in Tivoli. |
Sunday, May 20: Friends leave very early, a few hours before
our other guests, Debby and Sharon, arrive. During their stay we toured the Vatican Museums and the Sistine Chapel and had a guided tour of the Borghese Gallery.
Wednesday, May 30: We take a train to Naples, where we stay at Hotel Piazza Bellini, Piazza Carita 32. (Click
HERE for hotel.) On a previous visit to Italy, we took a train to Naples and immediately picked up a rental car and headed to Pompeii and the Amalfi Coast. This time we wanted to see the city's famous archeological museum and try pizza in the city where it was invented. The museum was great; the pizza wasn't. But we both wished we had another day to explore the city.
 |
The view from our hotel balcony in Capri
included a public beach and the marina
where the ferry from Naples lands. |
Thursday, May 31: Ferry to Capri, leaving from Molo Beverello,
the port adjacent to Piazza Municipio.
Three nights on Capri at Capri Inn, Via Marina Grande 222 (click
HERE).
At the ferry dock in Capri, we skillfully
negotiated a 12-euro fare with the driver of one of
Capri’s unique open-air taxis to take us to
our inn. He was all smiles a block later when he dropped us off at the door.
Capri is basically the top of an otherwise
undersea mountain.
A funicular railroad or
those open-air taxis or tiny, very narrow buses take people up to the town of
Capri, which is full of Prada and other super high-end shops, expensive hotels
and expensive and not so expensive restaurants. We were eating at one and the
owner told us that Adam Sandler had sat at our table recently. We saw no
celebrities. From there, you can take the bus or a taxi further up the mountain
to Anacapri, a smaller town without Prada shops. It has a chairlift that will
take you to the very top of the mountain, from which you can see 360 degrees of
sea around the island, the city of Naples in the east and the Sorrento
Peninsula to the southeast.
Our inn was
the first of several we stayed at in which the inn is merely a floor or even
part of a floor in a larger building that may also house another inn, private
apartments or businesses. Our room had a balcony looking down at a public
beach, the harbor and the open sea.
Sunday, June 3: Ferry to Naples and taxi to
airport to pick up our rental car. (We used Hertz because I’d read that, unlike
most rental car agencies in Europe, it didn’t tack on added fees. The price you
get when you make a reservation is the price you pay when you return the car.
That was the case for us, a nice change from recent rental car experiences in
Portugal, Mexico and France. )
We drove
right away to Pompeii and stayed three nights at La Casa de Plinio, Via
Stabiana 3 (click
HERE). We spent one day exploring the ruins of ancient Pompeii , one day
exploring nearby Herculaneum (the two sites are much more different than one
would expect), and every evening finding a new place for dinner amid Pompeii’s
new restaurant scene. We were there years ago (1999?) and there was maybe one
decent place for dinner. It’s a whole new scene now.
Wednesday, June 6: Drive to Trani, about two
and a half hours away on the Adriatic on the other side of the country.
Stay four nights at La Bella Trani, Lungomare
Cristoforo Colombo 168 (click
HERE). The B&B is on a public beach, making for a lively
scene as well as easy access to sand and surprisingly warm water. We were about
a half-hour walk from the center of town, where we went for drinks and
passegiata-watching and for dinner. We didn’t visit the cathedral or castle in
town, but we did drive an hour or so to visit the unique Castel del
Monte, an octagonal medieval
fortress with octagonal towers.
 |
Trulli in Alberobello. |
Sunday, June 10: Drive to Alberobello.
Stay four nights at Palazzo Scotto, Corso
Trieste e Trento 30 (click
HERE). Alberobello is famous for its trulli, dome-shaped houses
built originally of dry-stacked flat stones.
We stayed one night here in an over-the-top but
small room with a queen-size bed that appeared to float above a glass floor
with lighted stones beneath. The next three nights we were in an attached
trullo with a good bit more space. The Central Bar in Alberobello is the place
for watching the passegiata, the traditional evening stroll before dinner:
stylish couples, young people in shredded jeans, elderly women with their
mothers on their arms, children kicking footballs (soccer balls) as they walk
alongside a parent, lots of handshaking and air-kissing.
Short drives through trulli-studded hills
took us to the ancient towns of Ostuni, Ceglie Messapica, Polignano a Mare and
Monopoli, the latter two with picturesque ports and beaches.
 |
The beach at Polignano a Mare. |
Thursday, June 14: Drive to Lecce and
Palazzo Bignami, Via Lombardia 6 (click
HERE). Lecce is deservedly celebrated for
its Baroque architecture in its historic city center, which is well worth a
day.
And from Lecce, we could easily
drive to two seaside towns on different coasts, Otranto and Gallipoli, each
with fantasy-inspiring castles and their own historic districts of narrow
stone-paved lanes.
Sunday, June 17: Drive to Matera. Spend two
nights at Il Palazotto Residence and Winery, Via Sette Dolori 39 (click
HERE). This is a
town where people live in caves, hotels put guests in caves and where
restaurants are often in caves. Very unlike the perhaps more famous cave
districts in Cappadocia, Turkey, in that it’s pretty much all in one huge,
easily carved mountain, and that it seamlessly abuts a modern city with asphalt
streets, sidewalks and conventional buildings. We met people who were staying
here four and five nights, but we had given ourselves only two.
Tuesday, June 19: Drive about five hours to
Maratea.
Stay two nights at Hotel Villa
delle Meraviglie, C.da Ogliastro (click
HERE). This is a seaside area. Our hotel (the name
means House of Wonders) has a nice pool and many, many, many steps down to a
very rocky and forbidding shore. There are lidos (beach resorts where you can
rent beach lounges, umbrellas and towels and have easy access to a bar and
café) nearby with sandy beaches.
 |
The pool at Blu Infinito. In
the distance is the northeastern
tip of Sicily. |
Thursday, June 21: Drive about three hours
to Villa San Giovanni. Spend one night at Blu Infinito B&B, Via Petrello
85, Localita Santa Trada (click
HERE).
Villa San
Giovanni is a gritty little town and there’s little reason to visit except that
it’s where we could put the car on a ferry to go to Sicily. Blu Infinito, high
on a hill, had views across the Strait of Messina to the northeast tip of
Sicily, and a stunning infinity swimming pool that gave the impression one
could swim or fly out of it all the way to Sicily. Unfortunately, the water, at
about 68 degrees Fahrenheit, was too cold for us.
Friday, June 22: Take car on a morning ferry from Villa San
Giovanni to Messina to be in time to see the Duomo’s bell tower clock strike
noon (well worth the search for a parking place).
The tower’s mechanical lion roars, its rooster
crows, a “city of God” rises against darkness, and other marvels take
place.
Then we drove to Taormina, a
resort town not unlike Capri but a tiny bit lower on the economic scale.
We took a scary bus ride up the mountain to
the village of Castelmola and we took a cable car down the mountain to the
beach. We stayed at Maison d’Art Casa Arico, Via Silipigni 11 (click
HERE).
Monday, June 25: Drive to Catania.
Stay three nights at B&B Sciara Larmisi,
Piazza Mario Cutelli 3 (click
HERE). Catania has a reputation as a somewhat gritty city.
It’s the second-largest in Sicily and has an active port, but it also has
beautiful churches, plazas, a long pedestrian-only street, and a large,
beautiful and much-used park. We enjoyed Catania very much, and at least partly
because it is not filled with tourists. Of all the bars on the mainland and in
Sicily where we had aperitivos, Catania was the place where bars gave the most
elaborate “no extra charge” snacks: fried rice balls, hams, salami, cheeses,
cucumbers, etc.
Thursday, June 28: Drive to Siracusa.
Stay three nights at Charme Hotel Henry's
House, Via Castello Maniace 68 (click
HERE). The historic “center” of Siracusa is Ortygia,
an island at the tip of the city. You can walk the perimeter of the island in
an hour or so, and on the way look down at public beaches below the seawall.
There’s a lively fish and produce market with places to buy plates of ham and
cheese and smoked fish. Siracusa is perhaps better known in the U.S. as Syracuse,
founded about three thousand years ago by Phoenicians. It later came under the
sway of Greek cities, Rome, Arabs and various European kingdoms.
All are reflected in Ortygia’s architectural
stew – and at the archaeological park on the mainland, which has a theater
built by Greeks (and where Aeschylus himself put on two of his tragedies), an
amphitheater built by Romans, the remains of the largest altar to Zeus ever
built, and other ruins.
 |
The 440 B.C.E. Temple of Concordia in the Valley of the
Temples at Agrigento. This is the view from the Hotel Villa
Athena, which has a private entrance to the archeological
park. |
Sunday, July 1: Drive to Agrigento for three nights at Villa
Athena, Via Passeggiata Archeologica 33 (click
HERE). The attraction here is the Valley of
the Temples, a collection of Greek temples dating to 500 B.C.E. or so. One, the
Temple of Concordia, is considered the best-preserved Greek temple anywhere,
more complete than any on the Acropolis in Athens.
For several centuries, it was used as a
Christian church, which meant that it was not used as a source of stone for
other buildings. In the 1800s, as Italy was rediscovering its past, the
Christian elements were removed, leaving the original temple in amazing
condition. Out hotel was about 300 meters from Concordia with a direct view
from the swimming pool, bar and restaurant. It is dramatically lighted at
night. From our hotel, we could walk to the temples or go the other way to the
town’s archaeological museum, which does a fantastic job of explaining the
temples, especially the one most in ruins, the Temple of Olympian Zeus, which
was unlike any other Greek temple anywhere. It’s a five-minute drive to San
Leone, a beachfront town with sandy beaches and inexpensive lidos.
Wednesday, July 4: Drive to Marsala. Stay three nights at Hotel Carmine, Piazza Carmine 16 (click
HERE). We've never been fans of Marsala wine; it's too much like Madeira without being as good as Madeira. But we thought that, as in Porto, Portugal, a town known for its fortified wines would also be good for unfortified wines. We found what we were looking for about an hour out of town at Gorghi Tondi, which does not make any fortified wines but does use the popular grillo grape to make an excellent dessert wine using botrytis, the same "noble rot" used in France to make sauternes. Its standard grillo and its several reds are also very good.
 |
View from the roof of Santa Caterina
d'Alessandria in Palermo. |
Saturday, July 7: Drive to Palermo. Stay three nights at Palco
Rooms and Suites, Via Camillo Cavour 118 (click
HERE). We returned the rental car as soon
as we had dropped our luggage at Palco, another B and B on one floor of a large
building. Palermo is a crowded, busy and lively city. The drivers are as
foolishly aggressive as those in Rome, but from our hotel we could walk to many
major attractions, to excellent restaurants, to the harbor and even to a
beachfront bar. It was very hot and humid during our stay, but I bet in
mid-spring or mid-fall, Palermo would be very pleasant.
Tuesday, July 10: Fly Palermo to Rome on Alitalia, a one-hour
flight. Alitalia is not a pleasant experience, especially boarding; people
seated in the rear put their bags in the overhead bins at the front of the
plane. Several people seated toward the front who boarded late had to put their
bags in bins at the rear, meaning they had to wait for everyone to get off
before they could retrieve their bags, and the flight attendants had no problem
with this, happily watching people fill the forward bins first. And, although
there are “boarding zones” on the boarding passes, they weren’t called. It was
a mad rush to board with a mob where there should have been a line.
Once in Rome, we stayed two nights at the
Hotel Stendahl on Via Tritone (click
HERE), convenient to the Monti, Spanish Steps and
Borghese areas.
Thursday, July 12: Fly Rome to San Diego.
Leave Fiumcino Rome at 11:40 a.m., transit at Heathrow and arrive in San Diego
at 6:45 p.m.
Telephone
At home,
Jane and I each use a Samsung smart phone from Verizon. The phones are locked,
so we can’t simply insert a foreign SIM card. Our Verizon plan lets us use
those phones abroad for 24 hours for $10. Since we would need a phone almost
daily, it was cheaper for us to buy an Italian smart phone. We spent 150 euros
for a Vodaphone smart phone including three months of service within Italy. We
couldn’t use it to call the U.S., but we could use it to make restaurant
reservations, etc., and to use GPS when we were driving. We used our U.S.
phones for taking pictures, posting on Instagram and Facebook (using wifi,
which is available almost everywhere; Palermo seems to have free citywide
wifi), and calling the U.S. using Whatsapp. When we got home, I took the battery out and
stored the phone in hope of using it again on our next trip abroad. All I would
have to do is get a country-specific SIM card.
Music
I had never
thought of Rome as a destination for music, but it is. Many churches, such as
the gigantic St. Agnes in Agony in Piazza Navona, and some palaces offer
operatic music in the evenings. We heard “favorite arias” well performed at
such venues. Usually a tenor, a soprano and maybe a baritone, accompanied only
by a piano or perhaps by a string quartet.
Admission was between 10 and 20 euros.
We also
found more jazz than in most U.S. cities. We went several times to Charity Café
in the Monti neighborhood (click
HERE for website) and to Gregory’s near the
Spanish Steps (click
HERE).
It was
either a one-drink minimum or a small cover that included one drink.
The music was first-rate, especially our last
night in Rome when there was an open jam at Charity. Heard a Roman singer do a
good job with Nina Simone’s “Feeling Good (It’s a New Day),” the song to which
I walked my daughter down the aisle at her wedding.
 |
Dancing in the moonlight: Tango enthusiasts meet
at the cathedral plaza in Catania on a Monday evening. |
The music
was recorded one Monday night at the main piazza in Catania, Sicily, and it was
tango music. Couples did their complicated footwork as they clung to each other
and swirled in the plaza between the city cathedral and a large fountain. It
was an almost surreal scene that we happened onto by chance. Most of the women
were dancing in high heels and were not dancing with a “date.” It seems the
plaza attracts men and women who like to dance and they partner-up once they’re
there and then change partners during the evening.
It was live
music one night in Siracusa, Sicily, again in front of a cathedral. The city
band (a city band!) performed the overture from “William Tell” and other
familiar pieces. In what I saw as a
political comment in a country that had just installed an anti-immigrant
government, the band played “We Are the World,” with many people (I guessed an
audience to be about 300 locals and tourists) singing along. Toddlers were set
free to dance and hop around in an open space at the foot of the cathedral
steps.