Ups and Downs
05.11.2009 - 05.14.2009
Our day in Cinque Terre provided a much needed day of rest and recovery for our bodies and as it turns out, some mental preparation for what lay ahead of us in the next day's ride. In the train station on the way to Cinque Terre we met two Americans from Connecticut with whom we sat on the train ride from Sestri Levante to Riomagiorre, the furthest of the five towns, and had long discussions about anything and everything, including our newest obsession, the whereabouts of Gene Wilder, we were just glad to be speaking English rather than the bastardized form of Italian that we have developed in learning to feed and house ourselves. Immediately off the train and a 20 minute hike later and we found ourselves in a small tavern in Manarola where a native Hawaiian served us a sampler of the local fare including native Ligurian Pesto and Anchovies which melted in your mouth, and the local wine grown along terraced vineyards along the cliff's edge, all of which left us needing a nap on the beach, so we promptly went to the first town Monterrosso and found a beach where we collapsed on the sand. Not long into our naps we were approached by a Thai Masseuse and for 10 Euro we enjoyed 20 minutes massages (just the feet and legs thank you). We caught the last train from Cinque Terre back to Sestri and passed out in our hotel preparing for the next day's ride.
The ups and downs of which we speak began very early in the ride out of Sestri Levante, we would climb for an hour, decend for twenty minutes, coast along the next ocean front resort town and then start the process all over again, which was all at once thrilling and exhausting...that is until we reached Genova...the only way to summarize the ride through Genova is a short poem, with appoligies to Johnny Cash...
Genova may you rot and burn in hell
May your walls fall and may I live to tell
May all the world forget you ever stood
And may all the world regret you did no good!
Seriously though, a larger mass of mindless motors moving in many directions through tunnels, up hills, onto middle of the city freeways, and speeding past us has not been encountered on this trip, not even Rome or the Autostrada compared! By the time we reached out next campsite just out of Genova we were exhausted, but were rewarded with an amazing meal at the campsite.
By the way, if you are looking for a campsite in Italy, find the place where the railroad tracks and autostrada meet and somewhere in the vacinity you will find it.
The next day after Genova we were rewarded, or so we thought with a coast road which had very minimal climbing, and a fast ride until we hit the village of Noli Ligurie. In Noli we started looking for lunch but were running a bit late and so everything was closed until one chef volunteered to open his kitchen to us and he prepared massive quantities of pasta for us, by far the best meal we have had so far! Little did we know that we would need every carb in that bowl for what lay ahead. Soon after Noli, the coast road was closed, no explanation, no way around or through, just closed, so we returned to Noli for what turned out to be a 600 foot elevation gain climb in a little over a mile and a half!!! OUCH! but we were soon at the top enoying a fast ridgeline ride to Finale Ligure and on to Albenga where we spent last night.
So now on to the Italian/French Border...
hmm, by the way, if you ever get the chance to go on a journey of your own making, make sure to try the Basil liquor while listening to DeJango Reindhart style guitar in a small cafe near the ocean, watch the SMART CARS speed by cuz they are everywhere, no one here drives anything else.
Posted by NAPoulos44 05.14.2009 4:39 AM Archived in Italy Comments (1)





