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Guest Blogger: Carole Waterhouse ‘Turn Right at the Madonna’

Who is up for a trip to Italy???  I have a special guest blogger today.  Carole Waterhouse is here to talk about her trip to that beautiful country last month.  Enjoy!

Carole Waterhouse - Italy

Turn Right at the Madonna

By Carole Waterhouse

The Amalfi coastline in southern Italy is considered one of the most beautiful in Europe,  an area of craggy cliffs and serene valleys full of lemon groves, with tiny secluded beaches and picturesque towns built on hillsides so steep they appear to be tumbling into the sea.  An early explorer to the area described it as a place where only the ocean was horizontal, anything even remotely resembling land appearing vertical.  It’s a place where colorful majorca domes on churches glisten in the light, houses look like pastel boxes, and flowers bloom everywhere.

Although rugged, the Amalfi coastline is a walker’s paradise, as I discovered on a recent inn-to-inn hiking trip.  In five days, I completed walks ranging from 9-15 kilometers with an average ascent/descent of 500 meters.  While steep at times—a “hike” could involve a full hour of walking up or down steps—seeing this area on foot is a way of truly appreciating its uniqueness.   Walking through the groves where lemons are grown adds to the appreciation of that slice in next morning’s tea and there is nothing like the experience of sitting on a quiet beach listening to the sound of waves washing through pebbles.

I chose a self-guided itinerary organized by a walking company called One Foot Abroad.  They  booked rooms for me and make arrangements to transport my luggage from hotel to hotel so that all I had to carry was a daypack.  They then provided detailed walking instructions, complete with emergency numbers should I get off track or experience an injury, and then I set off on my own—literally.  While most walkers travel in pairs or small groups, I have a preference for going solo, a way of becoming truly in tune with my surroundings.

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Slowing down and spending more time in a single place can mean sampling the tremendous variety it has to offer.  Along the Amalfi Coast it meant  seeing the changes in color in the ocean  from bright turquoise to deep, cobalt blue and watching the way the towns with their unique pastel colors and the limestone cliffs surrounding them changed moods in different light.  Walking also leads to interesting encounters with locals.  A man who was trimming weeds stopped his work to serenade me as I passed by and I received my first ever Italian lesson on a terrace with spectacular views over the ocean.  The woman I met there was concerned that I didn’t know the proper words for food, even though it’s hard not to feast in Italy regardless of the language spoken.  A walking itinerary also means an opportunity to experience towns the tour buses miss. In Pontone, a tiny village high in the cliffs, I watched children ride their bicycles around and around a tiny square, the only spot that was flat, and as I walked from village to village that early Sunday morning, I had the luck of arriving at each town just in time to be greeted by the sound of church bells pealing.

My tour began in the town of Amalfi, the location of one of the most beautiful churches in the area with its black and white striped exterior and a colorful mosaic façade.  An area known for its papermaking industry, the walk passed through a stream-lined valley with an impressive waterfall and vine-covered ruins from the mills, all surrounded by lemon and olive groves.  I passed through Pontone and on to Ravello,  an especially beautiful town whose villas have extensive gardens that look down into the sea, then went town steps and steps and more steps to the small town of Atrani, which just out into the sea, then back to Amalfi.

Carole - Shrine

The second day involved a nine mile walk from Amalfi to Priano, a quieter town more often visited by Italian vacationers than international ones.  The walk began on a terrace overlooking the sea and followed an old mule track. For a short time I walked with two mules that were being used to haul debris from a building that was being renovated.  From there, my trail wound up and down the hillside, across terraces with flower-covered villas,  passing  through tiny towns and by interesting churches, and involved scrambling down a ravine that ended in a secluded cove.  The “path” made use of sidewalks, roads, steps, and forest trails—a maze that offered a view into all sides of local life.  Animals are apparently well-cared for—I was impressed by the number of  pans full of left-overs I stepped around outside doors.  Religious shrines appeared in all kinds of unexpected places, including alcoves in walls and along tight turns in the road.   The directions I was given  often sounded vague, but made sense while following them.  There were comments like take the left at the shrine or turn right just before the house with the red roof, or take the right fork at the Madonna.  Riding a ferry back to Amalfi the next day in an attempt to trace my own path from the ocean,  I found it impossible to see how I had made it through what at times appeared to be shear rock cliffs.

The third and forth days were spent on the famous Sentiero dei Degli, or Path of  Gods, the first a circular route over Praiano, the next on the hike from Praiano to Positano, both offering spectacular views over the ocean and surrounding villages and countryside.  The walk to Positano began with steps lined with crosses that led to a monastery where there was a small church with frescoes inside.  Scrambling upward, the walk then opened up into what my route notes described as “the most famous section of the most famous path of southern Italy.” With a thousand foot drop into the ocean below, there were breathtaking views of terraced gardens and the surrounding towns.  The walk was exhilarating for both its height and its views.  Despite the trail’s fame, there were only a handful of other walkers.  That was my experience most of the days walking here.  This is a place rich in its scenery and vegetation and full of enticing scents, and in the hills at least, a place where you can find the solitude to truly become immersed in everything the area has to offer.

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The final day of the tour when into the higher elevations, beginning with a bus ride to Montepertuso and following paths in a park that loomed overhead, passing by cliffs used by climbers, views of a natural arch built into the rock, and fields full of wildflowers, always again with incredible views of the hillsides and sea.

Each of the towns are remarkably unique and carry their own specialties.  Amalfi’s paper is used by the Vatican for official correspondence and there is a museum where you can watch the process and buy paper with pressed flowers inside.  Positano is known for its unique clothing styles and is full of art galleries.  Sorrento, on the other side of the same peninsula, its famous for its in-laid wood. Each town also handles the hills differently.  Amalfi’s side streets are built into the rock like long white tunnels.  In Praiano, streets that run parallel to the sea are flat winding lanes, while those run perpendicular are steep steps.  Positano’s wind more gently upward, the main one covered in wisteria.

The Amalfi coast isn’t the only attraction in the area.  Nearby Sorrento is a larger town with winding medieval streets that are mercifully flat and terraces that look down into the sea and harbor.  From there it’s and easy train ride, one where musicians stroll the aisles playing for passengers, to Pompeii, a vast archeological site where time stopped after the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD.

Sorrento is also one of the gateways to Capri, the upscale island  that is often described as a mountain rising out of the sea.  It, too, is considered to be a walker’s paradise, provided, as one of my guidebooks states, you are at least part mountain goat.  Part of the island consists of pedestrian only lanes leading to the ruins of Tiberius’s castle and the natural arch that extends into the sea, one of the island’s most famous sites. The paths are marked with colorful ceramic tiles.  In the center of the island is a chairlift that leads to the top of Mount Solaro.  The small town of Anacapri has a church with an amazing tile floor and villas, including the eccentric Red House, a castle-like structure made of a combination of tiles and other pieces of artwork.

Carole - Capri

One of the best parts of traveling are the completely unexpected surprises.  I began and ended my vacation in Rome,  where I stayed in a hotel that was a converted monastery.  During my first stay, I was amused by the signs asking visitors not to hang laundry outside the window, an Italian custom, because clothes wouldn’t look appropriate strung out along the side of a cathedral. On the day before my flight home, I return to the same hotel.  After checking in, I was given a key and sent to the third floor, where I was told to cross the terrace and find my room on the other side.  The terrace was the roof of the cathedral, and when I walked outside, all of Rome seemed to stretch out before me.  The Amalfi coast, I knew, would be full of remarkable views.  This one wasn’t bad either.

Carole WaterhouseA creative writing professor at California University of Pennsylvania, Carole Waterhouse has traveled through England, Wales and Ireland by bicycle, recently hiked the Inca Trail to Machu Picchu, has gone trekking in Turkey’s Cappadocia region and has completed other walking vacations in the Austrian and Swiss Alps.  A fiction writer, she has written two novels, The Tapestry Baby and Without Wings, as well as a collection of short stories, The Paradise Ranch.  You can visit her website at www.carolewaterhouse.com.

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Special Guest: Paul V. Stutzman on hiking the Appalachian Trail

Let’s see a show of hands who loves mountain stories???

I think my hand was raised higher than anyone else.  I love the mountains.  Been on several mountain trips through the Smokies and the Blue Ridge and I always come back so refreshed.  I’ll be blogging about my trips shortly, but I have a special guest today.  Paul V. Stutzman has hiked the entire Appalachian Trail (2,176 miles by foot) after his wife died and wrote a book – a very very good book – about his journey.  It’s called Hiking Through: Finding Peace and Freedom on the Appalachian Trail.

Paul is presently on a book tour – a physical and a virtual book tour – to talk about his book and it’s my pleasure to have him here today.

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Quit Dreaming, Start Walking

by Paul V. Stutzman

In the fall of 2006, my wife Mary died of breast cancer. Life as I had known it for 32 years was pretty much over. For a year, I struggled to make things “normal” again, but that, of course, could never happen. My life situation had changed drastically, and I knew that somehow, I myself needed to change, too.

In the spring of 2008, I left a secure job and paycheck to walk the entire Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Maine. I had known, even before losing my wife, that being out in the beauty of God’s creation had a healing effect on me. That was one reason I decided to hike the Trail. A second reason for my decision was that I had long dreamed about doing a thru-hike on the AT, and I had come face to face with the fact that we are never assured of tomorrow—we need to live today. So I quit dreaming and started walking.

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I was a thru-hiker, which meant I walked the entire 2,176 miles in one season. Along the way, I met many section hikers, folks who wanted to experience the Appalachian Trail but only did short sections. Some of those people go back year after year, each time doing different sections of the Trail. I also met many, many day hikers. The Appalachian Trail is legendary, and hikers everywhere want to experience at least part of it.

Even if you’re eighty, if you dream of walking on the famous Trail, I encourage you to do it! Many parts of the AT were so strenuous, so rugged, that I wondered sometimes how I could go farther. But there are sections of the Trail that are relatively easy, and yet so beautiful that hikers will never be disappointed.

Paul Stutzman 4

Let me take you briefly to three of those places.

Max Patch Mountain is called the “crown jewel” of the Appalachian Trail. The bald summit, covered by 350 grassy acres, is part of Pisgah National Forest near Hot Springs, North Carolina, and is a favorite spot for picnickers and kite-flyers. The trail crosses the very top of the bald, and I felt as though I were on that mountain meadow with Julie Andrews singing “The Sound of Music.” The views are 360-degree panoramas of mountain ranges stretching to every horizon.

The AT cuts through Grayson Highlands State Park in Virginia, and this area has some of the most beautiful scenery and interesting rock formations that you’ll find anywhere on the Trail. The Highlands are dotted with pink and red rock outcroppings, with clusters of evergreens scattered in open fields on the hillsides. Herds of wild ponies graze throughout the state park. Although hikers are encouraged not to feed the ponies, many of the animals were so tame that they nuzzled us, looking for a handout.

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Our quick tour is going to stop in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, for two reasons. First, the headquarters of the AT is in this little town, and anyone who dreams of hiking the Trail will find the few miles of trail through West Virginia only whet the appetite. Also, hiker-friendly towns like this all along the Trail are the hikers’ lifeline—we stop for supplies, a hot shower, big meals, laundry. Yes, sometimes we stop just because we’re lonely and need to meet and greet people.

If you dream of hiking the Appalachian Trail, don’t wait for someday. Do it now! Dreams can come true. Just start walking.

If you’d like to hear more of Paul’s story, purchase his book, Hiking Through: Finding Peace and Freedom on the Appalachian Trail, online by clicking  here.

Hiking ThroughPaul V. Stutzman grew up in the middle of Ohio’s Amish and Mennonite community. His new book, Hiking Through, chronicles his thru-hike of the Appalachian Trail, seeking peace and healing after losing his wife to cancer. He is available to speak to groups on the subjects of hiking the AT, working through grief, and finding a relationship with God. More information available at www.hikingthrough.com.

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