Thursday 23 August 2012

Strap yourself in, it's a long one (as the actress said to..)

'Ciao!' 'Bellissimo!' 'Mama Mia!' 'You look atta-ma sizz-ter I-a cut off aya genitals and-a turnem into spizy meatballz like-a ma mamma yoose-to-a maik..'

Yes! All this can only mean one thing, we’ve arrived at the home of great food, passionate people and the world’s most loved organised crime syndicate – Italia!!

As Helen mentioned previously we took the opportunity to travel to Italy using Camping on Board. If you have a camper this really is a great way of doing an overnight journey giving you both the luxury (if you can call it that) of wandering around the rust bucket you booked onto but still using your own van for sleeping, hanging out etc. You even get to hook-up - that’s an electrical thing Rob, not an on-board swingers party - dead handy if you don’t want to book an overnight cabin or if you haven’t yet mastered contortionism and can’t bend yourself into a small chair in a brightly lit restaurant for hours on end.   All you need to know is what time you arrive at your destination so you can set an alarm and not oversleep. I’ll ask at the bar, they’ll know. ‘ Mi dispiace, non capisco’ came the response. No worries, I’ll ask at the ship’s main reception. After a bit of thought: ‘I-a don’t-a know-a whatata time-a we arrive’. Good man.

Every country seems to have a butt-hole of a town and Bari, from what we saw upon arrival, is certainly a good nominee for Italy’s, a right old dive of an industrial wasteland. Bari also has one of the most confusing road systems we’ve encountered so far and it took ages to figure out how to get out of it – we’re sure it was intentionally designed this way to trap you there – but once free we found ourselves in the stunning setting of the southern Italian countryside, all sun-scorched fields, rustic farm buildings and crooked old woman dressed all in black (a suicidal move given the heat), bellissimo indeed.

Like Greece with its ‘picturesque, stunning, awesome’ coastline and beaches Italy seems to have a never-ending succession of ‘picturesque, stunning, awesome’ old hill-top towns and Matera was the first we stopped at. Bloody good choice too, an amazing little city that looked incredible at night-time. Not even a disappointing first Italian meal served to us by an Italian gentleman whose designer shoes were clearly crippling him (they do suffer for their fashion here) could spoil our short stop here. We’ve realised that we need to find more free stops now so we found a decent little car-park to spend the night in. We even felt comfortable enough to hang out our freshly laundered undies in the morning, much to the surprise of the locals going about their business I’m sure. Saying that, I have got nice briefs though, perfect for hot climates; ‘Cool and Fresh, with Stretch’ retailing at just £17.00 for a four pack, available in white or black (mine are white) from all good Marks and Spencers. Sorry, I’ve put that in just in-case someone from M&S’ publicity department happens to find our blog and wants to sponsor me. God knows I could do with it the rate I’m getting through them out here.. it’s the heat.

Onwards, and quite literally, UPWARDS!! Geddit?? It’s a hilly country, so you go up a lot, quite literally (though there are obviously some downs too). A lovely drive through the mountains, a quick dip in the ocean and a stop at an incredible typically Italian food store and we found ourselves at a brilliant little aire near an old town called Chiaromonte that had stunning views on account of being up on a hill. A fantastic facility that appeared criminally underused by those whose use it was intended for. But we weren’t complaining, having the place to ourselves. Besides, we weren’t completely alone. It appeared that all orange-clad public sector workers were skiving off work here in the daytime and we had the added ‘pleasure’ of the company of the local football team whose great looking municipal ground was joined onto the aire. They trained in their pants don’t-cha-know. Oddballs, in more ways than one.
It was here the day came that I was hoping would never arrive. There was no toilet facility at the aire and a walk around the very steep, very shut, town also proved fruitless. So, despite having strict Thetford toilet rules concerning any serious use I had to have my first ‘crunchie’ in the van.. not pleasant, or easy, with loads of curious bin-men and footy players in g-strings hovering about outside…I hope I never see this day again.

A new dawn and another lovely drive through the mountains and all around the houses to our next destination of Padula, a stunning old town set on a… you know the rest! We stopped at the bottom of town at one of those ‘Agro-tourism’ (which isn’t as violent as it sounds) places that turned out to be a lovely old farm. We had a couple of lovely nights here and spent our time getting back out on our bikes to explore the local area, something we haven’t had the chance to do for ages, and wandering around the town in the evening. There was even a free concert to go to in the stunning setting of the local monastery that we stumbled across. Some entertainment, we thought. After waiting an age for the band to strike up we were gutted to be presented with a right over-the-top warbling pop diva so promptly left. Unfortunately, our farm was near the monastery so we had a night of one Italian Celine Dion type after another belting out a load of crap. For once I was thankful, and felt sorry for, the local dogs who had been set off by the noise but who also helped drown it out.. good Rovers.

We don’t often take in touristy or recommended stuff but we’d remembered that we’d kept a few old Guardian travel items on the places we’d be visiting and went through Italy’s. One leapt out at me in particular, an article entitled ‘Is This the Best Pizza in Italy?’. It turned out that we weren’t far from Agropoli, the location of Pizzeria Anna, so we headed out to find it. The article mentioned that the Pizzeria was not what you’d expect, nothing posh, just a normal looking ‘you’d-walk-past-it-most-days’ little restaurant and they were right. But, my god, the pizza’s we ordered were very cheap, all things considered, and incredible!

Despite it’s run of the mill setting the pizzeria had certificates on the wall to show that the tomatoes were a sweet San Marzano variety grown on the slopes of Mount Vesuvius and that the mozzarella came from a herd of buffalos reared in the marsh meadows north of Napoli (stolen word for word from the Guardian article, can they sue?). Helen ordered the pizza vulcana that was simply a tomato base, gooey buffalo mozzarella and prosciutto, and it was sublime. Hooper decided he would go for the pizza a sorpresa, the same as the journalist who had written for the Guardian. We only had half the article so I didn’t know what I’d ordered and the menu had given me no clue. All I got from the article was that this pizza was ‘extraordinary’. The journalist was 100% bang on. It turned out that the pizza a sorpresa, the most expensive on the menu at just €10 was one single pizza but divided into eight different sections, each with a selected topping of the chef’s choice from the menu… I nearly cried when it arrived. A true work of art and it was absolutely amazing. Not too big, elegantly understated given what it was and a truly delicious pizza. One to tick off of the list along with once owning a Porsche and getting fired from a job.

Up Pompei! Frankie Howard once cried and Pompei was our next destination, somewhere I was really looking forward to going. We’d found a little aire not far from the ruin which was in a part of Pompei that another eruption could only improve, an awesome little place to stay again complete with outside, in full view of all other campers, shower. We kept our swimmers on for this refreshingly ice-cold experience though (sorry to disappoint any naturists out there) and settled in for an early night after a particularly tricky drive into Napoli.

I’m not very good at writing about the historical stuff we go to see but needless to say Pompei really does not disappoint. With the ancient city preserved as well as it is you get a real sense of what it would have been like to live in a city such as this and the added bonus of Vesuvius as the dramatic backdrop. It is well worth the €11 it costs to get in, the pick of the relics we’ve looked around so far for me as there is so much still there. Houses, shops, public buildings etc still in such good condition and a really good amphitheatre that would have been great for watching lions chase christians. However, when they were building it all those years ago did not one person think; ‘ere, that huge great big volcano yeah?’ ‘Yeah?’ ‘Not gonna go off at any point soon, destroy all this good work like and bury us all alive under a thick layer of hot choking ash?’ ‘Nope…’

Our continued journey north took us first to the worryingly named Strangolagalli - where we had a free night at a recycling unit - and then to Terni where we found an aire that you could stay at for 48hrs for just €4 with ruddy electric too. Not too bad a town either with free access to great sporting facilities including a running track - take note Britain!

It was here that Helen too had a day that she probably never wished would come and pleaded with me not to write about. After her sharing my comment about Anne’s lovely over-toppy-beachy-thingy though I couldn’t resist. So, we’ve been without WiFi for a while and desperately needed to get budgeting/planning etc done as soon as was possible. We walked the whole town looking for WiFi and found nothing. We were just about to give up when out of nowhere ‘do do do do dooo, I’m loving it!’ There they were, the golden arches, and what does that say on the door?? Free bloody WiFi. Helen hasn’t had a Maccy D’s for 8 years (or so she tells me). Three hours we were in there, first ‘we’ll just have drinks yeah?’ Then, ‘I’ll just have a small wrap or something’ which turned out to be a fuuuuuull Maccy D meal with fries an all. She now has her own Maccy D’s WiFi account and everything..

It was during the next day’s drive that I suddenly got whiff of the most awful smell. ‘Oh no, perhaps Helen has reacted badly to her Maccy D and hasn’t had time to get to the toilet’ I thought to myself as she sat beside me in the cab, ‘I won’t say anything, the poor girl’. But no!! I needn’t have worried. The awful smell was emanating from outside as we’d just arrived at the natural sulphur hot springs of Saturnia - thankfully!! Pretty crowded by the time we arrived in the evening so we got up early the next morning, had a lovely walk through the south Tuscan countryside and plunged ourselves into the naturally occurring hot water pools. After bobbing around here for an hour we then went off piste, found the river that was the source of the pools and, along with just a few locals ‘in-the-know’, had a relaxing plunge in the river, without many others around. Lovely, aside from the fact that some of our clothes & bedding now smell like rotten eggs.

The next evening we found ourselves in Colle di Val D’elsa and camping in a small woodland set on a lovely Tuscan vineyard run by an awesome piss-head eccentric, completely on our own. ‘We’ll do 2 nights here, awesome, just what we’d been looking for, at last’. We both soon changed our minds after a few trips down to the ramshackle, insect infected back-to-nature toilet facility set back into the woods. Wussies, both of us.

So after a night of ‘what was that, did you hear that noise?’ etc and lots of recent free, cheaper stops we both felt that we needed somewhere easier and more comfortable for a few days. We’ve arrived just south of Viareggio at the kind of campsite that we hated at the beginning of the trip and would normally not go to but it’s been lovely having everything we need in easy reach and the sound of other people around us again. A good chance to re-charge, get washing done & plan September in France which is shaping up to be very busy with much welcomed visits. One thing about the site though, once you’ve paid for your pitch they then charge you to use the outside pool, cheeky f*@!ers, and not only that they make you all wear identical swimming caps so we all look like some kind of weird cult or really bad synchronised swimming team. Coleman was not happy.

It was from here that we jumped on our bikes and headed out to find something that I have wanted to see since I was a nipper – only the bleeding Leaning Tower of Pisa!! An amazing sight to behold and I was glad it wasn’t a let down after all those years of longing. Whilst there a street trader told me a remarkable story about the tower.

Apparently, sometime in the early 1980’s an angry, unshaven and clearly drunk American man in fancy dress arrived out of the blue and singlehandedly righted the tower back into a true vertical position! This caused huge problems for the local souvenir sellers who now had stalls full of useless ceramic mini Leaning Towers which had to be replaced with new, true, replicas. No sooner has this happened than, about 6 months later, that same now much happier looking American guy returned and pushed the Tower back to it’s original, and world renowned, listing position! After the expense of replacing all of the ‘leaning’ stock this pissed the local traders off no end so, clearly exasperated by events, they set about smashing up their now useless stock with brooms. Weird huh!? Honestly, you couldn’t make it up…

The tower is found in a lovely setting with some other beautiful buildings around it including a cathedral with really impressive external decoration and impressive carved doors and another large domed shaped building that also appeared to list slightly. I overheard lots of ‘is that building leaning too or does it just appear that way because I’ve been looking at a leaning building’ conversations but I am convinced it was also on the wonk. Pisa is definitely a good place to do in a day.

You may wonder why there are some glaringly obvious names missing from the ‘must see’ list of Italian places to visit - Rome, Amalfi Coast etc - but after nearly four months on the road, and with the weather still blisteringly hot, we’ve been a little pooped of late so need time to just relax. We’d also decided that we like the Italian countryside far more than the coast we’ve seen and that the major cities are just too hot, and too packed, to bother going to this time around. So, we are just slowly drifting our way up through Umbria and Tuscany heading for nowhere in particular whist taking in the incredible scenery all around us.

Proof we're not lying 1


Proof we're not lying 2


Thursday 16 August 2012

Friends and family


Another friend to join us on the trip; Lena, and so we all climb in the van and drive away from Camp Athens towards the island of Evia and her father’s beautiful home on the coast – our home for the next 5 days.  We were under strict instructions from Lena to relax, relax and then do some more relaxing, which as you can imagine we are pretty good at by now, but this was different.  This was an extended period of time out of the van, with a real opportunity to rejuvenate before setting off travelling again, and in beautiful surroundings…and, and this is a big and, to sit still and save some much needed dosh!  It had been bloody donkeys since we had caught up with Lena properly (and she crashed the Porsche) so it was truly wonderful to share each others company, and we had the enormous pleasure of meeting cousin Kristina and her husband Agoustinas (who probably wont speak to me again when he see’s how I’ve spelt his name), and their baby daughter Sophia, who tested all my non-maternal instincts when she spent the car journey to the local taverna copying everything I did.  The taverna too was the kind of place we had been hoping to stumble on during our time in Greece; a family run place packed full of Greeks with a great atmosphere, and it provided a taster of the Evia delicacy of cheese bread.  Cheese. And bread.  All mingled together in hot gooey wonderment.  Beautiful, and seriously damaging on the waste line I’m sure.

So, lots of swimming, fantastic food, and jugs of Pimms later (thank you Matt), we were ready to leave Evia, and drop Lena back in Athens before heading off across mainland Greece; both feeling very happy to be on the road again after our refreshing pit stop – Lena if you are reading this, thank you for your endless generosity, we were so happy we got to see you and look forward to living in your new world of anti-capitalism (it just needs a little tweaking for the Nobel).
Surprisingly, the drive across the mainland was far flatter than we expected and we found ourselves at a free stop on the hillsides next to a taverna, right next to our destination of Meteora.  This was quite possibly the quietest night’s sleep for some time – no dogs, no traffic, no squabbling Athenians…  Meteora is quite possibly one of the most dramatic sights in Greece; lots of monasteries perched up on top of strange rock formations,  apparently caused by strong river currents formerly running to an ancient sea.  You wonder how people accessed some of them, until you see the long rope and basket pulley system used to hoist them up…not for us.  We had a great morning driving around the hill sides , but the August tour bus crowds put us off going into any.  Onwards west then, to Igoumenitsa to secure ourselves some tickets for the next part of our journey.

It seemed crazy that over a month had passed since we were last at this port, and the 160 euro tickets that ‘no point buying, they wont go up’ were now over 200 euro’s.  Damn.  We now had the added complexity of getting the van to Corfu and then onwards to Italy.  After a bit of shopping around and tweaking of our Italy destination though we managed to secure both ferries for 150 euro’s, and the opportunity to experience ‘camping on board’ for the Italy journey.  We triumphantly headed to a nearby beach where we knew we could camp free for the night.  It was sunny when we arrived, but as the grey clouds started rolling in, and the other vans promptly packed up and headed off we wondered if we should be doing the same…especially when we looked around and saw huge branches and other vegetation that had obviously come down in a storm the previous night.  So just us and an Italian camper were left, both looking up at the tree’s overhead warily, but eventually giving each other the thumbs up and saying ‘we’ll stay if you do’ in broken Italian/English.  Quite possibly the biggest storm I’ve seen in ages blew right overhead, masses of rain, huge claps of thunder, and the largest scale mass exodus of sunbathers from a beach ever.  Perversely, after two months of wall to wall blistering sun, it was amazing to be trapped in the van by rain…in fact, like proper Brits I think we even made ourselves a cup of tea while we watched the lightening.  Needless to say, it soon made way for the evening sun and we were left with the quietest beach in the whole of Greece that night, just us, the Italian and hundreds of stray dogs.

We decided that by way of a goodbye to mainland Greece we would treat ourselves to a stay on the lovely Sofas campsite again…so a wonderful day and evening was had, catching up internet time, cooking up the veggies Lena had packed us off with, and even watching some Olympics in the bar.  Perfect, then it was back to the beach for another free stop before getting our ferry to Corfu the next day…to see my parents, who just happened to be on holiday there celebrating 40 years of matrimony…amazing.

The ferry to Corfu was quick and easy, except it was the first ferry I’ve ever known where all the vehicles had to reverse on, which is no easy feat in Gus, but if the Czech HGV driver can do it then so can we.  We pootled our way up from the south of the island and located my parents hotel, left a message to meet the next day and then drove north to find some freecamping.  North Corfu took my breath away to be honest – it is so dramatically beautiful with sheer cliffs plunging into clear turquoise waters – if you can find somewhere away from the kids burning about on quad bikes, it is heaven and my idea of paradise.  Yet again I had timed my book reading bang on and was halfway through The Corfu Trilogy by Gerald Durrell…another gold star for Coleman. 

We spent the next day knocking back complimentary drinks courtesy of my parents in their all-inclusive hotel.  They even sneaked us in for a crafty lunch, while we caught up on the last three months.  It gave us the idea of doing a trip based solely around wandering into all-inclusive hotels and seeing what delightfully free food and drink you can pilfer along the way…maybe next year.  We found a campsite around the corner, with the luxury of a swimming pool, and made a trip to Paleokatritsa for some last Greek snorkelling.  Then on our final day on Corfu we went to Kerkyra town with my parents for a very long lunch by the sea, where we were witness to some champion eating skills from Hooper in order to finish up all the food we had ordered and been too full to eat.  That’s my boy.  It was over 40C yet again so before we caught our ferry to Italy we all headed back the hotel that just keeps giving for a dip in the sea.  It was on the way back to the hotel that Michael paid my mum the ultimate compliment, when he said “that’s a nice whatever it is you’re wearing”….haha!  What a beautiful 3 days on Corfu, and simply wonderful to spend it with my folks.  Now onwards to Italy.

Goodbye to Greece