LEVANZO
The
tiny Levanzo (pronounced with an emphasis on the first syllable)
has a surface area of 6 sqm, and is bristled with hills. The tallest,
Pizzo dei Monaco (278m), tumbles its jaggedly rocky skirts down
into the sea; the most beautiful part being a section of the southwest
coast.
Only
one road bisects the island from south to north, making it a veritable
haven of peace and serenity, beloved by nature-lovers and those
who seek solitude and rhythms set by the breaking waves or by the
sound of ones own feet on the stones.
The
northern part of the island consists of a succession of sheer drops,
rocky outcrops and secluded little creeks. Between Levanzo and the
coast of Sicily lie two minute islets: Maraone and Formica (on which
there are the remains of an old tuna fishery).
Cala
Dogana – The only hamlet on Levanzo overlooks a bay of the
clearest water on the south side of the island. From here, a well-kept
path snakes its way to the bays that open out along the southwestern
coast, each tightly embracing its very own miniature pebbled beach,
as far as the Faraglione (a large rock).
Grotta
del Genovese – Accessible on foot (approx 2hr there and back),
by jeep and then on foot along a steep slope, or by sea. Discovered
in 1949, this excavated hollow in the side of a tall cliff bears
traces of prehistoric man. Vestiges of wall-painting have been identified
as dating from the Upper Palaeolithic era, while the incised drawings
may be from the Neolithic period. The graffiti drawings, completed
at a time when the island was still attached to the island of Sicily,
represent a bison and a deer of the most pleasing proportions, elegance
and foreshortening.
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