Intorno Lucca

30 May – 12 June 2019

This post tells about our excursions beyond Lucca’s walls.

Garfagnana

The Garfagnana is the beautiful, wooded mountain area just north of Lucca between the Northern Appenines and the Alpi Apuane. Sweet chestnut trees cover the mountains and a major river—Serchio—flows through it.

Most important, it is the ancestral home of our niece Kitty Loyd’s relatives—the Marcuccis—her dad’s side of the family!

We visited several towns on our day trip there: Bagni di Lucca (where Elizabeth stayed), Barga, and Castelnuovo. And we saw an incredible medieval bridge. There are few tourists, mostly serious hikers.

Robert is amazed that no one is fishing the river here as well as others that he sees from the car.

Bagni di Lucca

We couldn’t find the rest of the chess set.

Barga

Castelnuovo di Garfagnana

Ponte della Maddalena

We saw this bridge on our way back to Lucca. Robert had to stop to take a few photos and walk across it. Wikipedia revealed that this medieval bridge was built around 1100 and named the Bridge of the Devil. It was later renovated around 1300 and renamed the Bridge of Mary Magdalene. It was an important Via Francigena pilgrimage crossing of the Serchio River.

Marble Quarries of Carrara

Wow. Wow. Wow.

Those are three wows of our trip so far. The tour of the marble quarries of Carrara adds a fourth WOW.

The tour guide met us high up the mountain with his Land Rover, which has seen many miles but not a car wash in many months. Eight of us climbed in. Bonnie and Robert took the back with a young couple from Manhattan. A couple from Switzerland and a couple from Bosnia and Montenegro took the real seats. As we headed almost vertically up the single-lane gravel road with hairpin turns, there was nothing to hang onto except one another and a few OMG bars. The bumps, twists, and turns easily surpassed any experience at Magic Mountain.

This bone-rattling tour lasted more than two hours with visits to numerous quarries. (There are at least 85.) The scale of these quarries is immense, and the bright white of the walls and all the surrounding surfaces in the sun is blinding. One visit took us into a mountainside where they were actively excavating. There, a machine was diamond cutting a huge slab.

The guide made good use of the Land Rover as some slopes exceeded 45 degrees for long distances—some dry and some wet.

Excavating marble began here in ancient time, and marble from Carrara was first used extensively in Rome for the building projects of Emperor Augustus (“I found Rome a city of bricks and left it a city of marble.”) Michelangelo favored Carrara marble even though his client, a Medici pope, had insisted he purchase marble from a Medici quarry. The Pieta marble came from Carrara.

The technique of excavating marble has not changed much since it began. The cheapest method is to start at the top of a mountain and work down, not into, the mountain, changing the roads for trucks as you go, daily if necessary. Only two of the quarries have gone into the mountainside because of physical restrictions created by adjoining quarries owned by others.

While the technique has not changed, the machinery has. Today, they core drill at intervals of a depth of up to 9 meters vertically and horizontally, then run diamond-embedded cable through the drilled holes in a loop around the still-attached marble. Running the cable in a loop cuts through the marble until they can wedge the block off and onto the quarry floor. Workers look for the largest piece possible that does not fracture or have major internal flaws. Each new cut is a gamble.

Buyers inspect new slabs on site. If they like what they see, they must arrange for transportation out of the excavations. More than 700 trucks run shipments each day on gravel roads that change from day to day as quarrying continues to eat away at the mountain.

They estimate that only 95 percent of the marble has been excavated to date. The mountain range is large and extends east to Lucca. We learned that unimaginable amounts of marble powder, created from marble slabs too small or too flawed to sell in one piece, are used in products worldwide such as toothpaste, osteoporosis medication, body creams, and milk (calcium additive thanks to Nestle). Robert had thought the small pieces of marble were just used to make miniature statues of David sold in Florence. Who knew?!

The tour was by Il Tau (iltau.com).
We highly recommend them.

Marble sculpting exhibition—Carrara
Our first marble parking lot, in Colonnata, up the road from Carrara
Tour starts. Eight plus guide. One Land Rover.
Slab cut and ready to wedge off the mountainside
Slab recently broken off lies on its side.
Somehow, we do not think this ladder would meet OSHA safety standards.
Note the tunnel entrance in the distance on the left. We went there next.
Better view of the tunnel entrances
Inside the mountain
Video!
Old train tunnel now used for vehicle access
Yes. You can buy marble lemons.
If you want.
On the way back, Bonnie wanted to see the seaside resort of Forte dei Marmi, famous for its fashion shopping and to . . .
. . . explore another Angela Caputi store!

Terme Tettuccio in Montecatini Terme

These hot springs have been known for their curative powers since ancient times. Don’t worry. We did not include any photos of Robert in a Speedo.

They might not know there is an app for this.

Cibo e Bibite

Lardo di Colannata, near Carrara
Colannata
Colannata

Lucca

30 Maggio – 12 Giugno 2019

We’re not sure why more people don’t make Lucca a destination for long stays. We did. Twelve full days. Lucca is filled with churches, shops, squares, restaurants and trattorias, and gelaterias. Its location gives easy access to Pisa, Cinque Terre, Florence, Viareggio, Carrara marble quarries, and the Garfagnana—all one to 1.5 hours away by car, train, or bus.

Lucca’s defensive wall encloses all of this, making strolls easy and enjoyable. The streets curve, revealing glimpses of shops that finally come into full view or occasional piazzas that open up the street to front a church or a civic building. Many of the churches are now used for academic and civic functions. Music recitals seem to dominate.

The drive from Rome took about 4 hours including a stop for gas and a quick lunch.

Music, Music, Music, and More Music

Lucca is filled with music of all kinds. Elton John will be here next month. So will Sting. But most importantly, Lucca is the home of Puccini. Lucca has long embraced music. But Puccini solidified Lucca’s importance and influence in music worldwide.

This importance has borne schools of music and opera in Lucca. You see students with instrument cases on their backs going to and from school or you hear opera flowing onto the street from open windows as students train their voices.

Puccini performances take place nightly, and we went to one with Bob, Richard, and friends. We heard an impressive Tosca in an open-air plaza while having drinks at a cafe, and we went to Verdi’s Messa da Requiem with a full orchestra, 100-person choir, and four highly accomplished operatic singers. Both performances were free. The conservatory offers free Rassegana Giovani Interpreti (final exam recitals) daily from mid May to mid June. We heard 11 students from the Scuola di Pianoforte play selections including Chopin and Liszt.

It makes for very special memories.

Messa da Requiem
Giuseppe Verdi
Messa da Requiem
Giuseppe Verdi
Messa da Requiem
Giuseppe Verdi
Video!
Messa da Requiem
Giuseppe Verdi
Tosca
Rassegna Giovani Interpreti
Student recital—Pianoforte
Video!
Rassegna Giovani Interpreti
Student recital—Pianoforte

Cattedrale di San Martino

Basilica di St. Frediano

Frediano was an Irish bishop. (Yes, Jim Walsh, you heard right. An Irish bishop.) The Lucchese could not pronounce his real name—Finnegan—so they called him Frediano. He had the church built in the first half of the 6th century. The church underwent major expansions over the years.

Santa Zita

St. Michele in Foro

Built over the Roman forum and first mentioned in the late 700s. Pope Alexander II rebuilt this church in 1370 to rival the church built by the archbishop of Lucca. Some sort of pride and power issue was going on with the pope, who wanted to impress pilgrims approaching Rome from the north.

St. Davino

Palazzo Manzi

A few doors down from where we are staying, this palazzo provides a great example of how the upper crust in Lucca lived in the 1600s through 1800s. It holds rooms of tapestries, samples of silks woven in Lucca, and the city art collection that includes works given by the Medici family, including Tintorettos, Ghirlandaios, Bronzinos, and other Renaissance paintings. Well worth a visit and barely mentioned in tourist guides.

Detail of silk embroidery

Puccini’s Home

Puccini’s early work on La Boheme
Bonnie loves the draped silk

Torre Guinigi

This tower was built for show. Wealth that is. Back in the 1300s wealthy families built bell towers to show off their worth. Today, we climb to the top for incredible views of Lucca and beyond. The oak trees on top replaced a culinary garden for the kitchen that was once located the floor below.

This and Thats

Oval shape from the Roman forum that once occupied this space outside of the Roman wall
The Lucchese of all ages make use of their bicycles
Top of the wall
Old market undergoing restoration
Star jasmine in full bloom
Botanical garden
Thanks to the shutter that cast the shadow
Baby announcement
Puccini the hipster
Ice cream “truck”

Robert’s Colazione

Robert each morning goes to a nearby pasticceria—Pasticceria Da Sara & Co—for his morning cappuccino and dolce (usually a cornetto vuoto). The place seats about 40 with another eight standing at the counter. A family (mother, father, and daughter) run the operation. They take turns at the register, although it seems that the daughter is always the barista and mom is the person in charge of the dolce (pastries).

The shop, mainly with a modern but not too modern look, sits on one of the main streets and as such fills and empties with people on their way to work, school kids getting their last hit of caffeine and sugar before their classes start in 10 minutes, and the local police. Robert has yet to figure out the schedule of classes for the students. They come in waves—some before 8 and others at 10:30.

Workers in the trades filter in and out throughout the morning and stay only a minute or two—enough time to order and down an espresso or macchiato. Customers read the newspapers left folded neatly on a tabletop by a prior customer. The pasticceria gets its share of tourists too. But the mix is heavily in favor of the locals as in many places in Lucca.

The familiar sounds here are of the customers talking to each other, arguing (but not really arguing) about who will pay the bill, the clanking and clinking of cups, saucers, and plates. No need here to worry about chipping because the cups and plates are heavy and thick with a purpose in mind.

Cibo e Bibite

We went here many times for lunch. They have a great selection of meats, salads, and sandwhiches that you order at the counter and eat there.
This is about one third of the prosciutto hanging. I asked how long does it take to sell them. Answer: 1 to 1.5 months!
L’Ancuia—Pesca Povere
Great multi-course meal included wine and dessert.
Pappa al pomodro
Ristorante Cantine Bernardini Lucca
Located near the cathedral. Nice outdoor spot for a spritz and dinner
We went here three times. Great simple food. Great friendly service.
Tortelli
Thick moon-shaped pasta encloses a mainly meat filling
Amaro from a local pharmacy. Very good.
Near the Roman amphitheater. Hip,
Tagliatelle arrabiata
Local tortelli
Trippa!
Pappa al pomodoro – a Lucchese dish made of tomatoes and bread

Next stop Roma!

Sketches—Part 3

31 Maggio – 12 Gugnio 2019
Lucca

Lucca-31 Maggio 2019-iPad
Lucca-02 Giugno 2019-iPad
Lucca-01 Giugno 2019
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Lucca-01 Guigno 2019 – iPad
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San Gimignano-02 Giugno 2019 – iPad
San Gimignano-02 Giugno 2019 – iPad
San Gimignano-02 Giugno 2019 – iPad
San Gimignano-02 Giugno 2019 – iPad
San Gimignano-02 Giugno 2019 – iPad
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Terme Tettuccio, Montecatini – 06 June 2019 – iPad
Tosca in Lucca-06 June 2019-iPad
Carrara-07 June 2019 – iPad
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Lucca- 11 June 2019 – iPad
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