We
left our hotel early for our last wander through old town Dubrovnik.
Having explored the city on my arrival, I was more interested in what
our guide said than seeing the town. Dina did provide an excellent
resident's view of the bombings during the 1990s war. It was very
hard to imagine the devastation given the present bustling and
prosperous town. Good job, UNESCO! The beautiful renaissance era
buildings, with their Venetian windows and Ottoman porches still
caught my attention. It is a beautiful town.
From
Old Town Dubrovnik we boarded a mini-bus to our boat. It turned out
the new harbor was near an interesting suspension bridge I had
admired from afar. In Rottendam, the citizens were very proud of the
new Eramus bridge, called the Swan due to the unique and elegant
asymmetrical balance of the cables. Well, not quite unique as there
was an identical and equally elegant Swan bridge in Dubrovnik! The
roads are so narrow with few intersections that there were no place
for any motor vehicles to turn around or make wide cross traffic
turns. All turns were to the right. If your destination was on the
other side of the road, you would proceed to the nearest highway
interchange, switchback and approach your destination as a right hand
turn. It was a circuitous method but provided ample opportunities for
sight seeing, passing the Swan coming and going.
Our
floating home for the next week was called the Amalia. It could
accommodate just 38 passengers and staff. Along with our 13 Women's
Travel Club Americans, there were two Australians, two New
Zealanders, a British family of four celebrating Dad's 80th
birthday and the crew of five. The Amalia featured three levels of
passenger accommodations plus below deck engine and crew cabins and a
roof top sun deck. Quite a contrast to the fourteen stories and
thousands of passengers on common U.S. cruise ships. The upper
enclosed deck was the galley, dining room and an open common area.
Everyone dined, played cards or just enjoyed the passing vistas here.
The next level down was passenger cabins which featured doors onto
the open deck and porthole windows. Before the water line were
interior passenger cabins.

Slano


A thoughtful passerby told us that there was a archaeological exhibit near the church. Indeed the hidden highlight of Slano, a fascinating display of tombs and tombstones with explanations of the family history of the deceased, set within a garden and olive grove. The time of day was approaching dusk and the weather was misty. The ancient tombs set among the dusty green of the rows of olives was something from a dream
Mjlet

Korcula

Vis
The
next day we docked at the island of Vis. Perhaps as it is furthest
of the Dalmatian islands from the Croatian mainland, under Tito's
rule it was used as a closed military base until 1989. As a naval
base, commercial
development was restricted and the island remained relatively
untouched. Beautiful old stone buildings dating to the early days of
Venetian rule, still dominate the towns. The sailboats and pleasure
craft docked in front of the old buildings alternated with pebble and
sand coves. In the clear clean water, sea urchins crawled among the
rocks as bathers stayed on the sandy sections. Whether gazing towards
the red roofs of the old town or off to the blue seas, Vis provides a
perfect vista.
The
remnants left behind by the military have been creatively adapted by
the civilian
population. Our second wine tasting was in a former underground bunker, a cave used by the army to store weapons and supplies. The winery used both vintage wooden barrels as well as modern steel tanks to age their wines. The vats and tasting room all housed in the constant temperature and humidity within the mountain. The cave was set midway up the mountain and our hike to reach it was as interesting as the destination. Along the way we passed another repurposed remnant of Tito's might. His barracks and offices were now the seasonal grape pressing plant. Nature had overtaken what buildings and facilities, wine production had not yet needed. Fig trees and blossoms grew throughout the area and all along the roadway, making our hike up the hill along the road as pleasant as a walk in the park. There just didn't seem to be anything about Croatia, which was to be dismissed.
population. Our second wine tasting was in a former underground bunker, a cave used by the army to store weapons and supplies. The winery used both vintage wooden barrels as well as modern steel tanks to age their wines. The vats and tasting room all housed in the constant temperature and humidity within the mountain. The cave was set midway up the mountain and our hike to reach it was as interesting as the destination. Along the way we passed another repurposed remnant of Tito's might. His barracks and offices were now the seasonal grape pressing plant. Nature had overtaken what buildings and facilities, wine production had not yet needed. Fig trees and blossoms grew throughout the area and all along the roadway, making our hike up the hill along the road as pleasant as a walk in the park. There just didn't seem to be anything about Croatia, which was to be dismissed.
Blue Cave on Bisevo
The tiny island of Bisevo was not a port but never the less concealed a unique experience. The Blue Cave, is a natural eroded limestone seaside cavern, expanded by Tito's military. The coastal cavern is sufficiently shallow that sunlight reflects off the pale seabed up into the white limestone void, washing the entire space with an eerie electric blue light. Small boats take you to the low cave entrance, ducking down the boat handler poles his way around the cavern as you marvel at the seemingly unnatural lighting.
Hvar
Hvar is the hot spot of the Dalmatian islands. It has the most sunny days in Croatia, which
has made it a major tourist destination for both Croatia and neighboring countries. While the harbors of most of these seaside towns were lined with small sailboats, in Hvar the pleasure craft dwarfed our petite cruise ship. The dockside similarly instead of a few small cafes and gift shops was full of discos and nightclubs, which all keep the beat going until the wee hours. Celebrity visitors had tweeted and posted the charms of the town, spurring the party frenzy. In Hvar our wine tasting was conducted just before dusk on the balcony of a hip dockside restaurant. After dark that evening the quiet restaurant had turned into a rocking disco. Next door was another louder disco pumping out a wholly different musical genre. Cacophony reigned in Hvar at night.
Until
we arrived at Hvar, the Amalia had been among one or two similar
ships rafted to the dockside. Here we were rafted seven deep. This
meant the often intoxicated party goers had to negotiate crossing
gangplanks from the land through each boat to the next gangplank to
the adjacent boat and on and on. It was somewhat surprising that
there were no cries of man or woman overboard during the night. The
cruiser tied up next to the Amalia was hosting a party for their
young patrons plus crew from several ships. The musical choice was
retro; stuff popular in the 70's. It was quite a rave-up and several
of the Amalia crew looked a bit worse for wear the next morning.
While tourism was the main economy of Hvar, between the floating and
landed parties, I suspected the local residents might have some
misgivings about their guests.
Brac
Throughout
travels in Croatia, I had wondered whose were the hands that carved
all of the limestone? In past centuries, guilds trained apprentices;
who now maintained these traditions? Between new construction, normal
rehab and post-war repairs, a lot of stone needed to be quarried and
dressed. The source of the stone, huge dusty quarries dotted the
islands. These at first glance appeared to be a catastrophic
landslides but the presence of cranes and loaders made the function
clearer. The beautiful limestone graces buildings all over the world
including the U.S. Whitehouse. Mechanical strength replaced manual
skill to obtain the base material but the delicate engraving and
swirling acanthus leaves to restore medieval and renaissance
buildings require an experienced sculptor. In New York City, in order
to repair the St. John the Divine Cathedral, a special training
program had to be developed, recruiting retired Italian craftsmen as
teachers.
In
the tiny port of Pusisca, a stonemason / high school program was
established to meet the demand in Croatia. The school was founded in
1906, a more recent innovation is implementation of a full accredited
high school certificate program. We were supposed to have a tour of
the school but no one was present in the school office when the dozen
of us arrived from the Amalia. While the rest of our group wandered
off, I observed that someone was explaining the training process in
English. I crashed their tour, no one seemed to mind.
The
school used an organized logical progression of skill development.
Students were presented with their tools and a rough block of stone.
Under guidance, their first task was to smooth one side, then square
an adjacent side, rotating the block until it was a uniform cube.
That process would take the first semester or possibly the first
year. From a smooth cube the student next would carve out the inside,
creating a simple rectangular basin. From this stage they would
progress to decorative carving and ornamentation. Completing this
initial project might take a student up to three years.
To graduate a student would design an ornamental window frame, balustrade or similar complicated project and prepares a written proposal and drafts a measured architectural drawings, obtaining approval from his tutors. The student then selects and successfully carves the item to obtain their certificate. As a journeyman carver, there are job positions available both all over Croatia as well as overseas. The professor who explained and demonstrated the program, told us he and most other skilled masons had private clients, as well as, big public projects. The school matriculated about 100 enrollees each year. The students were predominantly young men but the school was proud to announce that there were a number of young women well.
To graduate a student would design an ornamental window frame, balustrade or similar complicated project and prepares a written proposal and drafts a measured architectural drawings, obtaining approval from his tutors. The student then selects and successfully carves the item to obtain their certificate. As a journeyman carver, there are job positions available both all over Croatia as well as overseas. The professor who explained and demonstrated the program, told us he and most other skilled masons had private clients, as well as, big public projects. The school matriculated about 100 enrollees each year. The students were predominantly young men but the school was proud to announce that there were a number of young women well.

Omis
Split
Our last port of call was the town of Split. All the tour books, advise that one should see Diocletian's palace, what they don't say is that the old town of Split is inside Diocletian's palace! The immense palace was built around 300 AD. After the fall of the Roman Empire, parts of the castle were predictably dismantled to reuse materials but the majority of the structure remains. Over the centuries people moved inside the walls, sometimes building their homes with stones removed from the walls. Now there are ample remnants of the palace itself, filled with both Diocletian's collections and with medieval, renaissance and modern infill. An Ottoman empire building sets next to one built during the Venetian occupation on a plaza clustered around a statue of Marko Marulić, Renaissance humanist and writer. Marulic, the Croatian equivalent of Chaucer, is considered the Father of Croat literature and the bane of existence of present High School students.
Other
evidence of modern times permeated the ancient walls. Gift shops
promoting “Game of Thrones” souvenirs and an opportunity for
photographs sitting on a replica of the Iron Throne. A few young men
dressed as Roman Gladiators would, for a fee, pose for pictures with
you. A group of men stood in the ruins of the conical watch tower,
great acoustics, and performed traditional a capella folk music.
Ringed around the Palace Walls ranged a variety of farmer market,
flower market and flea market stalls. Anything you might need on a
holiday or want to take home as souvenir, was available.
In a large
shaded park just outside the walls, a number of bistro tables and
chairs had been set up facing an enormous outdoor screen televising
the on-going soccer world cup. The park was packed with folks
enjoying local beer and cheering on the foreign teams. Incongruously,
a two story tall statue of St.Gregory
of Nin stood scowling
down on the soccer fans. He had strongly opposed the Pope in 900. It
did appear that he approved of modern soccer fans either.

The
wonders of Diocletian's Palace matched the other attractions of
Croatia. It may have been a whim to go there but it certainly worked
out to be a more than worthwhile experience. Popular too, the Women's
Travel Club has listed a similar trip for next year. My next trip
would be with the family: return to Iceland to sample the geological
features.