Thursday, July 12, 2007

Taormina-mare: Sea and nature

Taormina includes two places: Taormina-the village and Taormina-mare.
The coastal area around Taormina Mare is one of the most beautiful and wild places by the sea in the world. The coast can be easily reached by walk, car or by an exciting cable car ride right from the town centre and from inside the cabin you can enjoy panoramic views. Other alternative is the steps which descend from the center of Taormina through gardens of bougainvillea in bloom.
Isola BellaThe coast is a bay made up of several picturesque beaches and rocky inlets like Isola Bella, Capo S'Andrea, Mazzarò, Baia delle Sirene, Lido di Spisone. All the beaches offer a good range of watersports and boat trips to nearby sea caves like the spectacular marine grotto Grotta Azzura. The most exclusive of all beaches in the area is Isola Bella for its clear waters framed with the typical Mediterranean vegetation and cliffs. A very quite and peaceful place where you can also enjoy a Chinese massage. Further on is the beach at Mazzeo, a long stretch of sand that leads as far as Letojanni and continues up to Lido Silemi.

But don’t worry any of this rock, gravel and sand range of beaches are beautiful with the liquid crystal palpitating with azure and dark green. The only beach that I don’t recommend is Letojanni which is 5 km from Taormina because is very busy and the water the scene is not so spectacular. It is perhaps a good choice in the spring or autumn.
The local mild climate allows visitors to attend the beaches almost all year round.

Sunday, July 8, 2007

Taormina - Biblical image of a paradise wrapped up in luxuriant subtropical vegetation

On a cliff above the Ionian sea, at the foot of Monte Tauro, Taormina is the most famous Sicilian resort, also named Sicilian Monte Carlo. A Monte Carlo without casinos or royal families but truly romantic, where the self-exiled D.H. Lawrence was inspired to write Lady Chatterly's Lover, one of the most passionate and erotic love stories of its era. Taormina, like many Sicilian villages, has loads of winding medieval streets and thin passages, full of secrets and great restaurants, cafés and ice cream bars.
If you are a good explorer you can find hidden gardens, one of them is located on a cliff. Having a stunning view was donated to the town by rich Englishwoman, an aristocrat who had fallen in love with Taormina.
Actually is not hard to fall for Taormina, the town is a real beauty by day and in the evening is absolutely breathe taking. From Taormina, especially from the Greek Theatre you can see the rare image of Europe’s greatest natural wonder, Mount Etna’s. And the incredible views of the sea complete this biblical image of a paradise wrapped up in luxuriant subtropical vegetation.
The town medieval layout is impressive and there are lots of places embedded with history to see. The Greek Theatre is the second largest ancient theater in Sicily after the one in Syracuse. It was originally built in the Hellenistic age and was almost entirely rebuilt by the Romans in the 2nd century AD. At the entrance gate of the village is a clock-tower which is called by the historians “the 15th century area”. It is also supposed that the first tower was built on the ruins of an older defense wall which would have dated back to the origins of the city, in other words the 4th century B.C.
In the middle of the town, in Piazza de Duomo is a Barocco style fountain with mythological ponies overlooks the basins and fountain water flows out of their mouths. Three mythological characters resembling Tritons stands in the middle of the basin with their arms crossed over their heads so as to support another basin decorated in low-relief; a round base inside this basin holds a basket of fruit on the top of which stands Taormina's coat-of-arms. Even though the city's coat-of-arms normally pictures a male centaur here was turned into a female centaur. Further more you can see the Cathedral with its austere façade crowned by crenellation was built in the 13th century.
Not to miss Castelmolla. You can reach this village perched on a rock through a winding road of 5 km. From Castelomola you can experiment one of the famous panoramic views in the world, especially fine at sunset. Up there you will also find the ruins of a medieval castle which in antiquity may have been the site of the ancient acropolis of Tauromenion.
And if is too hot or you are too tired to go sight seeing, go along the street which are lined with shops, pasticcerie and cafes and also try the famous Wunderbar where you can find the cocktails that Liz Taylor and Richard Burton where so fond of.

Greeks, Romans and Arabs have good taste

Sicily, a country colonized by Phoenicians, Punic settlers from Carthage and by Greeks, also invaded by the Arabs, is a unique place full of art, archeology, history, folklore and breathtaking scenery. Roman province, Greek colony, an Arab emirate, a Norman kingdom and now a nation unto itself. A place where majestic mountains meet the heavenly beaches.

There is so much to see in Sicily and to speak about it that is very hard to decide from where to start.