Glimmers - slow travel nourishment
One of the treats and shocks of summer travel in Europe had been the super abundance of bread. I ate more bread in my first week abroad than I had eaten in the previous year.
The classic French breakfast, petit déjeuner, is a 12-inch length of baguette with butter, a croissant, jam, and a small hot coffee. As a no-longer coffee drinker, chocolat chaud was my go-to hot drink. And while I missed my usual eggy American breakfast, I adored petit déjeuner.
One day when Barney and I were in Turin, I’d filled up on breads with butter and jam to fuel a rigorous morning of cutting words from my memoir manuscript. Our day’s plan included a walk to the neighborhood market for bread and other fixings for hotel-room lunch while we watched the Tour de France. For dinner, we would go out for gelato.
Part of me chafed. We were in Italy. We should do something more Italian. I was going to be a fat-bellied cow by the time we returned from our trip if I ate bread all day and gelato for dinner.
Part of me loved this plan. This was slow travel – scaling back to the moment and exploring on foot; being in a place and appreciating the little things.
When we stepped into the blast of heat outside, Barney pointed to the windowsill of the neighboring building. “Dinky, look!”
A cactus held up eleven pale pink blossoms as if it were an elaborate tropical drink. I watched a bee swim in the stamens of a flower. It was magical. “Thank you for pointing that out,” I said, charmed.
“I thought you would dig it.” Barney’s whole face smiled.
We walked the long way back to the hotel from the market, sweating, and using the sidewalks on the shady side of the street whenever possible. Ahead, a moist spot on the sidewalk caught my attention. I stopped and Barney kept walking.
“B, look! A glimmer!” That morning, I’d seen an Instagram post from writer, Natalie Serber, prompting followers to share glimmers – moments of joy and delight.
“What?” Barney had walked past the wet area.
“A heart-shaped puddle!” I took a photo.
“I didn’t even notice,” he said.
“That’s amazing!” I skipped to catch up.
Our Breadfest of Champions at the hotel was its own glimmer. The brown bread I’d selected was malty and pumpernickel-ish. I slathered a hunk with Dijon mustard and topped it with a wedge of local tomato.
“This is pretty sweet,” I said to Barney. “I love bread. I love you, too. Thank you for pointing out the cactus to me.”
Share your slow travel stories, learn from others, and find inspiration by joining The Wonder of Slow Travel conversation on Facebook.