We’ve never actually been in Naples. We’ve been to the port of Naples many times to get the boat to Palermo, and once to Salina in the Aeolians, but we’ve never been in the city center. So we don’t know Naples at all. However, from what we’ve seen from portside, the venerable city, once the throne of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, is crumbling in pastel like so many stale macarons.
Naples sits under the gimlet eye of Vesuvius, tempting fate and preferring a sudden igneous death to a slow ignominious decay. At least, that’s my fantasy of Naples and its Neapolitans.
| The Sun Sets on Vesuvius. |
Crumbling Customs House
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Cargo Bound for Sicily
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We travel from
Berlin to Sicily by car, so we can take our cats. They're seasoned travelers, having made this crossing many times. We always try to get a room with a view
(despite the dirty, salty window), so the cats can amuse themselves
watching the crew ready the boat for embarkation.
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| Calyx Surveys the Crew |
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| China Observes |
As soon as
everybody gets stowed and comfy, we head to the bar to get stewed and comfy. They make a helluva Negroni!
The bar TV
is always on and is either tuned to
the news or to some crazy game show, like this one. The host has been around for as long as we’ve
been coming to Italy, so 20 years. Maybe this dude is channeling Admiral Nelson?
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| Weird Italian Nobilta' |
When we
docked in Palermo the next morning, we headed to the bar for a cappucino. The news was on and featured Matteo Salvini
vowing never to allow another migrant boat to land on Italian shores.
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Matteo Salvini
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But Salvini
doesn’t have a clue how to stop the northward migration of Africans escaping
climate change and seeking a better future.
He might as well just give it up, stick his head in a purple octopus, and live the adventure!







The one good thing about taking the ferry to Palermo is you can have an excellent pizza Napoletana for dinner .
ReplyDeleteSi'! C'e`in buon rapporto fra qualita' e prezzo anche.
DeleteThanks for the Naples interlude.
ReplyDeleteWe spent a morning in Naples years ago hanging around the train station waiting to catch the "Rapido" to Brindisi. "Rapido", it turns out, must be named ironically, because it stopped at almost every station along the way. This (plus an unscheduled stop in the middle of nowhere to put out a fire somewhere on the train) caused us to miss our ferry to Greece and gave us an extra day in Brindisi.
But I do remember feeling a subtle thrill being so close to Mt Vesuvius. There had been some recent earth tremors (terremoti).
I would love to see Etna exploding some day--from a safe distance, of course. It does spout off frequently, but we've never managed to be in the right place at the right time. An extra day in Brindisi--is that a plus or a minus?
DeleteLooks like a great way to get to Sicily!
ReplyDelete