Fgr. Marco Polo tower rises above the rooftops of Korcula
town
By Philip Marsden
Fgr. Motoring into the marina at Korcula, on a day with
little wind
Sailing from island to
island conjures up the maritime spirit of Croatia’s magnificent coast and the
ghost of its most famous son, Marco Polo. Executive summary by darmansjah
Into the sea maze
Below the boat’s bow, the water glows a deep and translucent
blue. The anchor chain arcs down into it, through shafts of sunlight, to where
the sand is patched with sea-grass. With the press of a switch, I start to
winch in the chain. Link by link, it drops into the locker. The boat nudges
ahead, the chain swings vertical and the anchor itself rises out of the water,
glinting and dripping like a fish. Our boat throttles forward and we head out
of the almost-deserted bay of Luka Soline, into the morning light, moving south
across an island-dotted sea.
In the Mediterranean, Croatia is matched only by Greece for
the number and bauty of its islands; more than a thousand lie off its shores.
Some appear like outsize rocks above the horizon. Some are rocks, grass tufted
mounds just clearing the water. Others are so large that their ridges and peaks
tangle with those of the mainland itself to produce an ambiguity of land and
sea. Exploring the coastline is a riddle that can be solved only by taking to
the water – either in the Jadrolinija ferries that serve the islands and the
coast like buses or, better still, in a sailing boat such as this 36-foot
Benetau, skippered with panache and humour by Zoran Bradic
.
Sea skills come as naturally to the people of these shores
as horsemanship does to peoples of the steppe. Zoran spent his school holidays
bombing around the coast in his dinghy; in his early twenties it took him only
a few years to qualify as a charter skipper. For centuries, the rulers of the
Adriatic – first the Venetians, followed by the Austrians – relied on the
island communities of Dalmatia (now largely in Croatia) to provide them both
with fearless mariners and meticulous shipwrights. ‘This is a sailor’s coast,’
wrote the historian Jan Morris. ‘It grows sailors as other lands grow farmers
and miners’.
Out of this port-hopping, footloose milieu stepped the most
influential traveler in Western history. Most think of Marco Polo as Venetian,
but although he set off from the Italian city for his great Asian odyssey, and
lived there later in life, evidence points to his origins in a ship-building
family from here, the coast of Dalmatia.
All morning I sit on deck, leaning back against the mast,
alternately gazing at the islands ahead and reading from the Travels of Marco Polo. I read of his 20 years in the Far East –
the magnificence of the court of the Great Khan with his 12,000 nobles and
5,000 elephants – reveling in the sense of marvels that fills every page. Even
by the time of his death in 1324, the book had made Marco Polo famous. Not only
did it prove hugely popular in the coming centuries, but – more than any other
piece of medieval literature – it fuelled that strange urge in Europeans to
jump aboard wooden vessels and sail off into the unknown: to discover, to
trade, to conquer.
Looking up from the book, I scan the horizon. Astern is the
archipelago of the Paklenis, the islands of brac and Hvar and the small island
of Solta. In the distance, far to the southeast, lies the tip of Korcula – a
few days of meandering and sailing ahead of us. It was there that Marco Polo is
said to have been born.
Fgr the fishing town of Kmiza on the island of Vis
Fgr. Buoys hang from walls on the quayside.
Fgr . retired fisherman Ante Vidovic now calls fishing his
‘hobby’
Fgr. The quiet port in Vis town.
Fgr. Vis’s vineyards are on the same latitude as Tuscany’s
Fgr Vis town is at the other end of the island from Komiza
Fgr The compass was a Chinese invention already known in
Europe when Marco Polo went off on his travels
Fgr A refreshing cone of ice-cream as a reward after a day
of sailing
By midday, we approach the shore of vis. Close up, it s
slopes reveal stripes of vines, limestone terraces and olive gloves. The wind
is light and the empty sails flop back and forth, so it is under motor that we
round the island’s northern shore and enter the harbor of Komiza.
Furthest harbor
Nowhere better embodies these islands’ restless, maritime
spirit than Komiza. With steep slopes rising on three sides, it is as if the
small town – outermost of all Croatia’s harbours – has pulled up a high collar against the land and set its face to
the open sea. Dozens of little fishing boats rub fenders inside the quay, men
wander around with boxes of tackle and in the Ribarski Musej, the fishing
museum house in Komiza’s fortress, is a display of 130 distinct knots. Every
years on the Feast of st Michael, the townspeople propitiate the sea spirits by
solemnly burning a boat and scattering its ashes on the water.
Komiza itself could not contain the roving habits of its
fishermen, and they migrated all around the world, spreading their expertise as
they went. In the 19th century, they set up salting works for
pilchards and anchovies on the northwest coast of Spain. Some years later, they
reached California and developed one of the world’s largest fish canneries.
They have set up enterprises in Alaska, the Galapagos, Samoa and the Magellan
Straits. It is said that there are now more Komizans in the Pacific than in
their home town.
Off Komiza’s main thoroughfare, Ribarska Ulica (simply
‘fishing street’), I meet Ante Vidovic. He is sitting in the half-darkness of
his worksop, trying hooks on a longline. Coming out into the sunlight, he leans
against the doorframe and nods down to the water where his boat is moored. Yet
fishing for Ante is now only a ‘hobby’. He is retired, while behind him stretches
one of Komiza’s sea-tossed lives: for forty years he lived and worked in the
far south of Chile.
We stand for a moment, in one of those silences that are so
characteristic of men who spend their days at sea, before he volunteers: ‘Do
you know that in the Komiza dialect, the language we use for boat parts and
fishing is still Venetian?’
Afternoon spreads its honey-coloured light over Kormiza. The
town settles into evening. No-one is in a hurry. Pottering, sauntering and
chatting occupies residents and visitors alike. Drinkers congregate in the
shoreside bars. In the coves around the town, family groups lie on the beach
while I join the swimmers lolling offshore, our heads bobbing in the gilded
waters that stretch out towards the setting sun.
During the night, the wind rises. After days of stillness,
everything is suddenly set in motion. I awake in my bunk and listen to the
rigging clap against the mast: rain briefly patters on the deck but by morning
the skies are clear. Over coffee.
Fgr A good wind fills the sails in the stretch of Adriatic
Sea between Korcula and Vis
Fgr A small boathouse adorned with a cross on the four-mile
long island of Soedro
Zoran and I chew over the mariner’s eternal question –
whether or not to leave harbor. Zoran goes off to the harbor office and
reappears with a weather forecast. ‘Twenty to twenty-five knots of wind
maximum,’ he smiles. ‘We go.’
We prepare the boat for sea. Around the headland, we are met
by a perfect breeze. With sails full and the gunwales dipping. We head south
and east, in the direction of Korcula and the ghost of Marco Polo.
Island of the heart
The island of Scedro lies a few miles off our route and that
afternoon we nose into the small bay of Mostir, cast anchor, and row ashore.
Beside the ruins of a Dominican monastery is a modest beach restaurant run by a
man dressed entirely in black, with an impressive pipe curling from his mouth.
This is Stjepan Kordic, whose father was sent to Scedro as a
forest warden. No-one lived on the island then, and now only a few other people
inhabit it in summer, letting rooms and cooking for visiting boats. It’s a
marginal existence, pursued exclusively by those with a passion for islands.
Stjepan is clearly one of these people. He stands in front of his open stove,
looking happily out over the bay. The stove’s smoke combines with that from his
pipe. He has an old friend staying, a retired sea-captain, who speaks on
Stjepan’s behalf.
‘Stjepan carries Scedro in his heart,’ the captain whispers,
with an admiring glance towards him. ‘He carries the island in his chest and in
his blood. He cannot live anywhere else. Sometimes he goes to Hvar to see his
wife, but after a day he is back on the island. ‘We eat fresh tomato salad and
grilled codding from Stjepan’s oven, and drink grappa. As we row back to the
yacht. Stjepan peels off his black trousers to reveals a pair of black swimming
trunks and, boarding an old speed boat, he disappears into the bilges to
service the engine.
The wind has freshened. Blowing hard from the north, it sends
us bowling down the coast towards Korcula. In the sun, the surface of the sea
flashes with white-capped waves. Every now and then, one breaks at our stern,
ramping up the boat and surging us forward. This is sailing at its most
exhilarating, and Zoran – standing at the helm, generations of Dalmatian
seafarers at his shoulder – grins at the thrill of it.
We approach Korcula with the Peljesac peninsula rising above
the mast. High up, the vegetation gives way to karst, pale rock dotted with
scrub. In centuries past the dogs that patrolled these heights were said to
have been bred to produce spotted coats for camouflage, and were thus named
‘Dalamatian’ after the coast.
The walled town of Korcula guards over this strait. For most
of the eight centuries from 1000 AD, it was an outspost of Venetian power. The
winged lion of St Mark is carved into its main gate, commemorating the great
sea battle when the Venetians defeated the Turks at Lepanto. More obvious is
the presence of Korcula’s native celebrity. A brief wander takes me past the
Marco Polo Mystique restaurant, the
Marco Polo bakery and three branches of the Marco Polo shop, selling
plaster-cast models of the great man and leather-cased telescopes. Visitors
trot by in Marco Polo T-shirts – ‘I have not told half of what I saw for I knew
I would not be believed!’ on the sea front the Dubrovnik ferry is docking,
dwarfing the town. Its name written on the bows: Marco Polo.
Fgr A grilled squid lunch on Scedro
Fgr Stjepan Kordic spends as much time as he can on the
island
Fish and tomatoes in the shade of an olive tree
Fgr a jetty on scedro
Fgr cooking tools in use at a family-run grille
Fgr clear waters off Korcula
Fgr alleyways lead down to the port
Fgr smiljana matijica runs the cukarin bakery
Fgr intricate stonework beneath Marco polo tower
Fgr a likeness of the adventurer outside the marcopolo house
museum
Grave yards are always a good starting place for local
history and, on the wooded slopes above the town, I find Sveti Luka cemetery. To the sound of sparrow song and cicadas,
I read the names of countless Korculans, peer at camoes of proud, communist-era
men and headscarved women, before reaching the 19th-century
mausoleum of the Depolo family.
The island’s leading authority on Marco Polo is Dr Zivan
Filippi. I meet him in the old town, outside the cathedral of Sveti Marko. He
is in his sixties, and he speaks with old-world charm and an easily-shared
enthusiasm for his town. Korcula’s claim, he explains, rests mainly on the long
term presence of the Depolo or Polo born here.’
Earlier papers, he continues, connect the family-at the time
of Marco – with the town’s principal occupation of ship-building. As we walk
through the shadowy warren of foot-polished alley, high-sided and narrow, Zivan
ignores the town’s trumpeting of its famous son, all the Marco Polo shops and
knick-knacks. He speaks fo documents and evidence. He points out the Polo
family crest carved into a wall. Even in the Marco Polo tower, a belovedere
with spectacular views of the sail-spotted channel below, he is more concerned
with a few stones in a yard beside it. ‘The tower is many years later than
Marco Polo – but we have discovered the base of a house from his time. It
belonged to the Polo family.’
Last horizon
Korcula has one other dramatic link with the great traveler.
That evening, we set sail along the island’s eastern coast. The sun is falling,
silhouetting the forested skyline and covering our sails in its yellowy glow.
Beyond Korcula town is a series of wooded coves where the Polos and others bult
the ships that helped keep the Venetian empire a float. We pass the port of
Lumbarda before reaching the eastern tip of Korcula, the headland of Rasznjic.
Fgr looking across the channel from the top of the Marco
Polo tower, to the bald heights of the Peljesac peninsula
Here, on the morning of 7 September 1298, the Genoese and
Venetian fleets confronted each other in the Battle of Curzola (as Korcula was
then known). Commanding one of the Venetian ships was Marco Polo, back from his
wanderings. The venetians were confident of their ships and their mariners, but
that day it was the Genoese who were victorious. Marco Polo was taken away in
chains, and from a jail in Genoa began to write of his 24 years on the road.
Coming around the headland, I can see the last of Croatia’s
islands to the south: the whaleback of Mijet, and Lastovo, almost swamped by
the sunset. Beyond them is open sea a flat horizon. This evening it is and slharder to imagine the horror of a 13th-century
sea battle, the timber clash and slaughter, than the young Marco, 27 years
earlier, filled with the fear and curiosity that begins all great journeys,
sailing off between these islands for the Far East.
CROATIA
By Philip Marsden, executive summary by Darmansjah
With more than a thousands islands scattered along Croatia’s
coastline, a sailing trip here is one of the great maritime experiences. But
there’s plenty to draw you inland too; forests, riverside villages and historic
architecture
Getting There Fly into Frankfurt or Munich before connecting
to Split’s Kastela/Resnik Airport with Croatia
Airlines.
Getting Around Split’s medieval streets are best explored on
foot, but there is a good local bus network connecting the city to outlying
districts. Download maps and timetables at find-croatia.com.
Further reading: lonely planet’s Croatia guide (US$22.99)
includes a chapter on Split and the islands of Central Dalmatia. The Croatian
tourist board website also has useful information (Croatia.hr).
3 WAYS TO DO IT…SPLIT
Fgr. Alfresco drinking at Luxor Café
BUDGET
SEE –- Bargains!
- DIOCLETIAN’S PALACE is one of the world’s most impressive Roman
ruins, with soaring arches and towers. And far from being a deserted monument,
it is a living complex filled with shops, restaurants, bars and churches
(free).
SLEEP –
Familly-run HOTEL JUPITER has rooms
ranging from dorms sleeping up to 10 to doubles with shared bathrooms. And the
location is unveatable, near Diocletian’s mausoleum in the palace complex (from
US$45; hotel-jupiter.info).
EAT – For a good,
quick meal, do as the locals do and grab a burek – a delicious heavy pastry
stuffed with meat or cheese and served with yoghurt – along with a typically
strong Croatian coffee at the BUREK BAR
(from US$2.50; Domaldova 13).
DRINK – In warm weather,
LUXOR CAFÉ sets up cushions on the
1,700-year-old steps of the mai square in Diocletian’s Palace, so you can relax
with a coffee or a cocktail while listening to the live music usually playing
nearby (Sv.Ivana 11, Peristil).
Fgr/ The Ghetto Club’s wall murals
MIDRANGE
SEE – Bargains! – The ARCHAEOLOGICAL
MUSEUM north of the city centre is the oldest in Croatia, focusing on the
Roman and early Christian era including a look at excavations in nearby Salona,
the former Roman Capital of Dalamatia (US$3.50; mdc.hr).
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