After a rather boring 9 hour motor
(no wind) from Malta we arrived at a very nice marina in Marina di
Ragusa on the south coast of Sicily. This is a popular wintering marina in Sicily. Many people were
coming in for the end of the season and getting their boats ready for winter
life. We arrived just in time for the end of summer celebrations held every
year in the town. There was a huge waterfront festival and great
fireworks display - actually a competition between three teams. The fireworks
started at midnight and the celebrations went into the very wee hours. We
had a great view from the deck of Songster
to watch the fireworks.
Marina di Ragusa is the port town
for the inland city of Ragusa, about 20 km away. We took a bus to this
town which is made up of an old medieval town and a new modern town. The
old town, Ragusa Ibla, was a rabbit warren of winding streets and stairways going up the
hillside. At one point we got quite lost. It was enjoyable walking
all around looking at the beautiful, is sometimes run down, baroque buildings
and churches.
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The winding pathways along the hillside dwellings in the old town of Ragusa Ibla |
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Gargoyles supporting a balcony |
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Duomo San Giorgio |
Marina di Ragusa has some lovely
beaches and the usual waterside cafes and gelato bars.
It is a popular tourist spot for
Italians.
One evening as we were walking
through the town square, we came upon a boot scooting, country line dancing
competition.
Various groups in American
West outfits entertained a fairly bemused crowd with their line dancing and
singing of country western songs.
We stayed at Marina di Ragusa for
nearly a week as there was some bad weather predicted. As it turned out
it wasn't so bad where we were but other parts of the Eastern Med experienced a very
nasty Medicane (Mediterranean hurricane). We knew some people who were in
the middle of it and thought they were going to lose their boat, others did.
A boat tied up to the wharf in Lefkas was bashed so badly it sunk in a matter
of minutes. See the video here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_lQ2LBCHWw
We had walked along this stretch of waterfront many times during our
winter in Lefkas.
Since leaving Marina di Ragusa we
have been doing relatively short hops to marinas along the south coast. The
south coast of Sicily is open and sandy with very few protected places to
anchor. This means we must stay in
marinas, which tend to be much more expensive than marinas in Greece or Turkey.
We knew this was going to be the case as
we moved west and we just accept these differences as we travel. Bob is getting much better at manoeuvring Songster, with its long keel, into tight
spots so berthing at a marina isn't quite the trauma it used to be (except on
the wallet!)
The definition of a marina is quite
different in Italy. There are some professionally run places like at
Marina di Ragusa, but more often a harbour will have multiple pontoons for
pleasure boats with each individual pontoon run by a different group or family with
varying degrees of facilities and professionalism. Yet a berth at a pontoon offering only water
and electricity, no toilets, showers, laundry or café, will charge as much as a
well set out marina providing all these extra facilities. These ‘pontoon marinas’ really are equivalent
in facilities to the town wharfs in Greece and Turkey. At those town wharfs we would be charged
about 10 Euros per night and often they were free. In Italy a no frills berth on a pontoon costs
4 or 5 times that. That is as much as we
normally would pay for a hotel room when we do land travel.
After leaving Marina di Ragusa we
moved on to Licata. This was a rather run down, poor town with rubbish
everywhere - rather sad and depressing. The best kept area was the huge
cemetery. This was a terraced area covering a whole hillside, the
size of a small village, filled with ornate and well maintained headstones and
mausoleums for whole families. It was very pretty and interesting to walk
amongst the memorials to family, yet just outside the gates were people living
in slum conditions.
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Town hall in Licata |
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View of the cemetery and harbour |
Next stop was San Leone.
This was a stopping off point to visit the Valley of the Temples, a site of a 5
th
Century BC Greek city. We spent the day tramping around the dusty rocks
enjoying the impressive Doric style temples.
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Temple of Concordia |
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The old and the new |
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Temple of Juno |
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Temple of Hercules |
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The rare Agrigento Goat in a pen near the temples - amazing horns! |
We did another relatively short
hop to Sciacca, a pretty town on the hillside above the waterfront.
To get to the town from the marina we had to
walk up over 200 steps.
Once in the piazza
we had a fantastic view of the sea and were surrounded by lots of up-market
shops and cafes.
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Just the right kind of car for Italian streets |
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Sunset over the harbour at Sciacca |
Our final stop in Sicily was
Favignana, a pretty island off the northwest cost of the main island.
Favignana was a big tuna fishing area in the mid 19th Century until the locals
totally fished out the area. We went to the tuna museum hoping it would
be similar to the great sardine canning museum we saw in southern Portugal ( https://shamballacyc.blogspot.com/2016/02/the-algarve-portugal.html ). Sadly the museum was just the shell of the old facilities and lots of old tins in which the tuna use to be packed.
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The smokestacks and tubs used for processing the tuna |
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The beach at Favignana with the old tuna processing plant on the left |
But there was another
archaeological section to the museum which was fantastic. There were displayed
bronze naval rams from ancient battle ships. These rams were from a great battle in
10 May 241 BC. This Battle of the Egadi
Islands, which took place a few miles from Favignana, was the decisive battle
of the first Punic War between Rome and the Carthaginians. The naval rams were recovered
from the ocean floor only a few years ago. Before this find of 11 rams
there were only two in existence and very little known about them.
I was just blown away by these artifacts.
They were decorated in reliefs of Gods or other symbols and in such good
condition after 2200 years at the bottom of the ocean.
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A 2000+ year old naval ram |
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A relief of Nike on the naval ram |
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The naval ram attached to a reconstructed Roman battleship |
Then on our last day at Favignana
a boat with lots of divers came into the port. There was great
excitement and back slapping and then an object in a net was lifted onshore by
a crane. It looked like another bronze ram. It is amazing that the
discoveries from over 2000 years ago are still continuing. I found an
article about the recovery of the rams on the internet which may be of interest
to anyone wanting more information.
I
find it all quite fascinating.
http://www.sebastianotusa.it/testi/Royal-Tusa_Egadi_battle%20Curr_WArch.pdf
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