Some island cruising - The Canaries and Sicily, then Milan

In the afternoon, I took an extended walk around Trapani.

The history of Trapani mirrors that of much of Sicily - the indigenous peoples (Elmyians, here); Greeks; Romans; Ottomans; Normans; Venetians, Aragonese (Spanish); Barbary states; Bourbons; Garibaldi/Italian.

G'won - read it all here. :cool:

Some of the coastal fortifications passed at the end of the excursion.

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I took along the north-western coastal wall. Unfortunately I completely missed the ancient salt works to the south.

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Garibaldi - statues of him everywhere. Father of the unified Kingdom of Italy (1861).

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Later in the afternoon, a tasting and explanation of Sicilian wines :) led by the French sommelier lady and the Sicilian wine 'academic' Davide Puca. Some good notes to go with them.

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More Malvasia - like the Canaries.

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And then, a tasting of cheese as supplied by Ponant's cheese and butter suppliers, Maison Bordier


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And then dinner!!

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Next morning saw us dock at Palermo - one of the non-volcanic highlights for me. Rain had been forecast - over the past few days there had been a Sirocco - same as the Calima we had in the Canaries - fine sand from the Sahara had been blowing across Sicily. This traditionally brings rain a few days later and this clears the air (and deposits mud on everyone's cars).

So it was a surprise when we docked that both the skies and atmosphere were clear.

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A couple of excursion choices, mine was Palermo and Monreale, the latter I knew nothing of.

The guide was one of the better ones of the tour. A local, but clear English and he told us interesting things and, importantly, shut up when there didn't need to be anything said. Some of them just feel the need to talk constantly.

So we hit the road in Palermo, early, but the traffic was still chaotic.

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Our destination was the Palazzo dei Normanni 'Palace of the Normans', the oldest royal residence in Europe and the Palatine Capel, which we would go into.

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First through the Porta Nuova, built to celebrate Charles V's conquest of Tunis in 1535 and his visit to the capital of the Kingdom of Sicily. The first version was completed in the 1580s. The gate was burned down in 1667 and the current version completed in 1669.

The figures represent the Moors defeated by Charles V.

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On a building nearby.

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