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We started off on a rather
rough road, through the forest of oak and chestnut, and into the clouds. It was a bit cool
now. The forest faded away and the only vegetation in sight was astragal, growing in
clumps among the rocks. It began to rain. The astragal eventually disappeared and
we were surrounded by a moonscape of black lava rock. Up and up we went, lurching from
side to side on the narrow road of lava, steep hills above and below us. It got colder,
the rain turning to sleet. Then hail, heavy hail. And snow, wet driving snow. Now it was
really cold and we were all wide awake. Were we going to stay on the road? Could the driver
even see the road ahead?
We finally got to the crater’s edge and got out of the bus. This volcano has long fascinated
man. The Greek scientist Empedocles, who had successfully fought malaria, was convinced
that Etna's gasses were semi-solid in form and strong enough to support the weight of a
human being. To prove his theory, in 433 BC, he jumped into the crater and was never seen
again. Perhaps he should have tossed in a goat first.
We peered into the crater but
there was little to see but clouds and driving snow. It was windy and very cold (4 deg
Celsius). The hearty young couples were hopping up and down, freezing their Teutonic
asses off. Too wet to even take the camera out. We didn’t stay long. The drivers wanted
to go back down before the weather got worse, so back into the vehicle and down that
bumpy, slippery road.
Descending the mountain was as much an adventure as going up;
but eventually the snow stopped, then the rain, and we reached the lodge and our bus.
Then back down to the sunny and warm port. Because we hadn’t stayed as long as
scheduled at the summit, we could have gone into Taormina for a couple hours; but Al,
Ingrid and I decided to return to the ship.
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