Thursday, 28 February 2008

Europe's worst airport?



The reputation of the Amalfi Coast precedes any trip with visions of La Dolce Vita, the stupendous beauty of the coastline and a magical and simpler Italy as seen in “Il Postino”. The reputation is not without some truth but the truth of today’s Amalfi Coast is somewhat more complex. The complexity begins with the probability that you will access Amalfi by flying into Naples Airport. This exercise in chaos is owned by our old friends B.A.A. who are in turn owned by Ferrovival, the Spanish brick company.

The previous year Naples had won the title of “Worst Airport in Europe” and from what I could see it was fighting hard to keep the title. Terminal 2 at Naples demonstrates BAA’s advanced sense of humour. It is a former cargo warehouse which has lost none of its ambience a mile from the airport to which the charter flight cattle are bussed. It has no luggage trolleys (either side!) and the “management response” when you mention this at the Information desk is to make a tannoy announcement which they have pre-printed in 12 languages that “there is a shortage of trolleys for operational reasons.” Indeed.

The ambience of the airport does not convey La Dolce Vita. There are not even proper air-conditioned buildings. We are talking about just a collection of pre-war aircraft-hangers in the middle of the one of the most heavily populated, poorest areas of Naples. Rubbish, barbed-wire fences and concrete covered in graffiti. Passengers are shipped in and out on coaches with no logical system or thought. Staff seem either too busy to help or would rather help their fellow Italians on domestic flights. Even the short runway is so full of potholes and rubbish that the pilots have to use all their skill and experience to take-off and land safely. The whole airport needs to be demolished and re-built outside the city.

Proudly wearing our “We saw Naples Airport and didn’t die” badges we made our escape from this proud gateway, but in dread of the thought that we had to come back through it in another week.

This is the spin on the airport website which promises happiness in the future:

" GESAC, the Naples International Airport Management Company, is committed to an important programme of airport development. By December 2008, new infrastructure will be completed which will make Naples airport more functional, safe and efficient."

Dammed with their own faint praise then that the current set up is not particularly functional, safe or efficient. Time will tell but let me tell you - the current crew are part of the problem with their years of experience of managing chaos and failure. Don't just replace the buildings!!

Wednesday, 27 February 2008

Gozo


Gozitan Bus


Rotunda Church Xewkija

The island of Malta is the fourth most densely populated place in the world and particularly on the north coast has a very urban character with one town running into the other. For many visitors to the Maltese Archipelago its sister island Gozo is the real deal, less populated, greener, more relaxed and very traditional with a definite sense of identity.

In Gozo, don't commit the faux pas of referring to them as Maltese, they are "Gozitans" and even the Maltese will tell you that the Gozitans don't like them! Greener and more atmospheric than Malta even the buses are a different colour, yellow on Malta and grey on Gozo. Gozo meaning “joy” in Castilian is the name the Aragonese gave this island, when they possessed it in 1282. The idea of joy and pleasure is also conveyed by its Latin motto “Fertilis ab undis caput iffero – a fruitful land raising its head from the sea”. We know that the Phoenicians, when it was theirs in 700Bc, called it “Gwl” or Gaulos, meaning a round ship, possibly in reference to the island’s shape from a distance, a name the Romans kept when they, in turn took it over in 218 AD. The Arabs, who came to rule this precious piece of land a thousand years ago, and who strongly influenced its Semitic language, left behind the name that has stuck in the vernacular: Ghawdex (pronounced Aw-desh).

It has an area of 67 square kms, is 14 kms long and 7 kms wide. With a coastline of 43 km, it is the second largest island of the Maltese Archipelago that, together with the smaller isle of Comino and the main island of Malta forms the Republic of Malta. Gozo is popularly called The Island of Calypso, which is a nickname originating from the Greek mythological location of Ogygia referred to in Homer's Odyssey. In this epic poem, the fabled island was controlled by the nymph Calypso, who had detained the Greek hero Odysseus for seven long years as prisoner of love in her cave.

"The cave was sheltered by a copse of alders and fragrant cypresses, which was the roosting place of wide-winged birds, homed owls and falcons and cormorants with long tongues, birds of the coast, whose business takes them down to the sea.

Trailing around the month of the cavern was a thriving garden vine, with great bunches of grapes; from four separate neighbouring springs four crystal rivulets were channeled to run this way and that; and in soft meadows on either side, iris and wild celery flourished.

It was indeed a spot where even an immortal visitor must pause to gaze in wonder and delight. "


The Odyssey, V. 63-74, Bk. 5, Homer


Calypso's Cave

Access to Gozo is pretty easy with a ferry service from the port of Cirkewwa every hour during the day which just takes 20 minutes. The ferries are bright and modern and well run purpose designed boats which even have lifts to the passenger deck. Passenger and vehicle service is provided all the year-round between Mgarr Harbour (Gozo) and Cirkewwa (Malta) including Saturdays, Sundays and Public Holidays together with a night service throughout the year. It is a pleasant 20 minute crossing skirting Comino, so named for the cumin which was grown there.


Gozo Ferry



Mgarr

From the natural sights and caves to the oldest temples in the world, Gozo has a long history to offer. As a deeply religious population, churches and other religious attractions are also abundant on the island. Various attractions you can visit include the Gozo Museum (historical displays) the Gozo Crafts Centre (good selection of local handicrafts) and the Citadel / Gran Castello. Other island attractions include the Gozo Heritage a series of life-size dioramas depicting the island’s past; pretty Xlendi Bay (on the western coast); and at the red-sanded Ramla Bay the reputed Calypso Cave. Near Xaghra are a number of places to see: two Gigantija Temples (1,000 years older than the Pyramids) and the Alabaster Cave(stalactite and stalagmite caves).





Xlendi Bay

On both Gozo and Malta the Arabs built fortified cities in the centre of the islands as defensive capitals, Mdina on Malta and Rabat on Gozo. Whilst the Gozo capital is shown on maps as Victoria, the locals always refer to it as Rabat, Arabic for “The Town”. Even today the roads on Gozo lead up from the coast to Rabat / Victoria and down again. Crowning Rabat and the island is the Citadel from which virtually the whole island and the surrounding seas can be seen. The Citadel is built on one of the many flat-topped hills in the centre of Gozo. The island was very exposed to raiders and up until 1637 the people of Gozo had to take shelter within the Citadel's walls after sunset, due to the frequent Turkish assaults on the island. In 1551 a strong Turkish force overwhelmed the Citadel and carried 6000 of the inhabitants away into slavery. Only 300 Gozitans managed to escape before the capitulation. The walls themselves date from the 16th to the 18th century.

Most of the buildings inside the Citadel are in ruins, but the Old Courts of Law and the Old Governor's Palace are still used as the Law Courts of Gozo. Also there are the Old Prisons with the Armoury of the Knights, the Archeological Museum, the Natural History Museum and the Folklore Museum. The Cathedral with the Bishop's Palace and the Cathedral Museum dominate the Citadel. The Cathedral was designed by the Maltese architect Lorenzo Gafa, in the form of a Latin cross. It was built between 1697 and 1711 on the site of an older church and it is saying something (given the stiff competition) that it is probably the most atmospheric church on the islands. Many of its treasures are displayed in the adjoining cathedral museum. The Folklore Museum is housed in three late medieval style houses featuring the influence of Sicilian architecture. Exhibits consist of agricultural implements, items related to the cotton industry, tools used in different crafts and some traditional costumes. All archeological material found on Gozo is on display in the Archeological Museum, a 17th century house, known as "Casa Bondi". Of special interest are shards of the Ghar Dalam phase 5000 BC found at Ghajn Abdul, probably the oldest ever found on the Maltese Islands. Also on display are Punic-Hellenistic pottery statuettes, amphorae and anchors.Reflecting the religious Gozitan culture, there is an abundance of churches scattered all over the island.

Gozo - View from the Citadel

The most interesting are the Sanctuary Basilica at Ta' Pinu built from 1920 till 1931in Romanesque style, on the remnants of a 16th century chapel, as well as the Rotunda Church of Xewkija, with the third largest dome in Europe (86 metres in circumference and 75 metres high). Xewkija, which lies in the middle between Mgarr Harbour and Victoria, is the oldest village in Gozo. The village feast of St. John the Baptist falls on 24th June, and the external festivities are celebrated on the closest Sunday. The word Xewkija is derived from Arabic meaning an area of thorny wastelands, common at some point in time. The awesome Rotunda, naturally dedicated to St. John the Baptist, is Xewkija's distinctive landmark and parish church. Tourists and visitors flock year round to visit the church and its attractions. It offers an unforgettable panoramic view of Gozo from its enormous dome. The monumental church is an enormous circular structure in white local limestone. It is called a Rotunda because of its form. Eight concrete columns covered with stone support its elegant dome, 75 metres high, with a 28-metre diameter, and a circumference of 85 metres. This boasts the third largest unsupported dome in the world. Its weight is calculated to around 45,000 tonnes. What is truly remarkable about the Rotunda is that it is totally out of scale with all the other churches on Gozo and it was entirely built by voluntary labour and donations over a 24 year period from 1951. Some of the pride the village feels at its creation can be garnered from the signs on the surprisingly large viewing area on the dome exhorting you to “admire God’s wonderful creation".


Rotunda Church Xewkija



A remnant of Arab culture in the whereabouts of Xewkija is the renowned marble slab of Majmuna (pron. Maimoona) with an inscription in Arabic dating back to 1173. It throws valuable light on life during Arab cultural domination. It also proves that Malta was by that time still under strong Arab influence, even though Arab political domination was ended with the arrival of Count Roger the Norman in 1090.

Gozo is renowned for its cottage industries, particularly spinning and weaving, and the creation of jumpers and jackets from the wool of sheep and goats. Lace is the most widespread doorstep craft. It was introduced on a large scale after the 1840’s. The craft soon proved its worth for the product was sold to the higher classes of society and even abroad. It was very common, especially in the afternoon, to see mothers with their daughters sitting on empty wooden lemonade crates with a lace pillow in their lap rested against the wall, their hands moving bobbins swiftly and deftly creating the most intricate and delicate of designs.


Azur Window

Gozo lace is an object d’art and it continues to flourish despite competition from machine made lace. The men make lace of a different variety: silver filigree, twisted into intricate pieces of jewellery. And there is fabulous glass, with remarkable shapes in subtle shades of blue and green. Pottery is widely available, ranging from decorative pots and statuettes to imaginative house name plaques and door numbers.

Gozo is also remarkable for some of oldest Neolithic remains including at Gigantija the oldest free standing structure in the world. These temples in Xaghra, Gozo, are one of the most important archaeological sites in Malta. The origins of Gigantija date back to the Ggantija phase (3600 – 3200 B.C.). John Otto Bayer was the first to excavate the temples in 1827. Extensive archaeological and restoration work was carried out in the early 20th century to ensure their preservation. The Gigantija megalithic complex consists of two temples surrounded by a massive common boundary wall. One of the most striking features of the entire complex, the boundary wall, is built using the alternating header and stretcher technique, with some of the megaliths exceeding five metres in length and weighing over fifty tons. The temples at Gigantija are built with rough, coralline limestone blocks. Each temple contains five apses connected by a central corridor leading to the innermost trefoil section. The first temple is larger and contains a variety of features such as altars, relief carvings and libation holes. The second temple was built later and is devoid of such features. Also of interest is the corbelling technique evident on the inwardly inclined walls, suggesting that the temple was roofed.

The gigantic dimensions of the megaliths have always struck a chord with popular imagination. In centuries past, some locals even believed that the Islands’ temples, in particular those of Ggantija, were the work of giants. This particular temple site in Gozo bears witness to this ancient legend: its name, Gigantija, is Maltese for giant.

The Xaghra Stone Circle.
Like the Hal Saflieni Hypogeum, the Xaghra Stone Circle, was used for funerary rites. It was also built on a promontory to the West of a major megalithic site, that of Gigantija Evidence suggests that this site was utilized for burial purposes over the period 4000 - 2500 BC. The Neolithic people at the time made use of a number of natural caves. The Xaghra Stone Circle was originally marked by two entrance monoliths which seem to have been 14 -16 feet high. Although the exact position has not been located, they seem to have been aligned with the Gigantija Temple. These monoliths together with several other megaliths formed part of a wall which circled the entire site. This circle was approximately 45 m in diameter.

Xaghra stone Circle

The interior is composed of a central ritual area entered through a huge stone threshold and down steps into the rough caves. The central chamber is subdivided into two distinct sections by a series of elegant megalithic trilithon altars and a massive stone bowl. Burials were concentrated in smaller caverns, surrounded by rough coralline stone walls. The most important discoveries from the Xaghra stone circle may prove to be the rare but remarkably preserved human remains.

Ta' Cenc Tombs.
On the northern lip of Ta’ Cenc, looking across towards Xewkija, three tombs assumed to be of the Early Bronze Age Tarxien Cemetery phase can be found, if carefully sought. The first consists of two rows of upright slabs, perhaps once the walls of a gallery grave. Close to them is a more typical dolmen, with a capstone supported on other blocks. The third is similar, built into a more recent field wall 600m to the east. There may once have been a fourth well off to the south east, but this can no longer be found.

Gozo has four good sets of the mysterious cart-ruts, and a few minor ones. At Tan-Nemes, well east of Qala, a pair runs out onto a spur overlooking the Fliegu ta’ Ghawdex. At Ta’ Tingi, several fine pairs can be found in the olive grove west of the pumping station, just south of Xewkija. An extensive system covers the Ta’ Cenc plateau, best seen between the hotel and the cliffs, and running near, but not to, Borg l-Imramma. They continue for nearly a kilometer to the east. An impressive pair zigzags down the slope from the San Lawrenz quarries to end on the cliffs above the Azure Widow at Dwejra.

There are two particular feasts which demonstrate the unique Gozitan angle on life, the Carnival and Victory Day. Carnival is celebrated on the five days preceding Ash Wednesday. It usually falls in February. Initiated during the Aragonese rule (before 1530), the celebration has continued to grow and expand. Colourful artistic floats, grotesque masks and dance companies of all ages and sexes parade the streets of the town and the main villages throughout the five days. A spontaneous carnival is organised after sunset in the villages of Nadur and Xewkija. Hundreds of people walk up and down the main street dressed in comically distorted figures and the most imaginative and creative costumes and masks to conceal their identity. The week from Palm Sunday to Easter Sunday, known in the Christian calendar as Holy Week, is full of religious and folklore displays. The central event is the Good Friday procession during which several life-size statues representing various moments from the passion and death of Christ are paraded through the village streets. Several men make vows to walk in the procession carrying a heavy cross or dragging heavy iron chains tied to their ankles. They wear hoods to conceal their identity. Scores of boys and young men are dressed in period costumes to add to the pageantry. Most impressive is the Roman legion, a gleam of breastplates, spears and shields and who announce themselves with trumpets and drum rolls. The procession is accompanied by the village band.

Bakery

Victory day is celebrated on the 8th of September. On this day the Maltese celebrate the feast of the Nativity of the Virgin Mary as well as the end of the 1565 Great Siege, when the Knights of St. John aided by the Maltese inflicted on the Turks a great defeat. There is a pontifical mass at the cathedral and a military parade in Pjazza Indipendenza. A scholar delivers a speech to commemorate what is perhaps the greatest victory in Maltese history.

Gozo’s strong sense of identity is manifested in its unique and complex history, its crafts and music, its many village festa, its strong identification with the catholic religion and its rural traditions. It even has its own ministry in the Maltese government. Its inhabitants strongly resisted the building of a bridge across the Gozo channel to Malta. For all that it is both a proud and welcoming place, proud of its identity and happy to be a place apart. There is no fear in walking about at night. The sense of safety and security is tangible. The people take pride in the absolute absence of muggings and the almost non-existence of theft. Until fairly recently, when they were not at home, the villagers of Gozo left their keys in their front doors, a custom which can occasionally still be seen.

Gozo is tranquil, and treasures its peace. For some, the silence can be overwhelming, but not to those for whom it spells a blessed a blessed respite from the trials and tribulations of everyday life. Gozo is not for those who like wild clubbing. Change is slow in Gozo, which adamantly sticks to its tortoise-like pace. Gozo has still succeeded in retaining its qualities of peace and solitude. If Odysseus were to come here today, he would probably find it even harder to leave.





Neolithic Malta




Gigantija

Malta is associated in the public mind with many images, holiday beaches, The Knights of St. John, The Grand Harbour of Valletta, grandiose churches but few are aware that it has some of the earliest and most developed Neolithic sites extant including at Gigantija on the island of Gozo the world’s oldest stone building. The list of Malta’s heritage sites is dominated by the Islands’ prehistoric megalithic temples and underground chambers. This small island of 243 square kilometers has a far greater importance in European prehistory due to this extraordinary collection of megalithic temples. Situated 90 kilometers south of Sicily and 370 kilometers east of the Tunisian coast, the island of Malta appears to have been first settled during the early Neolithic period by a wave of immigrants from the island of Sicily. Several thousand years before the arrival of the Phoenicians, the Maltese Islands were the home to a remarkable culture. These people acquired the skills, and had the strength of spiritual devotion, to mobilise men and resources to build megalithic structures and hew out living rock into burial chambers. This culture was to vanish from the Islands whether through famine, fire, natural disaster or routed by invasion no one knows. The remains seen today are both fascinating and perplexing for there are no definite answers to how and why they were built or for what they were used.

Malta’s temples and the Hypogeum are designated UNESCO World Heritage sites.

The ruins which remain are the bare skeletons of once magnificent structures, mostly roofed over, paved, furnished with doors and curtains, and beautifully decorated with sculptures and paintings. Some archaeologists assume that the period in which the early Maltese progressed from their first rock-cut common graves to their last massive temple complexes was between 3800 and 2400 BC. Around 2300 BC this extraordinary megalithic culture went into rapid decline. A major cause seems to have been the extreme deforestation and soil loss that accompanied the increase in population and the attendant clearing of land for agriculture. Other causes may have been famine, social disruption in response to an oppressive priesthood, and the arrival of foreign invaders. Following the decline of the temple culture, Malta may well have been deserted until the arrival of Bronze Age peoples around 2000 BC.

Sleeping Lady

On the islands of Malta and nearby Gozo, the remains of 50 temples have been found, with 23 in various states of preservation. Nearly all of the Maltese temples are constructed in the same basic design: a central corridor leading through two or more kidney-shaped (ellipsoidal) chambers to reach a small alter apse at the far end. The earliest interiors were plastered and painted with red ochre. Later interiors were decorated with intricately carved spirals on steps and altars, friezes of farm animals, fish and snakes, and a simple pattern of pitted dots. Still evident are wall sockets for wooden barriers or curtains and niches for ritual activities. Some of the relief decoration is of such delicate work that it is difficult to understand how it could have been carried out using only stone tools. Artifacts and furnishings (now removed from the temples and placed in museums) indicate ancestor worship, oracular and fertility goddess cults. The temples seem to have been used only for ritual activity and not as cemeteries, for no burials have been found. Sacrificial flint knives are among the artifacts discovered in the temples but no human bones, indicating that sacrifices were solely of animals and not humans.

A good place to start the exploration of Neolithic Malta is the National Museum of Archaeology in the Auberge de Provence in Valletta. This is one of the “inns” or Auberge of the eight Langue or tongues of the Knights of St John which are represented on the eight pointed Maltese Cross.

National Museum of Archaeology.
The National Museum of Archaeology displays an exceptional array of artifacts from Malta’s unique prehistoric periods starting with the first arrival of man in the Ghar Dalam phase (5200 BC) and running up to the Tarxien phase (2500 BC). The collection is housed in the Auberge de Provence, one of the first and most important buildings to be erected in Malta’s baroque capital city, Valletta, after the Great Siege in the late 16th century. The main hall is devoted to temple carvings, in particular the giant statue and altar blocks of Tarxien Temples. The collection continues with representations of animals, temple models, and the remarkable human figures. Of particular note are the exquisite figures of the ‘Sleeping Lady’ from the Hypogeum, and the ‘Venus’ of Hagar Qim.

‘Mother Goddess' from Tarxien

Heading from Valletta to the “three cities” on the far side of the Grand Harbour just outside the Cottonera Line, the defensive bastion encircling the cities you come to the suburb of Paola where a short distance apart you find the Tarxien Temples and the Hypogeum at Hal Saflieni.

Tarxien.



The Tarxien site (pronounced "tar-sheen"), discovered by a farmer in 1915 comprises three temples, one of which contains a famous statue of the lower body of a standing figure. Sometimes interpreted as a goddess statue by feminist writers (there is really no way of knowing this as the gender is indeterminate), it is one of the world's earliest known and most powerful representations of a deity.

This site, dating from 3600 to 2500 BC, is the most complex of all temple sites in Malta and consists of four megalithic structures. The temples are renowned for the detail of their carvings, which include domestic animals carved in relief, altars, and screens decorated with spiral designs and other patterns. Of particular note is a chamber set into the thickness of the wall between the South and Central temples, which is famous for its relief of two bulls and a sow.

The site seems to have been used extensively for rituals, which probably involved animal sacrifice. Tarxien is also of great interest because it offers an insight into how the temples were constructed: stone rollers left outside the south temple were probably used for transporting the megaliths. Remains of cremation have also been found at the centre of the South temple at Tarxien, which indicates that the site was reused as a Bronze Age cremation cemetery.


Hypogeum at Hal Saflieni.
Another important temple, the Hypogeum at Hal Saflieni, departs from the norm of Maltese temples. Located close to the Tarxien temple complex in the modern suburb of Paola, it was discovered by chance in 1902 during the digging of a well. The Hypogeum is a multi-storey underground labyrinth (25 x 35 meters) consisting of chambers, halls, corridors and stairs, which over the centuries were extended deeper and deeper in to the soft limestone. Constructed (according to the orthodox chronology) between 4000 and 5000 years ago, the Hypogeum was both a sanctuary and a cemetery, and the bones of some 7000 humans have been found. The most impressive chamber, commonly called "the holy of holies" has pillars and lintels that are architecturally remarkable. With its walls coated in red paint, it has been suggested that the chamber was used for animal sacrifices. Another chamber, the so-called Oracular room, has a square niche cut into the wall that may have been used so that a priest's voice could echo around the temple. A mysterious quality of this particular room is that a man's voice will powerfully reverberate around the chamber while a woman's voice is all but absorbed by the ancient stones.

Heading to the south coast of the island on a cliff top you come to the sites of Hagar Qim and Mnajdra.

Hagar Qim.


The massive ruins of Hagar Qim (pronounced "agar-eem") and Mnajdra (pronounced "eem-na-eed-rah") stand on a rocky plateau on the southwest coast of Malta, overlooking the sea and facing the uninhabited islet of Filfla, 4.8 kilometers away. This plateau is composed of two types of limestone; the lower, harder stone (gray coralline limestone) out of which Mnajdra is constructed, and the upper, softer stone (pale globigerina limestone) from which Hagar Qim is built.



Hagar Qim
The name Hagar Qim means 'standing stones' and previous to the excavations of these ruins all that could be seen was a mound of earth from which only the tops of the tallest stones protruded. Hagar Qim, possibly constructed in several phases between 3500 BC and 2900 BC, is built with some of the largest stones of any temple on Malta; one massive stone is 7 meters by 3 meters (22 ft by 10 ft) and weighs approximately 20 tons. The temple's soft globigerina limestone walls have weathered badly over the millennia and later temple builders used the harder coralline limestone such as is found at Mnajdra complex just down the hill.

Mnajdra Temple.


The Mnajdra temple complex is located about 500 meters to the west of Hagar Qim, closer to the edge of the promontory facing the sea. Mnajdra consists of two buildings, a main temple with two ellipsoidal chambers and a smaller temple with one chamber. Among their other possible uses, the temples of Mnajdra fulfilled astronomical observation and calendrical functions. The main entrance faces east, and during the spring and autumn equinoxes the first rays of light fall on a stone slab on the rear wall of the second chamber. During the winter and summer solstices, the first rays of the sun illuminate the corners of two stone pillars in the passageway connecting the main chambers. In the case of Mnajdra, the alignment today is good, but not quite perfect

Heading now across to the neighbouring island of Gozo we find many other Neolithic remains including the remarkable temple which is the oldest standing stone monument in the world named after the Maltese word for “gigantic”.

Gigantija.


The largest and best preserved of all the Maltese temples is on Gozo (a 20-minute ferry ride from Malta). Constructed (according to the assumptions of conventional archaeology) between 3600 and 3000 BC, the temple of Gigantija covers 1000 square meters and its astonishing rear wall still rises 6 meters and contains megaliths weighing in at 40-50 tons. According to local legends, the massive blocks of Gigantija (the word means gigantic) were carved in the south of Gozo by a female giant.

Gigantija



How do we explain the fact that the oldest free-standing stone monuments in the world, which by virtue of there size and sophistication declare themselves to have been built by a people who had already accumulated long experience in the science of megalithic construction, appear on the archaeological scene on a group of very small islands - the Maltese archipelago - that had not even been inhabited by human beings until 1600 years ago? Wouldn't you expect a “civilization history” to show up in the Maltese archaeological record documenting ever-more sophisticated construction techniques - and indeed wouldn't you also expect an extensive territory capable of supporting a reasonably sized population (rather than tiny barren islands) to surround and nourish the greatest architectural leap forward of antiquity?

Paleoanthropologists excavating in the caves of Ghar Hasan and Ghar Dalam on Malta found evidence of Neanderthal humans along with the skeletal remains of animals (European deer, bear, wolf and fox) known to be extinct long before the end of the Paleolithic era. While the Neanderthal could conceivably have made the sea voyage from mainland Europe to Malta during early Paleolithic times (though there is absolutely no evidence of such sea migrations anywhere in the Neanderthal record), the animals could not have made such a sea journey and would therefore had to have somehow walked to the region of Malta. But isn't Malta an island remotely located in the midst of a vast sea?

Malta has not always been an island and this fact we learn from oceanographers and the new science of inundation mapping. Around 17,000 years ago, at the time of the Last Ice Age, when the level of the world's oceans was more than 120 meters lower than it is today, the islands of the Maltese archipelago were the mountain tops of one landmass joined by land-bridge to Sicily (90 kilometers to the north), which itself was joined to the southern end of what is today the Italian mainland. Therefore, until 16,400 years ago, Paleolithic humans and the animals they hunted could simply have walked from Europe all the way to Malta. These people would have lived, hunted (and perhaps farmed) mostly in the lowland areas and (like so many other cultures of antiquity) might have constructed some of their temples upon the peaks of sacred mountains. Given the many thousands of years of time during which Malta was connected by land to mainland Europe and the likelihood of information exchange from other cultural regions of prehistoric Europe, it is eminently possible that the extraordinary architectural style of the Maltese temples could have been developed.


Then the ice caps began to melt and the level of the oceans slowly rose, relentlessly inundating coastal areas and the land-bridges between higher altitude regions. By 14,600 years ago, the land-bridge to Sicily had disappeared beneath the sea and by 10,600 years ago the waters had risen so high that only the peaks of Malta were above the seas, forming the islands we have today of Malta, Gozo and Comino. In the process of this inundation the social centers in the lowland regions would have been lost beneath the waters and the people would have retreated to the higher altitudes of the Maltese peaks or would have migrated northward to Italy and the mainland of the European landmass. The Maltese archipelago would henceforth be completely isolated from European cultural influences and would therefore display unique developmental characteristics, which is exactly the case found in the archaeological record.

Perhaps the great temples of Malta were not actually constructed during Neolithic times but are in fact artifacts of a much older Paleolithic civilization (remember, there is no radio-carbon or other archaeological dating to substantiate the current assumption of a Neolithic origin of the Maltese temples). Perhaps the elegant astronomical alignments of the temples and the presence of advanced mathematics in their construction indicate that the island of Malta was once part of a pan-regional (or global) sacred geography, itself formulated by a long lost civilization of high scientific and spiritual achievement. To determine the answers to these questions it will be necessary to conduct much more extensive archaeological excavations on Malta and, equally important, at the many underwater archaeological sites known to exist in the waters surrounding the islands. Whatever their ultimate origin however, the Maltese temples are places of power not to be missed by any serious pilgrim and earth mysteries aficionado and a source of curious fascination to visitors.

Photos on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=27562&l=99ccf&id=723587781

Monday, 25 February 2008

The Amalfi Coast.


Amalfi Duomo


Amalfi - St. Andrew

The reputation of the Amalfi Coast precedes any trip with visions of La Dolce Vita, the stupendous beauty of the coastline and a magical and simpler Italy as seen in “Il Postino”. The reputation is not without some truth but the truth of today’s Amalfi Coast is somewhat more complex. The complexity begins with the probability that you will access Amalfi by flying into Naples Airport. This exercise in chaos is owned by our old friends B.A.A. who are in turn owned by Ferrovival, the Spanish brick company. The previous year Naples had won the title of “Worst Airport in Europe” and from what I could see it was fighting hard to keep the title. Terminal 2 at Naples demonstrates BAA’s advanced sense of humour. It is a former cargo warehouse which has lost none of its ambience a mile from the airport to which the charter flight cattle are bussed. It has no luggage trolleys (either side!) and the “management response” when you mention this at the Information desk is to make a tannoy announcement which they have pre-printed in 12 languages that “there is a shortage of trolleys for operational reasons.” Indeed.

Proudly wearing our “We saw Naples Airport and didn’t die” badges we went outside for our transfer. Here it got better, much better. We had booked a cheap week at the end of season in October with MyTravel staying half board in a family run hotel, Hotel Santa Lucia, in the small town of Minori with transfers included. Tonight we were the only people going to this destination so we had a Lancia Thema and driver to ourselves and soon the mess of the airport was consigned to memory. We headed south in the fading light along the Autostrade del Sol before turning into the coast road at Vietri sul Mare (so called because it is the centre of the wonderful ceramics industry) and heading along the precipitous coast road which is the only land connection between the Amalfi towns. The coastline looked magical in the moonlight as we went from one picture postcard town to another until we arrived at Minori. However one of the reasons we were relaxed on arrival is we hadn’t driven. In the cold light of day The Amalfi Coast consists of towns which were built for defence in ravines and on mountain tops joined by a road which should never have been built driven on by people who should never drive!!

Yet what we are looking at today is the remnant of a powerful and vigorous maritime republic. In 1112 Amalfi founded an imposing hospital in Jerusalem, the "Sacra Infirma" which gave birth to the powerful Order of the Knights Hospitaller of St. John of Jerusalem, later to become the Knights of Cyprus, then of Rhodes and now the Sovereign Military Order of the Knights of Malta .( http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2008/03/knights-of-malta.html )

It was the first of the Italian maritime republics and was a powerful naval and trading power from the 8th to 12th Centuries. It was the home of Flavio Gioia, who invented the compass and gave navigators the famous "Tabula de Amphala", the foundation stone of modern Maritime Law. The maritime commerce of Amalfi formed part of a triangle that involved Italy, the Arabian North Africa and the Byzantine Empire. Amalfi ships carried wood to the North African coastal Arabian cities and sold their cargoes for gold. The second leg of the triangle took them to Syrian-Palestinian coasts where they bought spices, gem stones, fine cloths and gold objects that they then sold all over Italy by sailing as far as Ravenna and from there up the Po as far as Pavia. Amalfi lost its independence in 1131 when it became part of the Norman Kingdom of Sicily but its prosperity and importance as a maritime power did not wane. It was the later effects of new sea-going activities by the powerful cities of Pisa and Genoa that put an end to Amalfi’s once unassailable position.


Amalfi from the sea


State Barge of the Amalfi Republic

Today The Amalfi Coast, or Costiera Amalfitana in Italian, is a stretch of coastline on the southern side of the Sorrentine Peninsula of Italy (Province of Salerno), extending from Positano in the west to Vietri sul Mare in the east. The towns lying on the Amalfi Coast are Vietri sul Mare, Cetara, Maiori, Minori, Ravello, Scala, Atrani, Amalfi, Conca dei Marini, Praiano and Positano. Renowned for its rugged terrain, scenic beauty, picturesque towns and diversity, the Amalfi Coast is listed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site.


Pompei

Minori (The little town), our base for the week is a pleasant small Italian town with a nice park, beach and pier and many reminders of past riches. It is set in the deepest inlet of the Amalfi Coast, between Amalfi and Capo d'Orso (Bear's Cape) with its twin town towns of Maiori (The big town), always joined by a common destiny, as underlined by their names. The Romans called them Reginna Minor and Reginna Maior after the two small rivers flowing in this bay, with their mouths divided by a small promontory. It is a good introduction to Italian town life with charming shops, cafes and restaurants. However, our favourite activity was to take a stroll by the park faming the lovely seafront and having an "espresso a banco" for 50 cents at the kiosk with the locals.




Minori

The first settlement of Minori was a Roman villa during the first imperial age, of which nowadays some of the ground floor remains, discovered in 1932 but buried by an inundation in 1954 and excavated again. This villa is very important, because it is the only one remaining of the numerous maritime villas originally built by wealthy Romans on the Amalfi Coast. The wealth of the owner can still be gauged from the scale of the villa as the whole household would decamp from Rome by Galley, sail down to their own pier and access the villa through a tunnel on the foreshore. The Roman Villa in Minori extended up to the seashore for more than 2500 sq.ms. and was overlooked by our hotel at the rear. Today there is mainly the basement remaining and you can visit rooms on the ground floor, among which are the thermal baths with a mosaic pavement and the courtyard with arcaded sides and a pool in the middle. The past riches of the town as a member of the Amalfi Republic are attested by the magnificent Basillica de Santa Trofimena. The Cafe Europa on the sea front does a busy trade with many locals taking away boxes of its wonderful pastries. There are photographs all over the walls showing the many famous people that had visited this bar and pastry shop. Some of these included the Pope, the movie actress Sharon Stone, many Italian sports stars, and Italian politicians to name just a few. Apparently the owner/chef, Antonio Riso, is a famous pastry chef in Italy, and well known for his creations.


Roman Villa Minori

The Hotel Santa Lucia is a charming family run hotel of about 35 rooms with mostly Italian expats staying who were visiting family and friends along the coast. There was a “proper” dining room doing hearty home made Italian fare served by the head waiter Antonio who wore a black waistcoat in the morning and a white waist coat (with cummerbund) in the evening. He was ably assisted by Giovanni who was generous in offering seconds and obviously believed in his product! The rooms were spotless and both they and the bathrooms were decorated with the charming ceramics for which the Amalfi Coast is famous. However the beds could be better with plywood bases. There is a nice lounge and café terrace and the ambience is friendly. The one downside is it is on the main road and traffic noise is intrusive when the air conditioning is not in use.


Hotel Santa Lucia

The local bus service which connects the Amalfi is run by a company called SITA and I can only assume that the “H” is silent. They are totally unreliable, overcrowded and disabled unfriendly and whatever they are focussed on it is not the customer. One day we had the surreal experience of trying to get a bus to Sorrento and after 3 of them had not arrived the Italians at the stop were so enraged they were ringing the local police. Oh, you can’t buy the tickets on the bus but at newsagents and if the bus doesn’t turn up you can’t get a refund. On the day in question we gave up on going to Sorrento and instead took a bus to the other end of the coast to Salerno. The journey along the Amalfi Drive is dramatic and the coast line jaw dropping but Salerno, whilst having no great negatives, didn’t impress. This is where the Allies invaded mainland Italy in 1943 and judging by the modern town you see today they did a comprehensive demolition job on Salerno. The other complication is that all buses on the Amalfi Coast route change in Amalfi but on a busy parking area on the seafront which is chaotic and disorganised to the point of being dangerous.

The eponymous capital of the Amalfi Coast was 15 minutes away by bus (when they came) and is a delightful and atmospheric town which lies at the mouth of the deep Valle dei Mulini ravine at the foot of Monte Cerreto and is surrounded by dramatic cliffs and and gorgeous scenery. The bus drops you at the harbour front and the town is constructed along a ravine back from the harbour and on the slopes on either side. In caverns burrowed into the cliff front you will find the Armouries of the Amalfi Republic. These impressive subterranean spaces are used today for exhibitions and in one of them you will find an impressive replica of the State Barge and an exhibition on the history of Amalfi. The Armouries hint at the scale and power of the Amalfi Republic. at its height this was a town of 70,000 souls which commanded a fleet of 120 warships. The geography of Amalfi town is easy, there is one main street along the ravine and everything flows off that. Heading inland you soon come to a piazza with a fountain and a statue of St. Andrew. Overlooking this piazza is the Byzantine Duomo (the cathedral) and its cloister (Chiostro del Paradiso in Italian) which was built in the 13th. Century in the Arabian style and holds ancient sarcophagi, marble sculptures and mosaics. Contained in the Duomo are Saint Andrew's relics which were brought from Constantinople to Amalfi by the Amalfitan Pietro, cardinal of Capua, in 1210 after the completion of the town's cathedral. This is a contentious point amongst the Orthodox who regard the relics as looted by the rapacious 3rd Crusade which sacked Constantinople and installed Norman vassals as Emperors of Byzantium. The cathedral, dedicated to St. Andrew, contains a tomb in its crypt that it maintains still holds a portion of the remains of the body of the apostle. You can also see a golden reliquary which originally housed his skull and another one used to process the bones through Amalfi on holy days. Saint Andrew, called in the Orthodox tradition Protocletos, or the First-called, is a Christian Apostle and the younger brother of Saint Peter. He was crucified and originally interred at Patras in Greece. His followers put X after their name as a secret sign of their fealty, the first emoticon?



The cathedral is worth a visit up the many steps and often as not there will be a glamorous bride climbing the steps with you. There appears to be a parade of non stop society weddings taking place as the Duomo is a popular venue due to the association with the Apostle but more probably because it is highly photogenic. After viewing the wonders within and the beautiful cloisters stop at the wonderfully embellished traditional coffee shop and patisserie at the foot of the steps. Here, take a seat outside and order the wonderful frozen coffee, Café Frodo, whilst watching the world go by. You will never taste a more intense coffee flavour and the world will seem a better place.



Further along the coast you come to the picture postcard town and port of Positano, no longer a simple fishing village but still a place of considerable allure. When he was here in the 1950’s John Steinbeck observed "Positano bites deep". It still does and it gathers you in as you walk down to the centre which is pedestrian because the streets are stepped as you go down through its narrow alleys which open into squares with fountains and churches before you arrive at the seafront. Here there are two superb seafood restaurants which have been here for ever and which are compulsory stops. Choose want you want for your second visit but today don't think about it, go and have Fruitti dell Mare and a bottle of well chilled Corvo Siciliano in the Tres Sorreles (Three Sisters) restaurant or its neighbour on the water front. On a fine day watching the parade of fishing boats, ferries and yachts you may find yourself agreeing with Steinbeck! Life is too short and on a sunny day the time spent here is too precious to waste it on decision making! Steinbeck's description of the town still holds good today:

"Positano bites deep. It is a dream place that isn’t quite real when you are there and becomes beckoningly real after you have gone. Its houses climb a hill so steep it would be a cliff except that stairs are cut in it. I believe that whereas most house foundations are vertical, in Positano they are horizontal. The small curving bay of unbelievably blue and green water lips gently on a beach of small pebbles. There is only one narrow street and it does not come down to the water. Everything else is stairs, some of them as steep as ladders. You do not walk to visit a friend, you either climb or slide."

John Steinbeck, Harper's Bazaar, May 1953




Positano

Where we stayed in Minori we were only 3,000 steps away from Ravello which is perched on the hill top above but unless you have the DNA of a mountain goat you may decide to take the bus which winds up a steep corkscrew road to this enchanting town of stepped streets which has attracted people as diverse as Wagner, Garbo and Gore Vidal who lived here for many years. Ravello is one of the most attractive destinations on the Amalfi Coast. With a population of around 2,000, the settlement perches high above Amalfi, overlooking the Mediterranean. A renowned musical festival is held in Ravello every year, with classical music concerts taking place in gardens with breathtaking views, all through the summer months. The dreamlike setting of Ravello's gardens inspired Wagner, and it's fitting that today music is a major feature of the town. The Ravello Concert Society organises a long season of chamber music concerts (March-November), most of which are held against a backdrop of sky and sea in the panoramic gardens of Wagner's inspiration for Parsifal, the Villa Rufolo. When Steinbeck saw this view from the Villa Rufolo he cried. Photos don't do it justice, you have to be there. The other principal Ravello tourist attraction is the Villa Cimbrone with its breathtaking “Terrace of Eternity” where Leopold Stokowski and Greta Garbo romanced.




Ravello - View from the Villa Ruffolo

Both of these panoramic gardens are open to the public, and you can wander through the tropical plants and enjoy fabulous views of the coastline. Ravello also has an impressive cathedral, the venerable Byzantine Duomo, dedicated to San Pantaleone whose blood is a treasured relic. Ravello is not an easy town for those not fleet footed to get around due to the considerable number of steps but built on a hilltop for protection against corsairs it is still a place apart with incomparable costal vistas.

So far so wonderful but to see and appreciate the former maritime republic we need to see the Costiera Amalfitana from the only place which makes sense of it, the sea. The precarious switchback Amalfi Drive dates from the 1850's, before that travel from town to town was by sea and some would suggest this is the only sensible and safe method today! Here off the coast braced by the salt air a wondrous vista unfolds of deep eroded ravines, villages tucked into the clefts for shelter and defence, Saracen watch towers and implausibly steep terraces groaning with the heavy lemon fruits of Amalfi which make the famous Limoncello. Here we can be in awe of the spectacular coast as we head towards Capri ( http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2008/08/capri.html ) and the Isola Gallo Lungo, once the home of Rudolf Nuryevev but in antiquity these were the islands (Sirenum scopuli; three small rocky islands) where, according to the Greek poet Homer, Ulysses was enticed and held captive by the mystical song of the Sirens. Visitors will still be seduced by the Sirens and the Amalfi Coast today.

"You will come first of all to the Sirens, who are enchanters
of all mankind and whoever comes their way; and that man
who unsuspecting approaches them, and listens to the Sirens
singing, has no prospect of coming home and delighting
his wife and little children as they stand about him in greeting,
but the Sirens by the melody of their singing enchant him."

Homer, (Odyssey XII, 39).




Sunday, 24 February 2008

Woburn Safari Park



A good day out is the Safari Park on the Duke of Bedfordshire's Estate at Woburn Abbey. As well as the Safari Park you can visit his ancestral home Woburn Abbey and Woburn village which is a well preserved Georgian village with many antique shops and a Farmers Market on a Sunday morning. The Village has a number of upmarket eateries including the Woburn Inn and Lough Fyne sea food restaurant but there are also some down to earth pubs offering well priced food.

The Safari Reserves, with their wide open spaces, provide the perfect habitat for the park’s animals to roam freely and behave naturally. They also offer you the opportunity to get an unparalleled look at the world’s most magnificent creatures.



You drive your own vehicle through the reserves as often as you wish during the day. Each circuit takes between 45 minutes to one hour. You’ll experience the thrill of being right alongside White Rhino, Tigers, Lions and Giraffes to name but a few. On the Navajo Trail you’ll encounter bears and wolves running together, just as they would have in Britain around 1000 years ago. You’ll also drive your car through Europe’s most diverse primate reserve, spotting three different types of Monkey.



Some of the animals to look out for in the Safari Reserves are: Rhino, Eland, Scimitar Horned Oryx (Antelope), Lechwe (Antelope), Gemsbok (Antelope), Giraffe, Ankole, Zebra, Elephant, Camel, Bison, Bongo (Antelope), Lions, Tigers, Wolves, Black Bear, Congo Buffalo, Colobus and Patas Monkeys and Barbary Apes.

After you have driven through the reserves you can park up at the foot safari area. This has a number of supervised areas kids (young and old) will find fascinating including Land of Lemurs which features these charming animals, Australian Walkabout which features wallabies and Rheas, Monkey Business which features Squirrel Monkeys who are accomplished pickpockets, Penguin and Sea Lion pools and a Lynx enclosure. There is also a pond with Swan Boats and a narrow gauge railway which takes you to see other animals such as Bactrian Camels, Addax and the Birds of Prey enclosure. Needless to say in this area you will also find “retail opportunities” and a number of restaurants including the impressive Mammoth Play Ark.

Woburn Village

Situated just off Junctions 12 or 13 of the M 1 the Safari Park is an impressive day out which represents good value for money. Don’t try to do Woburn House and the Safari Park in one day as there will not be enough time.

Photos on Facebook;

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=25405&l=82b63&id=723587781

Tuesday, 19 February 2008

Trip Advisor Profile


Le Meridien Art + Tech: Turin


Meridien Lingotto Art + Tech Atrium



If you want some real swank try the “hotel” with a racetrack on the roof as featured in the “Italian Job” – The historic FIAT works with the 1 km test track is now the Meridien Lingotto, a showpiece conversion by the architect Renzo Piano which also features a conference centre and the Agnelli Art Collection in a superb “pod” on the roof, and all surprisingly inexpensive thru the weekend deal on the Turismo Torino website.

The motor company Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino, otherwise known as FIAT, was founded in 1899 by Giovanni Agnelli in the ancient capital of Piedmont, Turin, south of which still sprawls the extraordinary Lingotto factory, the empire's erstwhile headquarters and at one stage, the world’s largest car factory. The vast five-storey building, designed by Giacomo Matte Trucco, can claim to be one of the first and finest examples of reinforced concrete architecture in Europe. It moved the architect and designer Le Corbusier to proclaim it "one of the most impressive sights in industry".


Lingotto Frontage

The factory was designed so that production began on the ground floor and went up / down on two spiral ramps at either end of the factory to the roof, where cars were tested on a 1km track. This had a brief moment of fame in the 1969 classic The Italian Job and it has been cleverly recycled by FIAT for its current Punto T.V. campaign. The roof these days also contains a Heli - Pad and glass domed meeting room which often appears in photo shoots, so chances are you have seen it without realising it!

The car plant closed in 1982 and after much debate, the Genoese architect Renzo Piano was briefed to breathe new life into its steel, glass and concrete by adapting it to house a conference centre, auditorium, shopping arcades, restaurants, cinemas, an exhibition space and two hotels. It was reborn in 1994.

Lingotto Ramp to rooftop test track

The last part of the renovation in 2007 was the installation for Giovanni and Marella Agnelli of an Art Gallery "Pod" which hovers atop the historic and enormous former Fiat factory at Lingotto in Turin, overlooking the city of Torino. The building constitutes the third phase of Piano’s 14-year renovation of the factory, into a mixed-use center with a hotel, shops, and conference space. Built in the 1920 by Matte Trucco, the building was the largest and most modern plant in Europe, both architecturally and in terms of mass production capacity. The Lingotto Factory Conversion was the first example of modular construction in reinforced concrete, based on the repetition of three elements: pillars, beams, and floors.

When it was closed down in 1982, the building had such a great symbolic importance that it was essential to give it a new lease on life. The project consisted of radically transforming Lingotto without betraying the spirit and intended use of its premises, while preserving the overall architectural character and monumentality. By creating public facilities such as an auditorium, an exhibition center, a branch of the educational activities, meeting rooms, a shopping center, a hotel, a 2,600-seat cinema complex, as well as Fiat’s headquarters, Lingotto Factory Conversion has turned into a piece of city.

Pinacoteca di Giovanni e Marella Agnelli


Heliport & Meeting Dome

The new gallery, a 400-ton structure, dubbed “Scrigno” or “Treasure Chest”, appears to levitate over building’s rooftop track for testing cars. It is a technological marvel, a partly cantilevered, wedge-shaped box, both solid and light with no apparent openings through its steel skin, an oversized flat roof flying above it. Located in the North tower, this section houses the Agnelli’s art collection. Since Fiat mogul Gianni Agnelli and his wife, Marella, were donating the permanent collection to the museum, which is run by the Palazzo Grassi of Venice (supported with Fiat money), they were very much influenced the design. “Gianni wanted to know the diameter of every bolt,” says Renzo Piano. “A good client-architect relationship is not really about money. It’s about understanding.”

The building’s roof, nicknamed the “flying carpet”, is a light filter made of 16,000 glass fins above the gallery’s own translucent roof, creating a cool, even, impalpable light in which the 25 artworks of the gallery can be contemplated, devoid of any distractions within this peaceful and minimalist interior. This canopy is attached by steel struts to the walls of the gallery and sits about 4 feet above the gallery’s own translucent roof. In the lower roof, glass sits atop layers of movable aluminum slats, 3 m white neon tubes, and, finally, a vellum sunscreen made of “Trevira”, a synthetic fiber tissue.



Additional spotlighting reinforces the mix of artificial light and daylight, so that the paintings and statues are bathed in a luminous glow. The 6-m-high gallery, divided by 3-m-high freestanding partitions, is sparely designed with off-white gypsum-board walls and oak floors, and stainless-steel details. Below, in the reinforced-concrete structure of the factory, a suspended stair of painted steel, wood, and glass links the temporary galleries and other spaces. There is no natural top lighting inside the galleries building, daylight is admitted through existing windows and supplemented by spotlighting.

Rooftop Car Track

In the factory building The Art + Tech is Meriden’s 5 star offering on the site and has a central 4 storey atrium with cherry wood panels on either side. In the centre is the restaurant and at either end the lifts, stairs and lounge area as well as a gym. Being Italy it is child friendly with a kid’s play area. The excellent restaurant often has themed events from its sister hotels and when we were there was doing an excellent African evening featuring cuisine and live music from the Ivory Coast. Breakfast was excellent from a self service buffet which included a fresh orange press but the scrambled eggs were an alarming yellow colour.

Bedrooms are on corridors on either side of the atrium and are reassuringly quiet and restful. They have a roomy atmosphere with double height ceilings fitted into the structural framework of the factory, clean modern lines with high quality fittings and automatically adjusting external sun blinds. Bathrooms are a cappuccino marble with excellent wet room showers.

The area

There's the Baroque splendour of Turin www.turismotorino.com. Or, closer by, you will find the Pinacoteca di Giovanni e Marella Agnelli (00 39 011 006 2713; pinacoteca-agnelli.it), or the "treasure box". Designed by Piano, this is a showcase of 25 works from the Agnelli family collection, including pieces by Canaletto, Picasso and Dali. What it lacks in quantity it more than makes up in the quality of the exquisite artworks. Opposite the Lingotto is Eataly a wonderful emporium of Italian food and wine in a converted vermouth distillery. Here you will find a more than 10 dining options but also excellent atmospherics with many of the items (pasta, bread, ice cream, etc) made on the premises and a basement containing wine and beer cellars and a wonderfully odorous cellar full of maturing hams, salamis and chesses. Across from the Lingotto is the Olympic Village built for the 2006 Winter and Para Olympics with its distinctive “Gateway” bridge by Santiago Caltravo.


Lingotto Shopping Centre

Downtown Turin is 2 km away by bus, the tram route is disconnected whilst they extend Turins new state of the art Metro system to Lingotto for 2009.

Best night was surprisingly, having got back late, when we went into the adjoining extensive shopping centre (using the private lift & entrance from our hotel, don't ya know) had a really wonderful meal in a chain restaurant and there was an organised and free salsa dancing evening with a couple of hundred folk - compared well to a UK shopping centre on a Sunday night!!


Quanta Costa?

A double room starts at €150 (£107) per night at weekends and rises to €250 (£178) during the week, including breakfast. Best deal is the “Torino Weekend” deal on the Turismo Torino website which offers 3 nights B & B and a 48 hour Torino Card (Which gives admission to all the attractions and transport for 2 days) for a storming 150 euro a person. Combine it with a cheap air fare from Ryanair or Easyjet and you have a upmarket 4 day / 3 night 5 star break in one of Europe’s finest cities for not too serious money. Nothing wong wit dat, as Michael Caine never said in the “Italian Job.”

The address

Via Nizza, 230, 10126 Turin. Tel: 00 39 011 664 2000; www.lingottoartandtech.lemeridien.com

See also:

http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2007/08/bella-torino.html



The Castle Cat



After a long search a new Castle Cat has been appointed and has now been installed in the cattery in the West Wing of Castle Caldwell.

Ringo was appointed after a lengthy search by a competitive process using the latest catometric assessment techniques to fill the vacancy left by the previous distinguished incumbent:

http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2007/10/should-we-mourn-cat.html

Whilst, there are no quotas under the Cats for London appointment procedures it is noted with satisfaction that he is a half long haired Ginger Cat.

Upon taking up the position Ringo said 'meow' and I know he will have your support in his new role.

We picked Ringo up as a rescue cat from the RSPCA centre at Blackberry Farm near Waddesdon which is fantastic. I was so impressed at the quality of the facility and how they dealt with us, the young staff and volunteers run a very professional and slick set up. You have to fill in a questionnaire and have a possible home visit but it all became easier when they realised we were previous cat owners. Ringo (that was his name so we didn't want to confuse him by changing it) was lively and engaging. Absolutely no problem since we got him home. V. athletic compared to Freddy but hasn't made strange in the slightest and sorted himself out and got the run of the house. No danger of him hiding under a bed for three days but I'll be v. nervous when we have to let him out. There were some lovely other cats including 4 beautiful tabby kittens and a brother & sister but we went for Ringo as he was beyond the kitten stage and seemed very healthy and bright. Plus he matches the decor!!

Ringo is just the loveliest, lively, affectionate, very trusting, well mannered and house trained cat. I just can't believe we picked up such a nice cat in a rescue centre. He still scampers a bit and is not comfortable being picked up but he is settling in great and has given himself the run of the house. Because he is so active we have had to clear perches on the kitchen and bedroom windows but even then he is careful - he really has been no trouble, at night he goes into the bed in the front room but when we wake he is at the bottom of our bed but even then he is careful not to disturb you. I just don't understand how people gave him away.

Blackberry Farm charge £50 for a rescue cat and £75 for a dog. In the cats case this includes vaccinations, flea and worm treatment and “chipping” with your details so you can be reunited by Petlog if your pet strays. Also if it hasn’t already been done the pet is neutered. All in all, an impressive facility with very dedicated and motivated staff.

http://www.rspcafriendsofblackberryfarm.co.uk/

Monday, 4 February 2008

10 business start up mistakes.


There is an old but true adage “that a person who never made mistakes, never made anything.” Every entrepreneur can reinforce this saying with painful examples from their own experience. However the ones you won’t hear from are those who didn’t survive their mistakes. It is a sobering fact, according to a survey by NatWest Bank that two thirds of business start ups in the U.K. are no longer trading after two years.

This is a sobering thought and a counterpoint to all the “inspirational” lifestyle programmes and articles showing how people have successfully transformed their lives by being happy entrepreneurs. As for mistakes, you'll make them, try to fix them, and then move on. However, some entrepreneurs fall into traps that are bigger than mistakes. They are, in effect, entrepreneurial sins. Some of these sins will harm their personal life; others may irreparably damage their business, and still others will do both. It is said a wise man (or woman) learns from others mistake, a fool learns from their own. Well in the real world we mostly hover on an edge between wisdom and foolishness so as an aid to karma here are ten entrepreneurial sins that you should avoid:

1. Not learning from your own mistakes. Talk to any entrepreneur and he or she will tell you about crazy, ridiculous mistakes that will have you shaking your head and saying, "I just can't believe someone could be that stupid." Well, they can, I can, and so can you. I don't think it's stupidity at all, by the way. Entrepreneurs have so many irons in the fire that it's all too easy to get distracted, to let things fall through the cracks, to overlook what might seem obvious to an outsider.

Entrepreneurs by their very nature are obsessive and myopic, not necessarily props to aid good judgement. No matter how sharply honed a business sense they have; they don't have a crystal ball. No one ever learned anything meaningful from success, but failure–well, failure is an eloquent teacher on business and life. Accept that you will make mistakes–just make sure that you learn from them, and work hard to never commit the same mistake twice.

2. Trashing your personal life. Balancing "work" and "home" can be a challenge for anyone, but for entrepreneurs, it seems to be especially daunting. It's not hard to understand why. Entrepreneurs tend to work longer hours than your average wage slave. Because they are so passionate about what they do, they are always thinking about the business, today’s crisis, tomorrow’s challenge, the next venture waiting in the wings. The entrepreneurial mind is hard to turn off. It's hard to take a vacation. It's hard to put aside your worries about paying the wages so you can help your son with his homework, or connect emotionally with your spouse, or spend meaningful time with your friends, even if you are still in touch with them!

Too often, the result is a strained parent/child connection, or a bitter divorce, or a roster of business relationships and casual acquaintances in place of real friendships. Work can and should be a richly fulfilling thing, but it is no substitute for meaningful relationships with people you love. No one wants to neglect the people that matter, but unless you are constantly vigilant, it does happen. You have to find a work / life balance.

3. When Benjamin Franklin said that the world will come to the door of the person who builds a better mouse trap he knew as little about marketing as he did about mice! Your new business is up and running, your OPEN sign is in the window, and you are ready to serve your new customers. Only no one is lining up at the door and the phone isn't ringing. Why? - Because you didn't do any marketing to get the word out about your business. There are lots of ways to get the word out. It doesn't really matter how you do it, just that you do it. A bit of well-planned-out marketing will help you turn that empty store or slick web site into a bustling business.

4. Losing your soul. Financial success can do awful things to people when they aren't spiritually and emotionally equipped to handle it. Too much money too fast can make you suspicious, callous, greedy, and prideful. Think of the Seven Deadly Sins and you'll get the picture. Success can change people and lead to the same signs of compulsive dependent behaviour you see from other toxins. When you become successful, people will start to treat you like you know something. If you start believing your own publicity, you are in big trouble. Remember no amount of money makes up for losing sight of the things that really matter in life–friends, family, humility, compassion, faith, and love. Strive always to be the kind of person who, if you lost every cent you had, could still find happiness. I’m no one to plug religion but I do remember a clergyman telling me that he has never heard anybody on a deathbed say “I wish I spent more time at the office.”

5. Maxing out on credit cards. It's never a good idea in any situation. Maxing out your credit cards while trying to get a business off the ground could be disastrous. You'll find that charging item after item for your new business will be the most expensive money you've ever spent. I think credit cards are the most accessible and easy way for small businesses to get in trouble. (After all, they are much easier to get than start up loans!) There will be times when you will want to use a credit card rather than take cash out of the business, and that's okay. Credit isn't inherently bad. Just make sure you have enough money to keep making payments on your cards.

It is vital that you have good credit in case you need to make a big purchase or decide to open a new business down the road. You don't want to run up tons of credit card debt that you will have to pay off if the company doesn't survive. Remember in any area of business the zeros can come back to bite you!

6. Keeping your idea a secret. At first glance, this may not seem like a sin. In fact, it may seem like a good business decision. Many entrepreneurs don't want to reveal their new idea for fear that someone else in the market will beat you to the punch. But step out of your own shoes for a moment and look at the distrust this will induce in potential investors. In the early phases there is no need to reveal all the details of your product or service, but you must put some feelers out there to determine whether it's likely to succeed or flop. Revealing some of your secrets and finding out who your potential customers will be provides peace of mind.

7. Imagining you don't need written contracts. There is so much excitement at the start of a new business that rookie entrepreneurs are often afraid to get certain things down on paper. Learn from other’s mistakes: When you are starting a new business, you need contracts for everything! Verbal agreements just won't cut it, especially when it comes to partnerships. You can't predict the future, and when money is involved you never know what will happen within a relationship. To ensure that you avoid unnecessary costly (and gut-wrenching) legal battles, always write out a contract when making business deals. You never really know the calibre of your partners until money is involved and backs are to the wall.

8. Starting a business without the passion factor. Here are a few questions to ask your-self before embarking on an entrepreneurial venture. Am I truly interested in this field? Do I daydream about doing the work (instead of just spending the money)? Does this product, service, or activity feel meaningful? Does it benefit humanity? Being an entrepreneur is hard work, so you'd better want to jump out of bed bright-eyed and bushy-tailed every morning, anxious to get to it. Too many people start businesses based on their hobby on a half baked idea for which there is no realistic market. Chances are you will get the company going, and after your initial excitement wears off you will stop caring about the company, which will cause you to make mistakes. Carefully consider every angle of the venture before you get going and remember if you can’t hug it chances are you shouldn’t be doing it!

9. Choosing a wrong location. We've all heard the mantra "location, location, location" – originally attributed to one Colonel Saunders! If you are starting a company—especially a consumer oriented one—location may be vital to its success. Carefully consider how important foot traffic will be to your business. If you will be relying on passing trade to bring business to the store, you will want to make sure it is very visible. Choosing a bad location could make it difficult to create a successful business. I know this from personal experience when I fell in love with premises because they were ideal internally and good value without fully considering the convenience and perception of customers.

10. Trying to go it alone. There is a lot to be said against traditional business partnerships, I think it is absolutely necessary that you have a business "Mentor" when starting a business. When you start your new business, think about your strengths and weaknesses. And then find someone willing to help you who complements those strengths and weaknesses. You may choose to make that person your business partner or you may just hire him on as your employee. There are simply too many details to deal with to fly solo. Relying only on yourself is simply too much pressure. Nurturing great relationships is a much better way to do business than to try to go it alone.

Of course, committing one or two of these mistakes may not kill your business, but it will certainly make things more difficult. Remember this list as you start to develop your business and pay careful attention to each mistake. You, your family, friends, and business partners will be much happier if you avoid committing these mistakes. It will mean the difference between being a happy entrepreneur (surely an oxymoron?) or being one who is wracked with worry and unnecessary pressures caused by bad decisions. In business, living to fight another day is never a bad result!

Sunday, 3 February 2008

Kalymnos - Island of the Sponge Divers.






Harbour Pothia



Kalymnos draws you in. I still recall the very first time I saw Kalymnos and the sense of occasion I felt as the boat nuzzled northward from Kos. Beyond the port of Pothia opened before me emerging from its natural amphitheatre and into the dawn’s light to reveal its details to our transfixed gaze as the ferry got nearer. The feeling that this island is a place apart has stayed with me since and indeed been reinforced by getting to know Kalymnos and Kalymnians over the years. Pity then that most visitors see it on an alleged “Three Island” day trip from Kos and their view of this unique and multi faceted island is limited to a visit to a “Sponge Factory” and lunch at the wrong end of the harbour. For this is a fascinating and unique place with a special culture, music and sense of place which for all its maddening and frenetic aspects it is worth getting to know better.



Kalymnos draws you in and so do the Kalymnians with their heightened sense of solidarity forged in adversity from earning a hazardrous living from the sea and land and from asserting their culture, religion and Greek nationality in the face of 700 years of occupation by Crusader Knights of St. John, The Ottoman Turks, Fascist Italy, Nazi Germany and more benignly the British before Kaymnos was finally unified with Greece in 1948.



Kalymnos is best known as the island of some of the world's finest sponge divers. The sea has always been the focal element of local life and a culture which has preserved its traditional character, colour and style to a great extent. Kaymnos has always looked to the sea for its livelihood for the island is essentially 3 rocky mountain ranges with a small area of fertile land in the valleys between. Its picturesque landscapes, its clear blue seas and the hospitality of the locals are just a small sample of what the island offers to its visitors. Situated between Kos and Leros and off the coast of Turkey it is the fourth largest island in the Dodecanese; Kalymnos is surrounded by other smaller Greek Islands, (islets) however, only Pserimos and Telendos are inhabited. Kalymnos is a very traditional island with a distinct musical tradition and a strong sense of identity forged by the harshness of the sponge fishing in the past and the pain of emigration by the Kalymnian diaspora in America and Australia. Tarpon Springs on the Gulf Coast of Florida and Darwin in Australia are both Kalymnian colonies where after the war they migrated to seek new sponge fishing beds as the mediterranean ones were ravaged by disease and made inaccesible by political change. So English is spoken by most people on the island but often with an American or strine accent!


Pothia Harbour Front



The use of sponges was described by Aristotle, and was mentioned in both of Homer’s epic works, the Iliad and the Odyssey. For centuries, and until about 1986, the Greek sponge trade had been focused around the Dodecanese, with Kalymnos being the most notable. In the mid 1980s, a disease struck the eastern Mediterranean, destroying most of the sponges and decimating the sponge diving industry. The once large fleet of more than 30 boats was then reduced to only three or four. An important festival takes place one week after Easter just before the sponge fleet departs for its four-month expedition to the waters between southern Italy and the north coast of Africa. Known the “Dinner of Love” the weeklong celebration is a feast of food, drink, and dance. The dances depict the relation between the Kalymnian people and the sponge (the Kalymnian “Gold” as it is often referred to) and recount the joy and the tragedy of this incredibly dangerous deep-sea endeavour. When I first went there you would still see barrell chested men walking the harbour front with the aid of sticks having been crippled by the “bends”.



For the sponges which made Kalymnos famous and wealthy were both a blessing and a curse. Originally the sponge divers dived naked with a rope and a weight and a net to collect the sponges. As they used natural lung power they could only stay down for a few minutes each time. When the diving suit with an airline came in towards the end of the 19th Century the productivity and the harvest increased but there was no understanding of the bends and no decompression facilities on the ships when things went wrong. So a terrible toll was taken each year with some years perhaps one in five of the sailors who took to sea each April either not returning or coming home crippled. When the fleet departed the Kalymnian women donned their black “widows weeds” until they saw their husbands again. Often having lost a husband a widow would have to send their child to sea with the fleet the next year for otherwise the family would starve the next winter.



The story of sponge diving is ably told by Faith Warn in her book “The Bitter Sea”. It tells of the wealth and lavish lifestyle brought by the golden harvest to a few traders and dealers. The incredibly hazardous diving methods used to gather the sponges - and their terrible toll on the Kalymnos menfolk and the sudden catastrophe of the virus destroying the mediterranean sponge beds and the founding of new Kalymnian communities in America and Australia. In Greece, Kalymnos was known as “The Island of Widows.” Today tourists and day trippers from Kos are brought to “sponge factories” but in truth there are few mediteranean sponges in Kalymnos.



Lady of Kalymnos

Well worth a trip is the wonderful new archaelogical museum in the area of Agia Triada. The brand new KALYMNOS MUSEUM OF ARCHAEOLOGY officially opened its doors on 10th April 2009. For the first time the breathtaking collection of Kalymnos marble statues found in 2001 will be on public show, along with the magnificent bronze figure of the 'Lady of Kalymnos' trawled up from the sea bed by a Kalymnian fisherman. Other exhibits represent all periods of Ancient Greece, from Paleolithic and Neolithic to Minoan, Mycaenean, Archaic, Classical, Hellenistic and Roman. This museum contains displays of far greater importance than would normally be found on an island of this size and tells a new story of the significance of Kalymnos in both the ancient and modern world.




KALYMNOS MUSEUM OF ARCHAEOLOGY

The new museum is set in the grounds of the old Archaeological Museum which gives an insight into the lives of the rich sponge merchants in the 19th century. For an insight into the lifestyle of a wealthy sponge merchant you should visit the Vouvalis Family mansion in Pothia. Housed in a Neoclassical mansion that belongs to the Vouvalis family and that has been lavishly reconstructed. It contains a collection of Neolithic and Bronze-Age finds from the island plus local memorabilia but what will impress you more, in my opinion, is the 'Victorian' furnishings, portraits and panoramas of Constantinople you'll also find there. The dining room, the living room, the office and the storerooms have been reconstructed as at the turn of the 20th centuryand exhibit the complete furniture and household objects of the Vouvalis family. At its height this business even had an office in the Baltic Exchange in London but little of the wealth trickled down to the sailors who manned the sponge fleet each year.


Vouvalis mansion




Kalymnian Sponge Boat

Looking around from Pothia you can see the reason Kalymnos and Kalymnians have had to look to the sea and other countries to make a living as it is surrounded by barren mountains. Homer refers to a wooded island but it has been deforested over the millenia and today only 18% of the island is cultivated or forested. Kalymnos has capitalised on its mountainous landscape by promoting itself as a climbing destination in recent years to attract rock and mountain climbers from the furthest corners of the globe. However this is also a reflection that few mainstream operators now send customers to Kalymnos because of the akwardness and expense of the transfer from Kos and the generally basic 60 / 70’s style tourist accommodation, generally accessed up several flights of steps. In the countryside you can find a great variety of wild herbs such as thyme, sage and oregano, while exploring the Kalymnian slopes. These herbs are also vital ingredients for the production of the famous Kalymnian honey. The island also boasts two fertile valleys, "Vathi" being the most famous, dotted with citrus orchards for local consumption and export.


Vathi

Heading up the valley to Chora and the west coast from Pothia you pass by old windmills in front of a monastery crying out for restoration and the remains of the basilica dedicated to Christ of Jerusalem, dating back to the 6th century but built on top of and using the stonework of an earlier temple edicated to the Delian Apollo. Beyond you find find the castle of Chrisocherias, built by the Knights of the Order of Saint John on top of ancient and Byzantine ruins with the church of Chrisocherias inside it. The village is the old capital of the island and the knights left their mark here, reinforcing the old Byzantine castle. It is worth the climb up the donkey track to see the castle, in reality a fortified town, which still contains 11 churches many with ancient frescoes extant. When in the castle the logic of its position becomes apparent as you look down the valley 3 miles to Pothia and straight across to Kos. Here you could see any invader coming and take refuge behind the walls in this Kastro protected on 3 sides by natural cliffs. On the other side you can see down to the west coast to Telendos and the beautiful sheltered stretch of water where the ancient capital of the island once stood. This impresive fortification is a tribute to the resolve and the courage of the Hospitaller Knights of the Order of Saint John of Jerusalem and a testament to the fact that ultimately they were strangers in a foreign land. Like so many ancient sights in Greece it is cying out for sensitive development, conservation and management. In 1522 faced with an onslaught by Suleiman the Magnificent, grandson of the conqueror of Byzantium, the knights retrenched from the other Dodecanese Islands to Rhodes and after a siege, accepted the honourable terms offered by the Cailiph. Under their Grand Master they sailed to the island of Malta, given to them by the King of Spain. There, after surviving a further siege by Suleiman’s fleet in 1565, they founded the fortress city of Valletta, named in honour of their Grand Master, and today their traditions are carried on by the Sovereign Order of the Knights of Malta and the St. John’s Ambulance Brigade.



http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2008/03/knights-of-malta.html







Pera Kastro - Fortress of the Knights of St. John



Heading north from the village of Chora huddling under the castle you might be struck by the density of housing on this small island with 16,000 souls. There are a number of reasons for this. One is the tradition still extant of a “dowry house”. On Kalymnos a girl is expected to bring a house as a dowry to her marriage and frequently the girl’s father will build a house while she is young (in case “something” happens) which will stay empty until she marries. This is one of a number of traditions preserved on this island; another is the use of Byzantine girl’s names, such as Themelina, which are no longer in use elsewhere. Secondly families often spend the winter in Pothia and the summer in the countryside or by the coast so they have two homes. Lastly there are far more Kalymnians abroad in Australia and America than there are here and many keep the family house on the island as a talisman that they will return someday. Indeed so many emigres return for the winter that the cafes on the Pothia seafront are open and lively all year round.


Easter "dynamites" above Pothia

Further on you come to a crossroads at Elias Square (As in the Prophet Elias) and a road here leads down to the first resort area at Kantouni where there are two narrow beaches with lovely views of the coastline and divided by an unusual rock formation. Here in this pleasant area you can see two examples of how Kalymnos sells itself short as a tourist destination. The beach is dominated by the 8 story hulk of a derelict hotel built illegally in the early 80’s but still an eyesore and still not demolished. Along the beach its narrowness is emphasised by some villa gardens encroaching up to six feet on the beach, a selfish and illegal land grab on an island where there is little evidence of planning control.


Linaria and Kantouni beyond

Heading back to the main road and northwards you come to Myrties on the west coast of Kalymnos, approximately 8 km from Pothia. Myrties has a quay with boats leaving to the neighbouring islands of Telendos and Leros. The beach in Mirties is somewhat smaller, approximately 100 m long and with pebbles, but also has numerous small tavernas and bars. The sea around the island is clear and clean with loads of fish - perfect conditions for snorkelling. Myrties is little sleepy village with a few restaurants/tavernas, shops, cafes and bars the main meeting place in the village is at the small square were the locals and guests meets up for coffee and watch the world going by.


Emborios

From Myrties you must take a boat over to the magical island of Telendos. It is basically a mountain in the sea with no paved roads or vehicles, 3 beaches, 50 permanent inhabitants, six excellent tavernas and one island donkey called Samson. The sound created between Telendos and Kalymnos is a beautiful sheltered stretch of water and don’t worry about ferry timetables or getting back. Telendos lies about 700metres off the coast of Kalymnos, of which it was once part. In an earthquake of 554BC, which according to the historiographer Agathias lasted for 14 days, the ground subsided and the channel of water separating the two islands came into being. On the bed of the sea, important ruïns have been found of the ancient buildings in a large city which has been tentatively identified as Pothaea, the original island capital. The terrain of Telendos is mountainous, with Rachi (458 m) as the highest peak. There are also remains of a Roman town, a castle, and the medieval monastery of St Basil. There are a number of small beaches all within 10 to 15 minutes walk, there being no roads on the island. Some of the walk is paved whilst access to the more remote and secluded beaches is via stony rough ground.


Telendos

The boatmen have their own system and no matter what time you finish a meal on Telendos there is a boat to bring you back for one euro. The harbour is small and quiet, and is reached by using any of the regular small ferry boats travelling between the island and the port has numerous tavernas along the waterfront and some small supermarket shops selling water and essentials. The two I’d particularly recommend are the Telendos Taverna run by Nikos who in winter is a waiter in Florida and On the Rocks run with some flair by Greek Aussies and which has a 6th Century basilica in its back yard! All the tavernas specialise in fresh fish simply cooked which have been landed by the island’s fishermen that morning.

Telendos is a place apart, a place get off and let the world go by so you won’t find it easy to take the short ferry ride back to the “mainland”. When you do you will see a complete contrast when you rejoin the main road northwards and head 2 km. to Massouri which is a strip of shops, tavernas and tourist studios built on the side of the cliff to grab the view of Telendos sound and which all now looks somewhat dated and ramshackle. Your faith will be restored by continuing northwards on the virtually empty coast road past some of the most challenging rock climbs until you come to the end of the road at the charming and unpretentious hamlet of Emborios.


Kalymnos Airport & Argos

Head back now the way you came towards Pothia, Past Chora you will see a sign for the airport at the village of Argos. This airport opened in 2007 and it tells a tale of the quality of the administration on Kalymnos. For the airport (which caters for small turbo-props) was completed 14 years earlier with European Union funds but then took years for the Greeks to put in the safety equipment and facilities. Its opening was promised many times, normally every election year!


Agios Savvas

Past the windmills and before you come to Pothia turn right up the hill to a very special place, Agios Savvas. This is the monastery of St. Savvas which overlooks Pothia and affords a spectacular viewpoint of the harbour, Kos and indeed the Turkish coast just beyond. Savvas was the priest who led the opposition to the Italian Occupation (1912 - 1944) and who died in 1948 - The year the Dodecanese were united with Greece after almost 700 years of occupation by the Crusader Knights of St. John, The Ottoman Turks and the Italians. His body is kept here and he is revered as the patron saint of Kalymnos and his icon will be found in most homes. The Italians went to war against the decaying Ottoman Empire in 1912 occupying Cyrenaica and Tripolantia (Nowadays Libya) and the Dodecanese. At first they were welcomed as Christian liberators by the Greeks but the nature of the Italian occupation changed dramatically after 1922 when Mussolini’s fascists took power in Rome. Now the policy was of enforced latinisation of the islands with major public works to italianise the islands, banning of the teaching of Greek and suppression of Orthodoxy. On the next island of Leros a huge naval base was established at Lakki to control the eastern Mediterranean. This base and the huge guns at the harbour mouth formed the basis of Alistair McLean’s “The Guns of Navaronne” even though the book and movier were set in Rhodes. On Kalymnos the opposition to the occupation and the setting up of secret schools to continue Greek teaching was led by Savvas and his memory is revered by the Kalymnians. There was never Turkish immigration into Kalymnos and today you will find an island which is entirely Greek and preserves many of its unique traditions, including its distinctive music and song. In Kalymnos as elsewhere the Greek culture was kept alive against all odds by its language and Orthodoxy and today you will see little evidence that this island was not greek for over 600 years.

For an insight into the traditions which kept Kaymnian culture alive stop on the way back to Pothia at the “Kalymnian House”. Whilst a modern building the artifacts inside are genuine and the people who run it are Kalymnian with a passion for their culture and island. Inside you will see the Kalymnian platform bed where all the family slept, the handcrafts of the island, the household traditions and examine a traditional “marriage contract” between two families. Before you leave you can sample the traditional sweet wine produced on the island.


Vlichádia


Sponge Divers Museum

Further along this road you will come to the charming cove of Vlichádia, only 6km from Pothia but a world away from the hustle and bustle of its harbour front. We were driven there by Manolis Kalitkatzaeos (+ 069790 72221 if you want to book a reliable taxi on Kalymnos. This is mainly a summer community literally at the end of the road facing a small beach and peaceful cove. There are three small and attractive tavernas and an interesting "Sea World Museum" run by the colourful Vaslamidis brothers. The people here are very friendly and greet many of the repeat visitors who seek out its tranquility. The Sea World Museum in Vlichádia is open 10-14. It has every attractive and extensive shell collection along with other odds and ends from the sea.

All the tavernas here offer good home cooked fare and freshly caught fish. We went into the one called The Sponge Divers beside the museum which is also owned by the Vaslamidis family and here we broke bread with our great friend and enjoyed a typical Kalymnian seafood lunch whilst drinking in the peace and tranquility of this lovely place.


Taverna

Kalymnos has some unique features including a distinct musical tradition, an attachment to Byzantine girls’ names for its daughters and some excellent local dishes. Try "mousouri" - stuffed lamb oven-cooked in an earthen pot, mostly on Easter. The "'ptazimo" (bread kneaded in anise and ouzo), "phyla" (also known as "dolmades", stuffed vine leaves), "mirmizeli" (barley flour bread kneaded in olive oil, tomato and cheese), "anama" (celebrated local wine), octopus on the charcoal grill, fish and spinialo (sea food in a rich lemon sauce) and traditional "Galaktoboureko"(cream pastry) for desert.

Head back down the hill now to the bustling harbour front of Pothia which has gained new life as evening falls.

The harbour of Kalymnos is confusingly called both Kalymnos and Pothia (“The Port”). Pothia itself is a bit like a Monet, looks better from a distance but not so good close up. It has a bustling harbour front but the traffic is heavy with the buzzing of young exhibitonistic Kalymnians on scooters penetrating everywhere. If you see somebody with a helmet they are likely to be a tourist, indeed if they are a tourist they are also likely to be insured as well! It is difficult to know what the police do here other than stay in their station and keep cool! Pothia is bustling but with little evidence of proper planning or indeed traffic management.


Pothia Cathedral

A good perch on the harbour is Apostoli’s traditional family Kafeoin on the front. His pastries and deserts are all traditional specialities of the island and are justifiably famous.The most well known and a speciality of the island is "Galaktoboureko" a sticky desert as if semolina pudding has been mated with Baklava! Kalymnos is like the Clapham Junction of the Greek ferry system in the Dodecanese and there is a constant stream of Greeks in transit who hop up to Apostoli's to have the best coffee on Kalymnos and to take his deserts home as a very welcome gift when visiting families and friends.


Apostoli's Kafeoin

At the far end of the harbour you can enjoy good seafood in traditional seafood tavernas such as Baba Stoukas, the best of the many fish restauraunts which nuzzle the harbour front in Pothia. Fish is good in Kalymnos as are the Octopus croquettes and the pungent garlic sauce. Another specialty is Horta, the wild greens of the island served as a side dish. Chances are the neighbouring tables will enquire if you are enjoying your food and invite you to join them as whole extended families will be there enjoying a leisurely meal. You can sense here the solidarity amongst Kalymnians united by their shared history resisting occupiers and making a living from these hills and seas with some difficulty and hardship. They say if a Kalymnian is your friend then you have a friend for life. A case in point is our good buddy Bill. Bill is a Greek- American polymath originaly from Detroit who moved to the Kaymnian colony of Tarpon Springs in Florida and then to Kalymnos where his family hailed from. The cathederal in Pothia is built on land donated by his family and his grandfather was a mason on the cathederal sized church on the other side of the harbour bult in some style by the wealthy sponge mechants in C19.



Sitting on the harbour front at night surrounded by the lights of the town, overlooked by Agios Savvas illuminated on the hill above, and talking in the music and conversation of your new Kalymnian friends whilst you watch the huge ferries reverse in and out of this harbour as they connect the far flung islands this can seem the most enticing place in the world. Not for nothing does the English language have a word “idyllic” meaning to wander happily amongst the islands. Despite everything, Kalymnos has drawn you in.

Location: Dodecanese, Greece.

See also;

Telendos, a place apart

http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2008/03/telendos-place-apart.html

Kos Town

http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2008/08/kos-town.html

The Taxi Driver of Nisyros

http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2007/09/taxi-driver-of-nisyros.html