Thursday 2 October 2014

Cinque Terre

Five ancient fishing villages tucked into the base of mountainous cliffs on the Ligurian coast: Monterosso, Riomaggiore, Vernazza, Corniglia, Manarola.


Terraces carved into the sides of mountains have been cultivated for centuries with grapes and olives, and until not so long ago the villages were connected only by mule tracks. 


Access is still difficult today. 
From inland you can drive down to certain villages via a hectically winding road, in places so narrow that only one car can pass, through miles of protected national park ...


And to travel between the cinque terre you can walk for hours along a cliff path that is in places not for the faint-hearted ...


or travel by boat from one village to the next ...


or, more practically but less scenically, by a train that links the villages.


From Monterosso, the oldest village, with a history going back to 643 AD, the views across a calm Ligurian sea at sunset are spectacular (from higher up you should be able to see right across to Corsica on a clear day) ...


and down the coastline from Monterosso's beaches the inlets sheltering the other terre are just visible.


My favourite was the smaller Vernazza. Having missed the ferry (below right), we whizzed, bumped and flew into Vernazza's little harbour in a little dinghy care of enterprising  sailor Angelo.


for a drink and aperitivos in the sun next to the stone wall separating village from harbour.




It was hard to imagine in this peaceful setting the devastation caused by floods in 2011 when a landslide of mud tore down the vertical cliffs behind Vernazza and Monterosso, almost destroying both villages.


From the central piazza on the sea-front, the village rises up along steep alleyways, and some of the homes seem to grow out of the cliff face


The church of Santa Margherita di Antiochia and the small Belforte castle, built to protect the village from pirates, look over Vernazza.



Liguria, Italy, September 2014



7 comments:

  1. There are no words to adequately describe this part of the world. The Mediterranean coastline is a gift from God to all us mortals. To me, this is heaven. Just beautiful, Karen. I wish I could be with you on your travels, you live quite a splendid life !! xx's

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  2. Utter beauty, and imagining an "Angelo" appearing to transport you in his dinghy, what delight! :-)

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