I
had tried to pre-book one from Australia but found it a little
difficult, so I didn't. I think the mistake I made was looking in the
larger towns, my logic saying that scooter rental businesses will be
where the most people are, not the little villages. Wrong. When we
arrived in Tuscany we found literature about a few rental outfits all
based in small villages. In summer, there are plenty of holidaying
potential customers in the villages and the villages are right in the
heart of the road they wish to ride.
When
we arrived in Siena I chose a crowd call Tuscany Scooter Rentals base
in Gaiole in Chianti and Radda in Chianti. I filled in the online
form only to get a reply advising that they were completely booked
out for the week we are in the 10 days we are in or nearish to the
Chainti Hills. Disappointment :( . I contacted another form – still
waiting to hear back. I contacted TSR again and asked them to contact
me in there were any cancellations. To my delight there was. But
getting it organised from there was a mini-saga! The scooter to be
made available to me had been filled with diesel by a previous client
so it was out of action A couple of others possibly needed some
panel-beating so the numbers of available scooters was dwindling
fast. The proprietor said he would let me ride his special blue one
if I could ride. “Of course!”, I said!. “My Australian licence
has a motor cycle endorsement”, I added.
So
we drove two hours almost back to Siena for the ride. The mob is
rather disorganised. The local tourist information centre (a one
woman show) acts as an agent. Anyway, we didn't get the blue one, we
got a red Vespa 125 instead. Perfect! The scooter is hired for a 24
hour period. We had until 10:00am the next morning to get it back.
The cost is only 50 euro plus 10 eiro for insurance. A bargain. Oh, a
1000 euro deposit is required also. The only other expense is the
cost to return it with a full tank. We rode for more than seven hour,
using just over 4 litres of fuel.
We
first headed for Radda about 10kms away. Kerry was very nervous, I
was a little tentative and overly cautious for the journey to the
first stop but quickly got the for the feel of the machine and
settled into the ride. We caught our breath in Radda over a cool
drink, a coffee and an apple and custard torte. Next it was to
Castellino arriving about lunchtime after a long stop on the road for
the obligatory “man-girl-machine” photo-shoot. We paked in the special Vespa parking area,
then called into a deli to pickup some bread, ham, tomato, sheep's cheese, pesto and Chianti Classico for lunch.
Actually the Chianti wasn't for lunch. It's in one of those classic Chianti bottles with the wicker-work on the base. You know the one. The bottle will be kept as a souvenir once the contents had disappeared.
then called into a deli to pickup some bread, ham, tomato, sheep's cheese, pesto and Chianti Classico for lunch.
Actually the Chianti wasn't for lunch. It's in one of those classic Chianti bottles with the wicker-work on the base. You know the one. The bottle will be kept as a souvenir once the contents had disappeared.
After
Castellino, where Kerry bought some more souvenirs, we jumped on the
Vespa, looked at the map, chose a target village for our next drink
and headed in that direction on a beautiful, warm, cloudless day. The
roads were pretty quiet, but not devoid of traffic. Motorists in
Italy are very mindful and respectful of riders of two wheeled
vehicles on the public roads. Kerry had become completely comfortable
with being a pillion passenger by lunch, even taking photographs
while on the move!
Riding the Vespa is such a carefree way to spend a day. I cannot too highly recommend it as a way to de-stress. Way better than wandering aimlessly over the same route in a car, or a push-bike. “If it looks like a lot of fun, you're right. It is! No helmet, no licence and no idea, and that legal in Italy” (Rob Sitch, 1995). “Although you may want to check about the helmet, I could be wrong about that.” (G. Smith , 2013 (with apologies to R. Sitch)).
We
rode and rode and rode, with the little Vespa more than a match for
the Chianti Hills, even with two on board. Needless to say the
scenery, the endless panoramic views and the little hill-top villages
were marvelous to behold. We passed about 27,000 wineries I reckon,
but didn't visit any. We just wanted to be on the Vespa. By about 6pm
the sun starting to get low in the sky and the day was cooling of,
just a touch.
We rode the last 15kms back to Gaiole through vineyards and cool pine and oak forests. The scent of the pine as we rode along was lovely, remembering to “suck in the big ones” to get the most of that wonderful smell. We filled up for eight euros and very, very reluctantly took the Vespa back to its home and dropped the keys into the letter-box at the information centre.
We rode the last 15kms back to Gaiole through vineyards and cool pine and oak forests. The scent of the pine as we rode along was lovely, remembering to “suck in the big ones” to get the most of that wonderful smell. We filled up for eight euros and very, very reluctantly took the Vespa back to its home and dropped the keys into the letter-box at the information centre.
We
had a quick dinner at a nearby restaurant and then started the long
drive back to Caprese. And a long drive it was. We made it to Arezzo
and from memory with no worries, but directional sign-posts are dying
art-form in Arezzo so we found ourselves on the road to the town of
Bibbiena to the east of Caprese. Not very far east, if you're a crow,
but a long way if one has to negotiate foreign, twisting mountain
roads in the dark with unquestionably the worst headlights I have
ever had the displeasure to rely upon. But we made it back eventually
by about 10:30pm, called Emily on Skype, then Viber to say hello and
crashed off to sleep.
What a way to spend a day!! So nice!
ReplyDeleteSo seriously cool! Sounds like you really blew the cobwebs out. I can picture the grin on your faces as you were riding through the mountains and villages. Fantastic,
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