April 3, 2023
To Siracusa
For a simple day with a short two hour train ride to Siracusa, today was surprisingly interesting and worth remembering. It began with an excellent breakfast at our B&B and an extended visit with our host Katia. We’re the only guests this morning (and, as I said, her first guests of the year), so she had plenty of time to chat with us about a variety of topics - the best months to visit Sicily (April and October; but April is really best); favorite towns (Cefalu in particular); and the weather this year (there’s been a prolonged drought, and last night was the first real rain of the year). As challenging as it was to find our way up here, Il Duomo Relais was a fine stay for us.
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The Ragusa train station is over two miles away, in the upper town. Unless we want to skirt the city and climb up on the highway, the only route not involving a zillion stairs is the same serpentine we biked down yesterday. It’s not too steep, and even though it’s narrow and has a few blind hairpin turns there’s little traffic and feels safe enough - the few cars that pass us are appropriately slow and cautious.
And it’s an amazing short ride, one I’m happy to get a second pass at, one worth a second video.
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1 year ago
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Video sound track: Adagio, by Lara Fabian
We check out of our room around ten and our train doesn’t leave until two, so we have about three hours to kill once we arrive at the stations. There’s a nice small plaza in front with benches, so I hang out there while Rachael goes on an exploratory walk for about an hour.
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By the time Rachael returns, it’s clouded over and turned cool and windy so we roll our bikes inside the station to keep warm. It’s a small, unattended station with no facilities at all, so we take turns going down to the cafe Rachael spotted for a snack lunch and access to their services.
As our departure time nears, we carry our bikes across the track to platform two, where our train is due to depart. I’m worried about it, because I saw the other one arrive two hours ago. It’s tiny and disgorged many apparent day trippers coming up from Siracusa. It won’t be a shock if we’re rejected boarding with the bikes. We could end up trying to find a taxi. While we wait we game out possibilities. One is that we can get one but not two bikes on the train. In that case Rachael will take the train and wait for me at the hotel, since it would probably be easier to find a taxi that can hold one bike than two. I hand her passport, so she’ll have it to check in at the hotel if this occurs.
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There are two different lines that pass through Ragusa: the coast line, between Gela and Syracusa; and an interior run that ends in Caltanassetta at the crest of the island and connects to a line down to Palermo. Perversely, both trains arrive and depart every two hours during the day, at exactly one minute apart. The timing complicates things, and it worries us when a lot of passengers start showing up until we see they’re all clustering on platform one, apparently bound for the interior.
At a few minutes before the trains arrive, all those passengers suddenly cross the tracks and move over onto platform two with us. I look up and see that both trains are due to arrive on platform two now, apparently single threading. Ours is now posted as five minutes late, so we suppose this will work.
The inland-bound train comes and goes, swallowing everyone on the platform but ourselves and one other. Suddenly, about two minutes before our train arrives, the station attendant signals us to rush across the tracks to the other platform. I look up at the departure board, and our train is now arriving on track one! In a near panic we hurriedly carry our panniers and my bike across the track (there’s no underpass), and the attendant carries the other bike.
Then, in a fortuitous move that saves our entire tour, Rachael looks up and sees that I’ve left my rucksack (with my passport) behind on the other platform. She runs across, retrieves it, and returns just before our train arrives.
The train really is tiny - two short cars, with no apparent spot to put the bikes. The train’s behind schedule, so the female attendant gestures us to hustle as Rachael tries to board with all four panniers so I can start handing folded bikes up to her. In a second, heart-stopping near-catastrophe in as many minutes, one of the panniers slips from her grip. She doesn’t see this, but it falls into the gap between the train and platform, protected from falling onto the tracks beneath the train only because it’s barely thick enough to get wedged in the gap. Yikes! With a sick feeling I quickly reach for it, half-expecting to see it slip through the gap before I get to it.
We get the bikes on board, and the doors close behind us and the delayed train starts moving immediately. The attendant indicates that the train is too small and bikes aren’t permitted, but what’s done is done so she shrugs her shoulders and indicates that we should slide them between the seats. Phew!
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1 year ago
Two hours later we arrive in Siracusa, reassemble everything, and start walking to our hotel only a four minute, 400 meter walk away according to our phone map. Twenty minutes later we finally arrive, after three or four false starts down one wrong street after another. We arrive twenty minutes before the hotel shuts down for the day.
Quite the day! And it’s not done yet; but that’s enough excitement for the moment. We’ll have a look at our blitz tour of Siracusa in a separate post.
Ride stats today: 3 miles, 500’; for the tour: 347 miles, 26,200’
Today's ride: 3 miles (5 km)
Total: 347 miles (558 km)
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