Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Milan Cathedral

I wanted to go to Milan, since we had never been there before. It is Italy's second largest city, its financial and communications center, home to the great cathedral, galleria, La Scala, and the Pinoteca Ambrosiana, all of which we wanted to see. Happily, all these are located a few steps from each other, and we were able to do everything we wanted, even some shopping, and then move on. We camped the night before on a quiet street in a suburban business park, then the next day parked at the water-park adjacent to the one Milan campground (which we judged too expensive to justify an overnight) and took a combination of bus and metro into the city center.
Milan's great cathedral, begun in 1386, more or less finished in the 1800s; said 
to be the largest Gothic cathedral; 4th largest in Christendom; super-duper 
flamboyant Gothic; unlike so many others, this puppy is all marble; intended to
accommodate all of Milan's 15th century population, 40,000; seen across Piazza 
del Duomo

















3500 sculptures are said to adorn its exterior
















Nice gargoyles



















Nice martydom sculptures



















Inside the feeling is one of great expanse and volume; the piers are enormous; 
the feeling of expanse is hindered, however, by all the paintings hanging around 
like so much wash
















The windows range in age from 1405 to the 20th century 
and are in very good condition; this is the oldest one





















Vicki reading a window















Flight to Egypt















Annunciation















Sculpture of the flayed St. Bartholomew; I hope the model 
was well-paid




















One of the three huge apse windows; 19th century copies 
of the originals











Some of the original inlaid marble floor, differentially worn 
by centuries of thousands of feet of the devout and tour buses





















Chapel



















Altar and apse; Baroque; note the little red light at the top 
near the ceiling




















X marks the spot; under the red light is where they keep 
The Relic, a True Nail of the True Cross, brought back from 
the Holy Land by  Constantine's mom, St. Helen, who must 
have needed a small fleet to haul back all the religious loot 
attributed to her; remember, it was her boy's Edict of Milan 
that legalized Christianity












Mantua

Our next stop was Mantua, primarily to meet friends/fellow travelers Kathy and Rick Howe, but also to see the Ducal Palace there and the works of Mantegna. We found Kathy and Rick at the appointed camperstop, by the Lake Inferioure. A heat-wave was underway, temps in the mid-90s, with Alaska-style mosquitoes swarming outside. So we stayed inside, testing the limits of our AC, and tasting a variety of wines and cheeses. Next morning Kathy and Vicki and I did the ducal palace while Rick dealt (successfully) with their Italian internet provider.
Much of the distance from Bolzano south toward Mantua is a great valley--
a gorge I would call it, with high walls on either side, but a mile or more wide 
in most places--very heavily planted in grapes, very big-time Italian wine 
country; anyhow, above is one of several castles along the route, this one 
perched high atop a huge pinnacle



















Wine in capsules; Bardolino, Valpolicella, Lambrusco...















Not the great stuff, but we had to stop anyway at a place called appropriately Dulce, 
to pick up a few souvenirs















In the ducal palace, Pisanello's unfinished Arthurian frescoes















Ditto





Mantegna's portrait of the Gonzaga family; note obligatory dwarf
Remains of an intriguing Mantegna allegory
The trompe l'oeil oculus is one of the earliest, and certainly the first to show the 
putti and others looking down from the heavens
Next we strolled Mantua's weekly market, in its three connected central piazzas, 
certainly one of the largest we have seen in Italy
Rick and Kathy and a very, very rare shot: side-by-side American campers in Europe!
And us

Fun On The Federico Augusto Trail

The next day I did the loop trail around the Sasso Lungo group. Well, technically, half-way around, with a ride to the col between Sasso Lungo and Sasso Piatto, an exciting descent down unadvertised snow and scree slopes, and then a race to the down-hill chairlift, which closed at 5PM. Another stress-test.
The general idea: walk around the three in the middle there, after taking the 
cable car to Alpe di Siusi and then a chair- lift up to Williamshut, then a 
cable-coffin to the col, then back down and to Williamshut and the chairlift, 
which runs only between 9 and 5


















On the chairlift: don't rock the boat















Ever-present parasails















Determined dad: toddler on his back, infant in carriage; mom is just ahead on 
the trail, waiting to assist over a rough patch















The lift up to the col between the two peaks; the "cabins" large enough for one 
person to stand...















View from the col: Sella Pass, a previous campsite















Snow-draped Marmolada, highest in the Dolomites















Other side of the col: looking up the snow slope; crampons 
and an ice axe would have been handy





















Ditto; I did have a chance to practice my scree-glissade technique
















The Italian Alpine Club maintains some beautiful refuges 
in the area




















A welcome sight, the chairlift back down to Alpe di Siusi, which I made with 
17 minutes to spare
















By the time I was back down in the "meadow," the entire massif was covered 
in cloud, and I was glad not to have spent the night up there

Alpe di Siusi

We drove on, through Castelrosso, to Alpe di Siusi, one of the Dolomites' major summer and winter playgrounds. Alpe di Siusi is featured as Europe's largest alpine meadow. This I very much doubt: Alpe di Siusi is covered with deep ravines, hills, etc. Meadows are supposed to be sort of flat. Whatever. It is a beautiful place, with hiking trails everywhere and cable-car access to the higher elevations. When we found out the major cable-car company allowed over-night parking in its lot, we decided to stay 2 nights.

Sights along the way, a train station turned hotel















By no means our first cable-car campsite















Vicki on the ride up to Alpe di Siusi















The Sassa Lunga group, which I will explore the next day;
note wildflowers















Panning around, mountains everywhere















Time for some apple strudel at the Almrosen Hut















As the cows look on















Mountain azaleas abloom















Thus; best showing of them I have seen















More wildflowers















Perfect U-shaped canyon; there are no glaciers left in the
Dolomites; but there used to be...

Return To The Dolomites

Enough cities, museums, cathedrals, crowds, tour buses, admission fees...and 90 degree heat. The Dolomites are just an hour's drive from Venice, so we headed back there for relief. We visited the Dolomites just last summer, and loved what we saw. So it seemed a fitting time to see more, including some of the more principal sights. The Dolomites, for those of you who don't remember, are the third part of Italy's mountains: the Alps in the northwest, the Appennines, which run the length of the peninsula, and the Dolomites in the northeast. Though much lower than the Alps (Italy owns half of Mt. Blanc, the Matterhorn, and all of Monte Rosa, the three tallest in the Alps), the Dolomites are no less scenic and are far more approachable.

So after finishing Venice, we drove on up north and stopped
at a rest area just at the gateway to the Dolomites; after a quiet
evening we awoke to find ourselves surrounded by four
tour buses, all of them unloading strange people with alpine
hats and big feathers, setting up for breakfast, band playing,
singing; it was apparently Old Home Week (-end) for
Italians born in the Alpine regions; seriously



















I kid you not; the group on the left are singing "O Solo
Mio" to accordion accompaniment; on the right they are
fixing a bread and sausage and wine breakfast, after which
I would be singing "O Solo Mio" too










Anyhow, thus enlightened, we drove on,
admiring the scenery




















Thus















Wildflowers everywhere















And still some snow in the higher peaks



















Lunch break















It is  a beautiful weekend and the motorcycles and sports
cars are out in force; we have just been passed by 4 Lotus 7s















Crebain from Dunland!















Hairpin turns: the price of great mountain scenery















We spent the night at Sella Pass, a tad over 7,000 ft., at the
foot of the Sasso Lungo group, which would figure in the next
couple days, and with views of Marmolada, highest of the
Dolomites; alas, we have been in warm weather sufficiently
long to have forgotten the perils of 7,000 feet in June...the
overnight low was 32 degrees--we had left most of our winter
gear back in the States--but nothing froze



















Our neighbors were a young German couple who rock-
climbed in the morning and para-sailed in the afternoon
c