Blurred Footprints
Sfalassa Bridge on the A2 Mediterranean Motorway, Calaria |
Turning to the opposite coast, imagine a bridge-tunnel network across the Ionian Sea, say from somewhere near Otranto across the Strait of
A Giant Musk Boring Company Drill At the Las Vegas Convention Center Loop |
What is fascinating and little noticed, is that Italians name their bridges. In fact, they go to the trouble to post a sign at each bridge with its name, along with the bridge’s length in meters. I’ve no
Typical Italian Bridge Signage |
We’d been in Italy for about a month. It was getting time for a road trip, off to somewhere we’d not been before. Without the bridge-tunnel we needed, and ignoring an overnight ferry, we first headed west to Naples for a flight before we could head east to nearby Greece. Our sights were set on Corfu, Corfu Town on the island of Corfu to be exact. Absent Venice’s canals, we understood that Corfu’s architecture with balconies galore, its warrens of narrow alleyways, shady back streets and tiny squares full of bars, eateries, and pretty shops
Brindisi to Albania/Greece Not Too Far at All |
A Kingdom of Venice Flag Hangs in the Street of Corfu Town |
We wanted to find out for ourselves, so in mid-July we headed off to the Mayor Mon Repos Palace Hotel in Corfu Town. It was certainly not the best time to venture off being as hot as it was in Italy and no telling how hot in Greece but clinging to the hope it had air conditioning and that it operated, we drove to Capodichino Airport in Naples. We’d worked to keep our baggage to a minimum, somewhere just above wearing bathing suits the entire trip. EasyJet doesn’t make it ‘easy’ as their name tries to infer. There is a cost for everything … à la carte seats, down to costs based on dimensions for in-cabin and in-hold baggage. They slice and dice everything. I wondered if it is to make up for pandemic losses like everyone was into.
Maria Elena, the Easy Jetsetter Gets Aboard |
It took an uneventful hour and a half drive to the airport. We arrived early to an overcrowded terminal. I guess it’s to be expected in the stampede of the mid-July tourist season; By August, Italy’s cities would be abandoned. Thankfully, it was also icy cool inside which helped to quickly wick us dry. There was no real EasyJet check-in. We were supposed to have printed our boarding passes at home. We’re lucky to have Internet, but a printer too! That will have to wait. So, we downloaded our tickets to our phones. It seems to work for our daughter at Dunkin’s when she pays for her coffee with a QR code scan, and it worked to get us through the security scanner at Capo. As for those poor souls with baggage to check, they were in a queue that terminated at a luggage self-service robot, that when properly stroked with the correct button pushes and scans, ejected a tag for their luggage. We were glad we didn’t have to take that tech course. The flight was quick, about an hour. I spent what little flight time there was fiddling with the seat trying to get it to recline only to learn this Airbus model did not offer this luxury, even for an additional cost. Thankfully, we hadn’t far to go, just across Italy and then those hundred miles or so of bridgeless water. No sooner had we leveled off when our descent began. This was well before I could finish my Moretti “guy in the green hat” beer. With no baggage to wait for and not a customs checker in sight, we were outside in a flash negotiating with a taxi driver who had been born in NYC. Twenty eight euros became 15 and we were off. Come to find out, though Greek, he had no Italian heritage, but I had to start somewhere.
Our arrival welcoming was extra-ordinary. It began right at reception when Spiros, who we
The Mayor Mon Repos Palace Hotel, Corfu |
Efi's Realm, the Passaggio Bistro by Night |
We were quickly off on our first expedition with some taverna tips from helpful Katerina. By then it was late. We checked out a few places as we walked down a nearby side street. The songs of cicadas, thousands of them I’m sure, was deafeningly persistent. I’m convinced their legs shorten by the day. An area bordering the sea, hemmed either side by roads, sheltered outdoor garden restaurant after restaurant. From their kitchens, just across one of those streets, a steady shuffle of their servings, carried aloft on a panamana or what might be described as a large cutting board with handles, kept patrons well supplied. We successfully maneuvered as far as the Demitri restaurant where we finally yielded to their front man, Paavo. Paavo should be granted an honorary degree in marketing for his ability to oil you into his garden of gastronomy. He reminded us of the men outside the Ischia Port restaurants enticing you to join them instead of a neighboring establishment. It turned out that Paavo was half Italian and half Greek. Just imagine, what luck and it was only my second try! Whether that had occurred well in the past and he represented a true Corfiot descendent or whether he was of a more modern
Welcome to the Paradise of Gaios |
Corfu and a few other islands form a small archipelago. The real white sandy beaches and clearest waters lie further south, especially on Antipaxos. Neighboring olive covered Paxos is charming with quaint harbors like Gaios, its capitol, that emits a relaxed, bohemian vibe. To see it we island hopped there on a day long cruise that calls for a three hour boat ride each way. I began to understand why I hadn’t joined the Navy. I was curious, however, enough to want to know why one island, Antipaxos, was ‘anti’ the other, Paxos. To us ‘anti’ meant against. Didn’t they get along? It was from our waiter, Thason, at the Manesko restaurant (meaning ‘Street’) in Gaios that we learned that here it meant ‘ahead’ or a ‘short distance apart’. One island was just ahead of the other. That resolved and now ashore, I began to wonder about food. I sometimes wonder why food, transformed into leftovers in the refrigerator, can taste better the second
Still Some Moussaka Left When I Thought About a Photo but Dangerously Low on the Alpha Beer |
Days later at La Boca in Corfu Town, we met a Maltese man named Christos. He operated an all-day coffee and wine bar. It was early, still hours
The Corfu Godfather's Lair |
By this point I realized that my cohort and I were on a rather fruitless Don Quixote style quest. As was his pursuit, ours was truly quixotic, a rather romantic attempt to achieve the unachievable. It
Street Pavers Typical of Venetian & Roman Roads |
Symbolic of Venice, a Fishtail Capped Building Gets a Facelift |
One of Many Venetian Style Wells |
fishtail shaped merlons especially indicative of Venetian rule. Across the street, imposing building after building along with colonnades reminiscent of Saint Mark’s Square echoed a timeless, recurring Italian design. On our bus ride from town back to our hotel, the old Venetian fort with its towering walls hosted an additional symbol of Venetian majesty, a winged lion. Like Venice’s Rialto Bridge or Rome’s
Pantheon, all these remain. They represent a look back to classical times and add reasoning to why Corfu serves as a UNESCO World Heritage site, where cultures mix to this day.[2] Even at our stop on olive covered Paxos the once Italian influence was evident in its Venetian-ear town hall.
Today Corfu Town is a hive of tourist activity and new
construction. Although a growing tourist
destination that is stretching its natural resources, heavy traces clearly
survive of its vibrant Italian past. For
Maria Elena and me, Corfu
will forever remain more than an island, a testament
to more than tzatziki, ouzo, and moussaka. Yes, it has all those plus Neapolitans like Mimmo,
at least one Italian taxi driver born in New York, and a waiter, Paavo, of
mixed heritage. Could it be that
Italians are coming home to Greece and Corfu?
After all, beginning with the Magna Graecia in the 8th century BC
(well before there was a Venice), adventurous Greeks were colonizing the
coastal areas of southern Italy (Calabria, Apulia, Basilicata, Campania, and
Sicily). Culture, even absent a bridge,
flowed both ways to create an Italian-Greek legacy built on blurred footprints.Blurred Footprints
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