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Sicily at the Tip of Mainland Italy |
Sicily Part V:
An “Oh-My-God”
Pause
There is a yearning in my soul that keeps returning me to Sicily. Augusta, Ortigia, and Taormina linger as vivid memories, and now, too soon, our days in Cefalù evaporated as well. Regretfully we departed. In a remarkably short time, we had grown agreeably accustomed to its art, history, and palate, all perfectly paired with its Mediterranean setting. Yet, at the cost of leaving its many charms behind, we reluctantly turned west along Sicily’s northern coast wondering what might possibly top what we had already experienced. With each passing mile, we were about to find out.
Palermo lay ahead, but it was not
our destination. Instead, we would spend
the next few days in Carini, just west of the city, staying at Flower Villa
Con Piscina, Privata & Wellness. As we approached, we entered a puzzling huddle
of homes hidden behind tall walls that ran unbroken, on both sides of the road,
block after block, forming a grid that sharply defined each property. I imagined that from above, the view might
resemble a cluster of walled cells neatly packed beside one another like the
cells of a honeycomb.
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Our Carini Hosts |
Faithfully obedient to our GPS, we crept through
narrow walled and rutted lanes threading this maze of private enclosures. Although not immediately flattering, a sense
of cozy imperfection somewhere on the cusp between romantic decay and decrepit
abandonment prevailed. While “shabby-chic”
is usually reserved to describe interior décor, here the shabby clearly
characterized what lay outside these walls. We could only hope the chic was hiding within.
Rounding a bend, in the distance at the far end of the lane, we spotted a man vigorously waving toward us. We had phoned Roberto and Floriana, our hosts for the next few days, only minutes earlier. As we neared their gated compound, his radiant unguarded smile reassured us this had to be Roberto. And frankly, even if by some
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Sun Baked Pool |
Inside the self‑contained property stood a white multi-story home, surrounded by an olive tree dotted garden, and most inviting of all, a swimming pool basking in generous sunshine. The pool stretched out in a sweep of clear, shimmering water that mirrored the sky like polished glass. At one corner, a four-posted shelter by the water’s edge promised shade and cool relief from the Sicilian sun. Lounge chairs beckoned, perfectly positioned for reading, napping, or simply listening to the
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Patio Escape Built by Roberto |
Another feature caught my eye. In another corner of the yard, a patio blended rustic warmth with Mediterranean elegance. At its heart stood a wood-fired fireplace, its wide hearth ready for crackling logs and glowing embers, accompanied I imagined, by the shuttling scrape of a paletta (pizza peel). I could almost smell the scent of grapevine and olive tree branches crackling in the night air. Would that a paletta might serve up its magic in such an inviting retreat, designed for slow meals, and glowing fires. Picturing
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Under Olive Tree |
Following our orientation, we were shown to the informal
elegance of our two-bedroom apartment. Ours
was a tastefully converted basement unit at the end of what had once been a ramp
for autos to enter. Through a glass wall
entry, once hosted garage doors, we entered a spacious living and dining area
that created a restful, homelike atmosphere.
We shared a large bathroom and generous kitchen space. Still, the appeal of what lay outside dwarfed
any thought of remaining inside. Sleep, we suspected, would be its primary function.
While Lenny and JoAnn ventured into Palermo one day, Maria Elena and I, having already explored the capital on a previous visit, chose a different itinerary: the pool. That said, we didn’t spend the entire visit like sunning lizards. One morning, Roberto announced he was taking the day off and insisted on showing us his Sicily.
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Our Apartment's Interior |
We drove westward, with stops along the way. With each surprise destination, our
excitement rose. We paused first at Segesta. There, perched high above a sweeping valley
stood one of the best-preserved Doric temples in the ancient Greek world. Its isolation is so dramatic that the obvious
question arises immediately: why here?
The answer, as it turns out, is tangled in myth and history. Seeking an answer, the history of this once
city quickly leaked onto my pages.
My guidebook pointed out that while Segesta boasts a magnificent Greek temple, it was not a Greek colony in the traditional sense. Its origin traces to the beginning of the 5th century (around 430–420 B.C.). Ancient Greek historian Thucydides claimed the
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Roofless Greek Segesta Temple |
While this Trojan origin story is likely mythological, archaeological evidence suggests they were a distinct local culture deeply influenced by contact with Greek and Phoenician settlers. Aside from this legendary connection to Troy, the city was not ethnically Greek. Yet the Elymian people adopted Greek art, architecture, civic customs, and religion as Hellenic influence spread across Sicily and maintained close political and cultural contact with neighboring Greek cities.
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Among the Temple Bones |
Roberto and I were free to wonder and wander unimpeded through history, able to touch the ancient stone surfaces, silently urging them to tell us what had happened here. The temple, however, chose to remain silent, its incompletion part of its
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Foundation Remains of Segesta |
Gradually, we made our way to the
back of the temple. Navigating a steep-walled, muddy path from the back of the temple, we were able to get a glimpse
of a once navigable river that led to the sea, now tame and lost deep in a ravine. Roberto slithered and slipped his way across the
V-shaped path with me close behind. It
wasn’t pretty, but we made it. Returning
to the others for refreshments, I noticed a man diligently at work cleaning mud
from his trousers with napkins and bottled water—one out of three—he clearly
hadn’t made it.
There was more to Segesta than the temple. A convenient shuttle bus ride away, up a dusty adjacent slope, brought us to the remains of the fortified settlement of Segesta that included its amphitheater atop Monte Barbaro. Segesta’s strategic position overlooked key inland and coastal routes, making it politically
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Empty Seats of the Segesta Theater |
A well-preserved highlight is the Greek theater carved into the hillside late in the third century B.C. and rediscovered in 1822. Here theatrical presentations took place during religious festivals. Modern performances began in 1967, and since 2015, performances have occurred annually. Capable of seating 4000 spectators, it features an amazing panorama of the surrounding countryside and a beguiling blue sea off in the hazy distance. I sat for some time on one of the stone seats imagining those around me filled with attendees to some religious enactment, pantomime, or classic Greek tragedy of Sophocles or Euripides. Would that these stones, that heard them all, might reprise their rhyme, rhythm, and music once more. I closed my eyes to dream what the birth of theater may have been like:
The air carries the buzz of the throbbing crowd through the open bowl of stone—people greeting friends, vendors moving through the aisles offering cushions and fruit, the rustle of cloaks and sandals scraping the stone floor. The noise fades into a tense quiet as the penetrating, reedy tone of an aulos preludes the measured rhythms of the chorus, something close to a chant. Shortly, the resonant voices of the actors take up, orating poetry with the occasional stamping of feet in ritual dance.
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The Roman Fasces, Evidence |
We stomped the dust from our feet and moved on
to the town of Erice. We never learned
whether it held ancient treasures, for Roberto’s goal here was for us to enjoy
the best cannoli in all of Sicily. He
had the advantage, for by this point, we were thirsty and hungry, ready for
anything. Cannolo simply means “little
tube,” but in Sicily, it has become something close to a cultural
institution. Food historians trace
cannoli to the city of Palermo during the period of Arab rule (9th–11th
centuries).
Roberto claimed they made the best cannoli at Erice Bar in the village of Napola near Trapani on Sicily’s western coast and was out to prove it. Despite its modest look, it has become one of the most famous cannoli stops in the region, and many Sicilians like Roberto consider it a must-visit for the dessert. Here, each cannolo shell is piped full of filling when ordered with sheep milk ricotta, sugar, citrus, pistachios, and
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Filled & Cut Erice Bar Cannoli |
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Trapani Salt Flats |
Mediterranean. The sea salt is harvested from a network of shallow coastal basins separated by narrow earthen walls. Roberto drove us throughout this system of lagoons, pointing out how the seawater is channeled from the Mediterranean through these basins and left to evaporate under the Sicilian sun. They have been producing salt here for over 2000 years. Long before refrigeration,
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Snow-Like Fields of Salt |
The hordes of salt are so large
that tractors ply the rectangular salt pens to corral it into mountainous
piles. From a distance, the piles looked
like winter snow until one remembered we were standing in Sicily in the
Mediterranean sun. While they await
shipment, these pyramids of salt are covered with terracotta tiles to protect
them from rain. Almost like currency, salt
was a valuable commodity in ages past. It shaped trade routes, triggered wars, affected
taxes, and even empires. For Trapani, its
link to salt continues, hardly changed.
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Another Pie into the Oven |
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Floriana, Len, and Me Puffing Away |
The following day, we departed for
Naples and Calitri, ending an idyllic, hard-to-replicate itinerary that traced the Sicilian
coastline. But not all of it was due to
the locations we chose to explore, which in themselves were exquisite, but more
so because of the wonderful and extremely gracious people we met wherever we’d
hesitated.
Why bother with more? There is always Sicily, where ancient temples outlast empires and memories linger long after your departure. After a two-week stint there, we had only tasted the wine. Don’t wait and confine it to your dreams, after all, graveyards are filled with buried dreams.
Paolo
















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