Blanca & Ian's Travels Sicily Trip Report - 2009
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Modica |
The painted clock tower.
Not clickable - but the rest are . . .
Accommodations
Le
Magnolie http://www.lemagnoliehotel.it/ Accommodations: Rm La Calle. 110€ Very nice double-twinned (pushed together to make a double). Satellite TV via SKY, mini fridge, Jacuzzi tub, small balcony, good-sized shared rooftop balcony, breakfast room, wine tasting room Located in downtown Modica Bassa The Negatives:
Can't really drive up to it. Park & walk. |
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Our living room |
Our room |
Bath |
View from rooftop terrace |
Rooftop terrace |
View from room balcony |
Day by Day
Day 9 Sunday May 31 Up until
this point of the trip, we had visited places that are very common
destinations. Taormina & Ortygia are ancient & they were
touristed in Roman times let alone by the bused in cruise ship visitors
of today. When I was planning the trip, we decided that it would
be a good idea to base ourselves in one place for 4 nights after the
initial flurry of activity to visit those ‘must see’ spots. After playing with the itinerary in many ways, it finally made sense to
rest a bit around the baroque towns in the south east part of We packed & left Ortygia easily Sunday morning. Traffic was light – except when I pulled over in Siracusa to adjust my GPS. Why is that? The roads can be absolutely empty, but as soon as you do something different – turn around, pull over etc – there will be an endless parade of cars for the next 5 minutes? I know, Murphy at work . . . Anyway,
even Siracusa’s rotary was vacant of mania so the drive to the highway
was fine. We jumped on the nice 4 lane freeway (E45) that looped
southwest heading towards Modica. No traffic. Beautiful
scenery. The sun was shining. I wasn’t really minding the
map since my English honey was telling me what to do. I knew the 4
lane freeway ended just past Nota. We skipped Nota btw because we
planned to side trip to A really nice side benefit of a GPS is that you can eliminate 90% of the map arguments that you have with your spouse aka your navigator. Now you have an anonymous, inanimate object that you both can swear at. Ahh . . . togetherness . . . So around noon on Sunday, we approached Modica from the east. And entered into mayhem. Geographically,
Modica’s main drag with several forks lays in the bottom of a valley
in the old riverbed of connecting rivers. Since a massive flood in
1902, the rivers are now buried underground & the town climbs up
from these ‘riverbeds’ on all sides. So it’s actually easy
to drive through once you descend into Modica's 'valley." Except
on Sunday at noon when every resident in town is parked on this main
drag & or circling looking for parking. The main street was a
zoo. People, cars, buses everywhere. My GPS – yes, HER
again – kept insisting that I turn up alleyways that dead-ended with
stairs or were blocked by parked cars or were seemingly too narrow for a
car. I knew the hotel was on a street that ran parallel & only
one block west. After driving up & down the main street (Corso
Umberto of course) I spiked up a side street thinking there might be a
back way in. But in Modica, a side street takes you up. And
up fast. After a couple of hairpin turns we were high above Modica
when SHE tells me to turn right – and down a 50 ft staircase.
No, I don’t think so. I have no desire to relive that scene in
'The Italian Job.' I parked the car briefly to calm my nerves.
Then it was down into the fray on Corso U again – which sports not 1
but 2 rotaries smack dab in the middle of things. I finally
located a parking spot at the north end of the lower town on a street
near the bus stop. We locked the car & walked to the hotel –
again. This was getting to be a habit. |
Bird Shit Stairs |
Corso Umberto |
Hotel 'road' Last door on the left |
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This
hotel was also a roll of the dice. It was a new boutique hotel
with only 7 rooms & very few reviews anywhere. Once again it
proved a perfect spot for us. Our room had a large living room, a
large bedroom & a bath with a Jacuzzi tub. Very modern décor
& as needed - a balcony – a small one looking over the alley in
front & the rooftops but big enough to feed our habit. The
hotel also had a rooftop terrace that looked over the main part of the
town. No one used this but us. They also had a breakfast
room – with a modest breakfast every morning & a wine tasting room
that we never used. |
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Osteria dei Sapori Perduti |
Corso Umberto in motion |
Modica close-up |
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After
breakfast we decided to head to The bus
stop where we started was 4 kms from the touristed center of the
‘eastern’ Ibla. Are you understanding the problem here?
It was hot & 2 passersby who we asked independently told us not to
walk, it was too far. They both suggested the ‘autobus’.
Easier said then done when you don’t know which bus or bus stop or
where to get tickets or schedule. We walked for 45 minutes or so
in the blazing sun & ended up hailing a taxi when desperation kicked
in. 10€ well spent. The driver left us in the main piazza
by San Giorgio which is tourist central for the eastern Ibla. The
road connecting the 2 Iblas was narrow & twisty & descended down
& then headed back up circuitously. This part of Ragusa Ibla
is the Unesco part – and it showed. All of the buildings were
nicely cleaned & ‘prettified’ - this place was geared for
tourists even though they were pretty much a no-show on this day. Pretty shops
& pretty streets etc. Not like the grittier Siracusa or Modica
at all. We stopped for lunch in a ristorante at the east end of
the piazza (U Saracinu) & had an OK, albeit expensive meal of mixed
appetizer & pasta primis for 29€ (my wife said rip-off). We
walked out to the beautiful park – the Giardino Ibleo - at the eastern
end for some photo ops & it didn’t disappoint. But overall,
Ragusa Ibla just felt slightly unreal somehow. Hard to describe
why, but too polished I guess. We taxied back to the bus stop in
the new town. We were too hot & tired for any other options
& we wanted to be on the 5 pm bus. The ride back to Modica
offered spectacular views of Ragusa Ibla as we left the town. We
discovered that this bus also drops people in the center of Modica if
you ask. |
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Ragusa Ibla - lookout view |
Park in Ragusa Ibla |
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Ragusa Ibla - looking southeast |
Ragusa Ibla |
Ragusa - Bus station Note: weird stairs |
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These were shot by my wife through a
bus window hurtling around corners just south of Ragusa. |
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Ragusa Ibla |
Ragusa Ibla |
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Once again we asked the girl at reception in our hotel for dining choices – there were actually 3 different girls but one of them was the best with restaurant suggestions it seemed. She suggested a restaurant in Modica Alta (yeah, that’s right - the high part) for dinner – at the La Locanda del Colonnello. This restaurant is across the street in an alleyway from its partner hotel, the Palazzo Failla - which was out of our budget. Since the
restaurant was in Modica Alta, we decided that this was our opportunity to
walk up. This would allow us to see the |
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San Giorgio & its stairs |
Going up |
The view from the other side |
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I'm a sucker for arches |
Spooky at night |
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Excursion Day! It’s Excursion Day! I know, I know that yesterday's trip to Ragusa was an excursion but to a Road Warrior like me, a true excursion involves driving & in particular: driving into the unknown over interesting roads. I got what I wanted. So we got
an early start because we were heading to Caltagirone for ceramics
shopping & on to Piazza Armerina for the Villa Romana del Casale &
its 'best in the world' Roman mosaics. We hopped on E45 which is a
fast 2 lane road (and goes right across the bottom of the island).
After the |
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Scala di Santa Maria del Monte |
In detail |
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Looking down |
The Duomo |
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And then . . . SHE kicked in again & demanded that we exit just before Piazza Armerina. Silly me, I listened & 2 turns later I was heading down a narrow paved one lane road through a forest. And then it turned into gravel. Hmm. This can’t be right. I backed up until I could turn around. Then ignoring HER squeals, I got back on the main hwy & SHE came to HER senses & directed us through lower Piazza Armerina, back under the hwy & on to the Villa Romana del Casale. From the
entry road there is a parking area to the left for 1€. You then
run the gauntlet of ticky-tacky to the entrance. This site is a
Roman villa that they are gradually excavating. Most of the site is
covered with aluminum structure suspending a light-reducing roof.
You view from walkways built well above the ground to preserve the site
but let you get inside. It spoils your photos though because of the
crosshatching of the roof supports. I know: whine, whine, whine. |
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Except starting back . . . We left the Villa & SHE (that English bitch on the GPS) kicked in directing us into Piazza Armerina. I was wary after HER forest trek so when SHE told me turn right, I turned left in the southern outskirts of PA. Bad move. We went up. And up. Into the narrow abyss of upper Piazza Armerina. I met a woman in a Fiat on a narrow one lane car-lined incline & she refused to give way. Both me & the truck behind me had to back up & dive to the side to let this bimbette through (my wife’s term btw or close to it . . . the driver was young & blonde). This is where I needed my electronic emergency brake trick again. I scorched the clutch nicely here. After another block, I bailed on that route & tried another. This time, I followed a car ahead of me. I figured that he knew where he was going (northerly) & if he fit through the street, then I should be able to also. This was not fun. Some of the streets were really narrow & some of the turns were . . . well . . . tight. After a harrowing couple of minutes of roaring down teeny-tiny alleys & through small piazzas, we reached a main piazza & a sign pointed towards Caltagirone, so I went for it. It spit us out of town onto an extension of SS124 . . . yeah, the twisty one mentioned above. By this
time, my wife was in near-hysterics & just wanted back onto the nice
calm highway that we had arrived on. But we were heading in a
different direction & I refused to go back through Piazza Armerina
again in case I got into the maze of narrow streets . . . again. I
also knew that we were headed in the right general direction. After
about 15 kms of twisting roads & a near miss on another more modern
hill town, I saw a sign for This time I took the calmer route back to Caltagirone & on down to Modica & ignored the SHE bitches request for the scenic route. I swear she was pleading. We had an uneventful drive with jaw dropping scenery in all directions. Wow. It certainly was an adventure! My wife got her ceramics - although, never enough, never enough . . . And I got to see those fabulous mosaics. And to top it off, my wife even complimented me on my car piloting skill threading through Piazza Armerina - and this is an extremely rare occurrence. Back in
the warm cocoon of Modica, we opted for another suggestion from the hotel
girl: the Ristorante Torre
d'Oriente (Via Posteria, 29 – 0932948160) which was up the hill
again but only part way. It had gotten windy so we couldn’t eat on
their terrace – which has a great view btw. We snuck out for windy
cigarettes & enjoyed the Modica sprawl at night. Dinner was
superb. The food & presentation was at least 1 Star Michelin but
like the Locanda above, they slipped a bit on service as the restaurant
got busier. They gave us teasers & sparkling wine on
seating. We split a beef carpaccio. Then we split an
incredible ravioli – stuffed with eggplant, ricotta etc. A simple
pasta shouldn't taste this good. Then we both a had a roast pork
contorno with 6 - yeah 6 - French fries. All wonderful. All
local produce. With a bottle of local ’06 Serasuolo di |
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From the Torre d'Oriente |
Roast Pork with 6 French Fries |
Clock Tower from Torre d'Oriente |
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Since we arrived in Roma, we had been on the go - doing something, going somewhere - every single day we were in motion. This day was our holiday within our holiday. We didn’t get in a car, a bus, a taxi or a plane all day. So we did nothing on Day 12. Well, not completely nothing but close. We visited several of the local chocolate shops & bought some giveaways. Modica’s chocolate is quite different than any I have had. It has a grainy texture & shops sell it in a variety of cocoa percentages & flavors. My wife saw a blouse she liked & went back without me later to try things on & she bought one. We replenished our dwindling duty-free liquor supply. We had lunch at the café with the black awnings & ate one of those "fried flat thingies" for 1.50€. They looked much better than they tasted btw. We had some gelato. You get the drift. We needed a no-pressure day. For dinner, we repeated - yes repeated - at Osteria dei Sapori Perduti. This time we blew the budget & had a great meal for 34€. A litre of jug red wine. That great pasta/meatball soup again. An appetizer with a mix of goodies - arancino di riso, cheese, olives . . . veal with eggplant for contorno for me & fried 'meat' (veal) for my wife. Good basic Sicilian food. A winner again. We really liked Modica. Every corner, every turn offered a different view of the city. The people we bounced off of were very friendly. They tolerated our nearly complete lack of Italian & helped us smoothly wherever we went. The Corso Umberto had a wonderful mix of modern shops, palazzos, schools, chocolate shops, cafes . . . modern small town Sicilian life. They were used to tourists, but we were still the rarer exception rather than the rule. Everything you needed was closely at hand but a café was never more than 50 meters away. Step a block up the hill & you stepped back 300 years. Every time you looked around, you were surrounded by amazing vistas of stone houses, piled on stone houses with a splattering of churches. A little rough & basic in the stark Sicilian way certainly. And yet you could be on the hwy in 10 minutes. It was a good base. The Le Magnolie was also a great choice. The staff was very nice & very helpful with rock solid restaurant suggestions, transportation questions etc etc. We had the biggest room in the house (La Calle) for 110€ per night including breakfast – albeit pretty basic - but the waitress did make outstanding espresso doppio & cappuccino every morning. And the view from the rooftop terrace is not to be missed – day or night. Highly recommended.
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A stitched night panorama from the hotel's terrace |
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Chocolate |
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My travel companion - my wife |