So our friends wanted to see Mount Vesuvius... and they were driving. This meant requiring a small car like most Europeans favour, and a heart stone and nerves of steel. S had the forethought to take some video of driving in Italy. Aside from the fact that the roads are narrow, every turn brought new dangers. I can only imagine how it was likely very exhilarating to drive around a corner where convex mirrors were placed to help you see what was coming in the other direction.
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| Now imagine a motor cycle coming out of nowhere down the mid-line between the traffic ahead.... Ahhh,! That's all I can say! |
Then out of nowhere would pop a motorcycle or moped driving toward you on the mid line between the oncoming traffic and the line of traffic that you are driving in. I think I might get out of the car and walk! The most impressive thing about the drive was the fact that every turn you went around brought vistas of beauty and interest.
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| Beautiful views here... |
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| ...and here. |
G said that it was one city after another but they were small cities. You would hit a city and then shortly after you would be out of the city and heading into the country and then back into the next city.
And the communities were beautiful...
One after another towns of various sizes revealed themselves.... and each one with it's own unique appeal.
Teapot marvelled at how the homes were built so steeply on the cliffs with one house acting as the garden for the house above.
There were beaches too.... some near the towns and some that really were all to themselves...
Overlooking everything were feudal castles dating back to who knows how long ago...
And all the time the atmosphere was steeped in historical wealth, dreamy Mediterranean culture, and beauty above all. It is easy to understand why so many people travel to this part of the world.
Our friends stayed in a lovely domicile where they cooked their own meals each day after traveling to all the local spots of interest.
And of course the spot of interest that was of most curiosity to them was Mount Vesuvius... and the ancient town site of Pompeii.
Mount Vesuvius is best known for it's eruption in AD 79 when it spit forth lava and destroyed the Roman townsite of Pompeii.
Mount Vesuvius now looks like this...
and this...
and this...
You can now go to the edge of the crater but it really is an active volcano, though it hasn't erupted since 1944.
The nearest community/city is Naples. But at one time the nearest city was Pompeii. Pompeii... the city of mythology was destroyed in AD79 and thereafter was forgotten and disappeared from memory until the 1800s when the town site of Pompeii was rediscovered. Today it looks like this...
It is open to the public to wander about and see the effects of this devastating eruption that ended so many lives.
The bath houses of Pompeii look like this now....
and there is the remains of their amphitheatre....
then there are the remains of restaurants in what might have been a mall type of area.....
There are open ovens where bread would have been cooks and then there are holes in the surfaces of what might possible have been there to purposely hold bowls or pots of some kind. S had his picture taken next to one of these.
And though my friends didn't take pictures of it, the reality of Pompeii and the eruption of Mount Vesuvius really hits home when you see images like this...
How easy it is to forget the reality of natural disasters when they are so far away. But by traveling or at least seeing the pictures of someone else traveling to these places will remind us that we are humans and it encourages us to have a depth of feeling that we might not have otherwise.
This is the reason for my desire to travel....
I will end here and let you know that tomorrow we head back to Switzerland to Lake Lucerne, and to Bienz and to a pumpkin festival.... see you then...