Terry and Carol have kindly
welcomed me into their life on the boat 'Common Sense' and it’s been a truly
wonderful experience. I will cherish the fond memories of exploring the streets
of Otranto, Brindisi and Monopoli, sharing meals on the boat, shopping for
local food, finding hidden treasures just around the corner and so much more.
Thank you for allowing me to photograph every food experience before we bought
it, prepared it, and ate it, so that I could continue my Italy food blog.
Mostly I just enjoyed their lovely relaxed company. Thank you both so much.
This is my experience of life on their boat sailing in the Adriatic Sea.
Sunday 21st September -
Sailing from Otranto to Brindisi
Up at 730, brekkie, pack up,
check out with Guardia Costiera who really were not interested.
Set off at 9:00. It’s a very calm flat day and we had to motor
all the way as there was not enough wind for sailing. Common Sense needs about
15 knots to sail by itself. Today we have got minimal sail up just to assist in
stabilising the boat. It’s interesting to watch all the different size vessels
pass by. Terry and Carol have this amazing chart plotter system that also
provides info on position of ships, name, size, what type of vessel, cargo,
coordinates, where they are heading to and all contact details, a radar detects
all small craft and the automatic pilot steered us all the way to Brindisi
complete with ETA.
We had tea and chocolate
topped digestive biscuits (Carol's favourite) on the way. After a couple of
hours of motoring, still no wind we have a simple lunch of salad, bread and
chicken on the deck and afterwards we all snoozed, read and updated our emails
etc. It was calm, warm and an easy, pleasant trip. We arrived at Brindisi
marina at about 400pm about 7 hours of motoring.
Settled in at the Brindisi
marina, had a real shower and then Terry's famous 'chicken stew' served with
croutons spread with truffle paste. On the morning before setting off on a long
sail Terry prepares some chicken pieces, lots of carrot, celery and onion, it
all goes into the pressure cooker for about 10 minutes and then rests in the
sink covered by a towel. It's ready to eat after a long day at sea mmmmm food
for the soul.
Monday 22nd - Brindisi
Marina
I'm in heaven waking up to
the sound of water gently lapping on the side of the boat. It's quiet here
apart from the occasional plane flying over, a speed boat passing by. It's a
hot steamy morning looking out over the glassy water and there’s not a breath
of wind. The silence is broken with the sounds of Jimmy Buffet playing in
the background while we chat and have brekkie on the deck.
Trip to the shops in
Brindisi
Terry is busy hooking up the
dinghy to winch it from the deck and down into the water. The heavy outboard
motor is carefully manoeuvred down and Carol secures it to the dingy ready for
our trip into Brindisi. It's the equivalent to getting into the car to go the
shops, same but very different. Everything is harder and takes much longer on a
boat. We putter out of the marina past the castle on the point, two large
Grimaldi liners are docked amongst the cargo ships and we go past a UN
distribution depot. The wake of passing boats gently rocks us. We pull up on a
small jetty near three large tugs which become a familiar sight constantly going
in and out of port several times a day. We set off looking for a sign to
the Centro. An old lady waves us in the direction 'dritto, dritto' straight
ahead.
The smell of bread baking
draws us into a little bakery where we purchase some pane, panini and some
little baked olive snacks. Across the road Carol is getting some peaches, an
avocado, tomatoes, and she is carrying a large bunch of pale asparagus mmmmm I
am thinking ahead maybe some pine nuts to go with that. The streets are narrow,
dirty and run down we avoid walking under some of the shutters and balconies,
they look like they could fall down at any minute. We look up at some beautiful
old stone carvings set high up on a corner of an old building. The ornate
rusted balconies look stunning against the old stone, there are the occasional
bits of greenery, these are much sparser than the abundance of greenery in the
north of Italy in Spoleto.
We go into a little
'enoteca' and Terry buys some salami and prosciutto while Carol and I practise
our Italian and ask for some fresh pasta. Packets of orecchiette and
other pasta are brought out to us, pale, mixed sizes and shapes, wholemeal,
organic, flecked. Terry in the background 'not that wholemeal s.....' . Some
fresh ricotta and other cheeses of different consistencies, goat or cow’s milk,
we decide to try the goat ricotta . The lovely friendly shopkeepers help us and
another customer joins in with the Italian/English interaction and after a few
photos we leave. The Italians are encouraging and helpful in our attempts to
converse with them in their own language; equally some like to practise their
English. There are still many that don't speak English and my limited Italian
has been useful. I will continue my classes back home.
We stop in at the Farmacia
to buy some fish oil and we get some directions to the Vodafone shop.
Finally we find it at 1.10pm and it has just closed for siesta time, in Italy
everything bar a few cafés close between 1:00pm and 4:30pm for siesta. It can
be quite frustrating when you are trying to sort something out.
We are getting hungry and
decide to head back to the boat to have some of the yummy food we have bought
for lunch. Not before one more stop at the Conad supermercato to pick up some
radicchio, Parmigiana and I found some All Bran!
We wind our way back to the
waterfront through the narrow little streets. Then into the trusty dinghy and
we chug past the ships, some large tugs follow us on their way out to pick up a
ship. Lunch on the deck with Dreher lemon beer, my new favourite drink. It's
the perfect refreshing low alcohol drink, it would go down well in Australia.
Lunch:
Radicchio salad with
avocado, capsicum and ripe Roma tomatoes.
Goats cheese ricotta.
Prosciutto and salami
Crusty bread drizzled with
local peppery EVOO.
Sounds of Afternoon siesta.
It's quiet here. The water
gently laps on the side of the boat. I love the clinking sounds of boats, masts
swaying and creaking, mooring ropes squeaking and straining against the jetty,
I lie here listening to the sounds of a marina full of boats and settle into
the soothing and gentle rocking of the boat. Turkish towels pegged above us to
stop the afternoon sun sneaking into the siesta space on the deck.
Occasionally I hear a voice reminding me that I'm in Italy, a young girl
calling out 'bella', a man in the distance calling out sailing instructions in
Italian, his pupils in their small yachts trail behind him linked to each other
in a line. It's bliss!
Carol’s washing is turning
into an all day affair with both the washing machine and dryer taking hours! I
see Carol's ever calm demeanour where nothing is a problem.
After drinks in the marina
bar we head back to the boat. A few drops of rain and more expected tonight. I
cooked for the first time on the boat in the very compact but well equipped
kitchen. Everything has its place there are little cupboards in every possible
space, a fridge space, several pantry nooks brimming with supplies, a pot
cupboard, cutlery, crockery even a garage with every possible tool, nuts and
bolts you name it they are prepared for anything. The emergency life raft and
supplies sits under the table. There are gas detectors....everything clips shut
so there are no loose bits and pieces floating. Another new cooking experience
that requires some efficient use of space and utensils
Dinner
Fresh pasta with truffle
paste (from truffle hunt near Citta di Castella) and parmigiana
Asparagus drizzled
with truffle infused balsamic sprinkled with toasted pine nuts and shaved
parmigiana.
Tuesday 23rd
5:00 am. Woke early this morning to the sounds of a wind change, wind had
picked up through the night and there was some banging and unfamiliar noises.
Terry and Carol were up in a flash and realised that their boat had been
pushed back from the front mooring line (lazy line) and was now drifting back
into the jetty. They worked hard to secure the boat, a marina person helped and
another experienced yachtie came on board to help. After lots of winching and
tying down of ropes in 40 knot ++ winds with gusts of 46-50 knots they finally
managed to secure the boat. Lots of other boats around us were also having
problems. These winds were not forecast and caught people unawares. This
weather will pass around 11:00am to 1:00pm today, the rest of the week is
forecast for light winds.
This really is something else sitting in and feeling the brunt of every wind
gust, it certainly heightens your awareness! Banging, clanging, straining ropes
and the wind whistles as it pushes boats and masts around. This is new
experience that I haven't been aware of when comfortably surrounded by four
walls in a secure home.
We spend the day reading and sleeping until the wind passes.
This evening we bus it into the town centre with a couple of recommendations of
where to eat. In typical Italian fashion the city and shops come to life at 4:30.
Passagiatta is in full swing, Brindisi is a lovely city, lots of interesting
old buildings, a palm lined town harbour where yachts can moor placing them
right in the centre of the city. Lots of interesting little alleys and enotecas
and great shops too.
We find the lovely little Italian fish trattoria Siamo Fritto in the piazza
Mercato, looks great, we decide to eat there. And what a treat it is, so much
to choose from. We order some beer, half a litre of rose and with it comes the
complimentary bread and olive taralli biscuits.
We have some delicious marinated anchovies drizzled with lovely green EVOO and
a touch of pesto, the dressing begs to be mopped up with some crusty bread.
Then some crispy fried calamari followed by a seafood risotto which has my
undivided attention as I wade through the tasty sticky rice clinging to the
mussels and prawns. Terry has pasta with tuna and tomato. We all finish with a
cleansing limone sorbet and I can't resist a glass of limoncello. All up this
cost us approximately 21 euros each (about $30).
Our bus driver is obviously in a big hurry to get home, he races through the
streets and doesn't have time to take our fares, just waves us off the
bus.
Wednesday 24th - Brindisi
We dinghy into Brindisi, this time we moored right on the central town dock placing
us close to everything.
Shopping - we sample and buy some local fresh cheese, baked bread and a few
supplies. Terry's shopping list is 'lollies, chips and hot salami', I suggest
'fruit and veges'. This stirring of the dietitian continues. I suggest a chickpea
and tuna salad for dinner, Terry says sausages or pork chops.
Sitting in Piazza Cairoli
waiting to meet Terry and Carol I have an unbelievably creamy and delicious
amarello gelato, another heavenly food experience.
We visited a few historical
sites including the Palazzo Granafei where we stumbled across an amazing
photographic exhibition by Salvatore Valente. His stunning photographs were of
scenery, portraits and of people from all over the world. Keryn's motto of 'take 3 more steps' paid off
once again with this unexpected discovery.
It is siesta time and the city closes down. We find a little bar to have a
snack.
Mini tomato and mozzarella pizza and a lemon beer.
Two old Italian men sit at the table next to us, chatting, smoking, sipping an
espresso and they eat some kind of cream filled pastry. I watch them thinking I
must try one of these.
After asking 'che cosa il dolce gli uomini mangiare' (what are these men
eating) I am served a brioche like cornetto filled with creamy custard
dotted with dark liqueur soaked raisins that oozed out with every heavenly bite
I took. OMG how am I going to survive when I have to curb my eating
heaven.
It's now 4:30 and the city is coming to life again. We stop in at a little
jewellery shop that keeps drawing us in. They have these lovely necklaces with
little Puglia dolls typical of the area. Carol and I can't resist making a
purchase. We then head back to the boat on our dinghy.
Back on the boat Carol and I snack on the local cheese and taralli biscuits
that we bought along with a glass of Greek rose left over from Terry and
Carol's time in Greece. It has that typical retsina flavour which is a
bit of a shock after the Italian rose however a few sips later I am not even
noticing it. I prepare one of my versions of chick pea salad for dinner.
Tuna in oil, chick peas, olives, cherry tomatoes, blanched green beans, rucola,
quartered eggs and dressed with EVOO and lemon juice.
Thursday 25th - leaving Brindisi for Monopoly
Up at seven for an early start. Over brekkie and checking the weather report we
see storm warnings forecast for later today and strong winds settling in for
the next couple of days.
The plan was to get to Bari in two legs with a stop in Monopoli. Each leg is
about a 6-7 hour day sail.
I need to be in Bari in 3 days to catch my train to Milan and Terry and Carol
are picking up another friend in Bari the day after I leave.
Terry is reluctant to sail today with the storm warning so it looks like we're
stuck in Brindisi for a few days with the back up plan for me to train it to
Bari if needed.
Terry checks in with the marina staff and another local experienced sailor who
suggests that today is our window of opportunity to make a move before the
strong winds set in.
A decision is made - we pack up and set off for Monopoli and hopefully we beat
the storm.
It's calm, cool but not cold, and overcast as we sail out of the marina and
through the ever busy port of Brindisi. A large Grimaldi ship is coming in
followed by a rescue ship, military aircraft fly overhead, tiny fishing boats
dot the harbour and we plot our way to Monopoli. Onto auto pilot, after a while
there is enough wind to partly put up the genoa and main to help us along,
though not enough wind to sail independently. The boat needs about 14 knots of
wind to get it moving and are currently getting about 5-6 knots. We are
travelling at about 6.7 knots with a combination of wind and motor. It's calm and
flat and no sign of any storm.
All along the coast there are settlements, pockets of Greek style white
buildings, probably beachside holiday towns. Plumes of smoke dot the
landscape all the way from Brindisi. It is the season for burning off and
cleaning up of the olive groves. I also saw this from the train as I was
travelling down to Brindisi from Lecce.
Sailing/motoring like this is very relaxing, I write my blog, do Facebook,
Carol reads and draws, we have morning tea and then lunch (left over tuna and
chickpea salad) and there's time to chat and snooze. We arrive in Monopoli at
3:00pm.
The end
of my holiday is getting closer and I will be sad to leave this idyllic
lifestyle, however I have two precious friends and some wonderful memories to
look back on.
Thank you