Monday, July 5, 2010

The Steps of Bonifacio




From Santa Teresa Gallura to Bonifacio, we're on a ferry with the large blue whale – Moby – A bit too jovial (and blue) for its namesake. The gas fumes and rocking make me sick but it’s cold and raining outside.



We play a connect the dots game and suddenly Bonifacio is upon us or we are upon it.




This city is a fortress clinging to sparkling white cliffs…where, in the past, a sentinel would have marked our arrival, now, in this 21st century, bands of tourists look down at our approach.


We start the sweaty ascent into the heart of the city, unsure of our movements as only newcomers can be – soon we will know each windy, narrow street like the backs of our hands, but now we come to our hotel Santa Teresa by the back way, straddling a fence, me, white-knuckled, sure we will plummet off the cliff to our deaths.









(Merci Rich, Dawn, Chris & Alex)


The sky breaks open and unleashes a torrent of rain. Guy de Maupassant writes of Corsica’s torrents and wildness in a way that suggests he, too, has looked out of a room in despair at the falling rain blown in sheets against the cliffs of Bonifacio.



When the rain subsides a little, we make our way out onto the cobbled streets of Bonifacio, where we find a true local restaurant...Casa Doria. It is proper Corsican home cooking with tomato sauce and potatoes that stick to the ribs...and the first of what will be several chevre-on-toasts salads. This one is the best, within the cozy walls decorated by old Corsican farm tools.


(Merci Katherine, Kevin, Imogen & Scarlett)

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