Hello Lazio, Your Color Abounds

Tuscany gets attention for its beauty, but its neighbor Lazio has adorned the Via Francigena with scenes like this one. The highway signs say “Roma” now and we are just four days away from arriving at St. Peter’s Square once again.

It is sobering to think we have walked 209 miles. Long, challenging days remain. But tonight we have a dinner date with a Dutch couple who have become our friends. Buon Camino, indeed!

King and Queen for One Breakfast

Table for two. A charming aspect of distance walking in Italy is the vast variety of places we call home for a night. This dining room in a stately home in the lakeside village of Bolsena offered an omelet, yogurt, granola, jams, juice, fresh bread, coffee, and more. We felt like royalty! Our en suite bathroom was about the size of a bedroom.

Before we walked out of Tuscany, a Dutch trekker snapped this trailside photo.

What to do? The guidebook warned us that the last several miles of the Via Francigena on the way to Acquapendente “treacherously” traveled on a busy highway and it advised taking a bus from Centeno, a tiny enclave of homes.

As we took in the crazy scene of speeding (60 mph-plus) trucks, cars, and motorcycles on a narrow road with NO space for walkers, we split off into Centeno, intending to take the bus. Then this fast-talking Italian emerged from his home. We understood not a word he said, but he pointed to his car, then to himself and to us, and finally pantomimed holding a steering wheel.

As he sped us toward Acquapendente, our view of the highway trail confirmed that we had made a decision for our survival by avoiding walking on the road. He dropped us at the village piazza (above).

During our more than 2,300 miles of distance trekking, the stretch of highway/trail easily wins the prize for most dangerous. The ride was well worth 20 euro, and we got the feeling that our driver regularly rescues Francigena pilgrims.