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Rub the boar's snout to ensure that you return to Florence |
On the recommendation of Anne and Gordon
aboard Sarah Grace, we ‘sailed’ (a
Mediterranean term for motoring into a headwind) from Elba into the mouth of
the Arno River. Here, besides the big new Marina di Pisa complex, there are
small marinas and jetties for a couple of miles along the river bank.
Marinanova is a quaint and pleasant little spot where the two friendly marina
dogs race to greet you before you see the “Please do not Feed the Dogs” sign. Paolo,
who owns and runs Marinanova, has a PhD in Economics but he enjoys the simple
life sleeping on his boat and keeping company with the local fishermen. Nets
are strung all along the river bank and there seems to be plenty to catch, but
thinking of the major cities, towns and farmlands upriver, we weren’t that keen
on a seafood dinner. A regular bus service runs along the main road behind the
marina so it’s easy to travel to the local town, or into Pisa or, with a couple
of bus/train changes, to Florence and Siena. So that’s what we did.
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Marinanova |
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Tai the Marina dog |
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Fishing huts and nets on the Arno |
The first excursion was about ten
kilometres to the city of Pisa to see the Field of Miracles and the famous
Leaning Tower. No matter how many times you’ve seen it in photos or films,
seeing the actual tower listing at that angle is a surreal experience. Galileo
conducted his canon ball experiment here (whether it was an actual
demonstration or a ‘thought experiment’ is still debated, though it’s fun to
imagine him up there!) He thus proved conclusively that Wil E Coyote couldn’t
possibly have been crushed by the ACME anvil that he pushed over a cliff to
catch the Roadrunner (the theory does have some other minor applications.) A
stroll across the bridge and through the lamplit town, and dinner at Osteria I Santi, was a lovely way to
finish the evening.
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The Tower
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Detail - the Leaning tower |
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We managed to resist taking the 'holding up the tower' shot |
Our next, more ambitious effort was a round
trip to Florence for three days, the same in Siena, then back to Pisa. I feel
quite inadequate to describe either of these wonderful cities, but I hope the
photographs will provide some sense of their uniqueness.
My first glimpse of Florence was a day trip
with our mates Jenny and Robbie, who spent ten days with us in Rome – but I
want to leave that story for their Guest Blog. Terry and I booked into a nice
little ground floor apartment, within easy striking distance of the Duomo,
which of course is a spectacular must-see. Built from white, grey-green and
pink marble from the outposts of the Empire, it is one of those buildings that
proclaim, “We are the centre of the world” which, in the sixteenth century,
Florence was. Inside, it is surprisingly plain: light and space provide the
sense of awe rather than the usual spectacular decoration. Florence is the city
of the Renaissance, a testament to what happens when great wealth, new ideas,
enlightened leadership (the Medicis, of course) and genius in several fields
(art, literature, architecture, science…) coincide and enhance each other.
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The Duomo, Florence
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So, it was off to Santa Croce, where
several of the great figures of the time (and later times) are buried, to pay tribute. Besides
the great Galileo himself, the scientists Fermi, Marconi and Barsanti
(co-inventor of the internal combustion engine); artists like Ghiberti and the
great Michelangelo; writers like Dante and Machiavelli, amongst many other
notables in different fields, are buried here. Michelangelo created a beautiful
Pieta for his own tomb, but sadly it
is elsewhere and he is left with a fussy, ostentatious edifice which I doubt he
would have appreciated.
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Galileo |
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Michelangelo |
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Dante |
Fortunately I had been to the Uffizi with
Jenny and Robbie – there was no getting in this time around with the holiday
crowds in full force. It’s a strange phenomenon that only the really major
tourist attractions are ever crowded – perhaps this is because of the
itineraries of cruise lines and tour buses? Pompeii will have a hundred thousand
tourists, while Ostia Antica has ten! In Florence, places like the Bargello
(sculpture museum) and the Pitti Palace (home of a rival family to the Medicis,
housing a great art collection) were not at all crowded, making it easy to
stroll around and really look at things properly. Donatello’s sculptures,
beautiful paintings by Rafael, Titian, Rubens, Caravaggio – what a feast!
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Donatello's rather camp David |
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Living large Renaissance-style in the Pitti Palazzo |
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Amazing detail from an inlaid stone table |
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Rafael Madonna and Child |
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Titian's beautiful repentent Magdalene |
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Rubens bringing dynamic movement to Florentine art |
And speaking of feasts, we enjoyed several
including this Florentine bistecca at Rubaconte Ristorante - simple but sensational.
Florence is one of those inexhaustible
cities to which you could return again and again, and it would still reveals
more layers, more treasures. I hope we can return some day. And now, to do
justice to the equally beautiful, but quite different city of Siena, I think I
will save it for the next blog.
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Sun sets on Marinanova |
Hello Carol,
ReplyDeleteWe are planning to sail into the Arno in a week or two and find the following conundrum: our trusty Imray book (2015 edition!) states that cables run across the Arno for the nets and so many masts won't fit under. However, we have found a blog from 2009 that states the cables are no longer there, plus your blog entry and another from 2013... do you recall if there were cables still across the river when you sailed in?
Thanks in advance!
Hi Odette. Would you please send me a private email at
Deleteh O G e S i N W A
@
hotmail D O T com
all lower case, no spaces between any of them and replace the DOT - just avoiding the bots that scrounge these sites
regards
Terry Hogan
Arno river is a beautiful memory of Florence. Watch a video in Youtube athttps://youtu.be/Wzp8pgiZn7c
ReplyDeleteRead also article about Florence, alongside the Arno river inhttp://stenote.blogspot.com/2018/01/florence-along-arno-river.html