Tickets…check
Passports…check
Tuscan villa…check….whoa, wait a minute! Tuscan villa? Yes, Tuscan villa! As July ended, we headed off to Italy for a three-week adventure that was to take us through many parts of Tuscany.
The idea of this trip started about 18-months ago when our friend John Schram bid on a week at the villa during a charity auction. We had committed to joining in Italy but never really thought it would happen. Yet here we were, on our way from Kampala to Cortona.
We were sharing the villa with John, Ashley, Josh and Julia. We could not really imagine something more lovely. To make matters more interesting, the week we picked for our visit happened to be when Cortona was hosting the Tuscan Sun Festival, a celebration of food, wine and music.
We could not have asked for a better week. We got to relax and enjoy with some of our best friends, drink copious types of wine, cheese and pastries and enjoy all that Tuscany has to offer. We participated in several of the organised activities including cheese making (which included an amazing 6 course cheese menu), winery tours and a ‘competition’ between Australian and Tuscan San Giovese wines.
Aside from stuffing ourselves at the Tuscan Sun Festival, we also visited Lake Trasimeno for a visit to some ruins and a boat trip, Arezzo for an incredible antic market (think middle ages and then include original Rembrants and Dalis!), and of course the local area.
The best part of the week must have been the food. The restaurants were amazing. However, we spent most nights in our place cooking with fresh vegetables and trying out wine from wineries we had visited or had been recommended. Our wonderful chefs kept us stuffed to the brim. We rapped up the week with a visit to a great restaurant in the countryside and got treated to some modern Tuscan. All in all, we could not have asked for anything more. It truly was a week to remember. Highlights from the week are here http://picasaweb.google.com/stu.solomon/Cotona#
The end of the week did not mean the end of the trip. After our stay in Cortona, we rented a car and drove through some of the top wine regions. We took in tours in Montalcino, Montalpulciano and several days in the Chianti region. We tried many wines we liked and many that were not so good. The drives though were spectacular. The scenary in the region was so beautiful it was a pleasure to just drive around. Of course, visits to restaurants that serve a seven-course meat menu (http://www.dariocecchini.com/solo_ciccia_eng.html) are not too bad either. Along the way, we also visited several medieval towns including Voltara and San Gimingnano, the medieval Manhattan (so named because of the 14 towers surrounding the town). Photos from our road trip are posted at http://picasaweb.google.com/stu.solomon/TuscanRoadTrip#
Sadly after four days, we had to say goodbye to Josh and Julia and were on our own in Florence. Deb has been trying to get me to Florence since she visited with her sisters ten years ago. The most amazing thing about Florence is the architecture. Every building you look at is steeped in history. It is not hard to imagine what life would have been like there 500 years ago with the Medicis. We stayed in a small apartment outside of the downtown about 250 meters from the Arno. The apartment was perfect for us. It has a nice kitchen (and Deb loved cooking with all the fresh Italian food stuffs!), had a coffee shop nearby and was close enough for us to walk into town.
We spent four days leisurely touring around visiting the many churches and squares, a byzantine synagogue (very unique), and of course the art galleries. Florence is known for the Academia and the Ufizi, two of the most famous art museums. Even though neither of us are really into renaissance art, we had to visit. As they say, when in Rome…. It did not disappoint. Seeing the best of the best is so much different than the rest of the renaissance work. The pieces here are really in a class of their own. Photos from Florence can be found here http://picasaweb.google.com/stu.solomon/Florence.
Having taken in more art than we had seen in the past 5 years, we headed south to Siena to visit Lucia (a friend from my Masters in Brighton) and take in Palio (this is the horse race at the beginning of the last Bond movie). Palio is a spectacular event that is hard to explain and whose continued existence is difficult to comprehend outside of those who live in Siena. For the Sienese, life stops for five days, twice a year for this 700 real old ritual. The race itself is a 90 second bareback race around the central square. For the winner: a coveted silk banner (the palio), for the losers: utter humiliation.
Siena is divided into 17 town districts or contrades (there use to be 42), each with their own traditions, symbol and colours, and its own church and palio museum. The streets are lined with the various flags and plaques clearly drawing battle lines for the different quarters. For five days, the contrades come together to protect their horse, their jockey and their pride.
We were inducted in to the Valdimontone (mountain goat) contrade and stayed with them for most of our time there. There are specific rituals and practices that happen leading up to race itself. The horses are allotted to districts by lot, there are four trials to race and of course the festivities. There are three feasts in each contrade honouring the horse and jockey. We attended the final feast, a six-course meal fed to over 2000 people dining in the street!!!
The day of the race is a stressful one. The contrade march in their horses to singing at the top of their lungs. The largest men stand at the front, chests pumped out, protecting their horse and jockey just as footmen going to war. It is truly a freighting affair. The order of the horses is in an ancient ritual of lots. After which, the horses are called one by one to the starting line, a rope hung across the dirt track. The jockeys all poke and prod each other and the horses trying to ensure that their enemies horses will be too agitated to focus on the race. It can take up to an hour to get all of the horses in the right place. Our race must have been reset almost 10 times.
When the horses are told to leave only to be called back in order, the jockeys give and take bribes of up to $500,000. The bribe may be to start slowly, to bother an enemy or even to purposely loose. The only rules that exist during the race is that a jockey can not touch another jockeys reins. It is an all out war with horses and anything goes.
Although Montone didn’t win, neither did their enemy so it was not a complete loss. This years winner was Tartuca (turtle), Lucia’s unlce’s (and frequently our tour guide) contrade. After the race, we retreated to the district for some consolation drinks and to watch the race again (the locals can watch each race 100 times and it was on loop without commentary for 24 hours).
Sadly, we were off on an early train to Rome for our flight back the next day. Our three week tour had come to a triumphant ending. We were back to Kampala and a life of matoke, Tusker and pork. Some times you don’t know what you miss until it is gone. Siena photos are here http://picasaweb.google.com/stu.solomon/Siena02#
Superlative writing, Stu!
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