More Italian Generosity in Badiaccia, Lake Trasimeno

Dave the motorhome is facing the scene of one of the biggest military ambushes in history, a killing field where the Roman Army took a beating from Hannibal. We’re at another free sosta on the north west shore of Lake Trasimeno (N43.18408 E12.02396), in Umbria just outside Tuscany, and again Italy has provided us with unlimited electricity, FOC.

Why the sudden interest in free electricity? When we started travelling a year back, Dave’s leisure battery decided to halt service, and our efforts in various French automotive shops to find a new one proved a bit fruitless. Leisure batteries are different to starter batteries you see (we only discovered this years after starting motorhoming). They have a different internal construction (in theory; we read a magazine article a few months back with photos of sawn-in-half batteries proving many starter batteries are flogged at a premium as leisure batteries). Starter batteries are designed to provide a huge shove of electricity to kick the engine up, and to then be immediately recharged by the alternator. Leisure batteries have a tougher life, being called upon to power gadgets, lights, pumps and the like for hours before they are recharged. Since we couldn’t find a leisure battery, we bought a starter one in Spain, and have been using it without problems for a year, saving ourselves about €60 and feeling smug. Only thing is, it’s got dark. Our solar panel, which has been doing a sterling job of keeping this pretender topped up, is now pumping out not much. The voltage level on our battery monitor is dropping, which I suspect will kill the poor lead-acid box of light-giving love. Fortunately Dave has another box of tricks hiding under the driver’s seat which charges the battery while we’re hooked-up, so it’s getting a full-body massage at the moment. Happy days!

OK, where was I? Erm, last night. Under The Tuscan Sun has proved to be a contagious little blighter, Frances Mayes enthusing about the rustic cooking here had us salivating enough to ease a few euros out of our war chest. Trattoria, here we come. As Ju edited away on the laptop, Charlie and I had made a second pass through the town, finding a tiny eaterie along one of the ancient alleyways with lights on and movement inside at 5pm. Waiting until a decent Italian eating hour, stomachs grumbling at 8pm, we took the long way into town, walking alone through one of the arched doorways. Through the beautifully eerie passageways, begging to be flooded with mist and used in a Sherlock Holmes movie, we stopped at one point and listened at the nothingness silence. The door to the trattoria was shut, but the light remained on and a sidelong peek showed someone sitting at a bench alongside reception. Hunger played scissors paper stone with anxiety, putting out paper to fear’s stone and we tugged at the door, ‘aperto?’. ‘No’, the man stood up and walked over. Explaining the place was officially closed until December, we checked our watches (figure of speech; we don’t have watches) but didn’t fancy waiting 2 weeks for a table. His friends were using the place for a get together. There are other places to eat below the town, all of this spoken while smiling. We searched in vain for somewhere else, but had set our hearts on the little low vault-ceiling home and returned to Dave, cooked up a rice-porcini-garlic-nuremberg-sausage affair and quaffed red wine.

Too much red wine. Our neighbours shouted conversation, presumably necessitated through one being up an olive tree and both a little deaf, didn’t so much drift into Dave as hammer-drill it’s way in. Beats being woken by an alarm clock nevertheless! We got up, cleaned Dave, washed pots, emptied grey water, filled up with slightly-orange looking fresh water and left for here.

Pomegranate, I can confirm, does nothing to assuage feelings of hangover-ness.

Here is a few meters from the shores of Lake Trasimeno. Our friends Marc and Jacqui came this way earlier in the year after we departed company in Seville, sending over GPS co-ordinates and confirmation of, did I already mention this, free electricity. It feels strange to think those guys were right here, in this little corner of nowhere in a foreign land. The sosta looks out over the huge ripple of water to the right, it’s eastern shore marked by the rise of hills. Straight ahead, the killing of about 20,000 men took place on June 21st 217BC, the fighting so savage they didn’t notice a massive earthquake taking place. A village just north of us is named Sanguineto, meaning Blood River, after it took 3 days for the life blood of the dead to run into the lake. Hannibal pulled it off by goading an over confident Roman General into a foolish attack, the crafty old war-monger. But for the names of towns, it seems not much else remains to mark the field, we’ll have to take a closer look tomorrow, or just use our imaginations.

Ju and the eastern hills on Lake Trasimeno.

The little village next door is quiet but for a man wielding a walking stick, wandering around singing to himself, a few dog walkers, a small boy on a mini-moto (a tiny Valentino Rossi?) and a man on a red bike riding at falling-over pace and calling out ‘Ciao, bambino’ to Charlie. The church has photographs of scared faces of those killed in WW2 on the memorial, soldiers and civilians alike. There’s a flaked red tennis court painted on the floor to one side of a small square, the drooping net giving cause to look down and spot it. Someone’s house is made inside a defensive-looking stone tower, probably older than some saints and with tiny windows. The lakeside cafe next to us has a hammock and a sign on the door saying they have gone on holiday. Once the sun goes down here, there’s nothing. We expected town lights to twinkle across the lake but it seems someone neglected to build the towns. It’s a good place to sit and write, or read. A great place to kill a Sunday at ease.

Moving photos of fellas killed in the last war.

Cheers, Jay

Unidentified Tuscan November fruit. Anyone any ideas what it is and whether we should risk being savaged by tiny mutts to scrump some of it?

8 replies
  1. Glen says:

    This trip of yours is bringing back so many memories as we also stayed at Lake Trasimeno, good to know there is still motorhome parking there. Have a great time.

    Reply
    • Jason says:

      Hi Glen, the motorhome parking is alive and kicking! Tuscany is a revelation for me, a wonderful place to meander through, even in mid November (or perhaps because it’s mid November). Jay x

      Reply
    • Jason says:

      Ah, thanks Angus! Hmmm, thinking maybe tackling the yapping wee beasties might not be worth it though. Will hold out for a Lidl. Cheers, Jay

      Reply
  2. sonja says:

    Don’t you just love Lake Trasimeno, there are some stunning towns around the Lake. It seems more Tuscany than Tuscany in essence, even though its Umbria Castiglione del lago is wonderful with houses all down the hill over the lake. Did you know there are no rivers flowing into the Lake it is a giant puddle. I have done an article on the area here http://www.touringandtenting.com/index.html/_/articles/members-articles/treasures-of-trasimeno-r193
    Enjoy, Im enjoying reading about your travels

    Reply
    • Jason says:

      Hi Sonja! Thanks for the info, we’re eyeing up the map to see where to head to next so it’s most useful. Interestingly (for me), we were at Lake Balaton a few months back! Cheers, Jay

      Reply
  3. Catherine says:

    Hi, loving the blog, we try to follow your travels most days and are very envious of you. We have a similar Hymer and try to get away as often as we can. You have given us some ideas for our next adventure, although I dont think my husband could cope with those Italian roads!!!! Is it a Persimmon:-
    The persimmon is a fruit of Chinese origin. Originally cultivated in both Japan and China for centuries, this fruit is now grown in Italy and other Mediterranean countries, the Middle East and the USA. They are ready now, and must be orange before you eat them.
    Continue to enjoy your travels.
    Cath

    Reply
    • Jason says:

      A Persimmon! Excellent, something I’ve never heard of!

      We love this old Hymer, it’s become a part of us. The sound proofing’s not quite enough to keep out the chat of the Italian van which has pulled in next door, which we’re grateful for, they sound so passionate even if we can’t understand them.

      As for the roads, I’m quickly getting used to them and the driving. Most Italian drivers are pretty much the same as Spanish, Portuguese, or Bosnian drivers. Just there are a fair few are in a hurry! I’ve stopped looking in my mirrors so much, as we used to when riding motorbikes on race tracks in the UK, the guys behind me have to take care of themselves! The roads themselves are on the whole fine, no worse that Portuguese bone shakers anyway!

      Keep on trucking, and I would heartily recommend Italy, it’s a frustrating and fascinating place to be.

      Cheers, Jay

      Reply

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