April2004 - Dream of Italy
Transcription
April2004 - Dream of Italy
INSIDE: Italy’s Cork Capital 4 Tuscan Hideaways 5 Hotels Offer Dollar Guarantee 6 Yoga Retreat 7 An Escape to BLISSFUL BURANO eaving the bustling streets of Venice behind, I take a seat on the open back deck of vaporetto #12 to churn across the lagoon to Burano, the island where lace has been made for five centuries. The women of this fishing village still take simple cotton and linen threads and make lace so prized that Louis XIV and Catherine de’Medici sent their personal shoppers in search of the dainty textile called merletto. L ITALY Volume 3, Issue 4 www.dreamofitaly.com April 2004 Sardinia– A World Apart ardinia sounds too perfect to be true. An island equidistant from Italy and Africa, with European sophistication and an unspoiled natural setting, it’s the perfect size to discover in a leisurely week or so. S Alsion Harris Any doubts I might have had about such claims melted in the Mediterranean sun as I flew over the island’s stunning granite mountains, patchworks of pastures, farms and vineyards, high plateaus covered with cork oak forests and sandy beaches surrounded by a mesmerizing turquoise sea. This sea has turned Sardinia into the affluent mainland Italians’ summer playground, tripling the island’s population of two million in July and August. Happily, the weather is always mild and the sea great for swimming from April through October. Spring, I discovered, is the ideal time to visit: Sardinia’s perfumed Mediterranean scrub turns emerald green. Wild flowers paint the rocky countryside and the coast is blissfully empty. Whatever the season, the Sardinians are disarmingly solicitous. Hospitality is a cult. Farmers make gifts of outsized oranges, vintners uncork bottles of sunny wine and shepherds offer tangy homemade Pecorino sheep’s milk cheese. This is continued on page 2 But Burano is more than a mecca for lace lovers; it’s also a welcome respite from the tourist-filled streets of Venice. As I step ashore, I’m one of only a handful of visitors looking at the cloudless, periwinkle sky that frames rows of houses painted saffron yellow, terracotta red and peacock blue. Though Burano was once a 3rd-century refuge in the Laguna Nord, the scrubbed homes and small grassy courtyards are as fresh as today’s catch. Directly ahead, my friend and I see Fondamenta Cavanella (a main street on the island), a good place to begin a 15-minute walk across the island. We wander, until we’re greeted by a dark-haired postman singing something resembling “That’s Amore.” He strikes a jaunty pose when he notices our cameras. Barbara Wysocki dream of Then he’s off again, his song as cheerful as the bright geraniums, pansies and fuchsia on every doorstep and in every window. We turn around and head to the center of town for bussola continued on page 8 “Sardinia is left outside of time and history.” —D.H. Lawrence Sardinia – A World Apart continued from page 1 Italy and then some: the culture, faces, dialects, food and wine are a medley of Middle Eastern, North African, Ligurian, Pisan and Catalonian influences. 2 Cagliari, Sardinia’s capital, is a roughand-ready jumble set on a limestone eminence facing south toward Tunisia. “Strange, stony Cagliari,” wrote D.H. Lawrence in 1921. Strange and stony it remains: narrow streets climb among low houses from the port’s arcaded Via Roma to the medieval citadel — my favorite part of town. From its panoramic bastions you take in miles of scenery and millennia of history. At the citadel’s summit, the National Archaeological Museum, in the reconverted ruins of a 13th-century castle, offers an introduction to Sardinia’s dauntingly complex history. It stretches from the Nuraghic Civilization (2500 B.C.) to the Phoenicians (1000 B.C.), Carthaginians (550 B.C.) and the Romans (238 B.C.), via waves of medieval invaders into the modern age. Cagliari itself spins these epochs together: descending from the citadel you pass a Roman amphitheater, early Christian churches and a forest of contemporary architecture best not described. Sardinia’s real appeal lies outside its cities, and the best way to discover the island’s lifestyle and landscape is to drive clockwise from Cagliari to the west, cutting between coast and interior on back roads. Whatever you do, save time for the central Barbàgia region’s spectacular Gennargentu Mountains. There is little industry in Sardinia: farmland runs right up to city limits. Prickly pear hedges delimit citrus, plum and peach orchards. Vineyards march from mountainsides to sea cliffs. Nasco, Cannonau, Monica, Girò and Bovale are a few of the indigenous varieties that produce easy to love, fruitforward wines. The longest established of these wines, Nuragus, is named for the Bronze Age Nuraghi fortified settlements, 7,000 of which still dot the island. Sardinians have been making Nuragus wine for thousands of years. The best of it (and other island varieties) now comes from the Argiòlas estate in the Gerrei region’s rolling vineyards, due north of Cagliari. Here you might encounter the island’s curious “Little Train That Could,” a vintage narrowgauge steamer with a handful of harddriven carriages. It shuttles between Alghero Cagliari and Arbatax, a daylong corkscrew ride through wine country and over the Barbàgia region’s mountain fastnesses. As I feasted with winemaker Giuseppe Argiòlas on fresh lobster-sauce pasta and a chilled bottle of his Nuragus wine, he recalled how the train used to bring school children into Cagliari from outlying villages. When the steamer reached a steep grade it would splutter to a halt, the kids, Giuseppe included, would jump off, raid surrounding vineyards, then jump back on once it had charged to the next hilltop. An hour from the Gerrei’s vineyards, on the Gulf of Cagliari’s southwest Where to Stay Villa Las Tranos is the most charming seaside option in a town filled with modern hotels that seem stuck in a time warp. This villa, once the vacation home of Italian royalty, sits majestically on a promontory. A double room starts at 200€ per night in low season and 270€ during high season. (39) 079 981818; www.hotelvillalastronas.it Costa Smerelda (Porto Cervo) Hotel Cala di Volpe, one of the most luxurious hotels in all of Europe, was designed by architect Jacques Couelle to resemble an old Sardinian village. The resort offers every imaginable service including live entertainment and a water skiing school. Don’t be surprised if some of your fellow guests are Hollywood stars. For an April visit, expect to pay 924€ per night for a double room. If you can even get a reservation in the summer, you will pay much more. (39) 0789 976111; www.starwood.com The 4-star Le Ginestre down the road from Porto Cervo provides a tranquil seaside retreat with the opportunity to indulge in excellent Sardinian cuisine. During high season, rates start at 170€ per person, per day with half board. (39) 0789 92030; www.leginestrehotel.com La Maddalena The Hotel Cala Lunga offers stunning ocean views from every corner of the hotel, including its private beach. The hotel has a sailing school and a diving school. Rates average 95€ per person, per night during high season. (39) 0789 734 042 The Giuseppe Garibaldi, a pleasant place to stay near the port in La Maddalena town, is a 10-minute walk from the beach. A double room costs 140€ per night. (39) 0789 737314 —Kathy McCabe 1 € = $1.22 at press time Freedom fighter Giuseppe Garibaldi di How to get to Sardinia shore, a promontory curls into the sea between sandy, half-moon coves. Here stands ruined Nora, Sardinia’s most moving ancient city. Consistently windswept the promontory is studded with crumbling monuments. Other ruins lie beneath the sea. Wandering among Nora’s Roman theater and mosaic-paved houses I felt I had torn a page from Virgil, and that Aeneas might round a cape to land at the main watchtower’s base. Early Christians occupied the site and in the 11th century built the Romanesque church of Sant’Efisio, a squat, humble structure compared to the imposing ruins around it. The church is now the finishing line of the wildly colorful May 1st to 4th Procession of Sant’Efisio from Cagliari, which celebrates the obscure local saint’s martyrdom. Costumed men carry a sculpture representing Sant’Efisio and the merrymaking crowd swells en route toward Nora, with dancing and feasting into the night. The Costa del Sud wraps around Sardinia’s extreme southwestern tip. Coves, cliffs, ruins and vineyards follow in succession, with half a dozen medieval watchtowers set like pepper pots on the shore. A few miles offshore are the craggy islands of Sant’Antioco and San Pietro. The Carthaginians began the two-mile causeway to Sant’Antioco, now a busy fishing port. The upper part of town exudes antiquity: an acropolis sits atop a layer-cake of Phoenician and Carthaginian ruins, with Roman tombs over them, and early Christian catacombs riddling all three. More lively, and a quick ferry ride away, is the town of Carloforte, on San Pietro island. This is a slice of Genoa circa 1740. That’s because Ligurian seafarers built the handsome, pastelcolored, rococo town as a colony of the Republic of Genoa. Strange to tell, the Carlofortini still speak old Ligurian dialect and eat the focaccia and pesto of the “old country” — i.e. the Italian Riviera. Local artisans in rustic workshops weave elaborate reed lobster traps, now a popular souvenir. The wide seaside promenade is shaded by contortionist giant ficus trees and swarmed by strollers. There are flights from all of the major Italian cities to Alghero, Cagliari and Olbia. In the summer, charters are offered from London and other European capitals. As you drive north to the Giara di Gèsturi plateau and its herds of wild horses (see sidebar), or anywhere inland, be warned: shepherds, goatherds, swineherds and their Noah’s Ark of animals march down Sardinia’s country roads. Three million sheep roam free — the island’s economic mainstay. From a distance, trotting en masse, they shimmer, miragelike. On limestone hills they appear and disappear, wandering white boulders among the scrub. boulders and eroded pinnacles teetering above a jagged shore. Urbane Alghero, Sardinia’s most alluring small city, derives its Spanish character from the Catalan conquerors that ruled it from 1354 to 1720. As you stroll atop the seafront medieval walls, down The northeast coast, from Santa Caterina di Pittinuri to Alghero, is still largely inaccessible by road. You swing inland before dipping down to the Temo River valley, where the sleepy town of Bosa spills its stone houses from a castle-crowned peak to an old arched bridge and a fleet of lobster boats. Crisp Vernaccia or mellow Malvasia wines are considered local cure-alls: Bosa’s rustic winebar calls itself “the healthy folks’ pharmacy.” From Bosa to Alghero the coast road worms thirty miles over russet-hued The ports of Genoa, Livorno, Civitavecchia (Rome), Naples and Palermo all have ferries to Olbia and/or Golfo Aranchi. A high-speed ferry between Civitavecchia and Olbia or Golf Aranci takes three hours. The major ferry companies are Tirrenia (www.tirrenia.it), Moby Lines (www.mobylines.it) and Sardinia Ferries (www.sardiniaferries.com). continued on page 4 dream of ITALY Kathleen A. McCabe Publisher and Editor-In-Chief Copy Editor: Stephen J. McCabe Editorial Assistants: Marielena Martone Kate Potterfield Design: Leaird Designs www.leaird-designs.com Dream of Italy, the subscription newsletter covering Italian travel and culture, is published 10 times a year. Delivery by mail is $79 per year in the United States and $95 abroad. An Internet subscription (downloadable PDF) costs $69 per year. Subscriptions include online access to back issues and regular e-mail updates. Three ways to subscribe: 1. Send a check to Dream of Italy, P.O. Box 5496, Washington, DC, 20016 2. Call 1-877-OF-ITALY (toll free) or 202-237-0657 3. Subscribe online at www.dreamofitaly.com (Visa and Mastercard accepted) Editorial feedback is welcome. E-mail: editor@dreamofitaly.com Advertising opportunities are available. E-mail: ads@dreamofitaly.com Copyright © 2004 Dream of Italy, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or part without permission is prohibited. Every effort is made to provide information that is accurate and reliable; however, Dream of Italy cannot be responsible for errors that may occur. www.dreamofitaly.com i ed on Sardinia’s Caprera Island in 1882. 3 Sardinia – A World Apart continued from page 3 cobbled lanes lined with chic boutiques and smart restaurants, you could swear you were in Barcelona. Locals even speak Catalan dialect. Towers and squares bear Spanish names: Torre de Sant Jaume and Plaça del Bisbe, for example. Seafood is a specialty, accompanied by memorable red and white wines from Tenuta Sella e Mosca whose vineyards and winery are north of town. Much ado is made of the Costa Smeralda, a luxury resort developed by the fabulously rich Aga Khan on the island’s northeast tip. The setting is gorgeous, but the mockMediterranean communities could be anywhere. Skip them and head instead to the windswept islands of La Maddalena and Caprera, piled with boulders bearing extraordinary animal or human likenesses. Then go south to the pristine Foca Monaca coastal reserve, a series of ever-more-beautiful coves and bays protected by steep limestone cliffs and stretching from Cala Gonone to Capo di Monte Santo. Accessible only by boat or on foot, this is the paradisiacal home of the rare, whitish-skinned Foca Monaca seal, a protected species. Sardinia’s geographical and cultural heart is remote Barbàgia, the ancient Roman’s unconquerable “land of Barbarians,” where vertical pastures alternate with ancient vineyards knotted between the Gennargentu’s towering granite or limestone massifs. Modernity and tourism stop at Nuoro, the homely regional capital. Hill towns like Oliena (celebrated for its rich red wines) or Orgosolo (now decorated with scores of mural paintings, but nicknamed the “Village of Bandits,” for its Wild West feel) feel as if they are stuck in the 19th century. They belong to the winemakers and shepherds with black berets and red-leather skin, burnished by sun and wind, and their equally weathered wives with their elaborate traditional costumes (variations on the theme of black or gray wool, starched white linen and lace). These are the timeless faces and landscapes of Sardinia you will come away cherishing most. ◆ —David D. Downie David Downie is the author of Cooking the Roman Way: Authentic Recipes from the Home Cooks and Trattorias of Rome (Harper Collins). Sardinia: Italy’s Cork Capital S ardinia’s ancient inhabitants learned to strip cork oak bark to make amphorae stoppers, insulate Nuraghi villages and roof shepherds’ huts with it. Spectacular cork oak forests still abound. The Sarcidano region’s Giara di Gèsturi plateau — with lichen-frosted boulders, myrtle shrubs and fragrant rock roses — bristles with thousands of contorted cork trees.Among their curving trunks — rust red where stripped — Sardinia’s small wild horses run free, an estimated 600 of them. The same russet color as the stripped trunks, horses and trees seem to fly together across a surreal landscape. Sardinia produces 80% of Italy’s cork and the island’s cork capital, Tempio Pausania, in the northern Gallura region, has 180 manufacturers. Around town isolated trees in gorgeous scenery seem lifted from classical mythology — Daphne pursued by lusty Apollo, trailing a long head of hollyshaped leaves strangely soft to the touch. Cork forests — sacred and protected by law — are natural: no tree farming, no pesticides or fertilizers. Nothing may be planted, and no animals may graze, under or around cork trees.They are harvested, from May through August, only after reaching age thirty, and only every nine or more years thereafter (13 years is the ideal growth interval). Alison Harris 4 Sugherificio Ganau S.p.A. of Tempio Pausania is Sardinia’s biggest, most famous cork stopper manufacturer (clients include Antinori, Gaja, Martini e Rossi, Möet et Chandon,Veuve-Cliquot, Robert Mondavi, Farniente). Ganau’s secret? Season the cork bark 15 months in the unpolluted, sunny air — double most producers’ time — eliminating reddish coloration, tannins and mildew. Boil it an hour at 115ºC, air-dry three days, then boil again for 80 minutes. Stoppers are punched out, against the cork’s grain. Agglomerated stoppers are made from compacted, glued cork crumbs; to some, especially champagne or sparkling wine stoppers, natural cork disks are added. All semi-finished stoppers are treated with hydrogen peroxide, finished, fire-branded (never inked) with Ganau’s and their clients’ logos, then treated again with citric acid. Good, short corks (an inch or so long) may be adequate for average wines not meant for bottle-ageing, but longer, topquality corks bring out the best in a wine. Cheap shorties cost as little as 5¢, flawless two-inchers 15 times that.“It’s easy to make good corks and wines,” says Mauro Ganau.“It’s just as hard to make great corks as great wines.” Happily, Sardinia has both! —D.D. “Italy is a dream that keeps returning for Two Tuscan Hideaways Villa Vignamaggio Locanda dell’ Amorosa If you’ve watched the Kenneth Branagh film of Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing, then you’ve already seen Villa Vignamaggio, where the movie was filmed. Vignamaggio is also famous as the birthplace of Mona Lisa in 1479. It’s no mistake that the name of this Tuscan hideaway means, “Lover’s Inn,” as this place exudes romance from the moment guests enter the impressive, cypress-lined drive. An hour-and-a-half by car from Florence, Locanda dell’Amorosa resembles the small town it once was, a 14th-century medieval village. The property has changed ownership only once in 700 years. In 1873, the Piccolomini family of Pienza (family of Pope Pius II) sold the property to Fiorella Favard, whose descendants still own the estate. Two miles from the town of Greve in Chianti, Vignamaggio is centrally located among the local wineries producing Chianti Classico. In fact, Vignamaggio produces its own awardwinning wine and olive oil and hosts tours and tastings for guests and visitors alike. Vignamaggio’s wine was actually the first red wine in the area to be referred to as “Chianti,” in 1404. This agriturismo is a particularly good choice for families as it offers two swimming pools, a tennis court, mountain bikes, fitness center, a playground and a pool table. Guests can choose among 20 rooms, suites and apartments housed in several old farm houses. The villa itself, surrounded by a stunning Renaissance garden, has suites only. The room we stayed in was filled with antiques, but also had a kitchenette creatively built into an old wardrobe. Even the apartments have daily maid service. Vignamaggio hosts special dinners twice a week, otherwise guests cook for themselves in their apartments or visit one of the many fine restaurants in Greve. It’s best to have a rental car when visiting the area. Driving the winding road up to Vignamaggio at night may seem daunting to some. The hotel can also arrange for taxi service. Via Petriolo 5 Greve in Chianti (39) 055 854661 www.vignamaggio.com Open: Mid-March until the end of the year Rates: 180 to 285€ per room, suite or apartment per night. Optional breakfast is 10 or 15€ per day. The town’s lovely old church, the site of occasional weddings, sits in the middle of the main square. Next door, an old farm building has been converted to a wine bar where breakfast is served as well. On the side, former lodging for the farmers has been converted into large guest rooms with equally spacious and airy bathrooms, a rarity in Italy. The former stables are now home to Amorosa’s excellent restaurant with indoor and outdoor seating, where guests can enjoy the estate’s tranquil setting while indulging in Tuscan specialties. Behind the main square are the rest of the converted farm buildings and accommodations. The hotel’s infinity pool sits in a quiet field overlooking the countryside. The hotel offers small touches such as a computer with Internet access in the lobby and complimentary refreshments poolside. It makes it hard to leave to explore the surrounding towns, but at Amorosa it’s just fine to stay and enjoy the beauty at hand. Località l’Amorosa Sinalunga (39) 0577 677211 www.amorosa.it Open: Early March to early January. Rates: A standard room is 234€ per night, including breakfast.A suite is 365€. the rest of your life.” —Anna Akhmatova 5 News, Tips, Deals Luxury Hotels Offer Dollar Guarantee oncerned about the dollar’s fall against the euro? Two luxury hotel groups want to calm your worries and entice you to stay at their hotels with the promise of a dollar guarantee. Through the end of the summer, selected members of Leading Hotels of the World are offering American travelers a fixed dollar rate (based on an exchange Grand Hotel Excelsior rate of $1.15 per euro) for hotel rooms. Travelers will “know before they go” how much they will be spending on accommodations. Sample rates include $330 per night at the Carlton Baglioni in Milan and $448 per night at Rome’s Hotel Majestic. Dollar rates include taxes and service charges. Members of Small Luxury Hotels of the World are offering a similar dollar guarantee through 2004. For C 6 more information, contact Leading Hotels: 800-223-6800; www.lhw.com or Small Luxury Hotels: 800-525-4800; www.slh.com ◆ —Marielena Martone Leading Hotel Properties Offering Dollar Guarantee: Carlton Hotel Baglioni, Milan Grand Hotel Baglioni, Bologna Grand Hotel Excelsior Vittoria, Sorrento Hotel Lord Byron, Rome Hotel Majestic, Rome Hotel Regency, Florence Hotel Savoy, Florence Luna Hotel Baglioni,Venice Mezzatorre Resort & Spa, Ischia Principe di Savoia, Milan Rocco Forte Hotel de Russie, Rome Selection of Small Luxury Hotels of the World Properties: Castello di Velona, Siena Hotel Lungarno, Florence The Inn at the Spanish Steps, Rome Londra Palace Hotel,Venice Terme di Saturnia Resort and Spa,Tuscany Villa Crespi, Orta San Giulio Reggio Emilia Requires Pet Pampering I f your dog or cat wants to visit Italy, he might be happiest in Reggio Emilia, a central Italian town, where as a result of recent legislation, pets are now protected and pampered like no place else.The legislation — a product of three years’ work among environmental agencies, veterinary services, animal rights’ activists and ordinary citizens — encourages goodwill towards animals.Want to eat a lobster? Don’t even think about cooking it live.The new law says that that would be “useless torture” and that a crustacean must be killed before it is put in The Clooney-Kerry-Como Connection the pot.Among other provisions: dogs urns out John Kerry and George Clooney share more than a passion for politics; they also have a mutual love for a villa on Lake Como. Kerry and wife Teresa Heinz sold the former ER star their 25-room villa on the shores of Lake Como in September 2002 just before Kerry entered the Democratic race for president. Clooney paid $10 million for Villa Oleandra in Laglio and in the process put the town of 850 on the map. Let’s just say that Laglio receives a few more visitors as a result of its hunky part-time resident. “The food is great, the architecture is beauti- T ful, and the people are lovely,” says Clooney. “And they sleep for two hours at lunch. It’s perfect.” If you want to be George’s neighbor for a week, Italy My Dream (866-687-7700; www.italymydream.com) rents the home next to his, Villa Serenella, for $3420 per week during high season. Don’t hold your breath on spotting George, though. A recent report in W Magazine says the Hollywood hunk is considering the purchase of an Italian mountain hideaway (currently owned by Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s brother) in order to avoid prying eyes. ◆ must have their beds shaded; canaries must have companions to combat loneliness; public transportation must provide for pet access for service animals.The fines for not complying range from 45 to 245€. And if you’re looking to win a little goldfish received at a town carnival? You won’t find that prize at Reggio Emilia’s next festa, because of course, such a practice is cruelty to fish. ◆ – M.M. 1 € = $1.22 at press time “Italy, and the spring and first love all together should suffice and Events G “Big” Problem for Italian TV Producer Western Kentucky’s Big Red W hat happens when you mix a college basketball mascot with a loose-tongued Italian businessman? You get a super-sized lawsuit against Ricci and an international publicity war. Thirteen years ago,TV producer Antonio Ricci quipped to Italian magazine Novella 2000, “There was this puppet called Big Red who was the mascot of an American basketball team. The team is Western Kentucky University. It plays in minor tournaments, but the puppet was cute.” Shortly afterwards, Ricci introduced a character named Gabibbo on his television program, Striscia la Notizia, which still airs today. Gabibbo looks strikingly similar to Big Red with a giant fuzzy red head, arched eyebrows and large physique. Now,WKU and Crossland Enterprises, Inc., the mascot’s licensing company, are bringing a $250 million lawsuit for copyright violation.And not only is the “puppet” being insulted, but one of WKU’s “minor tournaments” also known as the NCAA basketball tournament which spurs “March Madness,” has been belittled as well. A spokesman for Ricci said he was only joking, but that’s not enough to stop the lawsuit or the media war. Big Red has even traveled to Italy to show Italians the true identity of the fuzzy red puppet. ◆ —M.M. Ducasse and Tuscany: What a Perfect Combination W orld-famous chef Alain Ducasse opens his luxury Tuscan inn L’Andana this month. Located in the little-known village of Castiglione della Pescala in the Grossetto area of Tuscany, the hotel boasts 34 classically decorated rooms boasting every modern comfort including DVD players and highspeed Internet access. Ducasse will supervise the hotel’s 100-seat restaurant and create dishes with the bounty of the estate’s vineyard, olive grove and vegetable garden. Guests may take cooking classes beginning in September. The hotel will add a heated pool, fitness facility and spa next year. Depending on the season, prices for a double room range from $390 to $992 per night. For more information, call (39) 0564 944-321 or visit www.andana.it Noteworthy Travels How much more relaxed could you get by practicing yoga — in Italy? Spend a week at YogaItaly’s historic Villa Stampa in Lisciano Niccone on the border of Tuscany and Umbria. A light breakfast kicks off each day, followed by a morning of Ashtanga yoga in a rustic converted granary overlooking the Niccone Valley. After an enlivening morning, fuel up with a lovely Italian lunch, and then spend the afternoon exploring the region or simply relaxing beside the walled garden terrace pool and meditating on the rolling hills sprawled out before you. The villa’s rustic charm, the tranquil country setting, chef Stephania’s wholesome meals, free-flowing regional wines and soul-calming yoga make this yoga retreat an exercise in rejuvenation. A choice of single and double rooms, apartments and suites are available. Prices range from $870 to $1305 per person and include accommodations, yoga tuition, meals and drinks. Weeks are offered in May, June, July and September. For more information, visit www.spibey.dircon.co.uk If you are looking for a more cerebral trip, consider Far Horizon’s Sensational Sicily:Art and Archeology tour. This 15-day journey brings you around Sicily and back in time through the island’s rich history. You will see evidence of Sicily’s centuries-old Greek, Roman, Spanish, Arab and British inhabitants. Led by Dr. Chad Gifford, an Italian art and archeology expert, the tour’s high- lights include Syracuse’s Paolo Orsi Archaeological Museum and its 4th century catacombs; Agrigento’s many classical splendors; Erice’s medieval charm; various Greek amphitheaters; Roman temples and cliff-top cathedrals. Forbes has named Far Horizon’s Web site one of “the Internet’s Top 100,” three years running. The next trip is October 2 to 16, 2004 and costs $5695 per person, including airfare from New York, hotels, most meals, ground transportation and entry fees. For more information: (800) 552-4575; www.farhorizons.com Have an artistic eye? Or just want to cultivate one? It is no secret that artists have always been inspired by Italy and especially Umbria. You can now join their ranks, whatever your skill level, in La Romita’s watercolor and oil painting workshops. The La Romita School of Art is in its 37th season. Aside from being inspired by the local culture and geography, you will be guided by award-winning instructors. Participants lodge in a beautifully restored 16th century Capuchin monastery and enjoy home-cooked meals. The region’s many wonderful day trips help prevent creative fatigue. The 2- and 3-week workshops start at $2290 per person and include accommodations, transfers, meals, instruction and art history lectures. Sessions are offered May through October. For more information: (202) 337-1599; www.laromita.org —Kate Potterfield to make the gloomiest person happy.” —Bertrand Russell 7 buranello and cappuccino. The dense, sweet cookies fill us quickly, so we head to the Museo Del Merletto just down the street on the Piazza Baldassarre Galuppi. where the leaning bell tower chimes an invitation. The church’s humble entry hall doesn’t prepare me for the richness of its Lombard Baroque interior. There are intriguing paintings such as The Miracle of the Children, depicting a local legend about a floating marble sarcophagus that could only be brought to shore when the strong men allowed the town’s children to rescue it. The object of the story is now solidly placed at the front altar. There’s also the majestic Crucifixion, an early work by Tiepolo. The Venice-born master went on to work for the doge, but found time to paint the church’s dramatic panel in 1725. The museum’s three exhibit rooms showcase samples of the Venetian lace worn by the crowned heads of Europe. The display cases feature finely wrought collars and table coverings fit for a banquet, but the real show is the half-dozen women who chat as they work scrolling ribbons of lace over logsized velvet bolsters. Most of the women are well into mid-life, but their hands move with fluid grace as they turn out flower patterns that have become instinctive. Just as I wonder if Outside, the quiet streets I explore are they ever get tired, one woman puts studies in primary coldown her bobbins and ors with one exuberant briefly massages each apple green house hidknuckle. No wonder this den on a back alley. I’ve meticulous handwork heard that these island was almost abandoned To reach Burano, take vaporetto #12 houses were painted so in the late 19th century. which leaves Venice’s Fondamenta Nove brightly in order to help Fortunately, one elderly hourly. A one-day pass is 6€. the fishermen find their lacemaker shared her way home. knowledge and new The Museo generations continue to Del Merletto Easter is only a few pass it along. Piazza Galuppir days away, and the pro(39) 041 730034 duce stalls I pass are Ready to invest in this Open Wednesday – Monday, busy with housewives ancient art, I go around April to October, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.; examining artichokes the corner to Emilia to November – March, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.; and tomatoes. I know buy a few lace-trimmed Closed Tuesday. it’s time to eat because hankies. The Ammendola Tickets: 4€ youngsters are calling family began selling as they walk home from their fine work to the Emilia school. The breeze carVenetian nobility four Piazza Galuppi 205 ries an enticing mix of generations ago. Now (39) 041 735299 aromas from each house their exquisite table Lace-trimmed handkerchiefs as I direct my feet to linens and clothing go generally sell for 5 to 20€. Trattoria al Gatto Nero. home with Hollywood stars, a more modern Trattoria al This pleasant restaurant aristocracy. Gatto Nero sits on a narrow canal Via Giudecca 88 across from the nowTo quell my desire for (39) 041 730120 deserted fish market. these worldly goods, I www.gattonero.com Neither of us are afraid cross the piazza to the Lunch for two with wine to cross the threshold of Church of San Martino costs about 45€. the 8 DETAILS Photos: Ann Grybko An Escape to Blissful Burano continued from page 1 a place named for a black cat. Every feline is a fish devotee, and so are we. As our waiter Masimilliano carefully describes the menu choices, my friend notices his resemblance to the man in a large portrait in the dining room. When she asks who it is, he proudly acknowledges, “my grandfather, the restaurant’s founder.” We start with the gnocchi and crab he suggests. It’s a good match with our half liter of house bianco. When we ask for good white fish, he tells us we’re in for a special treat because they’ve got dory today. I must confess, I’ve never heard of dory, but his enthusiasm is contagious. “Wild,” Masimilliano explains, “Not from the fish farm.” There are several of them not far away. “It is a fish that cannot be kept long,” he adds, to assure us of its freshness. The lunch crowd has thinned now so Masimilliano tells us about the framed scenes of Burano that cover the walls. He points out the places where a bridge has been rebuilt or a house repainted. We linger knowing that the vaporetto leaves every hour. Our step is light as we climb over the last bridge before the quay. Soothed by the unhurried pace and beauty of Burano, I sit on the back deck of the departing vaporetto to watch until the bell tower disappears. ◆ —Barbara Wysocki Barbara Wysocki’s travel writing has appeared in Arthur Frommer’s Budget Travel. She also writes about fiber arts and spirituality. The lion is the symbol of Venice. Live the Dream!! Italy…My Dream Italian Villas with Pools! 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