It’s 9.15 am and I’m drinking a Sicilian Pale Ale in a bar in Palermo Airport. Our bags are checked through to Brisbane. I don’t particularly care where they go as long as they eventually find us at home because we have all of our important stuff with us including all the requisite boarding passes.
That’s the celebratory reason for the beer. The real reason is that we dropped off our hire car an hour ago and I bid a poison-spitting farewell to Italian roads and drivers. The 50 or so kilometres from our hotel to the airport this morning was supposed to be a breeze. It was a nightmare. When I checked Google Maps at 6.00am it was predicting a 43 minute trip. The bad news is that it took an hour and a half. The good news is that we didn’t hit anything and noone hit us. God knows how that happened. In the areas where the traffic was heaviest – the outskirts of Palermo city – the lines on the road became as rare as functioning car indicators and it became a free-for-all with lanes becoming multiple choice and when a huge truck decides it wants half of what appears to be your lane and half of the next one over, drivers scatter and aim for the nearest available space. The words of our Syracuse cab driver (see #4) were Nostradamus-like in their prophesy.
I was sweating bullets all the way to the airport, the child bride was finally able to relax in her seat when we got here instead of jumping about like she was constantly being cattle prodded and our travel companion, in the back seat, when not getting hit in the back of the head by a flying suitcase (hard breaking unavoidable) was grinding her teeth to the gums.
Notwithstanding the driving hysterics, we had a marvellous time in Sicily. It was the second series of White Lotus that originally got us thinking about coming here. We even went to where it was filmed – Taormina – which looked nothing like what we imagined from the series. Not to worry because we found plenty to gawk at everywhere we went, the food (with one notable exception) was great, the beer was cold and the wine went down far too easily.
Our trip into Palermo yesterday was by train. The previous night it cost 70 euros for a taxi, one-way for the 25 or so kilometres into town. On the train it was 3.3 euros each. To compensate for the much cheaper price, the ticket machine wouldn’t accept any of our credit or debit cards; only cash. As luck would have it, this was the only time on the whole trip when none of us had any. A very kind American couple gave us the 10 euros needed for three tickets. Lucky I was wearing my Tennessee Titans t-shirt which got the conversation with them started.
These old European cities are always just a corner away from something interesting, historic or both. Anywhere with lots of glass will be soulless and boring comparatively. So walking along the main street of Palermo (Via Roma, I believe) from the railway station, it was easy to find something to photograph which is the determining factor differentiating interesting from boring.
The trains, or at least the one we travelled on between Santa Flavia and Palermo, are clean, comfortable, fast and on time. My recommendation to anyone planning a vacation in Italy is to shelve the car hire plans and catch trains. Apart from the absence of stress, you get to enjoy the incredibly rugged and spectacular scenery (talking Sicily here), none of which I saw when for about 900 kilometres, all I focussed on was the lane marker (when there was one) staying in the bottom left-hand corner of the windscreen. Getting used to driving on the wrong side of the road and not knowing where the front right corner of the car is (get your designers onto that, Mercedes) made centring the car in its lane rather challenging initially as that guard rail in Taormina discovered. Fortunately we got there and here in the end. I just need to know now, how many fines I wracked up by blowing through toll gates.


