Last week I posted about my aborted attempt to reach Kaninë Castle for fear of rain. Today, I decided to have another go! I had finished all my grading yesterday. The forecast called for sunshine with cool but not cold temperatures.
The castle is, as the crow or the two-headed eagle flies, only 3 kilometers away from where we are living. That's about 1.86 miles. Not far at all. Okay, well, you can't walk there in 3 km. You would have to go straight up the steep side of a wooded mountain. Or is the steep wooded side of a mountain? Or the wooded side of a steep mountain? Let's play it safe. You'd have to go up the steep, wooded side of a steep, wooded mountain. Yes, it's overkill, but hopefully it gives you a better image in your mind. If you care, the name of the mountain is Shushicë.
One of the higher parts of the castle |
The path up is 4.7 km (which is very close to three miles.) I normally walk about three miles per hour. But this particular walk is quite a bit uphill, so I can't make it in an hour.
Below is Vlorë and Vlorë Bay |
I made the assumption that someplace which is within a two mile radius of where I'm staying would have the same weather as the place I'm staying. The weather for Vlorë was forecast as sunny and mild. It has to be the same in Kaninë, right?
Wrong. Honestly, I should know better. I lived in Reno and I know how changes in elevation can dramatically change the weather experienced by locations not that far apart. But I assumed all would be fine. And you know what happens when you assume? It's the same, more or less, as when you suppose.
The East Gate, a tower, and where you would pay if anyone were there |
It rained on me while I was at the castle. And yes, I see how ironic this is. Last week, I turned back for fear of rain, this week I forged ahead believing I was rain-immune and found out my immunity had been revoked. Not to fret. Let me assuage your fears and start with the good news. This was not a heavy rain. Heavier than spritzing, lighter than pattering. Maybe a robust sprinkling is the best way to describe it. I was wearing my ugly hat, which kept my hair and my eyeglasses dry. I also happened to be in my quick-dry shirt and my quick-dry pants. That wasn't by design, but when you only own four tops and three bottoms, it isn't an insignificant chance that you will be in any particular outfit. By the time I got back down the mountain and into Vlorë—which was quite sunny— my clothing was all dry again.
Now I am going to tell you about one interlude in my trek up the mountain. When Alrica reads this, I am expecting one of three reactions.
- A lecture
- A look
- A shrug
Honestly, I'm not sure which one I am going to get. But allow me to describe the whole situation. At the edge of Vlorë, right at the end of the Rruga Bej Vlora-Kanina (or the Vlorë-Kaninë Road) there is a fountain. I don't mean a fountain with carved spitting fish or jumping water. I also don't mean a drinking fountain as in the kind we have in the United States. Take a look at the picture. This is a structure from which clean water is always running. There is no on-off spigot, it just keeps flowing. But it is clean city water. And people who live up the mountain and don't have their own water come down to this spot, park their car at the side of the road, and fill ten liter containers to then bring home.
Kaninë Fountain |
Today, when I was passing the fountain, there was an older man filling his ten liter containers. We nodded to one another, nods being a universal language. I mention this interaction for a reason.
I continued past and started up (quite literally) the road. About twenty minutes later, there is a honk from a car coming from behind me, from the direction of Vlorë. It's the man I saw at the fountain. And he stops in a lane of traffic (not that this is a super busy road) and beckons for me to come into the car. I shake my head no and he beckons more.
So what do you do? That's your call. Better question: What did I do? I decided, okay, I'm getting in the car with him. Now, before you judge, let me lay out my case.
First, I'm male. It's not fair, it's not right, but if I were a lone woman walking along the road and a man indicated I should join him in the car, that would be a very different situation. Also, the man is probably in his seventies. I figure if things turn ugly, I can take him. Finally, when Alrica and I travel, we want more than just seeing the sites. Alrica and I want to know the culture, experience something beyond the tourism. Maybe this would be a bizarre, but cool, Albanian experience.
Have you seen the recent news stories about the woman in Georgia (the state, not the country) who has a ten year old son. And the son decided to walk a mile into town (tiny rural town). Then a neighbor asked the kid if he was okay, he said yes, she called the cops anyway. And now the mother is being charged with a crime. And she's being told she has to sign some safety plan or she might go to jail and the government might take the kids away. I read about this story. And it is so American.
The United States, for all its wonderful qualities, is a country of fear. Everyone is afraid of what could happen. Naturally politics doesn't help with politicians stoking fear to get votes. But it goes well beyond that. Here we have a ten year old who plays in the woods behind his house, walking a mile into a rural town where he probably knows all the citizens. And the mother, who didn't know he was doing this, but you can't always know where your kids are at all times, is being charged for it.
Most of the world isn't like that. Here in Vlorë, for example, Alrica and I see children, much younger than ten, walking along Qemali Boulevard with no parent in sight. This is in a city of 90,000 people, where this child doesn't know everyone he sees on the street. But the people are good people and they don't live in fear of a possible, but highly improbable, bad person.
So all of this, for better or worse, was in my mind. I didn't want to live in fear. I didn't want to live in that fear which America instills in me. I wanted to see what would happen. My instinct said this was not the improbable bad guy. So I got in the car.
Obviously, I am writing this blog post, not from beyond the grave. What is the opposite of beyond? Within? No, I'm not within the grave. I'm writing this post from unbeyond the grave. So you know nothing terrible happened already.
What did happen? We rode, in silence (because we didn't share a language,) for maybe a kilometer or so. Then he got to a point where he needed to turn off the main road to get back to his home. He pointed up the side road to communicate this. I got out, said "Faleminderit" (which means thank you), we shook hands, he turned left, and I continued up the road.
Was it an amazing Albanian experience? No. But I met a good person who wanted to help me out. That was pretty cool.
I love that the north gate is still there even though the wall has crumbled and you could just walk around it |
Wow, I've written a lot and I haven't even told you about the castle yet. Let me do so: Kaninë Castle is built alongside the village of Kaninë. The original castle is ancient, built somewhere around the third century BCE. It was refortified in the sixth century CE and had a medieval village inside it in the 14th century CE. (There are signs at the castle in both Albanian and English.) The castle became less strategically important in the sixteenth century. It was damaged in 1690 by Venetian bombing. It was abandoned in the nineteenth century. And it was damaged immensely during World War I by the Italian Army.
I assume the openings are for fighting, using bows or guns |
There are still many pieces of walls that remain, parts of some towers, and interesting features in the stonework. The techniques used in the various centuries in which wall building took place were quite different. In addition, the tower had three gates and it still does: the east gate (into the village of Kaninë,) the north gate (down a hill), and the west gate (which now seems to lead to a private home.) The south is the side on the very vertical cliff-face. You don't want a gate there!
Normally, it costs 300 Lek to visit the castle (which is about $3.25) but this is not their tourist season. So there is no one there collecting any fees. I saw one other person exploring during the whole time I was there. It does offer spectacular views of Vlorë, Vlorë Bay, the Narta Lagoon, the valleys on the other side of the Shushicë Mountain, and Kaninë (which has a very pretty mosque with a silver dome and a thin minaret.)
You can see the minaret and if you look to the left, the silver dome |
Then I headed home. I didn't get any rides back, but it's almost all downhill. The rain didn't want to follow me outside of the castle grounds, so it was a nice descent.
And if you think I'm a fool for taking the ride, well, feel free to tell me about it. I'm not promising it will change my decisions in the future, but I'll at least learn not to tell anyone about it.