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More Lipari

October 17th, 2008 · Italy, Photos, Travel

The next day was kind of windy and rainy, so I didn’t really do much. I did a little bit of hiking, but was smart enough to come in out of the rain. My cheapo Hungarian umbrella got turned inside-out frequently by strong gusts of wind, so it wasn’t much use.

On Sunday, I rented a little scooter and set out to circumnavigate the island. The scooter was way, way more fun than it had any right to be. It was bright yellow, and the right mirror was broken off which gave it a silly, lopsided appearance. But it was fast enough to be fun and exciting without being overwhelming. I got it up to about 60 km/h (around 40 mph) on some of the more wide-open stretches. Actually, the only scary parts were trying to turn around slowly or maneuver carefully down a narrow street without running off the edge of the road (I almost ran into a ditch a couple times) or scratch up the side of the scooter (which would come out of my deposit).

Anyway, the scooter was awesome and I really enjoyed it. It was a great way to get around to see the whole island of Lipari, which isn’t actually that big. It was about 37 km for the road all the way around. I took it at a pretty leisurely pace, stopping in some of the small towns and to do some hiking, and it still only took me about 3 hours. After that, I just raced up and down windy hills until it was time to return the scooter.

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Stromboli

October 17th, 2008 · Italy, Photos, Travel

I came to Stromboli to hike the volcano, and it was awesome. Not in the ordinary, “this burger is awesome” (although a burger would be awesome right now) sense, but rather awesome in the literal, “inspiring feelings of awe” sense.

Stromboli has been erupting continuously throughout recorded human history. And it’s a long one, the Aeolian islands have been continually inhabited since before the ancient Greeks. While Plato was holding forth at the Academy, Stromboli was erupting. While Jesus Christ was dying on a cross, Stromboli was erupting. While the Vandals were sacking Rome a few hundred miles to the North, Stromboli was erupting. While kingdoms and empires rose and fell, Stromboli was erupting. Watching molten rock fountaining from the ground, the same way it has for at least the past 2,500 years or so (and in all likelihood, much longer than that) one can’t help but feel that there are forces in the universe which operate on their own timescale—with utter indifference to human affairs—like the callous and capricious gods of antiquity. These are forces of nature so vast and grand the human mind struggles to comprehend them. There’s no reason to believe Stromboli couldn’t go on erupting long after our species has vanished into extinction.


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Milazzo and the train to Rome

October 17th, 2008 · Italy, Photos, Travel

I caught the hydrofoil back from Stromboli to Milazzo, it took about 3 hours, including stops at several of the other islands on the way back.

Milazzo is quite nice, if a bit sleepy during the off-season. As a town of only about 32,000 people, it’s MUCH more relaxed than Palermo (pop. 675,000). The difference was immediately apparent the first time I rode the bus in Milazzo. The police had blocked off a section of the bus route, so the driver took a detour: he went the wrong way down a one-way street into opposing traffic. But he did it carefully, and he stopped for a pedestrian!

The only sort of major “sight” in Milazzo is the castle. It’s not really a castle in the sense of a king and royal court living there, but rather more of a military fortress. Built on the hill overlooking Milazzo (a place of strategic importance, it would seem), the fortress was constructed in various pieces by many different groups.

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Rome, The Eternal City

October 20th, 2008 · Italy, Travel

I had forgotten how incredible Rome is.

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Arrival in Florence

October 22nd, 2008 · Italy, Technology, Travel

Florence’s reputation as a beautiful city is well-deserved. It’s also a city that’s almost completely overrun with tourists, at least in the center.

When I first arrived, I followed the directions given me by Stefania, a researcher at the EUI I’m visiting with, which had me catch a bus from the train station out to the northwest section of town in the Le Cure district. I was supposed to find the post office in Le Cure and then call her so she could come find me. Finding the post office was easy enough, with helpful instructions from some of the other bus passengers. The second step turned out to be rather more difficult. My Dutch SIM card was out of credit (and despite multiple emails I never figured out a way to ‘top up’ from outside of the Netherlands). I had been counting on finding a payphone, but as the bus headed further into residential neighborhoods, my hopes diminished. Then, salvation! In front of the post office, a payphone! Tragically, it turned out to be the type of payphone which doesn’t take coins, but only cards, either credit cards or “chipcards”

The dreaded chipcard

The dreaded chipcard

A brief aside to American readers regarding “chip cards”. These are almost exactly like debit cards, in that they tend to be tied to a bank account and used for small purchases. They also come in prepaid varieties, the photo above is a prepaid one I purchased in the Netherlands. Nearly all European credit cards feature this chip system as well. This is endlessly irritating because you will continually encounter locations which claim to accept cards, but have only chip-readers, no magnetic-strip readers. Compounding the irritation is the fact that, as far as I can tell, the “chip” offers exactly zero added functionality or convenience over the magnetic strip. I suppose it’s not prone to demagnetization, so that’s a mark in its favor. Basically, I don’t care which system card-makers use, all I’m asking, begging even: Visa, Mastercard, AmEx, please pick one system and stick with it. If these chips are really so great, why don’t we have them in the USA? If they’re so great, why do all European credit cards have mag-stripes as well?

In any case, I shoved every card I had into that payphone, debit cards, credit cars, my prepaid chip card, my Pomona college ID. No dice, “Invalid card type” every time. Finally I gave up on the payphone and set about to borrow a phone from somebody. Unfortunately, it was about 11 pm on a Sunday night and Le Cure was DEAD. The first people I found were two winos sitting by the river. I asked them for a phone, because hey, in 2008, even winos have cell phones. One did, but he was out of credit too. They were quite kind about sharing their carton (yes, carton) of wine with me, though.

Walking further down along the river, I finally found two teenage girls sitting and smoking. They claimed to be 19 and 20, but I think a more accurate guess would put them at about 16. They were both excited and overly impressed with my being from the USA/Los Angeles/Chicago. I called Stefania and we did an entirely inadequate job of agreeing on a rendezvous point.
Her: “Are you by a little old bridge?”
Me: “Yes, like a pedestrian one?”
Her: “I know where you are. I’ll meet you there.”
Twenty minutes and three little, old pedestrian bridges later we finally met up.

Stefania’s place is super awesome. It’s the top flat in a four-story building, so it has a nice balcony and skylights. All of her roommates are Ph.D. researchers at EUI as well: another Italian, a Dutch economist (“I’m not an economist, I study economics, but I’m not an economist”), and a Frenchman who works on “the digital divide”. So it’s a very intellectual, international place, and it was a really cool place to stay for a few days. The only major problem is that they don’t have internet at their house, having decided to avoid it on philosophical grounds, “we don’t want to waste all our time online,” which I could sympathize with, if not endorse.

If the wind and tides are just right, you can pick up open wireless in one corner of the balcony with your laptop perched precariously on the railing, tempting the fates with a four-storey drop. So that was fun.

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