Sicily:
Flew into Catania, spent the night in a hostel that had a stream flowing underneath it from a lava flow from the near-by mount Etna. Rained that night.
Spent the next day climbing Mt. Etna. The ground was warm and steaming in some places, and I got very close to the peak. Rained that da
Took a bus to Palermo, left my sweatshirt on it. It gets cold at night in Palermo in autumn. Palermo was nice, rained all day.
Saw the catacombs, which is one of only two mummification museums in the world. I was in a room with thousands of preserved bodies. Very morbi
Then, while walking past the Duomo (cathedral), there was a funeral procession for one of the Italian soldier killed by an IED a month previously. Many people, both civilians and military, which was very emotional.
Ate a spleen sandwich there, which is a delicacy and a regional favorite. I actually really liked it.
Took the train to Cefalù the next day, which is Cifalù in Sicilian. Sicily has a separate accent from mainland Italy, as in antiquity the island was taken over by any dominant force in the area when they wanted a stronger hold of the Mediterranean. As such, there’s as much of a northern African and Middle Eastern influence on the language, architecture and culture as there is in Italian influence.
Cefalù was built in the shadow of a giant rock, yet the route you can take to climb to the top was closed off because it was raining. I found a route around the locked gate, yet you had to climb through a patch of overgrown cacti with a small hole in the middle. After that, there was a ledge about 3 feet wide leading around the rock, without a guardrail. It’s tough climbing a cliff face when everything is slippery from rain. I finally make it to the top for an amazing view.
Bussed to Trapani the next day, where I stayed at this great pensione, very cheap. Trapani is my favorite city in Sicily: gorgeous, neat mix of new and old in the downtown, and stayed open very late. It rained. I went to a pizzeria and ordered a seafood pizza. It wasn’t bad, but they put anchovies on it, which I’d never had before. Woke up early to catch my flight to Paris.
Everyone was amazingly friendly all over Sicily. Rained every day I was there. Great food. Trains and busses were usually less than 2 hours late, which was nice.
Paris:
Paris was amazing. It didn’t sink in that I was actually in the City of Lights until I was eating an éclair and walking down the Champs Elysees.
I passed by the Arc De Triomphe twice before I noticed it.
I met a couple of the nicest people in a bar who put me up for my first night, and Jean-Philippe, the French-Canadian fellow I Couch-Surfed with, couldn’t have been a better host.
I had the best macaroons of my life.
I got hassled on the Pigalle.
I defiled the Notre Dame.
I met amazing people.
I saw Versailles, Jim Morrison’s grave, and La Grande Arc of La Defance.
I ate crepes, pastries and French bread. It rained.