Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Monday, November 1, 2010
Tunisian Treat
The brik is a delicious deep fried fast food that is a specialty in Tunisia, the most common is the tuna brik - a brik au thon. It has an egg in it and in a good one the egg is runny. They taste so much better than I can describe, the sort of thing one would never eat at home but with the freedom of a holiday far far away can become a daily taste sensation.
Monday, October 25, 2010
Rome
A lovely mild day in Rome, I walked beside the Tiber which is a pretty jade green not the muddy brown of January. I saw a man catch a large fish before I dived into a church then a museum and then the endless laneways of little shops to get Johnny's birthday present. There are more tourists here than I usual, it is a positive town of babel but always fun, well mostly. I am really enjoying the freedom of doing exactly what I want after the inevitable restrictions of being in a tour. One of the others from the group is still here and we meet for dinner but go our own way in the day, best of both worlds.
I have very specific things I want to see but if they are shut, on tour, swathed in scaffolding or just plain disappeared its not a tragedy. There are always other things to see. Today it was Caravaggio, one of his sullen, sexy, touselled and very tactile John the Baptist representations. Not terribly religious but very appealing. Unfortunately no photographs in the museum
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
So many things
Tunisia
Tunis
Monday, October 11, 2010
Sabratha
Hottest day so far and site with the least cover. However best theatre ever. Tomorrow we leave at 4.30am for Tunis. The hotel has managed to lose my blue shirt in the wash but I will miss the computer in the room and the massage chair, even if the instuctions are in Japanese. No opportunities to really go shopping which is a shame
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Leptis Magna
Ptolemais and Apollonia
Ptoemais is very dry and was well supplied with cisterns in ancient times. The enormous govenors house supplied the museum with some interesting finds but much of what is there is from the Byzantine period.
Apollonia is, especially since Africa dropped two meters, by the sea. A Greek city it was the port for Cyrenia
Cyrenia
This town, a few miles inland on the top of the escarpment, has some incredible views and a divided heritage, also now a lot of gum trees. The hellenistic baths are still there beside the far more elaborate Roman ones. You can see us sitting in the separate hip type baths of the helenistic period.The temple of Zeus was rebuilt by the Romans but is still pretty impressive. They have a strange funerary cult with blank faced statues of Persephone
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