Italy, 2nd – 5th October 2015
It’s been a while since we’ve given a more up to date version of our intended route. We had a fairly concrete plan of the direction we were going to travel in on our way up from Greece (Bulgaria-Romania-Hungary-Croatia-Slovenia), but leaving Slovenia was always the crossroads point where we could have headed in a number of different directions, and so before we left we had to have a sit down and think about where exactly we were going to go.
Ultimately, we knew we wanted to be in Spain and Portugal over the winter. There are a lot of places that we would have liked to visit before then, including heading north-east towards Slovakia and the Czech Republic, or north into Austria and then Switzerland. Unfortunately the former would have sent us too far in the wrong direction, and the latter would have sent us into mountainous Alpine countries a little too close to winter when we have no snow tyres/chains (having spent longer than originally thought in countries from Greece onwards). As a result we’d probably have ended up rushing our way through the places, doing the countries a great disservice and racking up needless miles on the van.
With this in mind, we decided to go back into Italy to get across to the south of France. There is a fairly direct non-toll road that we previously used to get from Venice to Lake Garda; if we follow this road along further it will take us straight to Milan (probably detouring away at some point for Lake Como). The earliest winter requirements for Italy start on the 15th October; this gives us about two weeks to get across to France, so we’re not in any real rush for now. The only routing issue we still haven’t solved is how best to get back to the UK for Matt’s PhD graduation ceremony in December; when we’re next on WiFi, we’ll have to start looking at ferry and plane ticket costs. If anyone has any words of wisdom about the UK-Spain ferry services, we’re all ears.
In Slovenia we left the solace of Lake Bohinj behind and went west, towards the Italian border. Vignette now expired we stuck to the smaller roads, and other than one small incident “Oh God it joins the motorway in 2km! What do we do? Can we turn around? Oh right… it’s just a turn-off for the motorway in 2km, we’re fine” the roads were pretty easy going. From previous experience we knew that fuel costs in Italy were massively more expensive compared to any of the other countries we’d visited (and yet still cheaper than the UK), so got a full tank before leaving Slovenia. We don’t often fill the tank to save some weight, but it was worth it as over the border fuel is about €0.20/litre more, and that’s just for self-service fuel pumps; at some pumps station attendants will fill for you, which is usually another €0.05-0.10/litre extra.
The next day we moved on, stopping at the Sosta in the nearby town of Gemona del Friuli (GPS: 46.27653 13.13722) to use their free service point and get our last blog post uploaded as we didn’t have an internet signal at the previous spot. After this it was onwards to Udine, where we decided we weren’t really feeling the journey in to the city so just had a five minute breather at the Aire (GPS: 46.08101 13.22332). Today in Italy the fleeces had found themselves retired back to the cupboard after their constant wear at Lake Bohinj, but if we needed any further indication that we’d left the mountains behind, during the five minutes or so that it took for Matt to get the satnav programmed and me to make the walk to the recycling bins, two mosquitoes found their way into the van. I’m happy to report that both of the devil spawn creatures have since met their demise, so there will be no repeats of my fifty bite trauma in Croatia. No fly swats were required; either my hand reflexes are improving or I’ve spent so much time around the buggers that I’m getting more attuned to their movements.
The Villa aside, the surrounding terrain is excellent for cycling with lots of flat land. There are five well signposted cycle tracks in the area, of which three start at the Villa. We got nearly an hour and a half of good cycling in, covering 12.5 miles on a variety of cycle paths & country lanes before the weather turned off, having just packed the bikes away and retreated indoors when the rain started.
We’ve settled in for the evening now, resting off a stomach full of fresh pasta, profiteroles and cheap Italian bubbly. Tomorrow we’ll be aiming to get some miles in travelling across country.
- Jo
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