The most perfect week of my life has come to a close and there’s a train ticket on my table with tomorrow’s date on it. I’m telling myself to get excited for Parma, my next travel destination and the beginning of my first ever solo backpacking trip, but leaving Cinque Terre feels like leaving home. In fact, departing from Manarola feels harder than leaving home because I don’t know when I’ll be back.
I’m afraid I’ll forget the little things.
The way it smells here, like the sea, citrus, sun, soil – the same fragrances
of California but a different perfume. The way people park their boats in front
of their houses and hang their laundry out to dry. The way parents call their
children amore, love, like a second
name. The way gardeners leave the blossoms on the zucchini to sell at the
market. The weight of the big, old-fashioned keys that open the wine cellar
doors. The names of the wildflowers. The specific shade of pink paint on the
houses.
Part of me wanted to wallow in my
preemptive nostalgia and spend the day sitting on my balcony, staring out at my
stunning view of Manarola until it was seared into my eyes, but luckily I had
reason to be pleasantly distracted – a trip to Riomaggiore and a hike to the
sanctuary of the Madonna of Montenero with a new guide, Chiara.
Because everyone in Cinque Terre has
known one another for decades, it can be easy to feel like an outsider here,
but if you know one person, the entire town becomes your friend.
As a native of Riomaggiore and a guide by
profession, Chiara is simultaneously rooted in the Cinque Terre tradition,
while being subject daily to the tourism culture here. From this unique
perspective, she had a lot to say about striking the right balance between the
two.
We should all strive to leave a place
better when we leave it – or at least to support the authentic heritage rather
than just the tourist culture. Repeatedly throughout my time here, I’d been
told the best way to support Cinque Terre is to drink Cinque Terre wine. Look
for bottles of white wine made in one of the five towns, or perhaps La
Coopertiva, a wine made with grapes from the entire Cinque Terre vintage each
year. I highly recommend buying a bottle of the dry white wine called Costa da
Posa. (If you happened to buy two and want to share… I’ll be there.)
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With my time in Cinque Terre already changing from the clarity of the present into a rosy pink and sparkling blue mosaic of memories, I'd like to once again thank World Nomads, Parco Natzionale delle Cinque Terre and Can't Forget Italy for the incredible experience they've given me. I plan to take everything that I have learned along with me as a traveler, a writer and a cook. I can only hope that my life will continue to be filled with as much adventure and good food as it has been this past week.