We seem to be establishing a pattern here:
1. go to a place we’ve barely heard of with a plan to stay a couple of days. 2.
Get caught by a boat malfunction or bad weather. 3. End up staying for a few
weeks, with the positive side being that we get to really explore the place
properly. Well, that has happened again here in Gozo, Malta’s smaller sister
island just a little to the north west.
Santa Marija Tower
We sailed over here on a pleasant day and
wandered around the coast a bit looking for a good anchorage. St Niklaws Bay on
the tiny island of Comino (between Malta and Gozo) offered the best protection
from the wind, so we settled in there and spent the next day checking out
Comino Island. There isn’t a lot to it, apart from the spectacular views of the
other islands and the famous Blue Lagoon, which is indeed very blue. We hiked
up to the Santa Marija watchtower, the “guardian of the Gozo Channel”, built by
the Knights of St John in 1618 as part of the system of inter-communicating
towers across the Maltese Islands. The main role of these towers was to guard
against the very real threat of Turkish invaders and Corsair pirates. In 1551,
the formidable Turkish admiral Dragut Reis had carried off virtually the entire
population of Gozo (about 5000 people) as slaves. The tower has been
beautifully restored and is well worth a visit. Apparently it came at an
environmental price, however: Grand Master Alof de Wignacourt originally paid
for it by selling all the wood on Comino, which is now nothing but limestone
heath, sustaining a population of four.
At one time several farming families lived
on Comino, and, in keeping with Malta’s identity as ‘more Catholic than the
Pope’, they had their own church. When the weather was too bad for the priest
to cross the channel, Mass was conducted through a system of semaphore flags
from the church in Mgarr.
Dwejra
Well, for us the wind arrived on cue with worse to
come, so we headed over to Mgarr, Gozo’s fishing harbour, ferry port and
marina. The marina is a work in progress, but it’s really nice and will be even
better when all the work is finished. The staff are particularly helpful
docking boats and ensuring that everyone is safe when the weather turns ugly.
As I write, it is so ugly that nothing is visible from our boat – the air is
completely whitish-pink with sand – where normally you can see for miles across
to Comino and Malta (I don’t know how the Comino Catholics would manage Mass
under these conditions – bells or foghorns perhaps?) We’ve been told to expect
winds upwards of 50 knots, so everything is battened down.
Onto my rock theme. People say that rocks
are Malta’s only natural resource, and Gozo is similar, though it does have
some pretty farmland in the valleys between the rocks, and Gozo is famed for cheese, tomatoes, honey, capers and wine. The most eye-catching rock is the
beautiful honey-gold globerina limestone. It is soft enough to be carved
easily, as demonstrated by the facades of many homes both old and new, and especially by the churches. Of course this also means
that it weathers quite quickly, so many old carvings have lost their
definition. Nature too is a great sculptor of stone on these islands.
Walls in the Citadel, carved by the wind
Typical house front stonework
Stonemasonry must be a kind
of instinct for Maltese. When we went to have a look at the famous red sand
beach at San Blas, it was blowing a howling gale. But there on the beach,
groups of sunbathers had built themselves neat little dry-stone windbreaks.
Gozo must have thousands of kilometres of rubble walls interlaced across the
countryside in an attempt to retain the soil. And of course stone has been used
for protection too – so it’s not surprising that, when a Maltese bloke sees a rock he
has a strong urge to put it on top of another rock.
Sunbathing fort at San Blas
Then there are the most mysterious and
fascinating rocks of all – those of the Ggantija temples, largest of Malta’s
megalithic ruins with some stones over 6 metres high. These are the oldest
known free-standing structures in the world, dating from 3600 BC. Very little
is known about the people who worshipped at the carved stone altars, but you
can stand there on the crest of the hill overlooking most of Gozo and try to
imagine someone doing the same thing back in the dawn of human history.
Ggantija temple
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