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  • Recipes
    • ‘Mbriulata
    • *Baked Barley and Mushroom Casserole*
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    • *Stuffed Grape Leaves*
    • *Swordfish with Salsa Cruda*
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    • *Tzatziki*
    • 10th Tee Apricot Bars
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    • Insalata Caprese
    • Kumquat and Cherry Upside Down Cake
    • Lasagna Al Forno con Sugo Rosato e Formaggi
    • Lemon Meringue Pie
    • Leo’s Bagna Cauda
    • Leo’s Mother’s Stuffed Eggs
    • Louis’s Apricot Chutney
    • Mom’s Sicilian Bruschetta
    • No-Knead Bread (almost)
    • Nonna Salamone’s Famous Christmas Cookies
    • Pan-fried Noodles, with Duck, Ginger, Garlic and Scallions
    • Pesto
    • Pesto
    • Pickle Relish
    • Poached Pears
    • Polenta Cuncia
    • Pumpkin Sformato with Fonduta and Frisee
    • Rustic Hearth Bread
    • Sicilian Salad
    • Soused Hog’s Face
    • Spotted Dick
    • Swedish Tea Wreaths
    • The Captain’s Salsa Cruda
    • Tomato Aspic
    • Vongerichten’s Spice-Rubbed Chicken with Kumquat-Lemongrass Dressing
    • Winter Squash or Pumpkin Gratin
    • Zucchini Raita

An Ex-Expatriate

~ and what she saw

An Ex-Expatriate

Category Archives: Italian men

Cows Come Home… Again!

20 Saturday Sep 2014

Posted by farfalle1 in Alps, Animals in Italy, Italian festas, Italian food, Italian men, Italy, Piemonte, Portraits of people, Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Antique tractors, Cowherding, Cows, Fera 'd San Bartrame', Oropa, Tractors



fair poster

Those who are faithful readers of this blog know there are few things that give us more pleasure than a day spent with the cows (read about last years outing here). Last weekend we enjoyed just such a day, made even better by being with dear friends.

The Santuario di Oropa sits high in the pre-Alps of Piemonte (region of Biella) at an altitude of some 1,100 meters (3,610 + feet). Its long history dates back in lore to the 4th century AD. In fact the first mention of simple churches in Oropa, dedicated to the Saints Mary and Bartholomew, occurred in the 13th century. (San Bartrame’ is Piemontese dialect for St. Bartholmew.) The present series of buildings were begun in the first years of the 17th century, with work continuing to this day. The most recent basilica was consecrated in 1960.  Our friends told us there is a saying in Piemonte to describe something that is never finished – ‘it’s another Oropa.’ There is a good, brief history of the Sanctuary, which is an important pilgrim destination here (in English).

However, it was not as pilgrims that we visited the sacred site – it was as cow fanciers, in particular to get to know the Pezzata Rossa di Oropa, one of sixteen minor cattle breeds recognized by the Italian Ministry of Agriculture. The standard for the breed calls for a ‘red’ coat with white spots. In fact, there have been breeding changes over the years and, in addition to the standard, there are now all white Pezzate and black and white Pezzate.

During the summer months the cows live with their herders on the high fields of the pre-Alps; it is too cold for them to remain there through the winter, and the Festa we attended was held to celebrate their return to civilization. The herds are brought down a very narrow road and driven into a large field where they are tied by chains to a flimsy wire fence.

pretty cowherd

That’s not a cane in the young woman’s hand, that’s the rather delicate shepherd’s crook that all the herders carry. Every now and then when a cow goes in the wrong direction she receives a little whack on the fanny with the crook along with a shout telling her what to do. Getting the cows to approach the fences in the field sometimes took a bit of effort. The crook was freely employed, as was simple strength.

pezzata rossa di oropa chaining them up-003There was a delightful amount of confusion while the herds were being organized – some of the cows simply did not want to stand still in a row and would try to wander off.

watchful dog and young cowherd

As in Scotland, dogs are central to controlling the herds, though the dogs at Oropa were very different than the border collies we have seen demonstrating herding techniques (sheep! geese!!). We asked one of the herders what the breed is and the succinct answer was, ‘bastardi.’ They certainly were bright and attentive to their work, though sometimes they looked a little goofy.

brindle dog with tongue out

brindle cow dog-001Each herd wears its own identifying collar for the occasion. The old collars are made of wood, new ones of leather, and many are ornately decorated.

pezzata rossa di oropa leather collar pezzata rossa di oropa old wooden collar-001pezzata rossa di oropaMost of the cows were cows, but there was the occasional bull. This one was pretty randy, but he was wearing a home-made prophylactic device. Inelegant, perhaps, but effective

pezzata rossa di oropa finding shade

Cows weren’t the only beasts being brought down from the hills. There was a fine collection of sheep, interspersed with goats, that were put in a field across the road from the cows. I should mention that almost every single animal was wearing a bell – what with the shouting of the herders, the clanging of the bells and the bellowing and bleating of the animals there was a fine cacophony.

corraling the sheep and goats sheep and babygoatHaving been to Egypt in the last post here I couldn’t help but think that this pair was from that ancient land – such fine profiles.

sheep egyptian profileYou may be wondering why the cows were all tied up in that big field. The reason is that each herd was judged, and a prize awarded to the herd deemed to be in the best condition after a summer spent up on the mountain. I’m ashamed to say I was thinking about lunch and missed the prize presentation, but I did get to the stand in time to catch a glimpse of the winners. It seemed to be a rather low-key part of the event.

prize winners

There was ample opportunity for the many photographers present to take pictures of cows – and you can’t tell me the cows weren’t posing.

pezzata rossa di oropa posing for photographer

Did someone mention lunch?? It wouldn’t be an Italian festa without a good meal. The featured specialty was polenta cuncia, one of the world’s great comfort foods (you can find a recipe for it here). Basically it is a fairly finely ground corn meal cooked with either water or stock with the local cheese, toma, stirred in at the end. It is rich, hearty and extremely satisfying. The Oropa iteration was dressed with a couple of tablespoons of melted butter, a fine improvement. It took three ladies to serve the polenta – one to glop it in a bowl, one to add the butter, and one to stick in a spoon and hand it to the hungry pilgrim, along with a napkin.

serving polenta-007polenta cuncia with black butter-001It was fabulous, and after a morning of chasing cows and sheep it was most welcome, especially washed down with the earthy local red wine.

For me one of the best parts of an event like this is looking at the people. The cowherds were extremely kind in letting me take their pictures. These are men whose families have probably lived in Piemonte for centuries.

cowherd-001

cowherds cowherdThere was a lot more going on during the festa – a large array of vendors had local (and some not so local) crafts for sale; there was an excellent exhibit of tractors, old and new; there was a photo exhibit in a tram car that for decades carried sick people from Biella to Oropa for blessings and cures; in the church there was a display of preseppe (creche scenes) from all around the world (my favorite: the one from a nearby village made from marzipan); there was music. If you would like to see some pictures of these things, in addition to more pictures of the animals, please click here (for a slide show click the icon in the upper right that looks like a couple of small rectangles).

The weather was glorious, one of the few sunny days Oropa enjoys each year; it was warm, the crowd was happy, and the animals seemed to be too. It was just so much fun – and exhausting – for everyone.

pezzata rossa di oropa tired

THE END

cow backsides

Ships Not at Sea

13 Sunday Jul 2014

Posted by farfalle1 in Italian men, Rapallo, Uncategorized

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Franco Tassara, Model ships, Models

Franco TassaraMeet Franco Tassara, Master Shipbuilder, of Cogorno (a small town on the far side of the Valle Fontanabuona, on the other side of the mountain from Rapallo). Studying his photo there are two things I wish I noticed when we were chatting, and that I asked him about them. First, the hat? How did he come to have it and why? Second, why does he wear a small metal pacifier on his necklace, or is that something else, perhaps a microphone? He clearly has a sense of humor as his calling card gives him the honorific Conte Decaduto (Count Decrepit).

In any event, calling Sig. Tassara a Shipbuilder is an exaggeration, if only of scale. He does not build the ships that sail the ocean blue, rather he builds quite lovely model ships, some of which he is willing to sell and which he displays, idiosyncratically, on the roof of his auto.

model ships on car roof-001This whimsical display caught Speedy’s eye as we motored through town a while ago, and we came back to investigate. That is when we met Sig. Tassara and chatted with him about his models. He was most eager that I pose holding them. Perhaps he thought that, like puppies, once you’ve held one you simply can’t live without it. Alas for him, it didn’t work in our case, but we did enjoy getting a close-up look at his meticulous work. He makes models of all different kinds of boats.

Foolishly I forgot to ask what the names of the boats are. Fortunately our friend T. is a nautical wizard, Dinghy Class champion, meticulous sailing judge and general mistress of the wind and seas. She told me the ship below is called a Runabout, and may be a model of the Riva Aquarama, a famous luxury wooden Runabout made by the shipbuilders Riva.

IMG_3457This large one, so intricately detailed, is a “Galeon” with a double deck of guns:

model shipJust thinking about trying to sort out all the rigging was enough to give me a headache. It’s not terribly dissimilar from the Galleone Neptune at the port in Genoa, a ship that was built in 1985 for Roman Polanski’s film “Pirates.”  Sig. Tassara’s version is a lot tidier though, to tell the truth, and not covered with all that ridiculous froufrou:

Photo from Daniele Martino’s Flickr Photostream. Thank you Daniele.

Sig. Tassara was a tug-boat captain, so the sea is honestly in his veins. He has made models since retiring and spends many an hour at it. A ship like the Galeon may take him three or four months to complete.  One like the Runabout may take only three or four weeks.

Sig. Tassara, along with others with the same hobby, exhibits his boats at the Mare Nostrum show which is held annually in November in the Rapallo Castello (you can read about an earlier iteration of the show here).  Living up on the hill as we do we sometimes forget how very central the sea is and has always been to life in Rapallo. This annual exhibition is an always fascinating glimpse of the many facets of the ongoing relationship between the two.

The dates for the 2014 show have not been posted on the Mare Nostrum website yet, but it is most always held in the latter half of November. If you find yourself in Rapallo then, do pay a visit to the show and seek out Sig. Franco Tassara, who will probably be happy to let you hold one of his puppies.

La Transumanza (Till the cows come home…)

04 Monday Nov 2013

Posted by farfalle1 in Italian festas, Italian habits and customs, Italian holidays, Italian men, Liguria, Photographs, Uncategorized

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Festival of Cows, Santo Stefano, Santo Stefano d'Aveto, Transumanza

Il Secolo XIX calls the transumanza ‘the most spectacular event of the year in the val d’Aveto.’  Not having seen other events there I can’t say if I agree, but this festa, held when the cows are brought down from the high pastures where they’ve spent the summer to the barns and lower land of the valley is charming and fun.

Friends took me with them to Santo Stefano d’Aveto to see the transumanza on a rainy Sunday.  The arrow on the map below points to Santo Stefano; at an elevation of about 3200 feet, ‘low land’ is a relative term.

map of Santa StefanoArrow

We arrived in plenty of time to walk through the small village (population about 1200, probably double that the day we were there) and savor the anticipation. When would the cows arrive??

Not being able to stand the suspense we started walking up the street down which they would come, a walk which provided a sweet view of the town from above.

Santo Stefano from above

We met and chatted with others whose level of excitement matched our own. When would they arrive? When would they arrive? Finally the first outriders appeared, and it quickly became evident that this had as much to do with costume and play-acting as it did with herd movement. All to the good! The horses were buffed, fluffed and bedecked:

be-ribboned horse

well-trimmed horse

The riders, dressed as gauchos, gave the impression they had spent the summer keeping order among the vast herds on the mountain side:

gaucho

more advance riders

a real gaucho

rider

Then the first cows arrived, festooned with flowers and accompanied by a pair of flowery goats.  Many of them moved to the music of their cowbells, a sound we associate much more with Switzerland than with Italy.  Each bell has a slightly different pitch, making the herd an orchestra of happy random dissonance. With them was a group of people dressed as old-timey farmers, brandishing the antique tools of high meadow agriculture.

cows festooned

people in peasant dress

the cows arrive

cows-001

longhorn

And then it was over:

cows-003

The fact that there were perhaps 50 head of cattle made me suspect that those handsome gauchos had not, in fact, been tending the herd all summer.

The cows continued their procession through the village and disappeared up a winding road on the other side of town.  We did what all sensible people do after so much excitement and activity:

Locanda dei Doria menu

At E18 this huge mid-day meal was a real bargain.  I enjoyed the anti-pasti, followed by the squash stuffed ravioli, veal scallopini with fresh porcini mushrooms and a killer plum tart.

ravioli with pumpkin

Such a large meal calls for a post-prandial stroll, which we took, admiring the shops (closed at that time of day) along the narrow streets of the old part of town. (Santo Stefano, with a rich history, has been inhabited for centuries. Its first written mention is from the 2nd century BCE at the time of a battle between the Romans and the Ligurians. The castello in the center of town dates from 1164.)  At a time when many small towns are dying for lack of occupation, Santo Stefano has cast itself as a center of ‘bio’ food – what we would call organic.  People from a wide radius make the long windy drive up the mountain to buy fresh locally produced cheese (San Sté cheese has been made in the same way by the same families for several centuries), yogurt, eggs, vegetables and at this time of year chestnuts.  My friends staggered out of a small food shop we found open with bags of locally ground flour, fresh ricotta and other delectables.  I brought Speedy a small basket of ricotta, and I have to say, it is the best either of us has ever eaten.

other chestnuts

garlic in market

You can’t have a good festa without some live music.  A trio of musicians was performing (and clearly enjoying themselves) under the covered arcade in front of the shops on the main street.  If you want to see and hear them you can do so here and here.

Is life in a mountain all fun and games?  I would say not. Farming in what is one of the wettest parts of Italy comes with its own particular set of problems, exacerbated by long cold winters.  But we saw plenty of indication that people still farm there, in spite of the influx of holiday homes.

he took goats up the mountain
Maybe you could call this man ‘before.’  He’s clearly serious about his farming – he was just returning from taking the festive goats up the hill to march with the procession of cows.

Then you could call this man ‘after.’  Giorgio Carpanese has lived all of his 84 years in Santo Stefano d’Aveto.  When I asked him if he had seen an awful lot of changes there in his life he just shook his head with a whimsical look and said, ‘Si.  Si.’

Giorgio Carpanese

Stalking the Wild Octopus

09 Wednesday Oct 2013

Posted by farfalle1 in Italian food, Italian men, Rapallo, Uncategorized

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Octopus, Octopus facts, Octopus fishing

Yesterday Angela and I toddled down to her beach to enjoy some unexpectedly fine sunshine and to dangle our feet in the rather chilly sea. As we chatted about this and that we watched a couple of men fishing for octopus.

The gear they used was real DIY material. A thick piece of cardboard, about the size of a shirt cardboard, around which was wrapped a good bit of nylon filament. Their method was to throw the baited line out as far as they could, and then reel it in, ever hopeful that they would find an octopus firmly attached to the bait. We watched for an hour or so, but none of the resident octopi obliged, and our friends left disappointedly empty-handed.

Here is Paolo, pulling in his line.  You would think he’d end up with a hopeless snarl of nylon, but he never did.

Paolo  hunting octopus

And this is Giuseppe, showing off the bait: a chicken’s foot!  Evidently it is irresistible to an octopus.

Giuseppe and octopus bait

Paolo spent some time giving Giuseppe instruction in the finer points of octopus fishing as they prepared to try their luck in a different spot:

Paolo gives Giuseppe direction

There is a beautiful fountain across the street from the castello which, happily for me, was in operation the day we met Paolo and Giuseppe.  It was dry for much of the summer, but whatever the problem was, it seems to have been fixed, as you can see:

il polipo-002

Thanks to IFLS I learned that today is World Octopus Day. This poster will tell you more than you ever wanted to know about octopuses (click on it it see it larger). What it fails to mention is how absolutely delicious octopus is, especially when served in the Ligurian style with boiled potatoes.

octopus_infographic1

Poster credit: National Aquarium, Baltimore

Photo credit: Giallo Zaffarano

Photo credit: Giallo Zaffarano

Happy World Octopus Day everyone!

Tip-toeing off the Grid

18 Sunday Aug 2013

Posted by farfalle1 in Home maintenance and repair, Italian men, Photographs, San Maurizio di Monti, Taxes in Italy, Uncategorized

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Fotovoltaic panels, Green energy in Italy, Installing fotovoltaic panels, NWG

Meet our computer wizard here in Rapallo, Andrea Canessa:

Andrea Canessa

This year when Speedy’s home-built computer finally got tired and decided not to cooperate with us any more we paid a visit to Andrea. Speedy, who makes limited demands on his computer, had the brilliant idea that Andrea could build us a machine from bits and pieces for much less than a new one would cost. And he was right! We got exactly what Speedy wants for about half what a spanking new machine would have cost.

While we were with Andrea we admired his new electric car:

IMG_0275

Cute, isn’t it?

Then Andrea started bending our ears about alternative forms of energy. We’ve been admiring our friend Leo’s extensive work of that sort at his house in Piemonte – he’s put in photovoltaic panels for electricity and solar panels for hot water – so we were pretty well up on what Andrea was speaking about. What we didn’t know, and what he soon told us, is that he has become an agent for NWG, a company that installs alternative energy systems all through Italy.

Andrea’s a man we trust, and someone who has a firm grasp of technology. To make a long story short, we decided to install a photovoltaic system for our house.  We have enough space for 10 panels which should produce about 2.5 KW of electricity when the sun is shining brightly.  Since our regular electrical service is 3 KW, and we never seem to exceed that, it seemed enough. Besides, if we need more current than the sun is giving us at any particular moment, Enel kicks in to give us the extra that we need. The project was not cheap, but there were several factors (aside from the 80% financing offered by NWG) which made it seem timely and The Right Thing To Do.

First, the Italian government has a scheme in place that will refund 50% of the cost of the project with tax credits over a 10-year period.  No, we may not live (or live here) long enough to collect it all, but the rebate is attached to the project, not to us; it can be transferred if someone else lives in our house within the time period.  The government’s incentive program is not just for photovoltaic cells. It covers other energy-saving projects as well. Why is the government being so generous?  Well, (aside from it being The Right Thing To Do) it is an effort to stimulate the economy – for the manufacturers of green energy systems and for those who install and maintain them.  This tax incentive has been increased to 65% for some systems this year.  Lots of projects are covered in whole or part – restructuring a house to make it more energy-efficient; energy-efficient windows; hot water heaters and heating systems; even  some kinds of furniture for the newly done-up house are covered.

Second, the electric company cooperates by buying from us any energy we produce which we don’t use.  We buy energy from them for .32/KWH; they buy it from us for .16/KWH, which seems fair to me.  We get a certain amount of black-hearted glee from knowing that it is our neighbors who are buying our excess, heh heh heh.  We don’t have the capability to store what we don’t use, so when the sun sets, or when it decides not shine at all, we are once again at the mercy of Enel.

This leads to an interesting case of teaching old dogs new tricks.  We’ve tried for decades to use energy during the low-cost hours, which are usually after dark.  Now we have to school ourselves to do our energy-intensive chores, such as laundry, dish-washing by machine, and oven use, during the brightest parts of the day.  Turns out it’s not so hard to adjust.

The first step of the project was to get all signed up – which in Italy of course means many, many signatures.  To our amazement, though, everything was done with great efficiency and relative speed, and a month after an acceptable engineering study and our subsequent agreement to go forward, it was time for the installation.  It was done in two steps in one day.

A very jolly crew of five men from AMS, based in Lucca, arrived shortly after 8 a.m.  The first step was to prepare for the panels.  This involved some amount of wiring inside the house and placing frames on the roof to accept the panels.

Wiring done up in the attic

Wiring done up in the attic

wires

Here’s what our indoor electric panels looked like before the installation:

electric boxes before

Here’s what they looked like at the end of the day:

electrical plant

The jolly lads from Lucca sang as they worked; it was so cheerful:

up on the roof-011

Once upon a time I would have climbed up on the roof myself to photograph progress, but I couldn’t do that this year. The photos taken from the roof itself are courtesy of the gents who did the work. The frames are not massive at all:

braces for panels

The panels were supposed to arrive at mid-day, which was about the time the electrical work was done. The men went to lunch. They came back from lunch. They tidied up some. Along about 3 p.m. they were finally able to track down the panels which had left Prato, near Florence, and mysteriously bypassed Rapallo on their way to Genova, where they now sat (a thoroughly Italian route). Our expectation was that everyone would shrug and say, ‘Well, see you tomorrow.’ Not this outfit. Two of them hopped in their panel van, drove to Genova, retrieved the panels and at 5:30 the roof was crawling with activity.

The panels arrive!

The panels arrive!

Getting the panels to the roof was not easy.

Getting the panels to the roof was not easy.

up on the roof-007

It was still hot in the late afternoon

Solving a small problem

Solving a small problem

By 7:30 the work was done and the connections had been tested successfully.

P1010468

It was time for a bit of refreshment (and a few more signatures):

The ccrew

The crew didn’t linger however; they had a two-hour drive to get back to Lucca, and another system to install the next day.

Here are a few more pictures from installation day:

They had the most appealing backpacks.

They had the most appealing backpacks.

It takes a panolply of tools to effect this sort of installation, but they kept everything neat and tidy (tools, house, everything).

tools-001

tools on parcheggio

My favorite collection of gizmos - I want a box like this!

My favorite collection of gizmos – I want a box like this!

So, everything was in place… now we had to wait for the men from Enel to come and make the connection. This also was done in two parts. There was the outside team:

Enel men

They swapped out our one-way meter, which measured only what we used, for a two-way meter for what we use AND what we sell them. (ha!) Then another technician came and checked the indoor wiring and turned it all on:

final connection

Ta-Dah! We are now using old Sol to run our day-time appliances, and it makes us feel just great. Our first reading:

Our very first 'free' energy!

Our very first ‘free’ energy!

Everything is working as it should with but one little wrinkle. NWG keeps track of all the power coming in and going out. They like to do it using the Vodaphone cell-phone system, but our hill-side coverage is not good enough to send the data. Their technician will return in a week or two to attach everything to our ADSL line to transmit the reports. Then we should be able to see daily graphs of what we are producing and what we are using. I can’t wait!!

Are we off the grid? Not by a long shot, but we’ve taken our first baby steps. Next year, who knows? Maybe solar panels for hot water. Stay tuned…

Bird Man of Rapallo

18 Thursday Jul 2013

Posted by farfalle1 in Animals in Italy, Birds in Italy, Italian men, People, Portraits of people, Rapallo, Uncategorized

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Bird man, Pappagallo

Strolling through town the other day (before it got so hot)  I was pleased to encounter this eccentric gent. He was happy to pose for me with his little bird. I wasn’t expecting the kissing event, but evidently it’s something they’re both accustomed to. I wonder if the bird thinks he has a very well-trained man?

bird man of rapallo-002

Sorry it’s out of focus, but it’s a nice shot of the tourist in the background. This is how they walk around together; every now and then the bird nibbles the man’s gold necklace.

bird man of Rapallo

After I asked if I could photograph him the man struck a pose. I particularly like the man’s costume with its northward nod to the Alps and its westward nod to France.

bird man of rapallo-001

Wasn’t expecting this, and I have to say it kind of grossed me out! The bird took little nips at the man’s tongue, which made me suspect that sometimes the man gives the bird treats in this unorthodox manner. When I asked what the bird’s name was the man replied, ‘pappagallo,’ which just means ‘parrot.’ I felt no wiser, but was somehow unable to continue the conversation.

Men in White

07 Sunday Jul 2013

Posted by farfalle1 in Italian men, Uncategorized

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Human statues, Street performers

man in white

Photo credit: Hilary Hatch

We see these men (and sometimes women) in white in all the tourist towns of Italy. I don’t recall ever seeing one in the U.S. – maybe in the larger cities? Anyone ever seen one in New York or San Francisco?

The best remain absolutely motionless until someone drops a coin in the bucket. Then they slowly move in some form of acknowledgment. This man, whom we found in Lucca, was a hand-kisser. Some merely bow or regally raise a hand to say ‘thanks.’ The amateurs among them will sometimes wear a white mask, presumably so they can make faces and move at least some part of their bodies. The other day in Rapallo I saw a boy in white who had simply given up and was striding down the street thrusting his cap at people to ask for money.

It’s hard to imagine who came up with the idea of being rewarded for standing still; but it must be a good idea because a lot of people do it, and if it didn’t pay at least something they wouldn’t. I wonder if anyone would pay if the person weren’t done up to look like a white statue? Evidently some people simply can’t resist touching the statues to see if they’re real. It doesn’t always work out well, as this video from Australia illustrates.

still man

Hilary gets a handshake

margaret gets a handshake

This ‘statue’  works in Lucca, although the box he’s standing on says SPQR, which is the motto of Rome. (Senatus Populusque Romanus – the senate and people of Rome.)  While it dates from ancient Rome, it is now seen everywhere in the modern city; Speedy remembers that all the man-hole covers bear this acronym.

This man was particularly fun as he had a very pleasant expression, even while he was simply standing and waiting. It’s not a job I’d want, though; I can’t imagine standing still for any length of time, or being covered in white paint.

Il Marinaio

28 Thursday Jun 2012

Posted by farfalle1 in Arts and crafts, Italian men, Rapallo, Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Il Marinaio, Sea Cairns, Sea sculpture

Well, it just drove me crazy not to know who was responsible for the sea cairns shown in the last post.  My source had told me that the artist was probably one of the members of the Associazione which has its headquarters next to the castello. So I went back there and hung around the club grounds for a while until someone turned up I could speak to.  I asked a few questions and was lucky enough to be invited in.

This Friends of the Castello group is a gang of men (I think all men, though I’m not sure, and they didn’t ask me to join), mostly retired, who enjoy boating and fishing.  And, as it turned out, making cairns in the sea.

I asked if the life-saving ring really was from the Titanic, but no one knew for sure.  It is very old, they said, and was given to them by an English friend a long, long time ago.  Nice to think, in this centenary year of the tragedy, that a relic of the great ship resides in Rapallo.  Being a sceptic, I doubt it… but it could be.

Now I know you’re just eaten up with curiosity, so without further chat, allow me to introduce Il Marinaio, creator of the ever-changing exhibit of sculptures in the sea:

His name is Michele (no last name offered and I didn’t like to ask).  He ‘fessed up to being the artist, and admitted that some of his work gets washed away by the tide every day.  When I asked him if he had a special reason for making these lovely sculptures he replied, “Beh! Passa tempo.”   But a friend tells me he likes to walk in the water to improve the circulation in his feet.  They both sound like good reasons to me.

Spunky Old Dame

02 Sunday Oct 2011

Posted by farfalle1 in Italian habits and customs, Italian men, Italian women, Law and order, Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Crime in Italy, Italian Thief

I loved this story that appeared in the English-speaking part of ANSA news service this weekend:

Woman, 88, sees off thief

‘I would have chased him if it weren’t for my artificial hip’

(ANSA) – Pordenone, September 30 – An 88-year-old Italian woman got rid of a thief in her house Thursday, telling him he should be ashamed of himself and get a job.

The man turned up on her door in the northern city of Aviano posing as an electricity-meter man the morning after she had celebrated her birthday with some friends, Rina Zorzin told Italian TV Friday after receiving the compliments of Mayor Stefano Del Cont Bernard.

“First he asked to see the meter and when I refused he took out a gun, thinking that would frighten me,” she said.

“But nothing scares me any more, at my age, so I jumped onto his back to stop him.

“He grabbed me round the wrists and forced me to sit down”.

Undaunted, Ms Zorzin taunted the would-be thief: “look all you want, look for gold, I’m not giving you anything”.

Then, when the man was looking elsewhere, she managed to get out of the house and shout for help, crying “thief, dirty thief, you ought to be ashamed, go and get a job”.

The would-be thief gave up and took flight, Zorzin said.

“I would have chased after him, too, if it weren’t for my artificial hip,” she told the RAI state TV corporation.

******************************

What I love about the story is that this is the same kind of lady who will cheerfully elbow you out of the way at the meat counter or bus stop.  What I also love about it is that the thief gave up and ran away.  In the U.S. he might well have shot the old woman.

Diving for Pearls in Zoagli

05 Monday Sep 2011

Posted by farfalle1 in Customs, Italian habits and customs, Italian men, Uncategorized

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Cliff diving, Diving in Zoagli, High diving, Zoagli

(click on any photo to see a larger, clearer image)

Nah, I’m just kidding, they don’t really dive for pearls in Zoagli, at least I don’t think they do. But they certainly do dive.  The young neophytes start from the passagiata walk, a gorgeous path that has been constructed where the sheer, steep cliffs meet the rock strewn sea:


And if you think mothers object to their children jumping from a great height into what looks like a pile of rocks, guess again.  Mom jumps too!


Once they’ve mastered the low dive, they move up to the medium dive.  This young man dove from the ledge above the heads of the three people standing farthest along the sidewalk; he not only had to clear the sidewalk, he had to get far enough out to miss the rocks just below the walk.


Then there’s the…. High Dive.

See the boy in the green trunks with his friend about twenty feet above the passagiata?  This stops my heart every time I see it – there’s no margin for error in this jump.

And there he goes!

The photo is out of focus because the whole thing makes me so nervous my hands shake.  But look!  He’s arrived safe and sound!

Jumping from the high rocks seems to be a rite of passage for Zoagli teenagers (mostly boys, though I’ve seen girls jump too).  It makes me kind of glad I didn’t grow up on a rocky sea coast.  No.  It makes me very glad I didn’t grow up on a rocky sea coast!

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