The village church bells have just tolled in the midnight
hour, so I really should be sleeping instead of blogging out here on the balcony
in the light of a nearly-full moon. But when there’s a random accordion, tuba
and trumpet playing an off-key waltz to the somewhat harmonic singing of late
night revelers somewhere a few properties away—well, let’s just say
circumstances aren’t conducive to sleep just now anyway. So I may as well catch
up on writing about our experiences traveling across Slovenia on a team-building
excursion to recharge after the previous two weeks of active ministry.
Excitement was running high last Friday, a day which awoke to the sight of we eight Canadians climbing into our beloved “Canadian Mule” cube van and driving off into the horizon. For two hours the cornfields and country-scape to which we had grown accustomed gave way to beautiful, forested foothills as we cruised down the highway. At last, the Mule pulled into our first destination: the famous Postojna Caves.
(Please click Read More to continue)
We stepped off the train to journey on foot through this
underground cathedral, ascending into galleries filled with towering formations
which defy description—an army of elaborate limestone giants rising upwards to
meet innumerable spears of shining stone twisting down like chandeliers from an
ancient gothic ceiling. Even the walls sparkled. How can I convey what the
senses encounter as one walks through such a setting: the smell of cool, still
air and damp rock, the echo of the murmuring crowd, the sight of fantastic
limestone forms rising and falling like the spires and colonnades of some
forgotten castle? All of it leaves the observer unequivocally wonderstruck.
Back in the daylight, we travelled further into the foothills,
winding up a series of hairpin curves to reach our hostel set in a
narrow-streeted village atop a high ridge. The vista before us, stretching down
a deep valley green with orchards of figs and olives, featured an incredible
range of foothills, the larger ones being topped with the white steeples and
red roofs of distant villages. We didn’t have long to gaze at this scene,
however, before driving back down the hairpin road to Piaogn, a town set on a Mediterranean peninsula between Italy on one horizon and Croatia on the other.
The colourful, flat-faced buildings and cobblestone streets of the beautiful
town, however, were not the first thing to capture my attention. That honour
belongs to the sunny water of the Adriatic Sea, clear as a topaz and
twice as blue. Already a plan began to percolate in my mind as to how I might
encounter that water more vividly.
But first—dinner. Being on a team with a bunch of hungry
guys means that things like jumping into the ocean have to come second to matters
of survival, like eating. So eat we did, at an apparently fantastic seafood
restaurant facing the ocean. I say apparently because I haven’t eaten much
seafood before: most of it counted as adventurous eating for me, including the
octopus, squid tentacles (actually pretty good) and cuttlefish. Since I was on
such a roll, I even swallowed a fish eyeball, just to say “I done it.”
Afterward,
we roamed the ridiculously scenic streets for awhile, journeying from open
courtyards surrounded by magnificent buildings and fountains up through narrow,
cobblestoned alleys to reach an ancient church at the top of a hill. A climb up
the iconic bell tower’s 400-year-old stairs—for the slight fee of one Euro each—landed
us in a windy wonder-world overlooking the city’s maze-like network of red
roofs, beyond which lay beach, then ocean, and finally the Italian Alps
themselves. What an amazing series of moments those were, gazing out from the top of the bell tower. But even more amazing was the final highlight of the day.
Thanks for sticking around to listen to this account—I hope
you had as much fun reading it as I had writing it. Now that the partiers and
their accordion have finally quieted down—time to log off!
You see, back at the restaurant I had snuck away from the
table to return in a different set of clothes—ones that could get wet. Now, as
our team strolled casually back from our sightseeing, I broke into a jog and
wove among the evening’s foot traffic towards the ocean. You can imagine what
happened next! Running onto the nearest dock, I tossed my DIY backpack, watch,
jacket and shoes into a pile on the concrete and leapt over and into the crystal clear
water before giving myself the chance to hesitate. Floating on the warm, sunny,
salty Adriatic water, rolling over to watch the fish playing below, I knew
I would never, ever regret taking that jump.
The earth is the Lord's and everything in it, the world and all who dwell there. Ps. 24:1 I love reading about God's creation. I do hope you will continue blogging when in the UK. His glory is over all the earth!
ReplyDelete