On 14th September I arrived in Venice. Although long since a novelty, sailing into Venice at sunrise is still a spine-tingling pleasure for me. My short sea cruise, and the attendant thirty-six hours of freedom from all responsibility which it had provided, was reaching its conclusion. Before me lay the prospect of driving away from Venice, on unfamiliar and far busier roads than those to which I am accustomed, and finding somewhere to settle.
I drove off the ferry and onto Mussolini's 'Ponte Littorio' which, since 1933, has been the only road link over the lagoon between Venice and the mainland. Heading west towards Milan, I passed by many interesting towns and cities worthy of my time; Padua, Vicenza, Verona, Mantua.
Because I decided, on this occasion, to ignore the undoubted charms of these places I was at Milan far earlier than I had expected so chose to press on further. Beyond Turin the motorway runs through more scenic country than hitherto and it began to rise towards the Alps. By late afternoon I had reached the entrance to the tunnel that would take me through the mountain and bring me, within half an hour, into France.
Flakes of the life of a sensate man; random notes and pictures that endeavour to capture capricious thoughts, largely of unreasonable and mysterious origin, before they leave forever the wandering mind of a life pilgrim stumbling towards the point where parallel lines meet. “Give me the sensate mind, that knows The vast extent of human woes!” M. Robinson Angelina II. 1796
Monday, September 19, 2011
All at sea
The trip on which I am presently prosecuting was conceived at some time during the days immediately preceding the twenty-fifth of August when an inexplicable notion, a notion of wanting to get far away from my home for a while, struck me. So strong was this notion that, within days of it penetrating my psyche, I had booked a passage from Patras to Venice for myself and my car for the earliest date on which I could reasonably leave.
Initially I dreamt of arriving in Venice and allowing the breezes of fate blow me where they may but through the two weeks or so following my rather sudden rash booking I did essay to give my trip some skeletal form. I gave it an ultimate destination. For most of my adult life I have toyed with the idea of visiting Ireland. Ireland being the birthplace and occasional home of many of the writers I most revere, I have wanted to experience something of that from which they drew their inspiration; to seek their shades in in their mortal stamping grounds. Yeats at Sligo, Green at Achill Island, Synge on the Aran Islands and so on. When I was younger my time away from the income-mill was limited and the need to escape for the summer to places with reliably fine weather strong. Through the years during which I have chosen to exile myself in Greece I have felt bound, when leaving home at all, to honor family commitments in the U.K.. The loss of my mother last year, together with the fact that all my children and grand children have only recently been with me has eased my need to be in the United Kingdom. Only my sister and her family have I not seen this year. She, sister Susan, lives in Scotland, not too far from Troon from where a ferry runs to Larne in Ireland. En-route for Troon I shall take the opportunity of calling on her and resting for a while in the delightful, “Wee County”; Clackmananshire.
I have given this post the title of ‘All at sea’ because that is where I am. For too long I seem to have been living in a state of dissatisfied contentment or, perhaps, contented dissatisfaction; happy enough but regretting not doing any of those creative things that give substance to, and justification for, being; blogging for one. I am hoping that, among many other things, this trip will break the mould of contented lethargy that I have, over recent months, allowed to shape me. Θα δουμε (Tha thoumae) is a much hackneyed phrase here in Greece; it means ‘we shall see!
When I left home early yesterday afternoon I had driven only a few hundred metres when I remembered that I had turned off neither the power supply to the house, nor the water pump, nor had I locked the front door. Bothered that I should need to, I turned back to deal with these things. When I finally did get away my thoughts turned again to considering why I was doing what I was doing. Why was I leaving? The sea was a beautiful shade of rich royal blue, the gentle swell high-lit here and there with brilliant white crests. The sea here is invariably a beautiful shade of blue but yesterday as I drove north beside the Messinian Gulf it was as beautiful as I have ever seen it and the mountains that back it, usually rather hazy, were unusually clear. It was as if the mountains and the sea were conspiring to change my mind; to make me consider the folly of leaving all of this for a place notorious for grey skies and all but incessant rain. As I drove on beyond the coast my route took me on winding mountain roads through delightful landscapes of olive grove, fig orchard, river valley, ancient forest, vineyard and villages, hardly changed for centuries, with wonderfully exotic names. Somewhere on this country road between the Messinian Gulf and the Ionian Sea I came upon a T-junction at which I could turn either left or right. WrongIy I chose left but it did not matter, it just meant that I joined the Ionian coast road to Patras a little further south than I had intended to.
I arrived at the port at sunset, seven-thirty, and was scheduled to board the ferry at ten-thirty. I boarded at midnight. But traveling was ever subject to delay and disappointment and rather more than that which we complain about nowadays; at least I did not have to wait for a favourable wind! Patience, surely, is a prerequisite of all travel.
And so, for better or for worse, my trip is underway. Sitting here writing this post in the privacy of my comfortable cabin I am rather pleased that it is.
Saturday, September 10, 2011
Into the unknown
At the beginning of August my younger daughter arrived here with her three children. Part of the way through her stay my two eldest grand-children arrived overlapping the arrival of their mother, her partner and their two young children; these last visitors left yesterday morning. Through the course of these past weeks life as I know it, my quiet ‘normal life’, has been ‘on-hold’. Instead of filling my days with reading, writing and generally pottering about, I have been commuting daily to one beach or another, one café or another, one ice-cream parlour or another, one bar or another or one taverna or another. I have been playing the role of a holiday-making grandfather. It is not an easy role for me to play.
At some time towards the end of my holiday-making a peculiar desire came upon me; a desire to get far away from here for a while. I had a disturbing feeling that, if I stayed here for any length of time after my visitors had left I would slip back into the uncreative furrow of lethargy I had been ploughing through the months before they arrived. I resolved to yield to this unsolicited escapist emotion and leave here as soon after my last visitors left as was reasonable. On 25th August I booked myself a one-way ticket for 12th September on a ferry to Italy. I leave here on Monday with a very loose itinerary - I shall be heading towards Ireland to look for what inspired Yeats and, perhaps, to look for something of myself. I have no idea at present about when I shall be ready to return from wherever my journey will end.
Through the past several months this blog has, along with many other of my pursuits, suffered considerable neglect; neglect due to involuntary lassitude and, more recently, to shameless hedonism. Through the weeks ahead I hope that my travels will terminate the lethargic stupor into which I have slipped and invigorate creativity sufficiently for me to resume regular, interesting and thought provoking, blog posts.
Monday, July 18, 2011
Fish n'chip night at Fini
Swordfish, a tasty, filling, close textured fish is popular in Finicounda; it is popular with me too!
Readers of this blog who may be interested in this fish can find, or can try to find, fuller information at the link below; if nothing else it is worth a look at:
http://fotis-fishingingreece.blogspot.com/2009/09/swordfish-greek.html?spref=bl
Readers of this blog who may be interested in this fish can find, or can try to find, fuller information at the link below; if nothing else it is worth a look at:
http://fotis-fishingingreece.blogspot.com/2009/09/swordfish-greek.html?spref=bl
Monday, July 4, 2011
Ο Νικος Κυριοπουλος
Nico herding his goats, March 2008 |
Nico, with his wife Fortini, farmed goats and olives, grew vegetables and kept domestic hens; they were as close to being self sufficient as it is possible to be in a largely retailer dependent society.
Through the century beginning soon after the exodus of Greece’s hitherto Ottoman masters and ending at the outbreak of the last world war, Mystraki developed as a clan farming community; the Kiriopoulos surname common, as yet it is, to every inhabitant. Most of the land around the village that is not presently cultivated for growing olives, presently scrubby wilderness, once supported all manner of crops, not only to feed the human population but also the considerable animal population. Domestic animals; pigs, goats, sheep, bovines, to provide meat and diary products for the table; horses, donkeys and oxen for transport and drawing bulk, water in particular, and agricultural implements.
Life made the landscape. Animals foraging undergrowth kept woodland accessible; browsing goats adequately cleared inaccessible uncultivated land. Water came to the hamlet of Valanidia, a kilometre beyond Mystraki and represented now only by my home, in ox-drawn bowsers, huge barrels laid horizontally on axels, keeping open a track from the village well in the valley between Velanidia and Mystraki to the house. After the war increasing mechanization, better roads and cheap imported food led to the abandonment of the still almost mediaeval life of country villages in favour of what was considered a ‘better life’ in the cities.
When, in 1998, I arrived to take possession of the house, Nico was here to welcome me. Why an englishman would want to buy and throw money for restoration at a mouldering eighty year old pile in which generations had been born, lived and died without any benefit of running water, sanitation or electricity, had obviously puzzled him but he was overwhelmingly grateful that I had chosen to do so; Nico appreciated and valued his environment, both natural and built. A gentle man in every respect and a natural philosopher, Nico had had very little formal education. Barely literate, although he had aspired to being able to write and read a shopping list, he was nonetheless an autodidact of all that is essential to life; horticultural skills, innate knowledge of when and where to sow and when to harvest; how to deliver into the world, raise, slaughter with compassion and butcher domestic animals; viniculture (although his wine is something of an acquired taste!), cheese making, bread oven maintenance, how to repair and fashion tools; repair and build shelter, how to magically improvise and re-cycle. Much more than this Nico had cultivated the difficult art of thinking, of using the most primary sources to make sense of and know the sheer joy of living. No one has taught me more about the privilege of living, of being able to feel the inner peace and tranquility that comes with being in harmony with the very rhythm of life than has Nico. Rather than being formally taught, this learning was somehow assimilated from the man, by being with him during long contemplative silent conversations and, when he did try to verbally communicate, of understanding all he had to say about the seasons, weather, plants, diet and all that is good in the world; Nico had no capacity for negative ideas. Nico and I did not share much spoken conversation, he did not have a word of english and I, even after half-heartedly studying the language for over fifteen years, can not claim a facility for speaking greek that is even close to fluent, but from our first meeting communication between us was never a problem and such greek as I have owes more than a little to Nico’s patience and understanding.
With Nico’s passing his goats will go from the village, the paths and tracks which their twice-daily wandering and browsing kept open will become overgrown and impassable. In a matter of months fast growing wild pear will provide shelter for more vulnerable trees and shrubs which in turn will grow tall and strong and ungratefully shade out the wild pear that had protected them. In very few years large areas of land will revert to impenetrable woodland. It is a cycle of which Nico was, and we are, a part; a cycle that always was and will ever thus will be.
The road to Maria's Taverna
Sunday afternoon and just ten minutes away from the beach and the promise of whitebait, stewed goat, roast chicken, fresh salads and cool libations of Maria's delicious dry rosé
Sticking with it
As far as my resolution for this week is concerned, so far so good. I have written a medium length post this morning. It is an important and serious post, which I want to re-read, digest and possibly edit before I publish it meanwhile I have this to offer:
Last Saturday evening I drew up beside this contraption in a petrol station. When I first travelled to Greece, in the 19060s, these single-cylinder, petrol engines on axels were common maids-of-all-work which were then fast making the ubiquitous greek donkey redundant. The engines were used for everything and anything that needed a source of power, ploughs, rotavators, water pumps, saws, drills and when the farmer needed to go to town he could hitch on a trailer and use his engine to pull his 'truck'. They must have been durable machines, there are still quite a few around; this one is 45 years old. I doubt it has had an emission test for a while though!
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