Calabria is much more mountainous than we expected, amounting to at least 1,000 feet of climbing every 10 miles. A fair bit of this climbing was on long steady ascents; out of Catanzaro we went uphill for a good couple of hours and could have made a meal of a couple more hours to get into the heights.
These next couple pictures are so much better wide that I'm posting them that way; you may want to scroll to the side a bit.
Plenty of the climbing is seriously steep, with a 10% grade coming as a welcome relief from stretches of 13-20%.
Harlan's rear valve stem pulled away from the tube as hard braking on steep ramps caused the tire to slip on the rim.
The collapsed pavement in this shot, right at my rear wheel, is not unusual.
There are photogenic views in the villages, olive groves all around.
And ridge-top towns into the distance.
Truly impressive bridges:
Farms with cows, goats, sheep, usually at least one of these with a bell ringing for the full pastoral effect:
We see wind turbines at home, but you can ride right up to the base of these, no fencing or security around them as far as we could see, for a full dose of their size and drama.
Water towers range from mundane to graceful, some with attention to decorative detail.
There are the occasional castle ruins.
And you can almost get used to the classic town piazzas with clusters of older men talking things over.
We saw no women on road bikes, so I was an object of some curiosity, especially when we stopped for coffee at one of these bars, probably all the more because of my age. Here several of the men to the right in this picture are hanging around at least partly to look at me, just outside the bar to the left.
We felt lucky one day to get a look at mammatus clouds.
We had one particularly scenic ride from near Cosenza through rolling country to the hill town of Santa Severina.
There's a castle in the old center at the top.
You can get great views out over the country from the summit--this is another pano to scroll:
Santa Severina has an interesting maze-like garden/park next to the castle.
And at least four places to get coffee on the lovely piazza.
Traffic overall was very light once we were out of the town centers. Getting out could be pretty, um, interesting. This is a fairly typical view of traffic in Catanzaro--the taillights on in the dusk add to the drama, but the density wasn't unusual:
Harlan's rear camera captured some of what could be involved in negotiating these streets.
Cycling in the US, you worry most about whether cars and trucks coming from behind will pass too close to your elbow or too far over into the oncoming lane in blind turns. In Italy, riding or driving, you turn your attention forward, alert to oncoming motorists in your own lane. If you are approaching a hard right turn, you know that if a car emerges from the turn it will be partly on your side of the centerline. If you head into a hard left turn, you watch for a vehicle at least partly in your lane just beyond the apex of the turn. All this seems to work out as the Italian drivers dart quickly to where we Americans think they "should" be, you just have to allow a little bit of time/space for them to do that. We felt this was an acceptable tradeoff for not having to worry for our very existence on the road.
I should note, too, that we witnessed a hit-and-run collision, a grown man on a motorbike running into a teenage girl crossing the street with a group of friends. The man buzzed off after the briefest stop, as everyone nearby was rushing to the aid of the girl. She was not badly injured, but it was a reality check.
Lovely narrow roads are not confined to tight quarters in town.
We saw just a few other riders, maybe because of the season. We didn't expect to see any at all in Naples but a fair number of people ride there on mountain bikes, whether for the cobbles or the steep hills. I was impressed to see a Sunday group ride assembling inside the Galleria Umberto, a beautiful 19th-century arcade.
The Relive "videos" of a couple of our rides are sort of fun:











































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