Friday October15 started cool in Trani and ended a bit cooler with some rain in Monopoli.
It was tough to say goodbye to Trani, a beautiful sophisticated town, as one reviewer noted. Our train wasn't until 12:10, so we went for morning walk. We stopped at Panificio del porto, a wonderful small bakery on the port that had been closed the last time we had walked by. It had some wonderful Pugliese focaccia. We bought half a pizza to take with us to Monopoli.
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Panificio del porto
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| One last look at the Trani harbour |
We said our goodbyes to Silvia, our B&B host. She and her husband and two teenage children live in a separate section of the B&B. She was very responsive and helpful to us. We would highly recommend a stay there. While it was a small room, it had everything we needed. It was fun to take breakfast at the café across the narrow street. We walked to the train station (about 8 minutes) and caught our 12:06 train to Monopoli just down the coast.
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| Arrivederci Trani-- the train station |
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| Welcome to Monopoli |
Monopoli is a city "born of the sea and one that lives from the sea". It was first settled in about 500 B.C. as a fortified Messipian city. In the Roman era it became one of the Adriatic's primary ports. It is about 40 km southeast of Bari and has a population of around 50,000. Its coastline stretches for 13 kilometres and offers 32 natural coves interspersed with beautiful sandy beach resorts and clifftops overlooking the sea.
Yes, the board game, Monopoly, dedicated a special edition to the town's centre, even though the Italian version of the game has always been called Monopoli!! (so says our guide book).
We got a bit lost getting to our Airbnb which is located in Centro Storico (Historic Centre), a maze of medieval streets near the harbour. We were only about a 15 minute walk from the train station, but Google Maps was not too helpful, as we could not locate street names. The town was also very quiet, but we found someone who got us oriented in the right direction. We were still wandering about, when lo and behold, our host Alberto appeared and asked if we were Allan and Toby! He led us to our spacious apartment on the ground floor on a tiny street called Vico Pugliese. He and his wife Elena left us a nice bottle of Rosato di Primitivo, some Puglia treats and a map!
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The entrance to our street
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| Bathroom |
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| Kitchen area |
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| Large bedroom and extra bed |
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We are on a ground floor apartment (beige door)
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Looking up the Street
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It was quite cool and cloudy when we arrived and it started to lightly rain. We headed out to Piazza Garibaldi where there are a number of cafés and the Tourist Information Centre.
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| Rainy day at Piazza Garabaldi |
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| Tourist info centre in an interesting building, which was once a fish market |
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| Display of photos of fishermen |
We got out of the rain and had a coffee and panini at Barumba, on the Piazza Garibaldi.
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| We were checked for vaccine status once we sat down |
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| Alonso with coffee and panini |
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| Clock Tower in Piazza Garibaldi |
The very helpful woman at the Tourist Info centre told us about a local fish store around the corner. We went there and got fish for our next two dinners. Having had our last four dinners out (two in Rome and two in Trani), we decided it was time for some Alonso home cooking.
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| Fish was so fresh |
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| Outside of the store--- a lot of stores have those strings of beads as you enter (like the 1950s films) |
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| The harbour across from the fish store |
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| Heading back to our apartment- many tiny streets |
Alonso made us a dinner of orata (sea bream) and salad. We also had the focaccia we had purchased at the Trani bakery.
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| Alonso prepping the dinner |
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| Orato (sea bream) and focaccia-- very tasty. |
Saturday October 16, was a mostly sunny day with a high of 18C. Perfect for exploring the city.
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Our front door has an outer door and two parts of an inner door--- Alonso doing his best Mr. Ed impersonation.
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| Walking through the historic centre to the harbour |
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| Flowers on a wall |
The harbour is only about 10 minutes (at most) from our apartment. So much nicer with blue sky and blue boats.
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| Monopoli harbour |
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| Lots of fishing boats- called "gozzi" |
There is an International festival of photography and art called PhEST, See Beyond the Sea, which has 15 free outdoor exhibits as well as some ticketed indoor exhibits. We passed a number as we walked along the coast.
The first exhibit we saw was entitled Corpus Fugit, by a Jordanian photographer, Mustafa Sabbagh (b. 1961).
Striking photographs of young men and women looking forward
We started to walk towards a lighthouse on a piece of land jutting into the Adriatic Sea.
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| Looking back into the harbour |
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| More of the photos |
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| Another view |
The next exhibit we saw was entitled:
Weathering Time, by Nancy Floyd (b. Minnesota, 1956), a fascinating project she started in 1982 of taking self-portraits every day to watch herself grow older. For the first 36 years she used an analog camera. There was a three year period when she did not take photographs and she also missed some days. Her visual calendar now consists of more than 2500 photographs.
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| 39 Years 1982-2019 |
Nancy often groups her photos by themes:
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| Protest 1984/1988/2018 |
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| Top: Evolution of the Typewriter 1983-2013 and Bottom: Evolution of Trousers 1982-2021 |
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| The display of her work |
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| Walking to the lighthouse |
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| Looking back |
Around the corner from the lighthouse was the Castello Carlo V, a stone fortress built in the mid 1550s and used as a jail for centuries. It is now used for exhibits, but it is closed at the present time.
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| A view of Castle |
More photos from a series called:
Hidden Motherhood, by Alena Zhandarova (b. 1988, Birobidzhan, Russia).
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| Fresh zucchini and tomato salad, salmon and wine |
We really enjoyed exploring Monopoli in the sunshine. Tomorrow (Sunday) we are taking a day trip to Ostuni, (about a 20 minutes train ride) known as the "White City".
Thanks for the tour. Love the photo of Alfonso looking out the half door and Toby standing on the beach.
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