Sunday, 23 March 2014

A story full of holes .....

Finally the torrential downpours we experienced a few weeks ago have left for other shores, although even now we are still getting the sudden unexpected deluge.  However these tend to be short and sharp rather than day-long concerted efforts at making our lives miserable.  As a result repair crews have attacked several of the local major roads with gusto.  Resurfacing has been carried out on the very worst and most lethal offenders, and although sometimes still a bumpy ride, driving is now nothing like as bad as it was a few weeks ago on the main roads at least.  However in the back streets it's a different story.  The crews seem to have been concentrating, quite rightly, on the main routes in and out of the city, which were truly dire and of course caused problems for far more people.  Meanwhile B roads and back streets appeared to have been forgotten, or so I thought.  
Road outside my house before repair
 Imagine my surprise then one morning early this week when stepping out onto the road outside our house I no longer found this, but this.
Road outside my house after repair
 This is what I call “teaspoon treatment”.  A spoonful of tarmac is dropped into a hole, smoothed over, and that’s it.  
Cutting edge technology is not required for this, and probably not much expense either.
Cutting edge technology is not required
Presumably this patching up of holes in the road is to prevent more claims from disgrntled drivers. Provided you call in the metropolitan police to witness it, damage done to tyres by badly damaged roads here can being charged back to the local authority.  I should imagine recently they’ve been inundated with claims, and so this is a stopgap solution to prevent more broken tyres.  At least I hope it’s a stopgap solution and not a permanent one! 
Here's another large crack repaired this week
Here’s another large crack “repaired” this week.  It’s been raining quite heavily here this weekend. 
Anyone want to lay bets on how long this will last?
  
Anyone want to lay bets on how long the repair lasts?


Thursday, 20 March 2014

Goodbye Bignè :(

Here is picture of the last two for this year.  Now with St. Joseph's Day over and done with (it was celebrated yesterday), there will be no more bignè until the end of January next year :( :( :(
  Just as well - I'm getting the size of a barge!!

Saturday, 8 March 2014

The Scent of a Woman - Tanti Auguri!!!

International Women’s Day is held on March 8th every year.  International it may be, but to be honest I’d never heard of it before arriving in Italy and spending my first March 8th here.  I remember going to the little supermarket round the corner from where we lived in Rome (same place as I’d mistakenly asked for 50 rolls at Xmas), and being greeted enthusiastically by the cheerful shop manager.   He gabbled on merrily about something to do with women (I’d no idea what) and picked a little box off a pile beside him and pressed it into the palm of my hand. I thought at first he was trying to sell me something but he began curling my fingers round the box indicating it was for me to keep while nodding encouragingly. 
I noticed other women being given these boxes too, and as no one called the police as I left the shop, I assumed it was safe to take it back home. On opening it I found a small china blue and white duck.  Having no idea at all of the significance of the gift, I called Vito, who was equally surprised.  Not that I had received a gift, which according to Vito was totally in order.  It was the fact it was a blue and white duck that surprised him.  He told me Mimosa
 is what women are traditionally given, and they also wear a sprig on their lapel on that day.
It is also customary in Italy for women to go out together in the evening to celebrate their day.  Well I’d certainly be happy to receive Mimosa whenever anyone wanted to give me any, never mind on March 8th.  Mimosa has always been one of my favourite flowers, even when in the UK.
Every year I used to buy myself some in springtime even though the delicate flowers fell almost as soon as I got them home.  Not only that but the bunch, if you could call it that as it usually only consisted of three small twigs, cost an exorbitant amount of money too.  However the scent made it worth the extravagance as far as I was concerned.  I love the scent of Mimosa.  One major pleasant surprise on coming to Rome was the realization that Mimosa grew on huge trees of all shapes and sizes
Mimosa trees come in all shapes
and sizes
 that are covered in tiny canary yellow furry baubles grouped on proper branches, and not as I’d always believed on flimsy twigs.  Not only that the flowers last for the best part of a week or two before dropping to the ground.
There were plenty of the trees growing round about, and if you didn’t happen to have a tree growing anywhere near you from which you could cut some flowers, you didn’t need to take out a second mortgage to buy some.  I remember treating myself at a local flower stall for 20,000 lira (that’s around 10 Euro today) to huge bunches that filled my two biggest vases (which are by no means small), as well as a couple of buckets commandeered in for the same service.   The smell in the house for over a week was simply divine.  Just as bignè mark the first period after Christmas here for me, so too do the mimosa trees bursting into flower.   The strange thing about the mimosa is that during the rest of the year, the trees are so terribly nondescript.  Downright boring in their ordinariness, you never notice them until February when the flowers start to open on warm sunny days, and suddenly you find yourself needing sunglasses in some areas, so bright are the blooms.  Places are suddenly transformed,
Building sites are transformed
building sites unexpectedly start to smell like perfumeries and not oil depots, and places you’ve never noticed before suddenly become highlighted.    Hidden castles appear out of the blue, rising
Hidden castles suddenly emerge
out of 100-year sleeping forests, and forests some of them truly are.
Forests of mimosa
To feel the warm sun on your face and breathe in the wonderful fragrance wafting on the air, to see thousands of delicate downy,
Delicate downy flowers
fuzzy, sunny flowers in front of you is for me, one of life’s greatest pleasures.  So as a present for all the lovely women in my life, especially if they are not familiar with the magnificent Mimosa tree, as well as any other ladies who happen to be reading this, I thought I'd take some photos for you all for International Women's Day so you can enjoy it too. For each and every one of you who has spent time with me, taken time to smile at me, encourage me, laugh with me, commiserate with me, celebrate with me, dance on life’s huge dance floor with me, whether for seconds or over the course of years, and not least of all those who have loved me and still do, these pictures which I've taken over the past few weeks are to say thank you to all of you.  Here’s to you ladies, on our special day.
 May you enjoy mimosa in all its forms, floral or liquid  J and "tango on” 
 “To us”, ladies!  Tanti Auguri!!!!!!!