We sailed
from Porto Palo after a slightly disturbed night (wind across swell) and made
good time to start with – wind was off our beam at about 20 and we made 5s to
7s for quite a while before it quit on us.
On with the noisemaker before the wind returned. Unfortunately it was a Noserly so it just
made the motoring uncomfortable as we had to head out directly in to it to
avoid a no-go nature reserve that two other yachts didn’t seem to give a stuff
about. When we turned after clearing the
corner of the reserve we had 20 knots on the forward side and turned off the
engine to sail into the Grand Harbour of Syracusa. Sailors have been coming into this harbour
for thousands of years so we were probably boat number 1 squillion and twenty.
It is
magnificent and when we arrived I saw a yellow boat in the distance. It was Benoit, our friend from Monastir with
his family and Guy and his family in front of them! Off to the port was Eric, the solo French
sailor we spent time with in Monastir, Lampedusa and in Malta.
Benoit, Flo and family aboard Baba
Wonderful. Off we went to the market this morning – one
of Europe’s best. Got two large Sole for
dinner – cleaned and skinned in front of us, €7. Fresh baked ricotta, €4. Stuff, stuff, stuff.
Then we
walked all over town trying to find the Immigrazione (about time we behaved
ourselves). I think we are rare and
nobody bothers because we got sent all over the place from Guardia Costiera to
Immigrazione and finally to the Polizia Frontiere. They were excited that we were there and
about 5 of them came out to see us. The
man we were dealing with took our passports to stamp and came back and told us
“Special stamp, Syracuse” and indeed it was, a Syracuse stamp in the passports. Shook hands all round with him and his boss
and off we went. Legal!
We dinghied
back later in the evening and went for a wander on the promenade. We wound our way up the stairs to the
Cathedral but couldn’t go in for a stickybeak because there was a wedding under
way. We went across the piazza a few
metres for a drink and sat outside with children kicking soccer balls, kids
riding bikes with dogs chasing them and a very accomplished accordion player
entertaining us all.
The bride
came out of the church to an honour guard and the whole square erupted in
applause. She was impossibly beautiful,
and his nibs was just the picture of elegance and charm (possibly a little
pride in there also?) Off they went for
a promenade to the north for a while, then they sauntered back for a promenade
to the south and departed. All the stuff
of romance novels and movies.
Everyone in
the bar switched from beer and wine to Aperol Spritz. Although I have resisted being a trendy in
the past, this seemed like a good trend to follow and a pleasant glass it was
too.
Across the
way, a couple of old-ish nuns came out of the Cathedral admin doors. All at once, the group of children kicking
the ball around ran over to the older of the two for a hug and a kiss. They genuinely fussed over her and she hugged
and kissed them all. They went back to
their game and the two nuns wandered off across the front of the Cathedral and
another group of kids spotted them. Same
deal, they all ran over to the older one of the two for hugs and cuddles and
kisses. She must be somebody special
because they all ran to her, boys and girls alike.
We wandered
through the old streets for a while and then returned to our dinghy to get back
to the boat.
What a
wonderful city this is.
Next day was
not so pleasant with some savage southerlies so we all kept our heads
down. We went into town for a visit to
the Archimedes Museum (he lived in Syracusa) and a visit to the Fonte Aretusa
for a Geocache (through a small aquarium which was nice). We found a small deli for lunch and had afor
€1.70 each. They were the best arancini
we have ever had anywhere. (they were a Sicilian invention) I also discovered a beer made in Sicily
called Ceria, which was twice the price of the arancini! But it wasn’t bad at that.
One of my
favourite TV characters, Inspector Montalbano, is a well known arancini lover
and has contributed to the popularity of the dish. I was very excited to see a TV Weekly type
magazine in Malta that announced yet another season of Montalbano with almost
all the original characters. He is placed
in the Ragusa area, where we are likely to spend next winter so I can see all
the Montalbano places – there was a book in the bookshop we went into yesterday
all about the series, with all the common scenes from the TV show.
Enough
fantasy stuff. Today we went to town to
get some wine. We were told by our
friend Rene that there was a wine retailer over the bridge near a florist by
the church with the round front (but not the ugly new monster church in
Syracusa). Off we went to find this
purveyor of fine wines.
He is
located in a small shop near two mechanical repair shops with a handpainted
sign advertising different wines. Inside
are about 10 massive hogsheads with labels on them advertising the wines
within. The old man’s name is Sebastiano
Russo. We tasted a couple and bought 2
litres of a red for €3.20 and two litres of a white for the same. He fills up used 2 litre water bottles for
you to take. 4 litres for €6.40? Of a three year old red and an aged
white. He also gave us a sample of a dessert
wine that we will go back for – that was upmarket stuff at €3.20 a litre.
Then we
wandered back over the bridge to the old city, picked up our laundry (€10 for
8+kg) and sat on the quay to have a couple of beers before dinghying back to Common Sense.
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