SFTF Italia o Portogallo Pt.5 Decisions, decisions . . .or rather a lack of same!

Taranstales

December 2, 2018

Sitting in a sun-filled room and looking out over green fields rolling away towards small craggy mountains nearly hidden in the distant mist, and in the shadow of war-torn Monte Cassino with its rebuilt abbey, it would be lovely to be able to say “Yep, we know where we are going to spend the rest of our lives”. Alas, the only thing I can say quite categorically is that we have found plenty of places where we most definitely will not be replanting our roots!

The marvellously rebuilt Abbazia di Monte Cassino.

Italy has proven to be a fascinating melange of conflicting qualities. We found there beauty both natural and classical contrasting with a lot of manmade ugliness, mainly the result of some terrible post-war concrete architecture; we breathed sweet fresh air in every corner that had not been scarred by the works of modern man and then were apalled by streets strewn with detritus from a society unable to care for itself; and to make matters worse, everywhere there seemed to be a blatant disregard for rules and regulations put in place to make sense of the chaos that prevails. What Italy is not is a never-ending realm filled only with romantic relics from its glorious past, a haven of peace and beauty unscarred by the carelessness of modern man. And then there is the small matter of the weather. I’m sorry to say but those who have become acclimatised to Southern California’s never-ending sunshine over many years don’t take kindly to the idea of facing what Northern Italy is capable of dishing out three or four months of the year. Personally I am still sitting on the fence over that one, believing I am still a tough Canadian but occasionally starting to have doubts!

During the course of the past eleven weeks Celine and I have been on a quest. We arrived in Italy each with our own idealised memories of past visits, expecting we would easily fall in love with some part of the country that we had both previously held in such high esteem. It might have been simpler if we both had exactly the same idea of the perfect place and the need for compromise had never entered the equation. But we are your  normal married couple with the inevitable differences of opinion, who don’t always share the same likes and dislikes, and have a few different priorities in life. 

The Trevi Fountain, one of Rome’s must-see places – if you can get through the crowds!

Our saga started with three days in Rome, where our transcontinental flight from Los Angeles disgorged us back in September; we needed some easy time to get over the usual jet-lag and acclimatise ourselves back to the Italian lifestyle we both remembered. We stayed in Trastevere within walking distance of most of the main tourist sites, bought slices of very delicious pizza at a ‘hole-in-the-wall’ pizzeria, ate some very good rabbit stew at a trattoria around the corner from our digs and tested out the local transport system to seek out the second largest Basilica in town. Suitably into the travelling mode again, we took a couple of weeks on a side trip to Portugal and Spain (see “SFTF Pt3 – Ten days with International Living”) before getting on with the main project, searching for our future, which we believed might well involve la bella italia. 

A busy side-canal in Venice

Doing the tourist thing wasn’t really the intention of our trip but there were a few places we both wanted to revisit to remind ourselves what we had seen and liked so much in the past. So we gave ourselves three days each in Venice, Bologna and Florence. Venice and Florence were much more crowded than I remembered and had ever so slightly lost their charm as a result. In Venice our gondola trip was, at times, almost like being in a waterborne traffic jam; and we only just caught our vaporetto back to the carpark before a record high tide brought the city to a standstill. Bologna was new to me and I was suitably impressed by the renaissance architecture and its arcades that enabled us to walk nearly everywhere without an umbrella – it was a bit damp during our visit. And Florence disappointed us in one important regard as we had to miss out on the wonderful Uffizi Museum after we discovered too late that it is sometimes now necessary to make reservations for tickets 48 hours in advance.

One of the many lovely arcades in Bologna

The tourist theme continued albeit unintentionally. We were travelling long distances and needed to break the journeys into easy stages, stopping sometimes for just one or two nights. The simplest plan was to look for towns that had something of interest, a focal point for the time we would be there, and often it was somewhere we had read about or that had been recommended by someone or other. In Italy this was almost inevitably a town or city of historical significance, rarely a town that was simply a very pleasant place to live. Thus we visited the red brick town of Urbino with its unusually large student population, the ancient troglodyte city of Metara which is said to be the third oldest continuously occupied city in the western world, Campobasso high in the hills of Campania with a marvellous museum about the Sammites, the wonderful  baroque city of Lecce, the capital of Puglia and the Firenze of the south, Cassino where we visited the site of one of the bloodiest battles of WWll, and finally San Stefano di Sessanio, a tiny earthquake shattered village high in the foothills of the mountains that are the heart of Parco Nazionale del Gran Sasso.

Some of the beautiful scenery to be found in Gran Sasso NP
The very ancient town of Matera, the home of several thousand cave dwellers until as recently as 1952 when Italy’s “shame” was brought to light.

In this way Italy, or at least the Italy we have seen on this trip and in the past, is its own worst enemy, for there is history of some sort everywhere, whether it be ancient Greek or Roman, medieval, baroque or renaissance, and where there isn’t history as we know it there is some of the most beautiful natural history to be found in all of Europe. Thus we seemed to spend days and days, tramping the streets of cities and towns, and even small villages, looking at archaeological sites, churches, museums, and castles, but rarely gaining true insights about the quality of life these places could offer us as potential new residents. We stayed in some beautiful homes, most notably an antique penthouse with marvellous views over the valley in the Umbrian town of Todi, and a wonderfully renovated farm house at the top of a hill in the little village of Moricone. I believe that our only mistake on this trip was to never stay anywhere really long enough to become even peripherally involved in the local community or get a real feel for the neighborhood.

The appearance is of a country that has a good handle on dealing with its rubbish . . .

When we did get a view of Italian life in the raw, such as our 48 hour sojourn in Naples, the drive through the modern city of Pompeii on our way to the Amalfi coast, the visit to the coastal town of San Cataldo some twenty miles east of Lecce or simply driving between our various destinations, the experience was not  always entirely gratifying. For starters parts of southern Italy seem to have a serious problem with refuse. You see it everywhere, either dumped in black bags in laybys, thrown into the bushes alongside an otherwise attractive country road, or casually thrown  out of car windows. Which all seems to be totally at odds with an apparently serious attempt by the authorities to have a well organised system of recycling. We found three or more different coloured containers, each destined to collect clearly defined streams of recyclables, in practically every place we stayed. Recycling bins were visible in every town and village, and collection schedules were posted for all to see. Yet every time we questioned locals about this rather anomalous situation, we received roughly the same message, namely that the local population really can’t be bothered and doesn’t have the will to clean up it’s own backyard.

And then of course there is the ‘excitement’ generated by meeting other road users. Much has already been said about the exuberance of Italian drivers, in blogs and travel guides of all ilks. I have driven in many parts of the world and have rarely been fazed by what has come my way. In my several jaunts into Italy it has usually been my passengers who have raised the “Oh my God” alarm bells as I have deftly avoided another heart-stopping situation. But once away from the wheel, I do have to admit to have now become quite neurotic about the sound of a scooter vaguely approaching in my direction at full throttle even when I am in a supposedly pedestrianised area, to totally distrust the actions of all motor vehicles anywhere near pedestrian crossings, and to being unnecessarily nervous when it comes to crossing a road without the sanctity provided by well signed semafori. Well okay, this sickness did reach the acute stage after 48 hours in Naples which has to have the worst case of scooter-mania we have seen in all of Italy, but it is something that has been a grumbling pain every time I have hit the shore of this bel paese. And, sadly, the ‘mad’ driving has a serious effect on Celine for whom, like so many US citizens, driving anywhere in Europe creates unwarranted fears of not being able to cope, even though she is a perfectly competent driver on her home turf. 

Scooters and pedestrians constantly playing chicken on the streets of Napoli!

Last but not least in this litany of complaints about what is still in my opinion an otherwise very desirable place to live . . .what on earth has happened to the Italian flair for architectural style and a desire for beauty as well as function that started in Roman times if not before, and continued for many hundreds of years possibly into the later years of the industrial revolution, or even the 1950’s? Practically without exception, every city and village that we visited and of which we enjoyed the centro storico within, had its outskirts filled with ugly concrete buildings, both residential and industrial, designed and built without the slightest pretence of artistic merit or architectural innovation. And to make matters worse, particularly in southern Italy, it seemed that the majority of these structures were in a sad state of disrepair with rusted crumbling balconies, weather stained walls in dire need of plenty of TLC and unkempt yards and gardens. [To be fair the post-war period of ugly architecture is not a phenomenom unique to Italy, just such a surprise in this country!]

There are almost certainly many reasons, some may say excuses, for these ‘unfortunate’ aspects of Italy, but it is with regret that I have to admit they do little to entice Celine, and myself, to make the move that we had been hoping might be the result of this year’s Italian saga. Countering these blights, there is of course the prospect of living in a country with hundreds of square kilometres of very beautiful countryside, a country whose people have proven to be nothing if not friendly and who have made us feel welcome everywhere we have gone, even including the most touristy areas. As is so often the case in a foreign country, a little of the local lingo has gone a long way in making us welcome and particularly Celine’s command of Italian has opened up many a fascinating conversation for us. We have spent time with ex-patriots who have had nothing but good things to say about their lives there, that is apart from the perennial complaints about Italian bureaucracy which most seem to have been able to endure, even if not enjoy! And yet we have also talked with several Italians, and ex-pats married to Italians, who can’t wait to get away from that self-same bureaucracy and from a country that they find to be increasingly unliveable; not exactly sure whether or not this is a case of rose-tinted spectacles versus the grass being greener on the other side of the fence. 

The most important lesson that I believe to have come out of this really quite wonderful trip, in spite of its unhappy conclusion, is the need for us to decide exactly what makes the ideal place for us to live. So many times Celine and I would find ourselves waxing lyrical about a hilltop village, or a view of the countryside, or sometimes even the old centre of a historic town or city, until one or other or both of us would ruefully admit that the place we are admiring would never make us both as happy as we hope to be in a new home. We both know the wishes of the other but neither of us is very good at accepting the need for compromise, if indeed compromise is the answer.

Something for me to go away and think about and, hopefully, write about sometime. 


SFTF Italia Pt4 – Addendum – A lesson learned!

Since writing this post I have received some interesting feedback from Monia di Giulmi, one of the better presenters at the conference, which I feel adds an important dimension to what I said. With her permission I am reproducing her comments below . . .

“I agree about almost everything you have written…but there is one point you have completely misunderstood:

…”but we had also come to understand why housing there can be cheap, and why the locals were so eager to bring in foreign investment.”…

“Are you sure that local people are kind to “foreigners” because they have some economic interest? 

“You really have misunderstood this point!

“When you bought the vegetable at the local outdoor market in Torino di Sangro, you have spent 1,00 euro of cherry tomatoe and the vendor has given you more than 1.00 euro extra gift of other products to try. Celine, was impressed, she said that this in California would never occur.

“You should investigate this point a little more…

“The nature of the locals…

The pretty hilltop town of Colledimezzo

“The welcome party in Colledimezzo was spontaneous and not planned.

“There are more than 15 families of foreigners from all over the world that have bought in Colledimezzo.

“This makes the locals very pride of their little town in the middle of nowhere.

“The mayor has not any interest in selling houses or bring in foreign investments, on the contrary, sometime foreigners give him more trouble than anything else.

“In addition, I can say to you that Abruzzo might seem poor, but it is not really that poor, almost every family owns two or three houses…sometime four.

“In my opinion you hadn’t enough time to relax, stop for a while your journey across the world and start to enjoy what Abruzzo has to offer.

“Abruzzo can’t offer lot of culture and art like Umbria and Tuscany.

“Abruzzo can’t offer glamour and VIP events like Sardinia or the Lake region in the North.

“Abruzzo is a region where you have to stop and where you have to open your heart.

“If you have time you can read the blogs below:

“The first one is a client of mine, she writes her blog because she loves writing…(no other hidden interests):

https://navigatinglifeinabruzzo.com/2018/11/22/walk-to-the-village/?fbclid=IwAR2V–COKmiBQ-NYfqFtpmT-I8USc3ZnsEBUKOkoBafnhzlVMXnlhul0TL0 

“The second one is related to a family I never met, but I met many other families like them:

http://www.italymagazine.com/featured-story/share-your-italian-story-one-familys-new-life-rural-abruzzo?fbclid=IwAR39lN9SW9IxEbep4tfg3wutMiovy5g4Q59CCmQhFyUi8dK3ILovlB4soro

“Reynolds the man who was talking at the conference has a blog too:

http://theslowtourist.com

“I think it’s not easy to understand a region in just one week…especially one week spent at a conference and attending a guided property tour.

“I hope you will have time to comeback on your own, to enjoy the beautiful places the region has to offer (for sure not Pescara) and the very welcoming people that are just so happy to meet foreigners!

“My best regards from Abruzzo!!”

These are very valid comments and I am grateful to Monia for making them. We were indeed in Abruzzo for only a very short time and it was unfair of me to make any sort of realistic judgement. However, I can say for certain that the region has some very beautiful countryside which deserves a second, more lingering look.

Celine and I have been trying to see a lot of Italy in our ten weeks here trying to find that perfect place. In many ways we have probably tried to see too much and have been nothing more than whistle-stop tourists. Only now as we come to the end of this tour are we beginning to come to any firm conclusions, some of which may come as no surprise to my readers who are going through the same process. In my next post I will try and synthesise our experiences and draw my own conclusions . . . Will we decide to come back to Italy? And if so when, to where and with what objective? I wish the answers to those questions were already jumping out at me!!

SFTF – Portogallo o Italia 2018 Pt 4 – Tempted by Abruzzo – LIOS’ Italian Conference

Twelve months ago Celine and I knew very little about Abruzzo – mainly the fact that it produced a pretty good red wine – and we certainly had only a very vague idea where it was; and as for Pescara, it sounded like the name of some quaint little Italian fishing village.

This flimsy looking structure is called a trabuccho from which Abruzzo fishermen cast their nets

So it was a well-timed marketing coup for the publishers of Live and Invest Overseas (LIOS) to convince these two travel-hardened cynics that both the region and the town were places that were not only worth visiting but were also a suitable venue for us to attend a conference about starting a new life in Italy. Well not exactly, as Celine and I were very much in the right frame of mind to be tempted by anything that might reinforce our interest in all things Italian, and could perhaps help us further our search for the perfect place to set down new roots. Indeed, when we heard about the conference, we were already starting to plan the Italian phase of our exploration of Mediterranean Europe and without a moment’s hesitation requested that our names be added to the list of potential delegates.

Todi, one of those dreamy places one thinks about when contemplating life in Italy

Personally I have never been a great fan of conferences. Sitting hour after hour listening to people waffle on about their pet subjects, and then networking my way through the throng of fellow delegates, hoping to find a sympathetic ear for my own ideas about life, isn’t something that I have ever taken to with great relish. So I do admit to having considerable misgivings about our decision to attend as we checked into Hotel Esplanade, a grand looking edifice overlooking Pescara’s waterfront, that displayed the faded genteelness of a down-at-heel dowager who remembers better days. However, that day we had passed through some very beautiful countryside as we drove from Umbria into Abruzzo along quiet country roads, bordered by lush green fields beyond which the wooded hills were a mass of autumnal red, orange and yellow leaves.

Thus we arrived believing that this region of Italy could indeed be the amazing place we had been reading about in recent weeks, even if the outskirts of Pescara itself seemed unremarkable.

This fancy building in Pescara is a remnant of when Italy was run by a fascist regime.

As circumstances had panned out, this was to be the second group event of our this year’s Mediterranean odyssey, as we had taken a little detour to a Portugal and Spain event a couple of weeks earlier. That had not turned out to be a great success [see “SFTF Italia o Portogallo Pt.3 – Ten days with International Living”] which only served to magnify my misgivings. However, with registration formalities over, the proceedings soon began to draw us in and we started to feel that this experience was going to be much more positive. The selection of presentations included many of the same topics we had heard and read about previously such as healthcare, taxes, real estate, assimilation difficulties etc etc, but they were greatly enhanced by the evident enthusiasm of various local mayors and entrepreneurs who so convincingly conveyed their love of Abruzzo, and their desire to welcome us foreigners into their communities. There were some subjects that seemed to us to be irrelevant to our ideas of settling in Italy; investing in truffle farming in France or in an outrageously expensive condominium development were certainly of no interest to us whatsoever. Whilst I appreciate that such subjects might be part of a “How to get rich quickly without lifting a finger” type of conference, there was no reason for them to be presented to a group of people who had travelled half-way round the world to learn about the pros and cons of starting a new life in Italy, and Abruzzo in particular. 

Dinner with the mayor of Citta’Sant’Angelo

The opening presentation introducing us to local dignitaries was a great start for the conference. The mayor of Citta’Sant’Angelo, Gabrielle Florindi, was a real gem not speaking a word of English and yet managing to convey his welcome with the help of an interpreter, plenty of typically Italian gesticulations and a serious look on his face that seemed to want to smile but rarely did. His invite to host everyone on a tour of his elegant little town, a tour which included a visit to the Sciarrm winery complete with generous wine tasting and concluded with a sumptuous dinner in Osteria Cavour, was truly beyond the call of duty! And for me, a visit to a winery that produced my long-time favourite tipple, Montepulciano D’Abruzzo, was an added bonus! Whether or not anyone will be taking up his offer to personally ensure that the purchase of a house in his town by any of us will be completely stress-free is another matter, especially considering he is resigning his mayoral duties in six months time. All the same, he and I, after a wine-soaked conversation over dinner promised to learn each other’s language better before our next meeting!

A beautiful sight! Barrels full of Montepulciano d’Abruzzo

The aforementioned tour took place on the Friday afternoon, the conference itself having finished at noon that day. Two days earlier, after the local mayors had welcomed us to “la piu bella regione di abruzzo”, our MC and Editor-in-Chief of LIOS, Kat Kalashian, had got proceedings going with an enthusiastic introduction ensuring we were all most definitely ready to be enlightened. Ten very informative sessions, one lunch break and two networking coffee breaks later, we were all feeling very positive, our brains were overflowing with informative facts about our prospective new lives in Italy, and we were more than ready for the evening’s “cocktail party” which turned out to be a delicious buffet in the ristorante pizzeria, La Sirenetta, on the waterfront across from the hotel. Suitably sated, Celine and concluded the evening with a long walk along the beach enjoying the mild, early-autumn, sea air and considered what we had heard so far, coming to no immediate conclusions except that Pescara itself had failed to impress. One presentation of that first day deserves particular mention however, namely that of Raymond Seitzer, a local expat, from which we gleaned a real idea of everyday living. 

Life in Abruzzo could be in a hilltop village in Gran Sasso National Park

Day two was much the same, Guido Lo Iacono, a state notary kicking off the proceedings with a very well presented treatise on the practicalities of buying a property and avoiding the many possible pitfalls. Unfortunately our interest wained somewhat during the day as subject matter more relevant to financial high flyers, but totally irrelevant to our interest in living in Abruzzo, drifted into the mix. Thus our eyes began to glaze over and eventually we played hooky during one or two of the late-afternoon presentations.

That evening, being just simple “VIP” delegates, we had our noses slightly put out of joint as the evening’s activity was a “Premium Members Only” cocktail party. This only served to alienate us and make us realise that LIOS is perhaps more interested in the richer echelon of potential overseas investors, rather than ordinary folk such as ourselves who simply want to move abroad. And it also started me wondering why anyone would want to become a Premium Member, investing a comparatively large sum of money to allow them to attend several more similar events, especially when there seem to be a small coterie of presenters who are obviously regurgitating the same old material at each and every conference. Another way of looking at it is this: if you have to keep on attending conference after conference, then perhaps the conferences aren’t doing a very good job of helping you decide where to move to!

Life in Italy has changed somewhat over the years

Anyway, Friday morning soon arrived, our last half day, and thankfully things ended on a high as most of the talks were of considerable interest – my success index being the number of notes I made during each session. Kat Kalashian closed the proceedings by succinctly reminding us about some of the most important things we had heard during the last couple of days, though she also could not resist adding in a few LIOS commercials. Which brings me to another issue that continues to bug me; was it really necessary for nearly one third of the conference proceedings booklet – 8 of 26 pages – to be advertisements for other activities and programmes one could purchase from LIOS? After all, everyone at the conference is already bombarded daily with lengthy e-mails all trying to inveigle them to purchase this or that programme. Or am I the only subscriber who gets heartily sick of the non-stop demonstration of excessively wordy copy-writing that if I am honest, tends to turn me off rather than making me want to participate in more of their activities?

Monia, our charming hostess from Abruzzo Rural Property

Friday afternoon of course brought with it the very enjoyable tour of Citta’ Sant’Angelo, but the real property hunting began on Saturday morning for those of us who had chosen to join Monia Di Guilmi on a two day bus tour of mainly rural properties available in and around the more southerly city of Vasto. Unfortunately four of us who had driven our own cars to the conference, now found ourselves having to follow the bus for much of the day, so we did perhaps miss a bit of the commentary; but we most certainly did not miss out on seeing any of the very interesting houses she had chosen to show us. 

Not having a clear idea of the average budget of her prospective customers, Monia hit the high end of the market to start with, showing us a rather splendid old three storey mansion with a delightful garden climbing the hill behind it and with close-up views of the Adriatic at the front. It had been lovingly restored and packed full of antiques by its owners who very graciously allowed us to swarm all through their home; but sadly, with an asking price of €800,000, it didn’t quite fit the description of “low-cost housing to be found in Abruzzo” that had been foisted on us over the previous 72hours.    Our next stop was high up in the hilltop town of Colledimezzo where we were delighted to find ourselves feted by another mayoral welcoming party including the local police chief and various other worthies from among the enormous population of 500 or so.

The main square of Colledimezzo

Then after a couple of glasses of local plonk and some home-made pasticcini and twenty minutes chatting with the locals in the usual mixture of our two languages, Monia took us in tow again and led us through four properties that were very much more in line with our budgets, all in very old buildings but in various degrees of restoration. The wonderful views towards Lago di Bamba in the valley far below us from a couple of the fully restored properties made more than a few of us start to seriously consider hilltop living!

The day’s real estate tour ended with a very bare apartment in need of a complete work-over on a busy main street in Vasto, where we were due to stay the night in the very chic boutique hotel San Marco which was a lovely change after the not-so-splendid Esplanade. Like many of the towns we visited in Italy, the old centre of Vasto was pedestrianised and a very pleasant place for that Mediterranean tradition, the evening promenade; and for Celine and I, a couple of the stalls in the market were just what we needed to purchase some tasty victuals for our supper.

The next day we were bus-borne and our first stop was a very spacious property across the valley from Torino di Sangro, a village whose name translates to something like “blood of young bulls”. A delightful country property of half a hectare and with plenty of rooms to rent it was also way out of our price range. A town-house in the village, owned by an ex-USAF pilot with a penchant for painting naked ladies, in superb condition and with yet more wonderful views across the valley, was much more desirable and as the owner plied us with a very good prosecco one or two of us were starting to look for our cheque books.

Town-houses in old villages have their disadvantages however, especially as one starts to think about living in them into old age; and one we saw later in the day in Casalbordino, exhibited the commonest fault, namely when hemmed in by other buildings they can be very dark.

Lunch at Borgo Antica

However, we were at last looking at properties within the budget of most of us, and after Monia had treated us all to a very nice lunch at Borgo Antica, local cuisine and plenty of my favourite Montepulciano di Abruzzo, she took us to see a property that was right up my alley, so to speak. A single family home on two levels, on about an acre of land sloping down towards the valley with 40 healthy looking olive trees, a flat area for an ordinary garden and my veggies, only minor work needed to make it very liveable and a price tag to suit.

If only we had been hooked on living in Abruzzo it would have been ideal, but, sorry to say, we weren’t and much as I would have liked to reward Monia’s gracious hospitality, we finished the tour as undecided as we were when we arrived in Pescara five days previously.

It was raining steadily the next morning as we said our goodbyes and headed north to do a bit of simple sight-seeing in some of the better known tourist traps. We were in many ways disappointed with the little we had seen of Abruzzo, but we had also come to understand why housing there can be cheap, and why the locals were so eager to bring in foreign investment. Personally I am glad that we had attended our first LIOS conference but I am not sure we will be repeating the exercise in the near future. I may well continue to subscribe to their newletters for the foreseeable future as they do help to keep me inspired to look for that ideal place for Celine and I to plant those new roots. But I am not convinced that attending a conference does anything more than increase my cynicism about the motives behind the organisation of such events. 

The very ancient town of Matera, the home of several thousand cave dwellers until as recently as 1952 when Italy’s “shame” was brought to light.

Right now, as I finish writing this post, Celine and I are staying in the extraordinary town of Matera, a few miles inland from the instep of Italy. Since leaving Vasto and Pescara we have seen lots more very beautiful countryside, visited some of Italy’s busiest and at the same time most beautiful cities and met with many lovely people, both Italians and ex-pats, who call Italy their home. We are doing that vital thing, putting our boots on the ground, and in my next blog I will let you know if and how our views of this beautiful country have evolved . . .watch this space!

Portogallo o Italia Pt 1 – Lost and found in Trastevere

As I write the sun is shining fiercely, driving me off the balcony where I broke my fast an hour ago. In the distance the Atlantic Ocean fades away into the horizon, separated from the woods around this sixties era, ten-storey apartment building by a thin ribbon of beach. The sound of commuting traffic in the distance is the only reminder of the wonderful city Celine and I left behind just twenty-four hours ago that is the place I want to tell you about today.

Our apartment in Trastevere looked out over these quiet gardens.

Trastevere is one of the oldest continuously inhabited parts of the city of Rome, ever since the Etruscans dwelt there five hundred years or more BC. It is now a delightful jumble of narrow cobbled lanes, filled with ristoranti, trattorie and old churches, and bubbling with life, both local and touristic. We have come to Italy to continue our quest for a place to plant our roots and build a new nest – how’s that for mixing my metaphors?! – and as the vagaries of airline travel obliged us to land at Rome’s Fiumicino airport,  it seemed a suitably expedient plan to spend a few days of rest and recreation in that ancient city, before travelling to lesser conurbations to the east.
Through our connections on HomeExchange.com we had acquired the use of a small apartment across the road from the impressive offices of the Ministero di Pubblico Istruzione on Viale di Trastevere, just inside the city walls on the west side of the river Tiber (the Italian name is Tevere, hence Trastevere means ‘across the river’). We were within walking distance of many of the most famous sites, which we would take full advantage of the next morning; but tired and jet-lagged, we restricted our first evening’s meanderings to our immediate locale. A loud clap of thunder had greeted us as we walked up the street from Trastevere Stazione, and as we settled gratefully into our new digs, a gentle shower of rain soon washed the leaves of the avenue of plane trees and left the streets shiny and fresh. 

These pizzas might look pretty ordinary, but they were truly delicious!

The clouds had thinned and blue sky appeared among them as we made our first stop of the evening’s stroll at Suppli, a hole-in-the-wall pizza parlour where we bought two slices of the tastiest take-away pizza imaginable [www.suppliroma.it]. Maybe our fatigue helped to magnify its excellence but it did it well enough for us to stop and be equally satisfied there again a couple of days later. Anyway, our hunger suitably sated, we walked through this pleasant neighbourhood to the west bank of the Tiber, admired the lights of the Ponte Sisto reflecting off the blackness of the river below, and then about-faced into the warren of streets to find ourselves inside and enjoying the calm of the evening “celebration” as we admired the lustrously gold-plated apse and ceiling of Santa Maria in Trastevere, the main church of this district.

Ponte Sisto in daylight, reflected in the calm waters of the river Tiber.

Trusting my map reading skills and famed innate sense of direction to find the way back to our apartment, I then led us confidently into the front gate of the local police barracks, “Citerna Militaria”, which is where we first realised how hopelessly lost we were. The local polizia were very helpful however, and soon had us going in the right direction; and with just one more stop at an outrageously expensive “Bio” store where we obtained our basic needs for the next morning’s breakfast, and a pause to refill our water bottles at one of the many roadside springs, we were soon safely “home” and ready for our bed.

San’Angelo atop the eponymous Castel

The next morning, a Friday, we woke up bright-eyed and bushy-tailed and after our usual healthy breakfast of meusli, coffee, toast and marmalade, we were ready to “hit the city”. Initially heading for the Pantheon, we actually found ourselves close to Ponte San’Angelo and decided to poke our noses into Castel San’Angelo, a place neither of us had visited in our earlier lives. Built originally as a Mausoleum for Emperor Hadrian, and in threatening times used as a refuge for the resident Pope, it is now an interesting museum and from the roof provides a superb 360 degree panoramic view of Rome; so in spite of it’s somewhat uninspiring initial appearance, we were glad we decided to make the visit. After tramping up and down steps for two hours we felt we deserved lunch and having changed our original itinerary again we stopped at Tucci Ristorante on Piazza Novana and had an ‘okay’ lunch as we admired the obelisk and fountains and people-watched.

Trevi Fountain

The Trevi Fountain is on everybody’s bucket list and, indeed, it seemed that ‘everybody’ had decided the 21st of September was the day to cross it off the list! It is of course a very beautiful sculpture, and a real money spinner for the city who dredge two or three thousand Euros out of it daily, but I would love to see it as uncrowded as it was when Marcello Mastroianni and Anita Ekberg romanced each other in Fellini’s “La Dolce Vita”. 

A wonderfully satisfying ice-cream cone apiece from “Gelato Sicily” [www.gelatosicily.it], we finally reached that most marvellous example of Roman architectural engineering, the Pantheon, and stood in awe of it’s incredible domed roof. A hundred metres away we found our next must-see treasure, the set of three paintings by Caravaggio in the Contarelli chapel in a corner of Chiesa San Luigi di Francesi.

Babington’s Tea Shop in the brown building to the left of the Spanish Steps

As we were by then most definitely on the tourist trail, we turned north to the Spanish Steps – Scalinata di Trinità dei Monti in the local lingo – where we were inveigled to partake of afternoon tea at Babington’s Tea Shop, an anachronism from 125 years ago when Rome was a stop on the Grand Tour taken by so many North European “worthies” of their day. The threatening clouds opened as we walked up the famed stairs, to head back to the terminus of the #8 tram, somewhere in the vicinity of the huge memorial to Emanuelle ll. After only spitting on us initially, the rain drops soon became heavier and we dived for shelter first of all into a shop selling nothing but carved Pinnochios of all different sizes, shapes, colours and length of proboscis, until we noticed an enoteca across the other side of the lane where we swapped the army of long-nosed puppets for a chance to taste and learn about the local wines and grappa. I had always enjoyed grappa as, well, just grappa, but by the time the rain had stopped the very knowledgable young man therein had taught us that grappa is every bit as variable as the culture of whiskey production in bonny Scotland. 

The vast nave of the Basilica San Paolo

The next morning we both slept in very late, neither of us stirring until well after the time for elevenses; obviously our bodies needed to recover from the combined effects of delayed jet-lag and the previous day of pounding the pavements. So for this second and last day of our whistle-stop tour of Rome we elected to restrict our tourism to a couple of basilicas, the first being the not so-famous but still the second largest one in Italy. The Basilica San Paolo is out in the sticks, well away from the razzamataz of old Rome, and necessitated us catching a #23 bus, which very conveniently passed right by our door in Trastevere. We then had a good view of everyday life in the suburbs as the bus went past shopping streets, high-rise apartments and industry along the length of Via Ostienze. Rome’s buses are aimed at accommodating as many people as possible and seats are limited to allow the masses to strap-hang as the bus rattles along the poorly maintained suburban streets. Originally consecrated in 324AD, the basilica was originally out in the countryside, and of course well away from the Vatican City although owned by the Holy See. Rome has, of course, somewhat expanded since then, which accounts for the rather drab surroundings of this magnificent edifice. From it’s pillared forecourt with its imposing statue of St Paul wielding his sword at the supplicants, one enters a vast nave 132m long by 65m wide, with a flat wooden ceiling of the same egg-box construction as we had seen in the Pantheon, 30m above one’s head. Natural light pours in through fine alabaster paned windows set high along each sidewall and at the far end, an impressive ciborio sits above the altar in front of a beautiful semi-circular apse. A very old carved wooden Easter candle, Candelabra del Cero Pasquale, to one side of the altar deserves a second look.

The beautiful spiral pillars around the cloister of the Basilica San Paolo

A small museum of religious artifacts, accessed through the pretty cloister with it’s unusual twisted, decorated pillars, is of interest to those of religious inclination, and to us unbelievers adds to our continuing incredulity at the churches riches!

Returning to tourist nirvana, we found that the #23 bus also went pretty well right past the front door of that other fairly well-known basilica, Basilica Papale di San Pietro in Vaticano, but upon arriving there and seeing the lengthy queue to get in, opted to only walk around the famous square before heading back across the river and into Trastevere where we sought out a small cafe where our hostess had suggested we take dinner. In Rome, dining doesn’t begin until at least 7.30, so we had a pre-dinner aperitif in the rather brash, wine-barish, strangely named, “404:No. not found”, before taking our seats promptly at 7.30 at a streetside table outside Trattoria di Paolo, which very quickly filled up making us glad we hadn’t dallied on the way. A dinner of rabbit stew followed by tiramasu, served by an old waistcoated waiter, seemed a very appropriate way to end a busy, but very enjoyable Roman weekend. 

The next morning we awoke feeling fit and able for our next journey, walked out to the street to catch the tram down to Trastevere Stazione, then hopped onto the local train to FCO from where we waved our goodbyes to this fine city – for a couple of weeks anyway – as we flew westwards for a short introduction to whatever delights Portugal might offer this couple of prospective emigrees.

ITALIA o PORTOGALLO?

 

The excitement is starting to build, the basic itinerary is all planned, flights have been booked, some places to stay have been found; but still we aren’t sure we are going to see what we want.

Earlier this year Celine and I returned from a road-trip vacation in Australia, telling everyone including ourselves, that we were going to Italy in the autumn. The world may well be our oyster but we are fairly sure now that the pearl we seek therein is somewhere close to the Mediterranean. You see we love Europe and all things European, and Italy always seems to be the country that has a stronger pull on us than everywhere else in the Old World. We have already spent altogether the best part of a year, scouting out France, the Basque Country, a wee bit of Liguria in northern Italy and a fairly unspoilt old fishing village on the Costa Brava in north Spain. We have even made a few visits back to the lands of our forefathers in Poland and England, but nowadays neither has the magic force needed to make us pick up sticks, pack our bags and build a new nest. What is lacking in one place, we find by the bucketful in others, and what we love about another place lacks that which we found in the first place. Dangerously for us we can be very impulsive; consequently we very nearly made three or four extremely rash, instant, house-buying decisions, but luckily our nerves got the better of us and our money still sits, safely we hope, in the vaults of England’s ancient high-street banks. 

So we made the decision to satisfy that inner longing that both of us have for La Bella Italia, did some fairly basic research, and decided to make our base camp in an area of the country, the region of Abruzzo, of which neither of us has any prior experience but which seemed to have great potential for various reasons. But all the time, nagging thoughts rattled around in the back of my mind, that perhaps Portugal should also be given due consideration before we allowed ourselves to fall in love with yet one more location, which may or may not be as ideal as it seems at that moment. And that is where good fortune started to provide us with the bare bones of an itinerary that may, perhaps, put nagging thoughts to bed  forever and give us good cause to pursue just one road along which to find our new home, well for a while at least!

For several years now I have been an avid though occasionally cynical reader of the outpourings of a couple of organisations that specialise in giving advice to wannabe emigrants such as my wife and me. The cynicism arises as much as anything the result of the constant flow of copy aimed at my wallet more than my heart. Nevertheless, I have continued to read much of this material in the belief that basically both companies care for the well-being of their readers and the aspirations of those readers to find better lives for themselves; the constant barrage of letters and articles advertising this or that new publication, conference or special membership, I trust to be simply the means by which these hopefully philanthropic publishers can continue to thrive. Thus our, or rather initially my, choice of Abruzzo had been influenced not inconsiderably by their enthusiastic writings. Celine and I began to delve more deeply into the offerings of this Italian province that we understood as being, in effect, the poorer man’s Tuscany, the undiscovered part of Italy that was every bit as beautiful as its neighbour to the west, and more affordable to the average person trying to make the best of their meagre pension. Taking our research beyond the aforementioned outpourings, we began watching videos on YouTube and, worryingly, realising that the poverty of the region might be more depressing than we were willing to live with. But the charms of the Italy that we had both been seduced by in the past continued to sway our thoughts and then, lo and behold, we read that one of the two organisations was arranging a conference to be held in Abruzzo during the time we were due to be over there. This seemed an ideal chance to both glean loads of useful information about everything to do with a new life in Italy, and to put to the test my sometimes waning faith in the organisers. 

At last our travel plans had a focal point and we could get on with the nitty-gritty of planning in more detail. We booked our flights between Los Angeles and Rome and suddenly we were past the point of no return. But there is always a fly in the ointment and this time the fly was Portugal, for no sooner had we fixated our thoughts on Italy than we received details of a ten-day tour being promoted by “the other organisation” to give people like us a taste of the delights of living in Portugal and Spain; and the dates fitted in ideally with our eastbound flight to Rome. Of course we soon discovered that the cost of changing our flight to make our first European landfall in Lisbon was astronomical, and we chose instead to back-track from Rome to Lisbon, allowing ourselves to first of all luxuriate in the former city for three days. So now we have the best of both worlds before us. We will have a chance to experience to varying degrees, the two remaining countries on our search list, Portugal and Italy. We will get to compare the abilities of the two organisations whose publications have been so instrumental in keeping alive our desires to find a better place to live, and with luck we will return to sunny, overcrowded Southern California at year’s end with an even clearer idea of what the future holds for us.

Now all that we have to do is to reserve a few more accommodations, rent a car suitable for the vagaries of Italian driving and the narrow streets of the many hilltop towns we expect to visit in Italy, add a few basic phrases of Portuguese to  our linguistic “skills”, and enjoy yet another stage in our search for the future. But who knows what we’ll be thinking by the time we get home again!