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  • Recipes
    • ‘Mbriulata
    • *Baked Barley and Mushroom Casserole*
    • *Captain’s Boston Baked Beans*
    • *Cherry Tart*
    • *Crimson Pie*
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    • *Pizzoccheri della Valtellina*
    • *Pumpkin Ice Cream*
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    • *Spezzatino di Vitello*
    • *Stuffed Grape Leaves*
    • *Swordfish with Salsa Cruda*
    • *Tagliarini with Porcini Mushrooms*
    • *Tagliatelli al Frutti di Mare*
    • *Tzatziki*
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    • Best Brownies in the World
    • Clafoutis
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    • Hilary’s Spicy Rain Forest Chop
    • Insalata Caprese
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    • Lasagna Al Forno con Sugo Rosato e Formaggi
    • Lemon Meringue Pie
    • Leo’s Bagna Cauda
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    • Louis’s Apricot Chutney
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    • Pesto
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An Ex-Expatriate

~ and what she saw

An Ex-Expatriate

Category Archives: Cats

Punta Chiappa

02 Friday Jul 2010

Posted by farfalle1 in Cats, Hiking in Italy, Italian Churches, Uncategorized

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

Punta Chiappa, San Nicolo di Capodimonte

How many steps from San Rocco to Punta Chiappa? I meant to count, but of course lost track somewhere along the way. I can tell you this: the change in elevation is from sea level to 210 meters above sea level; and the last little staircase on the return back up to San Rocco has 206 steps.

But I’m getting ahead of myself…

Punta Chiappa is the rocky tip of one side of the Portofino Peninsula. Like San Fruttuoso, which is not far distant, you can get there only by boat or on foot. The difference is that to reach San Fruttuoso by foot takes several hours from either Camogli or Portofino. You can reach Punta Chiappa in about half an hour from San Rocco, the lovely community above Camogli on a delicious woodsy path that has long paved sections and, by someone else’s estimate, 900 steps.

From Punta Chiappa there is a fine view back towards Camogli and the big hills behind it; down the coast to Genova and perhaps, on a clear day, the French Riviera; and to the southeast the continuation of the Portofino peninsula.

The point itself is made of rock, and plenty of it, although some brave plants have found a foothold there.

All the beaches on the peninsula feature these beautiful gray rocks with white lines in them.

The day we walked down was hot and steamy, but in the early afternoon the clouds rolled in and thunder began sounding its alarm over the mountains.  Nonetheless we set out on our adventure.  In fact the storms never materialized, but the cloud cover made the hike down and the looong hike back much more bearable.

There is not a lot of commercial activity at Punta Chiappa.  Once upon a time a lot of ship related iron work was done there, but no more.  You can still see the small cranes that moved heavy anchors and so forth, mounted on the side of the path.  There are several great looking restaurants there.  I’ve never eaten at one, but it’s now on my list of things to do.  There is also, a bit further on, a restaurant for cats.

The door is well locked, but the kitties can come and go through the mouse hole below.  Inside are several trays full of kuckies – which is what we call cat kibble, because when the cats chew it it sounds like kuckie kuckie kuckie.  We saw one of the generous women who keep the restaurant stocked, as well as several satisfied customers who were just leaving.

(By the way, if you like pictures of cats, check out the web album Cats of Italy; click the button for a slideshow.)

Cats of Italy

It felt a bit like stepping into a child’s story book when we arrived.  There were not many people and there was a magical haze over the sea; boats drifted in and out of visibility, and it was not hard to imagine there were some great pirate adventures happening out there (if you squint you will see a 4-masted sailing ship in the photo below).

We swam a little, and read our books as the ferry and fishing boats trolled back and forth.  A sudden movement caught our eyes: a school of sardines skimming across the top of the sea, with a dark shadow not quite breaking the surface behind.  A second school appeared and skimmed, followed immediately by the graceful black arc of the back of a dolphin in search of supper.  It all happened so fast we weren’t sure we had actually seen it.  But we had, and it was wonderful.

Wonderful too was the walk back up to San Rocco.  We took a much steeper, but shorter path which brought us in no time to San Nicolo’ di Capodimonte.  I know!  another San Nicolo’.  Am I fated ever to find San Nicolo’ when I am with this particular friend?  Evidently so!

This church, however, is in much better condition than its namesake near Genova. And there is another restoration underway. We saved our visit to the interior for the walk back, and were rewarded with a cool and peaceful respite. This church also is very simple inside, though it boasts a particularly beautiful rose window.

San Nicolo’ di Capodimonte is reputed to have been consecrated in 345 CE, although of course there are no written records to confirm this.  The present Romanesque church is supposed to have been built around the year 1000.  Like its poor brother church, this San Nicolo’ too passed into private hands in 1860 during the suppression of the churches, which accounts for its lack of interior decoration.  In 1865 Cav. Andrea Bozzo bought the church, restored it and built the neighboring residential houses.  The church reopened for worship in 1870.  After the death of Cav. Bozzo’s son in 1910 the church again became ecclesiastical property.

I can tell you two more items of interest.  Although the church is called ‘Capodimonte’ it is nowhere near the top – more like halfway down.  The second thing is this, heed my hard-earned advice: if you take this hike, and I hope some day you will, don’t wear sandals!

Luciano

08 Monday Feb 2010

Posted by farfalle1 in Cats

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

Luciano

He was an expatriate cat. Born somewhere in about 1990, he was abandoned in a state park in Norfolk, Connecticut. Friends who lived adjacent to the park were able to lure him into a cat carrier with food – he was such a scrawny adolescent boy – and they gave him to us because the Captain had a hankering for a marmalade kitty.

He lived in our bathroom for a week; I spent several hours daily just sitting on the floor, talking to him softly, coaxing him to come for a treat, a little scritch, and finally to sit in my lap. Turns out he was a lover. And a talker. That’s how he got his name. He used to walk down our long driveway with me every morning when I went for the paper, and he sang the whole way down. So we named him after Pavarotti.

When we moved permanently to Italy he moved too, becoming a very cosmopolitan cat. He never let it go to his head, though. He stayed his usual lovable, talkative self, and he grew hugely fat, like his namesake.

He used to love to sleep on the roof of the rustico below our house. There was just one problem – while he could get up on the roof, he couldn’t get down, so his penchant for going there always ended up with me at one end of a long board and him delicately tiptoeing down towards me from the other.

He was such a well behaved and lovable gentlemen that friends were always willing to take him in for several months when we began to return to the States for annual visits. That was lucky for us, and even luckier for him. This year he was with two young women who adored him and cared for him beautifully. They asked to watch over him, knowing that he had renal failure and that it was likely he would die while we were away.

That’s just what happened today. He slipped away in his sleep at the age of 18 or 19, and has been buried next to the dog Balto, who probably would’ve eaten him in life, but who will guard him in death. He had a pretty interesting life for a cat and I think it was a good life. I know he made our life much better just by being the cat he was, and we will miss him so much.

Free Kibble X 5 for Hungry Dogs and Cats

03 Tuesday Nov 2009

Posted by farfalle1 in Animals in the U.S., Cats, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Animal Shelters, Feeding Homeless Dogs and Cats, Freekibble, Freekibble.com, Helping Homeless Animals, Mimi Ausland

free kibble nov 5

In April, 2008, 12-year old Mimi Ausland founded Freekibble.com in an effort to help feed dogs (and latter cats) in Oregon animal shelters.  With two pet-food makers as partners, Mimi and her friends think up fun trivia questions every day, one on the subject of dogs, one on the subject of cats.  Each time a person plays the game, 10 pieces of kibble are donated to animal shelters (the answers do not have to be correct, luckily).The success of Mimi’s website has been astonishing (over 1,700,000 meals earned since inception), and now she is helping feed animals all across the U.S.

On Nov. 5, each trivia player will earn five times the usual donation – so if you like dogs and/or cats and you’ve never played Freekibble, why not give it a try by clicking here?  I get a daily e-mail reminder, and it takes less than a minute to play.  10 pieces of kibble doesn’t sound like much but it adds up quickly.  Here’s a picture of Mimi with one of her friends:

Mimi-Ausland_med

You don’t have to be in the U.S. to play… and who knows, maybe one day Freekibble.com will expand to Italy…

Cats and the Metro

06 Friday Feb 2009

Posted by farfalle1 in Arizona, Cats, Photographs, Travel, Uncategorized

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Cat show, Opening of Phoenix Light Rail, Phoenix cat show, Phoenix Light Rail, Phoenix Light Rail grand opening, Phoenix Metro

img_7598

But cats don’t like to ride on the metro, I hear you say. True. But no sooner did I grouse about the lack of good public transportation in the US than lo and behold! The Phoenix Light Rail system opened.  This is more like it!  The Metro offers a very inexpensive and convenient way to travel around metropolitan Phoenix, including outlying Tempe (home of Arizona State University) and a bit of Mesa.

The grand opening was on December 27-28, 2009.  As luck would have it the Captain and I were attending a cat show (I know.  But we like cats.), and we stumbled serendipitously into the gigantic street fair celebrating the opening just outside the Phoenix Convention Center.  As it turned out, there were festivities of one sort or another at almost all the major stops along the 20-miles of Metro.

img_7608

It took twelve years to build the system, and it was gravely inconvenient for many businesses and residents during construction.  But now, everyone seems well pleased. The Metro web site gives all the information you could need to take advantage of this service.  The fares are ridiculously low – $2.50 will buy you an all-day pass, which includes some amount of bus transfer.  If you’re over 65 your day-pass costs only $1.25.  There are Park and Ride lots at many stations which offer free parking during the Metro’s hours of operation.

In addition, some fun blogs have sprung up around Light Rail: RailLife.com, Blogs about Phoenix Lightrail, and my favorite, found by the now-famous Mrs. Harris (bread, pumpkin ice cream), PHX Rail Food, which is a great guide for places to eat within easy walking distance of each Metro stop. You Are Here gives an urban stroller’s guide to metro Phoenix, with guides to culture, shopping, sports, events, dining and nightlife all along the Route.

Speaking of Mrs. Harris, she had the brilliant idea that we should take a day and ride the Metro from one end (Sycamore and Main in Mesa) to the other (Montebello and 19th Ave. in Phoenix).  So that is exactly what we did a while ago, and it was loads of fun.  We met a lot of people, all of whom were pleasant and chatty.  We stopped in Tempe for a walk-around and ended up giving our opinion on speed radar on the freeways for a PBS show (our 15 seconds of fame). Then we took a mid-day break and visited the Phoenix Art Museum where, in addition to walking through several exhibits, we ate a delightful lunch.

tickets
We rode to the end of the line, then jogged to the other track and rode straight back to where we began.

If you’re interested in some photographs of both the cat show and the festivities outside the Convention Center at the Metro’s opening, click here, or over on the right under Photographs (Cat Show and Rail Opening)(You’ll see that I was fascinated by the break dancing.).

If you’re interested in some of the sights along the Metro, click here, or over on the right under Photographs (Riding the Light Rail).  These photographs are in three sections: sights along the rail ride, people we met, and some of the art at the Metro stops (each stop has at least one piece of art incorporated in its design).

And if you need to get your cat somewhere, you can probably take her on the Light Rail, but she’ll have to be in a cat-carrier.  She might even enjoy the journey! We did.

rail pics

cat show and rail opening pics

Icing the cat’s nose

31 Friday Oct 2008

Posted by farfalle1 in Animals in Italy, Cats, Italian habits and customs, Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Cats, Luciano, Medical practice in Italy, Veterinary practice in Italy

Luciano is an old cat, but at 16 not exactly ancient. He has, however, a panoply of interesting ailments that keep us in frequent contact with his doctors. He has three: Ralph Siegal, Fausto Finetti and Veronica, who is a brand new vet and whose last name we have not yet learned. Ralph has been waiting for Luciano’s kidneys to carry him off for three years now, but the cat keeps cashing in his extra lives and fooling all of us. Luciano’s other main diagnosis is hyper-thyroidism.

As prescribed, Kitty eats special food that is kind to kidneys – high in fiber and relatively low in protein.  It is available commercially for E 2 a tin, of which he can eat two a day.  Rather than bankrupt ourselves any sooner than absolutely necessary, we decided to make our own cat food, using an excellent recipe we found (of course!) on the internet. Here is a link to a site with cat food recipes for cats with various ailments.  We’ve been making a variant of the Hills kidney diet food.

There is no perfect cure for the thyroid problem, according to Dott. Ralph, but there is a pill that can help.  Unfortunately it is not available in Italy, but can be found in France.  So we have prevailed upon our friends who travel that way to carry back the cat’s medicine.

Which brings me around to the subject of medical care, the approach to which is much the same for animals as for people: caution! don’t over-medicate! wait and see!  Poor Luciano developed a big bump between his eyes last week.  When we took him to the vet (Dott. Veronica this time) she suggested that since the cat is pretty much blind (left that out, didn’t I) he had probably run into something and had a great big bruise.  So we left the office with instructions to ice the lump and administer cortesone pills.  Have you ever iced a cat’s nose? It’s interesting.  Actually, Luciano is quite patient with it, but I sure wouldn’t want to try it on a cat with teeth (I forgot to mention he’s toothless, didn’t I).

I believe that had we been in the US that an X-ray would have been taken on our first visit.  Instead we spent five days icing the cat’s nose and watching the lump grow.  Then we took him back and Dott. Fausto recommended an X-Ray, given the following day in a different office.  So, after three trips the cat’s lump, which proved to be an abscess, was X-rayed, opened and cleared up.  I’m not in any way saying that we don’t all receive excellent medical care here, but sometimes I think the caution is less than helpful.  The poor old cat had to make three trips to accomplish what, in the States, would have been done on the first trip. And if it had been a bruise?  There would have been one wasted X-ray.  And that’s one difference between Italy and the US.  Here waste is anathema – you don’t want a test unless it’s 99% certain to tell you something really useful, and only if other less expensive approaches have failed.  Is it dangerous?  No, because doctors and vets here are just as smart and well-trained as they are in the US, and they are careful.  Is it inconvenient?  Frequently. Is it frustrating?  Absolutely! We’ve been back for one aftercare visit, and will return again Monday for another, making a grand total of five visits.  We haven’t been billed for anything yet, but one aspect of cautious care is that it does seem to be less costly.

We’ve seen the same approach in our own medical care here.  Problems are discussed for ages and curative steps are incremental.  But then, Italian doctors don’t have to worry about the malpractice suits that threaten American doctors.  Eventually (so far!) we always get better.  And I have to add that when one of us had a very serious acute condition the initial care was immediate and excellent. Once danger was past, however, caution was again the watchword, and a condition that was treated in three days in a US hospital took twelve days for the exact same outcome in Italy.

I’m not sure what any of this proves.  Socialized medicine certainly has its pluses and minuses, and this is not an appropriate forum for that topic.  I guess if we’ve learned anything new from the last week’s experiences it’s this: it’s really hard to ice a cat’s nose.

Cats in Italy

15 Thursday May 2008

Posted by farfalle1 in Cats, Italy, Photographs, Rapallo

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Cats, Italy, Photographs

Italy is full of cats: country cats, city cats, polite cats, rakish cats, fat cats (!) and hungry cats.  Just the other day when I went to throw away the garbage a cat leapt out of the box and made me jump a mile.

Every town has at least one Cat Lady (or man, but usually a lady – why?) – that person who puts out an old tin pan of food for the cats whom no one else is feeding.  Cats come and go as they wish.  If a door or window is open, sooner or later a cat is going to go through it.

Last time I was in Rome I noticed there were a lot fewer cats than the previous visit.  Perhaps there is a cat control policy there now – I hope so.  Anyone know?

I’ve been addicted to taking photos of cats since we moved here.  No matter what the scene, a cat seems to make it more picturesque. Over on the right in Links you’ll find Cats of Italy – click on it (if you dare!) and you will be whisked away to a web album of part of my collection.  I really DID edit some of them out – honest.  (It took a lot of self-control not to put all of Luciano’s portraits in.)  I recommend using the Slideshow option if you really are going to look at all those cats.

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