• Walking Rowan
  • Anne Simmons

Italy and Greece 2025

See Venice and Florence, walk 420+ km to Rome, relax on Hydra, see Athens and home Baca selengkapnya
  • Awal trip
    10 Oktober 2025

    A Staggered Start: SYD-MEL-CGK

    10 Oktober, Australia ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    All packed, Indonesian visas done on-line, and now to Sydney Domestic, then to Melbourne, to Jakarta, and tomorrow early, to Dubai and then Rome. Qantas and Emirates cannot be as bad as Air France, so there is a high level of confidence that our one checked bag will be with us in Jakarta, and on a carousel in Rome shortly after we arrive. In Rome, we catch a train to Venice, which Anne has booked.

    I have never been to Venice, but we have lived in a house called 'San Marco' for nearly 30 years, so it is about time. The house was built by RP Gowing, whose wife was Eliza Carlotta Lucia Vanzetti, b 19 Oct 1883 in Garda, Brescia, Lombardia, Italy. That is close to Venice, and they spent their honeymoon partly in Venice. Hence the house name.

    Customs will be a new experience on the way over. We have more medical supplies than usual, so here's hoping that all works smoothly. Plenty of time at each interchange...

    Security at Sydney was fine. They wanted to check the blue canister, especially when Anne explained that it was where she kept her drugs. I think they had seen it all before.

    Transit in Jakarta, where the case appeared on the carousel almost as we arrived, and then immigration was just as fast. Too fast: the Emirates check-in desk was not open when we reached departures. The air smelled of clove cigarettes, and at the exits of tropics, but we did not go out. 50 years ago Jakarta was the first stop when I left Sydney, and at midnight there were thousands of people in the dark, just watching planes and passengers from the flat roof of a single-storey terminal. That whole terminal would fit in this one Departures hall…
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  • CKG-DUB-Rome and Venice

    11 Oktober, Uni Emirat Arab ⋅ ☀️ 34 °C

    Long wait in Jakarta, in a fairly crowded lounge. Anne scratched her arm retrieving the blue canister from the lounge fridge as we left, but the Emirates cabin crew were on to it with disinfectant and bandages, and checks though the night/flight. We tried to sleep the whole way as it was 8pm Italy time to 330 am. Uneventful and punctual until we almost landed and did a fly-around.

    Dubai Airport packed at 5am- it is about half as full now (8:20 local time)… so the shower queue diminished. We wrangled lots of ice for the few hours here for the meds: if the iceblock works for the flight, and we have a powerpoint on the train, we will have overcome our biggest logistical hurdle.

    An Airbus from Dubai to Rome. Left a little late, but significantly nicer to be in than the Boeing to Dubai. Watched a few more films, while Anne continued using the chance to watch several years worth of White Lotus undisturbed. Landed around the right time, then a 500m queue for Immigration. Tomorrow is supposedly the chaos day when they switch to fingerprinting everyone, and stop stamping passports… glad we avoided that! After that - BAG WAS THERE! (Not sure now what to write about for the next week). Packed train to Rome, a wait for the Venice train (self-inflicted: we chose 4:30 as we did not want to risk the 3:30 train in case the flight/bag were late), so writing this from a cafe a Rome Station.

    And so to Venice. Comfortable train left at 430 and arrived at 8:03 …a few minutes late, but we went down and around to the next platform and the train to the island left at 8:06. Then a longish (20 mins) and sweaty walk to the hotel via a small supermarket, which did not have the Woolies or IGA efficiencies. Hotel is fine so far. Guests a little lagged.

    10,092 steps, 6.7km … and that was just airports and stations. Only 3 flights… but with luggage, so we will call that 6.
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  • Venice and San Marco

    12 Oktober, Australia ⋅ 🌬 26 °C

    Lovely, sunny day. No real issues with jetlag. We had breakfast at the hotel (coffee average, breakfast very American buffet) and walked into Venice. It is pretty special. Some areas were crowded, but then others were almost empty. We followed the signs to walk across the Rialto Bridge, then San Marco Square, then Santa Maria della Salute. A gondola across the main canal, lunch in a little cafe, and back, after going the wrong way many times. Venice has 118 islands and 435 bridges, we read, and we crossed at least 200 of the bridges (okay, 100, but some multiple times).

    No organs being played in the churches, but amazing paintings and statues.

    It seemed far more crowded in the afternoon, but that might have been us getting tired…. We both felt a bit jaded by the time we were back at the hotel- perhaps not quite used to walking 7hrs almost, despite breaks, so we sat around, and had dinner early in the hotel as the lag set in. It's a Hilton, so mid-level expectations met, but the staff immediately agreed to put Pandora's freezer-gel in their freezer overnight so we have it for the train.

    Around 25,500 steps, 19km and 18 flights… all bridges.
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  • Florence

    13 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    Leisurely morning packing and breakfasting, then the 25 minute walk to the Venice St Lucia station in the sunshine. Our train to Florence left exactly at 10:26. It was full, so we were not seated together: both on the window, though, and 3 rows apart.

    Brother Kent rang during the trip to tell me that our 95 yo uncle Robert had died. We saw him at his home north of Newcastle a week or so ago. He was at home, but had been unwell and declining. It had been a possibility, so the memorial service for him will be in November, once we are back. He had no children. Very sad.

    Funny to be in Florence on a day like this, where centuries of mankind have lived and worked and created great things. We lit a candle for Robert in the Duomo.

    Only a short walk (more 2.5 mins than 25) from the train station to our B&B. It’s on the 3rd floor, and below our huge window is a narrow, closed-off street, full of parked Vespas and the sound of people. It is close to pretty much everything. We walked to the Duomo, via several churches, and then past the Uffizi, a copy of David, a few other palaces, the old bridge, some churches, and up to the hill overlooking the city for the fabled sunset.

    For dinner we stopped at a trattoria on the way back. An American couple sat next to us. He was a retired principal and had some strong views on why the current generation was struggling with traditional education. He did not blame the parents for everything. He also despaired for the US because so many States were different to NY and California. Dinner was interesting and good, though.

    Back to the B&B at 9:15 to book tickets for galleries and gardens.

    16,569 steps/12.8km and 17 floors.

    RIP Robert
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  • Florence Day 2 - The Uffizi

    14 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    Breakfast at 8, and then some sitting around. A little tired: partly jet lag, partly the street being noisier than expected overnight, and partly a real estate agent ringing at 12:30 am to suggest a house for Nicolas.

    Last night, Anne bought tickets for the Uffizi Gallery for 1pm today, plus a few other places to see on Wednesday. Florence was the birthplace of the Renaissance, the Medici family were the biggest sponsors and collectors for generations, and much of what they gathered is now displayed in the building that was once the municipal offices (hence the name) after the last of the family donated their art to the city over 400 years ago. You, dear reader, already knew that, but I didn’t, so we sort of had to see it…

    Yesterday's queue for the Gallery looked very long (400m?). We were hoping to avoid some of the wait by buying tickets early. I think I prefer walking around to standing in queues, but there is a cost to being a tourist.

    We were at the Uffizi before 12, and joined the aimless queue. A line of many Germans and Americans being managed (or not) by Italians - what could go wrong? Small glitch in that the tickets for today required me to log on, but no wifi, and my eSim (from Orange - a French company - should have trusted my instincts) would not work. We crept along in the queue hoping for a technological miracle, and hoping that proximity to the massive Duomo was a positive. Between me cursing - quite imaginatively - the French and Italian, and Anne using her mobile, we had tickets to show before time. Around 1230 the queue shrank enormously as a few Uffizi staff had sorted people by ticket times and formed multiple queues.

    The Gallery was spectacular. The building is hundreds of years old, and very grand, and the statues and paintings were equally good. Roman statues? Hundreds of those. Botticelli? Rembrandt? Michelangelo? Da Vinci? Caravaggio? Duerer? Roomfuls of them. And the rooms were often spectacular without any art at all.

    Walked back to the B&B afterwards for a quiet rest, then Anne went back to the 6pm mass in the Duomo (for Robert). Dinner in a trattoria nearby, again with New Yorkers beside us - but this time a young guy who was moving to Italy based on a Polish grandfather who settled in Bologna, where the rest of his family still live.

    21,000steps, 14.6 km, 12 floors (Anne’s data: I missed the km to and from Mass).
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  • Florence 3 - Pitti Palace, Boboli Garden

    15 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

    We woke early and felt stranded. I had not loaded yesterday's blog, so no comments to check first thing. It ruined a well-established routine. On the bright side, no phone calls overnight, and less noise, so it felt like a normal, non-lagged Wednesday morning.

    Another warm and almst cloudless day in Florence. We headed off towards the Pitti Palace around 8:30, thinking we might find an ATM that did not look suspect on the way. We didn't, and were there well before 9am. Our tickets were for 10, but there was no crowd, and they scanned us in anyway.

    The Pitti Palace was a surprise. From the outside it looks quite bland, as if built by ancestors of the people who built the Crows Nest Metro station - the one in red brick. Inside it was like the Uffizi, but far fewer people, even though it was bigger.

    The Uffizi might have the top 0.1% of their art, but the Palace has the next 0.1%, and felt far nicer because if was less crowded, and it also had different exhibits. It was also where people had lived, not just wall-space, floor-space and ceiling-space for priceless art. Napoleon's bathroom was quite the thing - not enough shelf space for all Nicolas's bits and pieces, but very light and roomy. Spectacular ceilings, and also spectacular furniture: a table top that looked like a magnificent, fine silk tapestry, but was actually almost microscopic gemstones, not stitches.

    The Palace had an exhibition of fashion from the time the Medicis lived there. Strangely, clothes worn by women in the 1700s and 1800s were very similar to some recent fashions. There were sequins like you've never seen, and originals of most 1950s and 1960s designers.

    Then the Garden. The people in Mission Beach could teach them a little about mowing, but walking around corners and seeing ancient Roman statues is something special, as well as views over all parts of Florence.

    Then a walk through the Treasury of the Grand Dukes: translucent, 2,000 year old cups carved from crystal, all sorts of Russian icons, a small-church sized private chapel (an organ, but not being played), china and glassware from 1600 royal dinners etc. It was fascinating, but almost too much to take in. I can understand looking at a painting, but using a cup like that?

    Down into town after wandering through the last of the Palace to find a trustworthy ATM (not that cash is used in many places...), then a hunt through the stalls flogging "genuine Florentine leather" that all had exactly the same items and prices, and the same non-Italian salesmen. Anne had wanted to find the hotel from where they filmed Room with A View... but read that the hotel was real, but the view was not. That was shot elsewhere... so back to the B&B before doing the washing. There is a seedy-looking laundromat just down the road, but the machines worked, so we are loaded up with clean clothes for the big hike.

    Tomorrow we get a 9am train to Lucca. That is an unhurried start as the station is only 5 mins away. Florence is spectacular, but it will be wonderful to be away from city-size crowds. Goodness knows what it is like in peak-season.

    Dinner at a traditional Tuscan trattoria. We braved a table outside, which was great when the wind dropped. No NYers near us … but four from the Gold Coast, with whom we did not have to talk.

    Triangulating from three phones, some 22,800 steps, 17.0km and 56 flights
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  • Train to Lucca, and only 419 km to Rome

    16 Oktober ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    Check news, Wordle, shower, pack, breakfast, finish packing, pay, leave by 8:35. This could be the standard morning for a while to come (other than most things being pre-paid).

    We were at the station in five minutes, then had to wait 15 minutes to see which platform our train was on. It was the milk-run through Lucca, and took 1hr 40 mins, even when late. We started in industrial wasteland, then semi-rural zones, then greenhouses and Tuscan buildings with red-tiled rooves and mostly yellow/ochre walls, plus graffiti.

    Lucca was unexpected. On the train, an American asked Anne whether we were getting the bus to the city, and seemed surprised we were walking. Out the station, across a park, up onto the old city wall, then down, and around a corner to the hotel. It took 5 minutes. Walking to the bus station would have been longer. Too early to check in, but we left our bags and Anne's backpack with Pandora, and walked around Puccini's old home town. By around 1:30, we had seen most of the town, including its many churches (only a few of which were still used as churches and open).

    Lunch on a bench watching people and listening to a busker, then checked into the Diana Hotel. A nice little hotel in a 250 yo building that covers half a small block, mainly because of the courtyard, and it shares the space with a sister hotel. Puccini described the building as a brothel in one of his letters, so it has a colourful past. The staff had agreed immediately to freeze Pandora's pack, so we like them.

    A lot of repacking ahead of the trekking: we will carry the poles, for example, and want the bags to be roughly equal weight. They are picked up at 8am tomorrow, and then every day we are walking, so we will take them to reception when we go to breakfast... the old routine.

    Late afternoon, we promenaded around Lucca on the wall. Lucca is one of the few places in Europe with its 16th C wall still intact, and surrounding the whole old town. The walk is 4.2km, and was fantastic on a warm evening. It was mostly paved, and 3-6 m wide.

    As it’s the start of the Via Francigena (for us), we went to the most dignified of the several churches - smaller, quieter, less gold, more locals, fewer tourists, but just as old - and lit a candle for Amr, too. He and Rosie were the inspiration for thinking that walking hundreds of kms across Europe would be fun.

    Dinner in a small trattoria near the hotel, close to a statue of Guiseppi Garibaldi. Simple and good. A walk around the main streets and churches, and back to the hotel. Tomorrow the Via Francigena!

    By my data, 21,100 steps, 15.8 km and 5 flights, so a quiet day. Tomorrow is a fairly flat walk to Altopascio, which is also c 15km, and also largely on sealed paths rather than trails.

    Good hotel. Breakfast fine, wifi fine, no tea/coffee, biggish room, helpful staff, and incredibly quiet at night.
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  • Lucca to Altopascio

    17 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

    We had breakfast at 7:45 in the Viennese-style hotel dining room. All very good, apart from the lack of DIY coffee: the house offer was a carafe of weak, instant coffee. It was not an issue to tea-totaller Anne, who only needed to find hot water.

    Pandora’s ice pack was delivered as promised, bags repacked, and we left around 8:50. Today is only 19km, but we walked first to the Cathedral because, officially, the Via Francigena section from Lucca starts there. A selfie was taken badly to prove it (and our inability to smile for, or take good, selfies: no need to comment, Al), and we set off east, as if heading back to Florence. It was roads and pavements through outer suburbs of no great interest, industrial areas (including a truck yard for massive semis: there seemed to be one arriving every minute, and they took up most of the narrow access road we had to walk on), then semi-rural zones where sunflowers (dead) were being harvested, a few small towns, and right near the end, some woodland. We reached Altapascio at 1:30 after stopping briefly in a cafe at 12, although the end of today is really the local church, which we walked to later in the afternoon.

    The hotel had a big sign saying check-in was from 2:30, but a man opened the door and checked us in anyway. Our bags were there at reception. Despite the good weather, it is the end of the tourist season here ( to the extent Altopascio might have one), as indicated by the roped-off dining area (Death in Venice??) and the receptionist telling us that dinner was not in the hotel, but at a restaurant 200m away. In addition, his coffee machine is not working, so breakfast is in a cafe another 100m further on. Perhaps a taste of things to come as the camino season winds down?

    We had walked around 20km up to the time we arrived at the hotel. That included walking around in Lucca, so the guide was close to right for us.

    We sat around for while and rested, then walked under the Autostrada and across the trainline to see where dinner and breakfast were. Then a visit to the local church - large but "modern/simple" (say early 20th C), and saw the limited sights of Altopascio. Dinner could not be until 7pm, when the restaurant (which looked good) reopened. So we arrived at 7:05, and the owner guessed our name and gave us a QR code to scan. They had a separate (limited) menu for hotel guests, but it had all we needed. Pennette with gorgonzola and walnuts, cooked veg (spinach, it turned out) with lemon/ spaghetti carbonara and salad. Great bread. Our tourist status was confirmed by families coming in as we were leaving. Just us till then, apart from a sequence of men ordering multiple glasses of white wine. Back to the hotel at 8.

    Hard to rate the hotel on meals, and no tea/ coffee facilities, but wifi works, the room is mid-size and has a balcony.

    Tomorrow is longish - 30km. The next three days are sunny and warm, but then a stretch of days of grey.

    Ended up at 28,995 steps, 23.3 kms and 3 flights…and 401 km to Rome
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  • Altopascio to San Miniato

    18 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

    We left the bags and keys in the room, as instructed, and went to breakfast at 7:30 in a modern-looking cafe up the road. It had everything, and they knew why we were there, but it was a bit intimidating: getting your own breakfast is fine, or ordering normally item by item, but this was an unsettling hybrid where we not sure how it worked.

    Started walking at 8am, when it was cool (8 deg) but no clouds. a long day - 30kms or so. Through the town, then a section on the original paved track (c 600 years old), and rough to walk on like the old samurai trail in Japan - the Old Tokaido Road. Some walking on roads, but mostly dirt tracks, which was a relief after yesterday's roads. Bought some bread at a bakery in a little town, and reached the Cappiano Bridge round 11:30...just on 15 km. The history is a bit overwhelming at times, as there are chronicles recording that people have walked on, lived at and fought over the trails and buildings we walked on or passed for over 1,000 years, and sometimes 2,000+.

    Around midday we were walking along a bank beside the Arno river and it was almost perfect. Easy walking, great views, farmland on one side, olives and trees on the other, lovely temperature, and then church bells at midday. we went up a slow rise to Fucecchio, where we had lunch (carbohydrates, Al) looking out over Tuscany. It was another 8 or 9 km to San Miniato: through the town, across a river, along a small levee bank for ages, across fields, then into town and up the hill to the town, and out to the hotel, which is at the end of a ridge. We arrived around 3;30 with a French lady in tow. She had also booked in here after all the hostels she had rung were closed, and we told her this hotel was at least open.

    It is a lovely hotel. They froze Pandora's ice, we have a fridge, nice room, and breakfast in the hotel... but dinner at a restaurant.

    Showered, relaxed (we had done 32km so far), then walked into town. It is amazing, and the guide books say it is just one of many amazing little towns we will see in the next while. It was a fortress because of its commanding position, and the headquarters for the church (more important than Florence for a time) so a grand cathedral and views on every side.

    Dinner was very good. It was in a packed, noisy restaurant, but the food was good. More carb loading (bruschetta and salamis/spaghetti + chicken and chips/hamburger and salad, plus hazelnut pannacotta and lemon sorbet).

    A big day. 44,187 steps/35.6 km. and 45 floors climbed. We both have tired feet, but nothing really sore, and injury-free (bar Anne's occasional scratches). Tomorrow is a respectable 24kms or so. 372 of them to Rome.
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  • San Miniato to Gambassi Terme

    19 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

    Slept ever so soundly - the quietness, perhaps? - from before 9pm to after 6am. Bags ready at 8, and a breakfast to delight anyone with a sweet tooth, and keep the rest of mankind happy. There were 7 other hikers there... five Australians and two Brits, but using a different tour company, so we may not see them daily.

    Set off at 8:50. 24kms, with the last 5 all uphill. Sunny, and not much breeze. We went through the town, and then it was a wide dirt road (mostly) through olive groves, vineyards, ploughed paddocks and sometimes trees. We passed a few hikers, but we in turn were passed by regular swarms of cyclists of all ages in lycra, all on off-road bikes (mostly electric) and going like the clappers down and often up the hills.

    There was only one small village on the route today, and we reached it mid-morning. Its 12th C church was closed for repairs. Sigeric, the Archbishop of Canterbury who walked the trail back from Rome in 990, mentioned the church in that village in his diary, so the location at least was the real thing.

    Our first rest - and lunch break - was around 1pm. There were no obvious places to stop, so we sat on the edge of the path where there was some grass under some trees, and looked out over Tuscany. Hilly fields being scarified, some sheep walking somewhere, trees, orchards, towns and cities in the distance, and quiet as anything. Idyllic. We saw no-one, apart from two cyclists, who smiled.

    Then the last 6 or 7 kms ... a flat, hard, dirt road through olives and vineyards, then 5kms up through the same. We reached Gambassi Terme around 2:45, and the first building was a church, so we kept our church-a-day ritual going.

    The hotel is an old villa, and we might be the only guests. There was an instruction sheet for us in a perspex box at the door, with the code for the box with keys. Dinner is in a restaurant again, but breakfast is here, in a room with four small tables and red velvet curtains. Pandora in the kitchen fridge/ freezer. That could be safer. We had a fridge in our room yesterday, but unwittingly I used the powerpoint for charging phones…

    The last section was hot and sweaty, so grateful to have a shower that was not as tiny as some: my shoulders almost touched both sides of the cubicle in Altopascio. Washed some clothes, then walked into the “old” city (which was small and unassuming), saw the simple, old church, then back to sit about until dinner from 7pm.

    Dinner was later than planned. We put the restaurant name in Google Maps and were sent a long way to nothing. Turns out it is called a tavern (osteria) and Google maps has a different address. It was the real thing: think 1950s films with rural Italian restaurants. Strangely, we weren’t overly hungry despite all, but we ate anyway. Spaghetti x 2, then salami& cheese and pizza. Talked to the “Englishman” we saw yesterday, who is a Welsh document conservator. Home in time to watch the town bell ring 9.

    38,351 steps, 30.5 kms and 69 flights. 348 km to Rome. Tomorrow is a mere 15km. That is good. Tired feet.
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  • Gambassi Terme to San Gimignano

    20 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    We had the small breakfast room to ourselves, but not the attention of the Italian waitress, who had just dropped an enormous glass platter. No DIY coffee, and croissants in cellophane, but otherwise good.

    Today was a shorter stretch - around 14km. That was a relief in many ways: shins and heels are a little sore after spending so much time on roads. We left around 8:45, walked back through town, through some woods and then perhaps 12km on an unsealed road with non-stop postcard views of Tuscany. It was cool and overcast at first, but then the sun came out and it was T-shirt weather. We passed a church and grotto dedicated to a saint who healed a deaf-mute 400 years ago, then a monastery, and numerous grand farmhouses selling home-grown wine and olive oil.

    San Gimignano is a storybook/movie-set town: an old walled town with numerous squares and multiple churches, and all the building exteriors kept as they may have been 500 years ago. The downside was that it was packed with marauding tour guides and tourists. One oddity is the 14 towers: family rivalries in the 1400s lead to people outdoing each other by building stone tower homes. There were once 72, but the rest have fallen down or been reduced in size. A few drops of rain as we walked around in the afternoon.

    Our hotel is outside the city walls, but quieter for that, and nice enough. A reasonable-sized shower for a change, and a fridge to help with Pandora, but no tea/coffee.

    The hotel restaurant is closed on Mondays, and it gad sprinkled, so we went in to the first open restaurant we saw. Papadella with saffron and pancetta/mixed salad/ pizza with olives and artichoke. Good meals, and a very attentive waiter as we were half his customers.

    32,020 steps/24.2 km and 81 floors. Tomorrow is our second of three long days: 32km to the town (Monteriggioni). It is said to be a similar track to today, but tomorrow it might also rain. 334 km to Rome.
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  • San Gimignano to Monteriggioni

    21 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ☁️ 19 °C

    It was raining when we woke up, but only persistent, European rain. Dropped our bags off before breakfast at 8am - DIY coffee (!), but otherwise standard - and left around 8:45 with rain ponchos on. We started on a road, then a stony trail with rivulets everywhere, and then the clay. It was slippery rather than boggy, but then the rain stopped, so we were back to sprayjackets and backpack covers in time for me to take two unnoticed (at the time) but spectacular slips. It was hard to hide the evidence, because this mud really stuck.

    Up and down a lot, and almost all in woodlands, rather than vineyards or orchards. Going up was sweaty in the plastic ponchos or jackets, but it was not cold. Around 10:30 the rain stopped, so it was back to shirts as we reached a town called Bibbiana, where the first shop we saw was a bread shop. On the counter were fruitloaf looking things, which seemed a nice idea... and I hoped they were better than nice because they were 14 Euros. Made for a festival, full of fruit and walnuts...and it was pretty good in the end.

    Around midday we were in Colle di Val d'Elsa, which was another medieval town, but just one long street and a cathedral and old palace. The shops had signs in English, but there were almost no tourists, so it felt less brazen. We were a bit surprised it took us just on 3 hrs to cover only 11km. Normally we are much faster, but muddy, slippery paths are very slow going, as was the km or so in which we went down 200m and up 250m.

    Light rain started again, and down the hill from the palace, it started to pour. Serious rain! We stopped under a balcony to change raincoats as the cobbler in the shop beside us urged us to go into his shop for shelter. Once wrapped in plastic, we followed a path to and then along a river that had water roaring over long, flat boulders. It was probably barely audible the day before. We were walking upstream, so it was a long, steady climb. The river had a few dodgy-looking crossings, with ropes strung over flat-topped boulders, but by the fourth or fifth one we were laughing. The rain eased, so we stopped for lunch, and during lunch the sun came out, so back to T-shirts for the rest of the day.

    After the river we passed another village and then several hours through open paddocks and then woods. We were tempted to take a few short-cuts, as the Via Francigena, like the walk from Le Puy, has some catholic deviations - ie extra kms or hills for no obvious purpose that simply put you back on the same track feeling more tired - but we are nothing if not purists, so we followed the path, not the Google maps shortcuts, and for our pains managed to walk through a village called Strove where the 11th C church was closed and we did not see a single person. More rocky paths through woods, then olive groves and fields (with Anne racing way out ahead) and on to an old church (first recorded around 1003) and monastery at Abbadia Isola. It was a serene place, and then we walked out of its walls and saw Monteriggioni hovering in the distance. It is more awesome than Sam Gimignano, we thought, because it is the real thing: a walled, circular town with battlements and towers.

    Our hotel is about 1km outside the town, and close to Abbadia Isola. We could walk along a main road, or on a path through the fields. We took the field, and arrived at the hotel at 5pm in boots and an extra few inches high with mud. An unusual entrance to a 4 star hotel! A long day- 8 hours walking for just over 27km.

    We left our boots outside when we checked in, and I cleaned them later at a garden tap, then washed my hiking pants. Dinner at 7:45 in the upmarket hotel restaurant that had about 50 people, and could hold maybe 80. a mixed salami plate appeared (one with aniseed), then spaghetti with baby squid/penne with garlic and mushrooms/ chicken and salad/cuttlefish, lemon sorbets- and they added pistaccio ice-cream. We like this hotel!

    38,669 steps, 27.5 km and 67 flights. 307 km to Rome.
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  • Monteriggioni to Siena

    22 Oktober, Italia ⋅ 🌧 19 °C

    The two bags had to be left at reception at 8am, as happens every day (although they would not be collected til later), but then a long breakfast. The hotel's shuttle down the kilometre or so of main road to Monteriggioni went at 9am. We had done a little of that road yesterday, and saving a km on bitumen seemed a good idea to us and two American couples, especially in the drizzle.

    Monteriggioni was the first stop... maybe ten minutes walking uphill. It was smaller than it seemed from the distance, and very simple. It was unique for being an oval, preserved fortress, and otherwise a little, old village. Back downhill and across the fields and woods in light drizzle. No towns or famous buildings, but two very old towers of unknown provenance and purpose, a horseman on a frisky young horse, one of the American couples (who to our surprise had walked around in most countries in Europe), lots of peace and quiet, and mud only where the soil was red. One smsll distraction was that we had left an airtag behind in San Gimignano - it slipped out of the slot in my backpack. Most people lose their luggage...the app says where it is, but the hotel could not find it, and it was too far away to activate. The people delivering the luggage would have collected it (were it found) and delivered it for the standard fee....E44.

    We had a break a few kms from Siena: a few biscuits as we sat on a flat stretch of grass to admire the countryside. Then a trudge along roads into Siena and our hotel, which is just inside the old wall. Unlike the last few towns, Siena did was not a mirage on the horizon for hours beforehand. We went through small farms, under an autostrade, through streets of old and new apartments, and then there was a big, stone gate, which everyone walked through or around.

    The hotel started badly with perhaps the snootiest receptionists either of us have experienced since the Ritz in London (and when you have only 3 stars?). But they told us with noses pinched where to find a laundromat, and the long way around to reach it. It was, however, right beside an enormous old church - the Basilica of St Francis (started around 1228) and a university that started in 1240, so while the machine was cycling away we walked around them.

    Dinner in a restaurant on the main street in the old town (maybe a 400m walk), which was good. Still on carbohydrate loading: spaghetti with pigs jowls and egg (carbonara when made basic), gnocchi with Gorgonzola and walnuts, and a pizza with local sausage, mozzarella and red onion. We took umbrellas, but the rain had stopped so afterwards we walked into the heart of the town... impressive.

    38,100 steps, 28.87km, 60 flights, and 286km to go. Much further than we expected for a standard day... but we walked a bit around the town. That and the roads explain the dead-tired feet and weary shins.
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  • Siena - A 'Rest' Day

    23 Oktober, Italia ⋅ 🌧 19 °C

    No need to pack before 8am. Bliss.

    Breakfast was crowded, even though we were late, and one wonders why: it was very average. Locals (and there were mainly Italians about) would have been shocked at the limited cake selection, unless they came early and ate the lot, but the positive was nice bread. Until Siena, many places had only salt-free, taste-free bread, even when it was wholemeal. The coffee machine produced average lattes quickly, but the espressos were good... and then I saw there was actually a barista. First world problems and solutions.

    Alistair had said that Rose's favourite saints included St Catherine of Siena. She was new to us, but we love a treasure hunt in a foreign city, and planned our morning around her. I am glad we did. First was her basilica (Basilica Caterina Dominico) (amazing), then the area around her home and the home (or the site), which is now a series of shrines or chapels, then the pathways near the cathedral where she (aged 6) had her first vision, and also lived. She was the second youngest of 25 (!) children, so housing might have been flexible.

    Lunch was an Italian baguette sitting on the city's central plaza, where they have the mad horse-race twice a year, before seeing the church near the city gate we leave by tomorrow. It was flying red and yellow flags, and the streets had red and yellow decorations because they are the district's colours, and the district won the last race (each race has 10 horses, each in the colours of and representing one of Siena's 17 districts). Back to the hotel as some rain came, via more small and large churches.

    In the evening we wandered around the area near St Catherine's basilica, which was the other side of town, and had dinner in a tiny Osteria called Il Grattacielo. A French lady there told us it was in all the guidebooks, but it was her and us. No pasta or pizza this time: Minestrone and Pork sausages (you work out who had what) plus house wine and orange cake for dessert. It was good. Hotel by 8:30.

    16,728 steps, 12.9km and 27 floors. A rest day

    Tomorrow we walk to Buonconvento. It is a long but only moderate day: 32 km, but downhill to start with, then generally flat. The books and blogs say there is not much walking on roads. The forecast is for sunshine! Back in boots, but they are dry, and clean: I brushed them down so we could wear them to breakfast without leaving our own mud trail.
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  • Siena to Buonconvento

    24 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    A big day: 32+ km, although on unsealed trails, and mostly flat.

    We set out just after 8am and wandered through the tourists and school children, down the hill, out the huge, stone gate (Porta Romana) and into the Tuscan landscape. There was a cloud haze to start with (not clouds as such, and not overcast) but that lifted as the day grew warm to be just scattered clouds.

    We were on a footpath for several km, and then a wide, unsealed trail that wound its way over and around hills, past heavily furrowed paddocks, through fields of green (lucerne?) and past farmhouses and distant villas, with a few short stretches beside and then crossing main roads. Slowly up and down, along and around for hours, and always with a wonderful but hazy landscape in the background

    There was a cool breeze, but the sun was coming through the thinning clouds, so it was T-shirt weather from mid-morning on. Never more than 18 deg, though.

    We passed quite a few (okay, 6) pilgrims in our nearly eight hour walk: three French, and three Australian. The first Frenchman we have seen regularly since Lucca, but the others were new. All were headed to Rome, and one maybe on to Jerusalem, if he felt it was safe.

    The first and only real break was lunch at around 1:45pm. We came down a slow hill into a small village with a cafe that sold bread and cheese, which we ate under some trees in a small park across the street. We had done 26.8km or so, and had only 5 km to go to Buonconvento. 4.65 kph seemed a decent average speed with the odd break for photos, but it was a good track and lovely day.

    Buonconvento ("happy place") is a tiny, old village. We walked in at 3:35pm, wandered through the huge wooden doors (from 1379) at the entrance of the town, down the central street, looked at the small church (first built 1103), then further down the street to our hotel, which is a new, brick building. Perhaps as a result, our room is spacious and fine. A fridge, and tea downstairs.

    32.4km in 7.5hrs, including breaks for photos and lunch... we were quite pleased, because we did not feel hurried or overly tired. We both, though, have a blister.

    Dinner is to be in a restaurant up the road, we were told. We asked for a map and the hotel man laughed: the place is so small that there are none. We are to walk 200m back down the main road to the town's three restaurants, and go to the one called "Roma".

    I was disappointed it was to be another restaurant, rather than a more friendly, shared hotel dinner. Big mistake. It was amazing. The menu was on a QR code in the room, and seemed over-the-top in every sense, but that was still underselling it. Lard crouton with cannellini beans and black cabbage, Tuscan chicken liver crostini, pork fillet with honey and crunchy vegetables, Chianina beef stew with chianti on white cannellini bean cream, salads, salt- crusted baked potatoes, apple cake and walnut cake. Huge thumbs up (except Anne and Suzie do better cakes).

    41,715 steps, 33.4 km and 46 flights. From Buonconvento, it is 255 km to Rome. Tomorrow is a shorter walk (21km) to San Quirico D’Orcia ( with a long climb at the end…) and the forecast is much like today’s.
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  • Buonconvento to San Quirico d'Orcia

    25 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ☁️ 19 °C

    Wordle done, bags dropped, breakfast, quick stop at the bakery across the road, and we left Buonconvento. Except we didn't. There was a small market just outside the town wall (ie 75m away) so we looked around, bought some cheese, and and set off properly at 8:55.

    After some roads, we had a gravel path/white road and then hour after hour of some of the most consistently amazing scenery. Tuscan landscapes on all sides, with hills, forts, towns and trees in the distance.

    It was cool, slightly cloudy, and flattish for the first 5km. Perfect. The weather stayed the same, but the were some noticeable ups and downs before a small town (Torreniero) with a church that had a memorial to soldiers in WW1 and WW2. It was the first we had seen in Italy: they were everywhere in France. After the town we were back on a hard but mostly unused road, where the bigger danger was the cyclists freewheeling almost noiselessly down the steep hill we first had to climb. Then some more undulating (unundulating - is it different?) land, where we stopped in an olive grove for lunch, before the ubiquitous steep hill into the old fortress town of San Quirico d'Orcia. But still with views all the way!

    SQd'O is remarkable. It is a cross between the best aspects of San Gimignano and Buonconvento, and almost none of the downsides. It is a medieval town inside the remnants of a wall, and is where parts of Gladiator was filmed. The Etruscans lived here. Frederick Barbarossa stayed here in 1155 when he was negotiating with papal emissaries. It has at least three churches, all built (or started) in the 11th -13th C. It is small enough to see in half an hour, but big enough to have curious little passages and alleyways, and a few surprises like a 16th C formal garden without any sort of stately house. Far fewer tourists, and locals who are just going about their lives rather than trying to sell gelato or fake leather goods.

    The hotel is a two-suite B&B. Our room is large, and there is a kitchen, but dinner and breakfast have been outsourced to local cafes. Breakfast seems to be limited to coffee and a croissant, so it will likely rate on the abominable end of every spectrum. Thankfully there is a kitchen with a kettle and tea. Dinner was outsourced to a very expensive nearby "Bottega" where you could order anything... subject to a low total cap. We had a table at the end of a narrow passage, but it was light: we were right next to a glass window looking onto the street.

    Tomorrow is a short day - 15km - so we will look at some of the sights along the way, like the untouched medieval village on the way with a thermal spring in the village square, and maybe another old church. To make it even easier, daylight saving ends tonight.

    34,949 steps, 27.8km, 57 flights, and 234km to Rome.
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  • San Quirico d'Orcia to Gallina - AM

    26 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    This was some day, so we will recount it in two parts.

    To avoid the 1 coffee/1 croissant outsourced cafe breakfast, we had some toast and tea (and coffee) in the B&noB kitchen, then stopped at Bar Centrale to have our allocated breakfast to start the trail. The B&noB had a great room, and the cafe offered huge foccacia as an alternative to croissants, so it was not a bad morning, after all.

    Second stop was the town's oldest church, the tiny Chiesa di Santa Maria Assunta. It was 50 metres from where we stayed. The church was built in the second half of the 11th C and still has its original early 12th C bell-tower. It had a plain marble interior which focused on Jesus rather than Mary.

    Third stop - and this time it was a 5km walk - was Vignoni Alto, a tiny, untouched medieval village. By tiny, I mean perhaps 30m by 10m inside the remnants of a wall, and no cars in the four or five little alleys. It had spectacular views, and a church like the Church of St Mary of the Assumption, with an equally-old looking bell-tower.

    Next - another few kms - was Bagno Vignoni, another small medieval town with a thermal spring in the centre. This time, cars could easily get there, and the tourist buses were shedding flocks of tourists. Admittedly, we are tourists, too, but arriving by foot provides a moral elevation. This village was Etruscan, then Roman, and is recorded in documents from the 10th C. It also had a church dedicated to Rose's saint, St Catherine.

    And then, around midday, we deviated off the track for a bit and walked up to Rocca d'Orcia, another small medieval village, and again on a hilltop, but overlooked by an old tower - Rocca a Tentennano. We had seen the tower on the horizon for some time, so it had to be climbed. My blisters were okay with that, but the last section would involve a lot of steps going down, which would not help the ones on Anne's toes. She stopped at the level with a statue of St Catherine, whom we now notice all the time. It was a relatively fine day, and the views from near the top, and then the very top, were astounding.

    Only half a day, and only 14.5 kms and 50 flights so far, but Tuscany +++.
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  • SQd'O to Gallina - PM

    26 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    Starting from the tower, we walked down through the village of Rocca d'Orcia, where St Catherine has her own street with maybe two houses, and out the old gateway with post-holes and hinge remnants from the 3rd C wall. We were on a white road that was mostly flat, but the sun came out, and there were not many trees. We are told the rolling, bare, brown-grey fields are typical of the valley of d'Orcia.

    We stopped around 1:30 for lunch (Italian bread) at a table that a farmer had set up outside his house, then kept on going across the Tuscan Nullabor. After the frequent sights of the morning, the afternoon was a slow trudge through mostly ploughed fields. We were heading to a town called Gallina, but branched off about 800m away from it to our "hotel", Agriturismo Passalacqua, where we had a room (or set of rooms) in a farmhouse on a working farm.

    We arrived around 3pm, and our bags were in a shed. Inauspicious, but then we were bowled over by the farm-owner's bubbly daughter (a restoration architect), who pointed out the features of the 64ha farm around the house, the vegetable garden, and the distant towns of interest (which did not include Gallina). One of her 7 cats seemed equally interested in the explanations until it tried to bite Anne, so we ended the tour and unpacked.

    While Anne recovered, I walked into and back from Gallina, where there was nothing to see. It was supposedly 14 deg when I was back, but felt more like 4 deg, so we sat in our own little kitchen and caught up on emails and photos from the day, then looked at the sunset.

    Dinner was at 7, with another couple as well: Kyle and Sophie, two Americans with whom we had already spent several hours talking on the way to Rocca d'Orcia. That was a welcome surprise, as they were very nice. Home grown pumpkin soup with croutons, pork sausages with potatoes and chard, cooked by the farmer's wife. It was the best meal so far by quite a way.

    Tomorrow is a shorter day, so no need to hurry in the morning. We can spend more time finessing the odd, annoying blister. Notwithstanding all the ups and downs today, and cat attacks, we are otherwise doing well. Sore shins from hard roads, but that seems to be it.

    33,191 steps, 25.5km and 103 flights.
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  • Gallina to Radicofani (and partway back)

    27 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

    Today had fewer diversions, and was a c 17 km walk that went steadily uphill all the way - total gain: 500m. And then we walked c 5km back.

    Breakfast at 8 was farm products: bruschetta and tomatoes, fried eggs, honey and yoghurt, plus brioche that tasted like doughnuts, bread, coffee and tea. We had not yet collected Pandora's frozen gel pack, so our bags were not out, and there was a small panic when a car picked up the Americans’ bags at 8:15. The owners assured us it was not our company, but the gel was collected, Pandora packed, and the bags put out quick-smart.

    From the house there was a path to the trail, and we had around 8 km of white roads slowly up through a shallow valley, with medieval watch towers always somewhere to see, and a boarded-up old stone chapel that was visited and documented in 990 AD. Then a slightly steeper 9km walk to Radicofani, another medieval village and tower, with no villages or other distractions on the way.

    We are staying in another agriturismo which has rave reviews, but it is 4km before the town, and we arrived at the turn-off to it at 11:45.... with the early walking around the farm, just a 13.2km day! Checking in before 12 seemed like heresy for anyone walking to Rome, so we sat on some rocks, contemplated the options (hills, blisters and sitting around all afternoon doing nothing), and walked 4.5km - all uphill - to the town.

    Radicofani is another quaint medieval village, but with a sense of being more renovated, and many fewer tourists. The church was less ornate (stone pillars, arches and walls), but we passed on the extra 20mins to the very top and the tower. Instead, we bought bread, cheese and sliced rolled pork at a little cafe and sat under the trees by the church and had lunch looking out over a valley. It had changed from sunny to overcast as we reached the village, and then a cold southerly breeze, so we were heading back downhill by 2pm, past a flock of sheep (rare enough to warrant a mention) and checked in around 3:30.

    This agriturismo is more business than farm, and has a pool (covered for winter), an artificial quarter-size soccer field (with inch-deep gaps all over the turf), and many old farm buildings converted to rooms. Our room ( more suite) has a grand four-poster bed, masses of space, and a super-heated bathroom. A chance to do some washing!

    Dinner is at 8 (very dark, now that daylight saving has ended) in the downstairs part of our building. Big decisions are to be made by then. Not the menu, which is fixed, but whether we arrange a lift back to town tomorrow morning to save time. Anne has a work call at 8am, and tomorrow is otherwise an uphill/downhill 28+km (4.5 of which we have already done twice!) ...

    Dinner was a new high. Bruschetta and farm vegetables, pasta with a beef sauce, pork in pistachio, chocolate pannacotta and roast chestnuts.

    30,150 steps, 23.8 km and 39 flights.
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  • Radicofani to Acquapendente - a slog

    28 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

    Packed early. I went to breakfast while Anne did work things on the phone, before she had breakfast, too, and we were chauffeured to Radicofani at 9. Lucky I was early: coffee was available by appointment, but everything else was good. We looked at Radicofani briefly, bought bread and cheese, and by 9:32, when the bell rang, we were already partway down the hill. Don't ask us why the bell there is always 2 minutes behind...

    Radicofani to Aquapendente is around 26km. The first 12km is almost all downhill, with great, open vistas all around, and walking on unsealed tracks. That took us until exactly noon. Then came an intersection and a choice. Go left, and it was 14kms to the next town, walking mostly on a flat, concrete-solid highway. Go right and it was another 350m hill, and 6km longer, but not all concrete, the road went through a former Etruscan town (Proceno), and you had the chance to see the Radicofani fort dominating the northern skyline almost all the way on the next 20km to Acquapendente.

    After two hours - one on a sealed road - we reached a little gateway where Tuscany joins the region of Lazio, and I was losing interest in the fort. It was a long trudge in the unseasonal sunshine, with more sealed roads than was fair.. We mentioned mad dogs etc several times, and told ourselves that Proceno better be worth it. We might have stopped for lunch at the Tuscan border, but the shaded table was taken by a British cyclist, so we stopped at 3:30 where the farmer had put two chairs and bench under a huge tree right by the road. We saw the farmer, but not a single vehicle, and our enthusiasm for the spot, which was almost an idyllic dell, may have been increased by simply having a rest after 6 hours walking.

    Proceno was another few kms, and only just worth it. A nice old town, with nobody in it. Then a mere 7kms more to Aquapendente, which was a walk through some woods as well as more sealed roads.

    Tonight we are in an Albergo, which conjured up youth hostels or "Master of the House" style inns, but the room is nice, and neither dinner nor breakfast is outsourced. Dinner was rustic, and the restaurant surprisingly crowded.

    45,121 steps, 36.2 kms and 35 flights. The last of the long days became the longest. Thank goodness we did the 4.5km yesterday... although if we hadn't, we might have taken the highway. And 170 km to go of the original 419. Tomorrow is a mere 23 km.
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  • Acquapendente to Bolsena

    29 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    Having a room called the Romeo e Giulietta suite, and overlooking the square and town hall, was romantic until the garbage trucks had a convention there an hour before dawn.

    Breakfast was a new point on the sugar-to-pumpernickel spectrum. Almost everything in cellophane, or packaged, nothing fresh bar some apples, no tea, and a coffee machine that used pods that did not fit. There was a vanilla slice equivalent with quadruple sugar and extra thick pastry, and mini-croissants with chocolate (or was it Nutella?). But it was fun opening packets and seeing what was there, and the muesli and UHT milk was actually good.

    With blood glucose levels at an all time high, we set off and wove through the old streets, past the cathedral, and due south on a road and then over quite flat farmland. Sunflowers had been ploughed in, and some fields still had potatoes left after the harvest, or lucerne. Many fields had irrigation pump outlets, and the soil looked quite fertile. It was cloudy and cool, and very rural, but nothing like the dramatic views of recent weeks.

    After 2 1/2 hours, we reached a town called San Lorenzo Nuovo, which was designed and built a few centuries ago. In most other places, a 300 yo town would be exciting, but the best part of this town was walking to the end, on the crest of a hill, and looking down to a massive volcanic crater lake, Lake Bolsena.

    The walk from the town went through a forest and then olive groves and farmland. It was lovely, but the signs kept saying it was 3 hours to Bolsena, and I am sure the 4.0km sign appeared five times. We kept walking and Bolsena kept not appearing. Around 2pm, we saw the castle towers and cathedral steeple, so the place existed.

    Our hotel is a 4 star effort right on the lake, so we had to walk through the old town, past the castle and closed church near it. We met an 81 yo retired Swiss surgeon who had been at the same agriturismo in Radicofani, and we communally bemoaned the hard day yesterday, and tiredness today. He is going to Rome, but started from his home in Basel, carrying all his gear. Last year he walked from home to Spain - three months walking, 90 minutes in a plane going back.

    We walked around the lakefront and town after having a shower and changing, and scouted out the restaurant we go to for dinner. Most impressive was the Basilica for St Cristina, a local saint from the 3rd C. It has catacombs going back to Etruscan times. It seems that in the 11th or 12th C they found the records of a martyred saint in those ancient catacombs, and may have invented a legend to make her and Bolsena famous.

    Dinner was very good. Pasta with ragout/cheese and pepper, then grilled lake fish/ aged beef skewers. Plus salad and really good bread.

    40,942 steps, 32.6km and 39 flights. Long... but it was around 25km to the town, and the rest was walking around the town, or Acquapendente, and walking to dinner then along the lake. Tomorrow is only 16km, but the forecast is steady but light rain..
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  • Bolsena to Montefiascone

    30 Oktober, Italia ⋅ 🌧 17 °C

    Anne had another 8am work call, so I took the bags down and had the breakfast room to myself. It ran the gamut from cakes up to cereal and yoghurt, then hit a wall. But still good enough...

    We heard the forecast had changed to rain in the afternoon, so we were looking at old Bolsena again by 9am, then heading up the hills alone. Cool, cloudy, but a path through woods, vineyards and olive groves, with frequent glimpses down to the lake. 16.9km of Via Francigena track is about 18km once you add the distance to the start point, and the odd excursion on the way, although the big diversion on the way today was an archaeological park that was the site of Etruscan and prior civilisation graves and structures. We were overtaken by some Americans we had seen often on the way, and a few km before Montefiascone, we caught up with two Australians whom we'd also often seen - the ones who started in Canterbury 4 months ago.

    Montefiascone is where the popes used to (ie perhaps up to 800 years ago) come for summer. It is about 100km north of Rome, overlooking a lake, and has a massive residence of rock. There is a rebuilt church at the 100km point that was mentioned in around 872. Now it has a seminary too, as well as an enormous, 1519, mosque-shaped Renaissance Cathedral of Santa Margherita, which has under it the crypt of St Lucia Filippini, in its own special church. Outside the old city is the huge church of San Flaviano, a 17th C Romanesque temple, with frescoes all round. It is two churches, one upon the other but in opposite directions, and with a facade built in 1262.

    We arrived at the hotel, which is on a cobbled street leading up from the city's main gate, around 2pm, after looking at churches and sites on the way. Soon after, it poured. The rain stopped around 4;30, but low cloud clung to the town: Halloween in a misty, 600 yo medieval village would be quite something. We walked around the town in the semi-dark, saw the crypt (only us and St Lucia (incl head) present), and hoped the clouds would lift by morning because the old papal palace and the views down to the lake should be stunning in sunlight.

    The hotel is good: very spacious room on the 4th floor overlooking the ancient, single-lane main street, with the massive Church of Divine Love (1580 - now part of an Augustinian nunnery) across the road and down a bit, but with a facade that looks much the same as the hotel and other buildings. Apparently churches were identified by just a green door, a rose window and a Gothic portal.

    Dinner is outsourced to Dante's restaurant, which is quite close.

    29,014 steps, 23.1 km and 89 fights. Tomorrow's walk is even shorter, and we then spend two nights in Viterbo. A friend from Sydney University in 1975 (Adam Harper) has a farmhouse near Viterbo. We will see him and his Italian wife for lunch on Saturday, and he is going to walk the first two stages south from Viterbo with us.
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  • Montefiascone to Viterbo

    31 Oktober, Italia ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

    By 9am we were back at the old Papal Palace, admiring the view of the lake that was yesterday hidden by cloud. Viterbo was only 17 km away, and it was downhill for quite a while, then an easy path through woods and wheatfields, and even orchards of kiwifruit. Part of it was the old Cassia Road - built in the 3rd C BC, and still rock-solid. A 2,300 year old road underfoot...

    Viterbo is quite big, so we had to traipse through several kms of light-industrial blandness, and sometimes use busy roads. Once we reached the usual large stone gate, Siena style, our hotel was only a few minutes away, and right on the old pilgrim trail.

    The early afternoon was spent back in the wastelands behind the railway station. Viterbo is not blessed with self-service laundries: there is a laundry metres from the house, but it was closed until 5pm, and was in any case really a dry-cleaners. When we found one, a young woman explained the machines, and I waited while Anne bought some bananas for lunch, which we had overlooked. We walked back from the wrong side of the tracks (yes, there was a hardware store) and went to an old church on the map that was somewhat on the way back.

    That was a find! The Church of St Rose of Viterbo, 1233-1251. Imagine finding St Rose on Rose's birthday (and Happy Birthday, Rose, btw).

    The church had a monastery attached to it, and some of the old sections were open. In the old room for scribes was a copy of a letter from 1255 mentioning St Rose and a church, and then items (papal robes, documents, embroidery, kitchen utensils) spanning the next 770 years... like the robes from a papal visit in 1984 as well as, of course, her body.

    That should have been the day's big surprise, but we walked down a few medieval side-streets on the way home and ran into Halloween. Streams of costumed and made-up parents and children were flowing up and down Viterbo's Ginza, and instead of visiting houses, they were visiting shops. The Max Mara store, for one, was handing out lollies by the kilo as child-sized Italian witches and ghouls veered in, but so were the gelato shop, the fruitshop, the perfume stores, the clothing stores and any store that was open. There were buskers, fairy-lights and a bemused small crowd. The only quiet space was a 14th C deconsecrated small, gothic (round) church called Santa Maria della Salute, with a few ancient tombstones on the floor.

    Another uplift was the ferry to Hydra in 10 days. The November timetables came out yesterday evening and had no afternoon ferries, which ruined several bookings and plans. Anne emailed them all, and we started on Plan B with Caleb the travel agent. Then this afternoon, one emailed back with a 5pm ferry. At ease, everyone.

    For dinner, we walked outside, turned right to miss the city-centre throng, and soon found a little restaurant that had menus only in Italian and no QR code. It was very good; bruschetta/ gnocchi in 4 cheeses/steak/salad/ house red. Another highlight was two dressed-up children coming in seeking sweets, which the lady in charge had ready.

    I had been quite willing to write Viterbo off as we traipsed through the suburban, light-industrial sprawl, as Anne charged off into the badlands behind the train station in pursuit of washing machines, but St Rose and Halloween were big surprises, and there is apparently more like it (but perhaps not Halloween).

    30,940 steps, 24.5 km and 22 flights. Tomorrow is an easy day. We are meeting Adam and family at 11, and then having lunch. No need to pack!
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  • Viterbo and Lunch in a Palazzo

    1 November, Italia ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

    What luxury! Not packing in the morning! Almost like not living out of a suitcase.

    Breakfast was an average of what is becoming typical, and by 9 we were walking around the emptier old city. The highlight was a marble pulpit built in 1242 for St Thomas Aquinus that still stands outside a grand old church, which had frescoes from the 1340s.

    We met Adam at the Porta Romana, and he drove to his house in a nearby village. It is light, bright and large, with amazing views over plains to some distant volcanic hills. He and Elisabetta then drove us to a restaurant (Palazzo Pretoria) in another nearby village (Vignanello). It was an old palazzo built in the 1500s for the Pope's entourage when he visited the enormous church beside it... and the popes often came because on the other side was an old castle, Castella Rispoli, complete with drawbridge. Centuries later, it still belongs to and is lived in by the same once-influential, princely family, the Rispolis, but it and its Renaissance garden (best in Italy) are open to the public.

    Lunch was bruschetta with marinated eggplant, pasta with a very light, tomato-based ragout, wild boar with chestnuts, beef with mushrooms, then marinated chestnuts in cream. "If it's not simple, it's not good Italian food", Elisabetta said, and this was both (relatively) simple and (very) good.

    Back in Viterbo (c 20 mins) there was a stop at a famous gelato shop where customers queued by number. We agreed our route for the next day and arranged where and when to meet Adam, then walked around more of the old town. It is allegedly the largest preserved medieval town in Italy, but the locals are grateful that most tourists stay in Rome.

    A very light dinner in comparison (water, beer and pizza) in a busy little caff.

    Only 13,842 steps, 10.3 kms and 3 flights. It feels like we're cheating. 22km at least tomorrow, to Vetralla, including perhaps the church that is officially 100km by foot from Rome.
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  • Viterbo to Vetralla

    2 November, Italia ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    A great day's walking.

    Our bags were out before 8am as the next five days are ones we have arranged ourselves ie accommodation and bag transport. We wanted to be sure the bag-pick-up worked, as we had new labels, each day's payment has to be in an envelope, and we needed to tell our B&B when we might arrive.

    We met Adam at 9 at the same gate and headed down paved roads and out of the town (pop. c 65,000). It was warm but overcast, and Adam walked at our pace, so all was good. After the manor houses and gardens on the edge, we were in woods and orchards, and comfortable trails for the rest of the day.

    Around 11:30, as bells were ringing, we reached San Martino al Cimino, a tiny hamlet dominated by a gigantic church and monastery. It has a 12th C abbey, with giant 17th C belltowers. We stopped at the cafe for a coffee (Adam initiative) after noting the giant chestnut roasters in the street, and the bells let loose just as we stepped out at noon.

    Then three hours easy walking through old olive groves and chestnut woods, past a 2nd C BC Etruscan/Roman water storage cistern, an equally old bridge support, and then the find of the day: the Church of Santa Maria in Forcassi. Buildings existed in 200BC as it was on an major cross-road, Charlemagne gifted the land to a Lombardian family in the 8th C, a church was built in the 10th-11th C, and remodelled in the 1400s. The monks who owned it were linked to the Knights Templar, and the 11th C frescoes are the same images as in Malta. The church wasn't used after the 19th C, and was a ruin until some 35 years ago, when a new roof was put on and the mess cleared up. It is not symmetrical and this year (!) they found - by chance - that at dawn on 21 June (summer solstice), the light through the round and vertical windows on the east side of the church shines on Jesus and the sun in the main fresco, and on the holy water font, and that the evening sun casts a shadow shaped as a fish through an oddly shaped rosette on the west. It is all couched in terms of archeoastronomy, and given the church's shape and orientation, they knew what they were looking for, but it seemed more like a real-life Da Vinci Code.

    It was nearly 4pm when we reached Vetralla, a town that has minimal attraction according to the locals. We stopped in the small square between the cathedral and town hall, and a man walked over and asked if we were staying in his B&B... which overlooked the same tiny square. He had been expecting us around then, and had already put our bags in the very large, comfortable, and stylish apartment. Adam's wife picked him up at 4:15, promising to return him to the same square at 9am tomorrow. I went hunting for a shop with milk for tea - late Sunday afternoon in rural Italy is not great for shopping, but a cafe had some - and we relaxed with rarities like a large bathroom, sofas and tables.

    The owner recommended a "Pinseria" for dinner. Rectangular pizzas. It was 200m down the deserted road, and very good. One table of people other than us... and probably the town's only open restaurant.

    35,220 steps, 28.1 km and 48 flights, but it felt like a very easy day. Tomorrow is some 24km from start to finish of the trail between towns, so about the same as today, and the forecast says it will rain overnight and be sunny tomorrow.
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