Weekly market in Montepulciano |
My travels around Italy (In the guise of work) continued unabated for several years and I have been very fortunate to have travelled to every region except one - Valle D'Aosta. This time I was back in Tuscany to visit wineries around Montepulciano.
Church of San Biageo which lies below the town |
Montepulciano is everything you want a small town in Italy to be: picturesque with views over valleys below and of course, good food and wine. I have now been to Montepulciano about 20 times and every time I go I find something I haven’t seen before.
My first experience of the town was thoroughly enjoyable
though it had a touch of comedy to it as well. As usual I was on a bus with half
a dozen other journalists and we were going to see Cantine Redi, a historical
winery in the heart of Montepulciano.
The town hall and the main piazza |
Now Montepulciano is a hilltop town, you have to go up a
long and winding road to get to the town which levels out for 100 metres and
then goes downhill again. The central piazza is bordered by the Town Hall
(Municipio) a church and several other historical buildings. All the citizens
live in apartments in the buildings, that could have been built up to 500 years
ago, surrounding the piazza and also facing the valleys surrounding the town.
The buildings are very attractive and you realise why the tourists love it so
much (I kid myself that I am not a tourist as I am working.....).
Cantine Redi was situated part of the way down on the other
side of town, the road basically the reverse of the way we had come in. We
started downhill and the bus driver was being very careful as the road was only
one lane, fortunately there wasn’t any other traffic coming the other way. We
got down to a hairpin bend when some German tourists stepped out in front of
us. Giulio the driver reacted as he was so shocked and he turned the wheel but
he forgot to brake!
The bus ended up brushing a building opposite and losing
traction as the road dipped and the road surface sloped away from the tyres on
the bend. We were alright as this had all happened in slow motion. We all got
off the bus to see how badly the bus was damaged.
Some of the people coming to have a look |
Giulio was lucky because the bus had some paint scrapped off
(it already had another couple of scrapes anyway)but that wasn’t our biggest
problem, our biggest problem was the bus was stuck. Because the bus couldn’t
get traction from the two wheels on the right hand side he couldn’t move it at
all. People started to gather and hang out of windows, we became the afternoon’s
entertainment. Several people gave Giulio suggestions of how to ‘unstick’ the
bus as the crowd got larger and larger.
Checking to see we didn't leave a mark on the building |
With most of the population of Montepulciano watching,
Giulio tried to find a solution. A light bulb went on in his head and he rushed
around the back of the bus and found a rope. He said if he tied it to the bumper
bar at the back, we could all pull while he got the bus back on four wheels.
After we had all stopped laughing, after all there were two women and a man in
his seventies and the rest weren’t extremely fit, he realised that it might be
a problem especially as all we would achieve would be to remove the bumper bar
from the bus in an inappropriate manner.
The tow truck arrives |
The tow truck river checking the traction of the wheels |
There was a roar from the crowd and the tow truck driver
took a bow. He then said for us to accompany him to the office as the tow of
800,000 lire ($800.00 ) had to be paid.
We're on the road again |
Our guide Paola then started to panic, where was she going
to get $800. She only had $100 on her so she phoned her office. We were all
asked if we could contribute $100 and we would be reimbursed sometime over the
next couple of days when we got to an ATM. Paola started collecting the money,
apologising as she went. We arrived at the office about five minutes away downhill
and disembarked. Giulio went in holding our money. We waited and waited, surely
it couldn’t take that long to fill in a report and sign a receipt. At last
Giulio emerged with a great big smile on his face and our money in his hands.
Waiting for the bill |
Next : A trip to Sicily turns sour
No comments:
Post a Comment