Friday, May 25, 2012

Another Place, Another Time: North Lagoon

Setting sun seen from the north lagoon
I'm convinced you could spend your whole life in Venice and easily miss about 75% of everything there is to see. Every three paces you take overwhelm you with so much visual detail--the myriad accretions of long history, or the picturesque deterioration wrought by those same passing years--that it's impossible to take it all in.

So it's very easy to forget about the lagoon, even if you are lucky enough to be here for longer than just a few days, or a week, or even a month. I do it myself all the time, until the chance (for example) to travel about the northern lagoon with some friends reminds me of how much I've been missing, and how large and fascinating the lagoon itself is: from the barrene--those low flat stretches of land that disappear and reappear with the changing tides--to the lightly populated islands close to the city (Vignole, Certosa), to those distant islands, looking so very unpopulated and unpromising when seen from a passing vaporetto going to or from Burano, that hide unseen within their interiors, along the overgrown banks of mazey waterways often too shallow for navigation, a host of residents living in conditions very much like those of the city's first settlers.

Seemingly less like a single island (even if they're named as such) than a cluster of puzzle piece islands, the residents of such places live in small houses built of wood, not stone, their yards delimited irregularly by water and wild overgrowth. Through open gates at the water's edge you glimpse their vegetable gardens. Above the flowering bushes that enclose their yards you see the tops of fruit trees (plums, cherries, even peaches, I think). which I'm told flourish at first and grow quickly, until their roots hit the first layer of salty subsoil and their height is stunted by the limited depth of good earth. Lining either side of the narrow waterways are the large wooden crates of soft-shell crab traps, each one hoisted or submerged between a pair of tall wooden poles--slenderer versions of the bricole to which boats are tied in the city.

It's an entirely different world out there, and away from the bulk and verticality of Venice, or even Burano, hours seem to go by differently than they do in the city: passing not, as one might imagine in such a watery place (and as the ancients put it), like that of a river or even slowly running stream, but settling gently and silently all around you--on the riotous vegetation and the vast still flat vistas beyond--like a soft sifting from above, becoming darkly opalescent in the day's last light.

14 comments:

  1. I would so love to explore the lagoon in a little shallow bottomed boat! Are you still rowing?

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    1. I am still rowing--though not in the Vogalonga tomorrow--and in response to both you, Susie, and ytaba36 (Yvonne) below, I can't tell you how I look forward to the day when I'll be so accomplished a vogatore that I'll be able to roam the lagoon with a passenger or two.

      But, alas, that day is a ways off... In the meantime, even a little motorboat is a marvelous way to explore the lagoon.

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  2. And, if you are still rowing, you have two potential passengers!

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  3. Exploring the lagoon is a long-held wish..... the view from the vaporetto is so tantalising - you just know that there's so much to explore.

    Make that 3 potential passengers - well 4 really, with Jon, who is really only happy when afloat (in any form of boat). A flotilla seems to be needed!

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    1. I'm with Jon--it is a great thing to be afloat in anything from a vaporetto to a sandolo to even Alilaguna (though that's much better when you're arriving than when you're leaving Venice). And, yes, the lagoon seems to be as mysterious as that maze of a city itself.

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  4. Ciao Mary, our landlady rents out her little motorboat to select tenants. Wouldn't that be fun? Jon could be the pilot and Sig. Nonloso could be the navigator. You, Mark, Yvonne and I could make sure everyone had plenty of food and drink!

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    1. How wonderful that sounds. And there'd be plenty for everyone to do if we happened to get stuck on a sandbar!

      Have you rented the motorboat before? Is its motor less than 20 horsepower (as below that one doesn't need a license in the lagoon)?

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  5. Now, that sounds like a plan to me! And, Siggie wouldn't even have to row.

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    1. Nor, more important, pilot the boat! As Sandro at 4 1/2 has much more experience doing that than I do at 10x his age.

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  6. No, I have not rented it before, but I have always wanted to! We always seem to be in Venice during December or January. It has a small outboard, I will have to find out about the hp. It is moored right outside of the apartment we rent and is very well cared for.

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    1. What a great option to have literally at your door! But I guess it might be a bit too "fresco" in December or January to tool around too much in a little boat But certainly not impossible.

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  7. The most recent Befana featured some spectacular weather. Remember Yvonne?

    Hmmm, this boat thing is an excellent reason to visit Venice at a different time of year.

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    1. Or to be bring some cold weather boating gear during your usual time.

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