Sunday, May 13, 2018

Aeolian Cruise, 3: Stromboli

The boat put in for about 3 hours on Stromboli, more time for walking, exploring, shopping, eating, drinking. The younger and more adventurous might even have walked some ways toward the summit or caldera. The island has accommodations and a variety of hiking and lava-viewing trails. Next life.
There are perhaps a couple hundred residents

Landing at Stromboli



Our walk basically took us along the southwest shoreline, up
into the town, and then back to the port

Black sand beach; of course

Helpful reminder

Lots of locally-sourced building materials on the island; and more arriving
every day

Another island and famous light-house

Town view

Under the volcano

Us, there; under Stromboli

Transportation on the island includes scooters, tuk-tuks, and golf carts


Top of the hill


Great tile

Aeolian Cruise, 2: Panarea

The ship stopped for 3 nearly hours at the island of Panarea, where we got off, explored, and had lunch.
We ate at a place call Cusiritati















The food was great, the view even better, and we mostly forgot
to take pix of the melon and prosciutto, Vicki's veal Milanese,
and my swordfish steak


Cusiritati

Panarea town

Nearby "island"

More


Stromboli awaits



Caves

And arches































Aeolian Cruise, 1: At Sea

Something we did not do on our 2011 visit to Sicily was to take the cruise out to the Aeolian Islands, specifically to the volcano Stromboli. Visiting Stromboli has since been high on our Sicilian priority list, and we were not on the big island more than a few hours before Vicki booked us on the next day's cruise. It is a long day's undertaking, pushing off at noon and not returning until 11, with two several-hour stops ashore at both Panarea and at Stromboli. These waters are studded with many lesser islands, about as rocky and jagged as one can imagine, and the cruise takes several of these in as well. We took something like 400 pix--it was a pretty action-packed 11 hours--and I'll try to edit them them down to 4 posts.
Panarea and Stromboli are 20-30 miles off the coast, I'd guess;
upper right of the helpful map

Boarding the Eolian Princess in the port of Milazzo































Eolian Princess; about a hundred passengers, mostly Italian, a
sprinkling of French, German, and English; and us


Departing Milazzo

Leaving the big island behind

Stromboli ahead

We got us a convoy

Passing by the larger Aeolian Isles

Nearing the small island of Panarea, where the cruise landed for
exploration, shopping, lunch

Stromboli and some of the little islands/sea-stacks

Among the uninhabited isles




































































































































Approaching Panarea

















The Tyrrhenian/Mediterranean is a gorgeous cobalt here, but
utterly clear in the shallows

Saturday, May 12, 2018