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ontheroadwithjp

~ tales of a wanderer

ontheroadwithjp

Monthly Archives: January 2013

More Steps

24 Thursday Jan 2013

Posted by jwpenley in Travel

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China, Great Wall, Stairs

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I have had an issue with steps for a long time. I suspect it began with a climb up the Washington Monument with my brother when one could still climb up the Washington Monument. Half way up, the steps were swimming and I thought that I wouldn’t make it, it was that difficult. Inside the monument there are few windows, the steps just keep going and one begins to wonder if it will ever end. It’s an amazing view at the top but it comes at a cost to those who make the climb. There is a reason it is no longer allowed.

The first time I noticed a real issue was shortly after the monument when I was standing at the top of the stairs to the State Capitol Building in Topeka, Kansas. I looked down and that was it. Fear hit my knees like a knife and I couldn’t move. I had to edge my way over to the handrail and inch down the steps sideways. Silly, I know, but irrational fears usually are. Since that time I have not met a step that didn’t make me pause. It goes with heights, as well, but steps compound.

This step thing becomes a problem when traveling, especially in countries with ancient monuments and non-existent handrails. Going up is just as bad as coming down. I need a handrail, a helping hand, a wall or the ability to go up on all fours. Embarrassing? Absolutely.

My first visit to the Great Wall, I passed on the “stairway to heaven” and just walked the wall. Gondola up, a walk through the woods with very wide, pastoral steps down. Piece of cake but I did miss that not-to-be-missed climb. The next opportunity came again in China at the “hanging wall” in Jiayuguan. A long wall with many steps in the middle of nowhere on a clear and sunny day. What made this wall different was that it had low sides, a veritable hand rail. I could do that! What I didn’t know was that the walls got higher and more precarious as one neared the top. Of course, you can’t know this until you are committed so the choice is to continue or turn around and go down. Terrible options but I chose up. Not for a moment have I regretted that decision. The view was amazing, the wall incredible and my sense of accomplishment a “ta da” moment. After that, what steps could not be conquered?

Back to that Great Wall and that “stairway to heaven” with its 500-700 stairs straight up. This time I was determined, even eager, to make the climb. This is not to say that I did not have moments of “what are you thinking,” but climb it I did, all the way to the top in spite of crumbling walls, missing steps and a wall that got shorter as I neared the top so a little stooping was in order. Never quite on all fours but very close. The ultimate in “ta da.” An unforgettable climb. Once at the top I realized that going down is easy if someone goes down ahead of me. Why did it take me so long? All I need in the future is a willing volunteer. As everyone eventually has to go down, problem solved.

As for the rest of the way down from the Great Wall, this time I took the toboggan. Throwing caution to the proverbial wind, I sailed to the bottom at such speed that the Chinese guides at the sharp corners were yelling at me to slow down. It was a glorious ride and a glorious day.

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3,750 Steps

15 Tuesday Jan 2013

Posted by jwpenley in Travel

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Egypt, Mount Sinai

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Mount Sinai is a mystical place. The debate continues on whether or not the mountain designated as such is the real Mount Sinai or just a spot in the general vicinity. Who can really pinpoint the general vicinity of such an ancient text. Still, believers and non-believers alike trek up the mountain seeking the place where Moses received those Ten Commandments. There are two known truths about the place. It’s a long way to the top and most visitors want to see it either at sunrise or sunset. Half the climb will be in the dark whichever you choose so bring a good flashlight.

The next choice to be made is how to make the climb. The easy way, unless the creatures terrify you, is to take a camel. The trail winds up the side of the mountain and the views can be spectacular but frightening. One can also walk up the camel trail which has its own set of problems as many camels make that trek every day leaving the trail one long camel toilet. The third way is to take the steps up the center of the mountain, a shorter but much more strenuous way.

The ages of the group accompanying me on this journey ranged from 21 to, well, me. (That age to be revealed at the appropriate time.) Three of us decided to take the lazy way up leaving the younger crowd, with the exception of one phenomenal New Zealander, aged 55, who had more energy than two people half her age, to take the center route. Alas, this lazy way was not to be. The night before, our guide was quite ill with a cold. Full of sympathy, we agreed to let him stay behind and opted for door number three so there would be a need for only one guide. Plus, the third person was unable to make the climb due to illness so that left just two. We were promised that, while it was a strenuous climb, there were stairs all the way to the top. How bad could it be?

3750 Steps!

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I was envisioning actual steps. The reality was quite different. There were 3750 boulders to climb. At times the trail was marked solely by small piles of rocks indicating a turn or a new direction. All straight up. No meadows to wander through. No trees to grab for support. Just rocks, lots of them. My camera, already heavy, was a millstone after a few hundred meters. The Bedouin guide graciously took over that load and two wonderfully kind gentlemen stayed with me and my companion to assist.  I did have a “third leg” provided by the ill traveler, her walking stick, for which I shall be eternally grateful.IMG_8405

Approximately 3,000 steps later we arrived at the beginning of the end. The first flat place and the termination of the camel transport. Not the top. 750 more “steps.” Straight up. My companion was in pain and could go no further. I have a stubborn nature and was not stopping here. It did not get easier and I was the very last to reach the top, but reach it I did! Just as the sun was at its best light and only for a few minutes, but I was there.

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A few photos, a quick turnaround, a search for the flashlight and down we went. One returns by the camel trail as the boulder way is too treacherous for night hiking. The dark made the vistas unseeable but that is probably best as the trail follows much too close to the edge for my taste. Of course, my flashlight died and the Bedouin guide, again, came to my rescue. Two different gentlemen, equally gracious, stayed with me for the descent and the guide plied between us and the rest of the group who, I suspect, ran down the slope. When we finally reached the bottom and the van, everyone else was aboard. They applauded my accomplishment. I thanked all those who helped me, as I surely could not have done it alone. Then I challenged the group to return when they reach 70 and make the climb again. I hope they accept that challenge. As for me, there are and will be other steps.

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Ceppato

04 Friday Jan 2013

Posted by jwpenley in Travel

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Italy, Pisan Hills, sagra, Tuscany

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August in Italy is “sagra” time when the small towns celebrate with a feast of everything from potatoes to rabbits. Each community features its specialty dish. The format is the same in every town. Rows of tables are set up in the piazza, or along the road in the smallest communities. Families often reserve space at tables but there is always room for the adventuresome traveler and families from neighboring towns. It’s that idle period in farming, crops planted but not yet ready to reap, and everyone wants to party. Wine pours freely, the food is ample and the evening nearly always ends with dancing in the street.

Cepatto’s specialty is soup, their “sagra,” Zuppa sotto le Stelle, (translated, soup under the stars) and the big organizer is Loretta who has a rooster that crows her name–…orehhtaaaaa. The women and older children prepare most of the meal, some portions in their own kitchens, others a joint effort in the middle of the road. This is a family affair and everyone, from the elders to the children, has a part to play. The men’s role is to set up the tables, barbecue the meat, sample the wine and, occasionally, stir the soup.

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The day of the “sagra” began with five, flour-covered and laughing women in Elvira’s small kitchen making biscotti to be dipped in vin santo as the grand finale. While the biscotti baked in the large, outdoor brick oven, we joined the men and sampled the evening’s local wine, provided by Roberto, and gave it a thumbs up. The preparation party then moved up the hill and into the street.

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There is no piazza in Ceppato, there is only one main road with a few small roads leading off it on the downhill side. This is not a thoroughfare so closing it for the day doesn’t present traffic problems. Leaving it open is not an option as the road becomes the kitchen and the parking lot the dining hall. The chopping tables were out and the soup beans already cooking in a giant aluminum barrel-sized pot. There is a special room for this pot, a large, stone cellar two steps down from the street. On this day, someone was trying to fasten a curtain to the door to let in air and keep out bugs. There is no easy way to do this in a stone wall so the soup room remained open to air and bugs. All day, someone was in that room stirring the soup with a long, wooden stick.

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The chopping began. First came onions, potatoes and other vegetables to add to the soup. The real chopping fun came when it was time to make the giant fruit compote. Tubs full of fresh fruit were brought to the tables where the knives were flying and hands were covered with sticky juice. As the bowls piled high with the fruit, strong hands were required to dump the concoction into large washtubs for later serving. Next came the salad. This is where the younger children got involved. Water ran through a stone trough along the wall and there was a lot of splashing and water play in the guise of cleaning the lettuce. More than one little one left with a soaking.

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As evening approached, the men, decked out in chef’s hats and aprons started up the barbecue. Soup is Ceppato’s specialty but the barbecued meat is its pride and the men were reveling in its preparation. Many jokes and not a few glasses of wine later, just at dusk, the meal was ready. We made our way to the rows of white tables set up in the parking area along the side of the road. Our names were on the seating chart, sort of–Americans-2. The tables filled, wine was poured, the soup arrived in the hands of the older children and the “sagra” began. On a clear night, under a star-filled sky with our new friends, we celebrated life in the Pisan hills.

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You won’t find these “sagra” listed in any travel guides. The dates are erratic, depending upon the whim of the community. What you will find are signs posted along the roads, at junctions, within the small towns, on directional signposts, announcing the date and the food specialty. Look for signs like Sagra del Coniglio, Sagra della Pattata, or, the fabulous, Zuppa sotto le Stelle! of Ceppato. Somewhere, every weekend, in the net of the Pisan hills, there will be a “sagra.” Mangia!

Lost in the Pisan Hills

03 Thursday Jan 2013

Posted by jwpenley in Travel

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The ubiquitous cappuccino

The ubiquitous cappuccino

What do you do in Italy in August when Italians are all at the beach and it’s hot? Rent a car and head to the Pisan hills. My adventure in these hills began when a friend and I rented an apartment for two weeks. The apartment was listed as a modern apartment on a farm in Piastraia. A small, Italian farm was a topic of interest, this was a part of Italy we had not explored and the price was right. All we had to do was find it. This was no small task as we discovered upon entering the “net” of the Pisan hills; that tangle of small roads that will cause you to get lost even when you have been there before. Many wrong turns later, far from most anywhere and designated only by a small sign reading Piastraia, we found our little farm, a small house inhabited by Elvira and her son, Roberto, with several small out-buildings and two modern, reasonably well-appointed apartments attached as rentals. We settled in. I took the bedroom with the big bed and my shorter friend took the small bed in the main room. (I think I still owe her for that arrangement!) On the tree-sheltered stone patio just as the sun was hitting that perfect late afternoon Tuscan light, we began our evening ritual of a chilled glass of prosecco and recapped our day. The Pisan hills awaited us.

The Italian way to start the day is with a quick cappuccino at the local bar. On a small farm, there is no bar. So, on day two, we set out in search of our morning coffee. A brief, gesticulating conversation in Italian with Elvira led us on a fifteen minute uphill climb to the tiny town of Ceppato. Excellent! Well, perhaps not. There is a bar but it is only open on the weekends. Farmers and really small-town dwellers make their own coffee. We truly were the lost tourists just looking for a cup of coffee, when the miracle of Piero appeared and our beautiful relationship with Ceppato began. Piero became our advisor, encyclopedia and friend. No question went unresearched, no request unfulfilled. We were the adopted Americans and we were privileged to participate in Ceppato life culminating on our last night with their Zuppa sotto le Stelle but more about that later.

About the “net,” before you begin your journey, invest in a good, detailed map of Tuscany. I recommend Carte Stradale D’Italia as it lists the tiniest of towns. You will see that all roads lead somewhere but not always where you meant to go. This is half the fun, but it’s good to be able to find your way home. On this map, the net is comprised of the red roads; others will color them white, still others yellow. Mostly, you are looking for the small, unnumbered roads that form a net-like image, twisting, turning, connecting, with the occasional dangling thread. The net encompasses the area leading south out of Pontedera to Volterra, west along the Cecina River to the sea then north bordered by the A12 in the direction of Livorno. Within this area, you will find the ancient city of Volterra, where I have witnessed a Rocky Horror Show production in the middle of the piazza, the charming town of Casciana Terme with its baths and a wonderful winery, Fattoria Uccelliera, run by a delightful young woman and her family near the town of Fauglia. In the course of your adventure, you will get lost; you will have to turn around–many times. Do not despair, you may discover another Ceppato and it will all be worth the effort.

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