Trapani, with Erice atop the mountain
As part of our “take it slowly” campaign
for this season, we made a short trip across the strait from the Egadi Islands
to Trapani on the north-west point of Sicily. We’ve been in a small marina
called “Vento di Maestrale” beside the fishing harbour for the last seven days,
enjoying the town, the clear water for swimming and the comings and goings of
the tuna fleet. There is a large fish market each morning on the waterfront right
behind the marina where the catch is delivered direct from the boats. A kilo of
sardines, cleaned and split is just 5 euros, a kilo of tuna between 10 and 15
depending on the quality. The vendors are loud and rude, spruiking their fish
and insulting the catch and the manhood of their competitors – it’s great fun!
Fresh produce stalls are set up daily around the fish market entry – in season
at the moment are deep purple eggplant, late tomatoes, zucchinis, all kinds of
wild greens, ripe stone fruit - everything you might need to cook up an amazing
dinner. Here, seasons mean seasons! Fresh peas were available for one month;
after that, “I’m sorry, Signora, peas are finished!” Yesterday there were no
figs, today they are everywhere, plump, sweet and only three euros for a kilo.
Somehow, foods are more precious and tastier when they only appear briefly, at
their appointed time.
Part of the tuna fleet
Trapani is an easy town to like. Its name
is a corruption of the Greek word for sickle, and Trapani’s narrow sickle shape
means it has a waterfront on each side. To the north are white sand beaches
(mostly free from the tightly packed grids of umbrellas and plastic lounges for
hire that you find elsewhere) while the southern edge is the harbour and a
substantial salt works with blindingly white mounds of salt and a traditional
windmill. Much of the town seems to be old palazzos renovated as apartments,
and many buildings have the remnants of family crests, ornate balconies and
huge heavy doors which must once have admitted horses and carriages to an inner
courtyard. Of course it’s Sicily, so you are never far from a good restaurant
or café. Not surprisingly, Trapani’s best specialise in fresh seafood. Terry could happily live here, one of the very
few places we’ve been to that this is the case.
The islands are only a couple of hours’ sail away, with lots of bays to
anchor in. You can circumnavigate Sicily
in a reasonable amount of time. It’s not
far to the mainland and Rome if you want a big city for a while and there’s
actually surf on the Island of Marettimo.
It’s an attractive proposition, but we still have a long way to go.
The Cathedral
There are a few foreign tourists, but it
seems to attract mainly Italians from northern parts, who spend their days
lying in the sun and their nights cruising the bars. That is, except for the massive Cruise Ships
that come in, sometimes two at a time, with crowds bound for Erice.
They’re not really tourists, though, as they only spend a part of a day
here then rush off in their hundreds to the next ‘part of a day’ in some other
location.
The wine shop
And finally it was time for a visit to
Trapani’s main claim to tourist fame, the old city of Erice perched 2,480ft up
on top of Monte San Guiliano. One of the marina guys dropped us off at the foot
of the mountain and we boarded the cable car to the top. It was truly
spectacular seeing Trapani’s sickle laid out below just like a map. And the
ride just kept going – the sea, the Egadi islands, the green and terracotta
patchwork of farmland – it felt like you could see the whole of Sicily from up
there! It is hard to imagine armies scaling the mountain and still having the
energy to take the town, but it appears that all the usual suspects did:
originally Phoenician (with Greek influences), it was sacked by the
Carthaginians, then conquered by Arabs, then the Normans under our old friend
Roger. A Norman castle still stands, built on the site of the famous Temple of
Aphrodite. The temple was supposedly staffed by 1000 sacred courtesans, which
would probably have given visiting mariners an incentive to climb the mountain.
The town is mostly Aragonese and very picturesque with its winding cobbled
streets and flower-filled balconies. We managed to find Erice’s single geocache
to add to the pleasures of the day. Do make the trip up the mountain if you’re
in these parts – it’s well worth it.
View from the cliffs, castle above
Terry looking out over Trapani
So, last evening here in Trapani. The
weather has settled, we’ve raided the market for fish and fruit supplies and had a delivery from one of the
local supermarkets. We’re planning to head into the Gulf of Castellammare, then
Cefalu before crossing to the Aeolian Islands. Taking it slowly. Everything is
clean, orderly and working. Except for that radar. Oh well … domani.
Streets of Erice
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