SAN
VITO LO CAPO
San
Vito is a well-known seaside resort, noted in particular for its
beautiful coastline. This opens out into a bay lined with wonderful
beaches lapped by limpid water that seems tinged with ranges of
blues and greens, from aquamarine to navy. In the 18C, the small
town comprised simply a collection of whitewashed houses clustered
around the Chiesa Madre. The church continues steadfastly to act
as the town’s focal point, square and massive in profile,
a constant reminder of its early beginnings as a Saracen fortress.
Inside, it used to preserve a small church dedicated to San Vito
(erected over the site where the saint is supposed to have lived)
but this grew to be too small to accommodate
the many pilgrims, and so it was enlarged until it actually incorporated
the very building which once harboured it.
HEADLAND
The road from Custonaci to the headland
offers wonderful views out over the Golfo del Cofano. Before San
Vito, it passes on the left one of the many 16C watch-towers that
punctuate this area. It then continues past an attractive, characteristically
cube-like, little chapel dedicated to San Crescenzia (16C).
Beyond
San Vito, on the left of the road stands an old and now abandoned
tuna fishery (Tonnara del Secco). Up ahead sits the solitary Torre
dell’Impio, another watch-tower (hidden on the way there,
but clearly visible on the return). At the end of the road extends
the marvellous Riserva dello Zingaro (see Riserva dello ZINGARO).
Monte Cofano – The towering
limestone peak and the bay that surrounds it, now a nature reserve,
make for a magnificent sight as the steep pinky-red cliffs extending
skywards are mirrored (hopefully) in the crystal calm sea. Turn
up the road on the right before Custonaci that leads to the bottom
of the hill before continuing past a number of quarries gouged into
the rocky flank. From these is extracted the marble known as Perlato
di Sicilia, a startlingly white stone by comparison to the other
brownish natural rock of the area. Not far from the quarries (follow
the signs) nestles the grotto known as the Grotta Mangiapane (in
the vicinity of Scurati). Inside, it shelters a tiny rural hamlet,
complete with chapel and cobbled street. The endearing charm of
this abandoned village, with its vaguely Mexican air (especially
because of the square, mud-coloured houses), is especially poignant
at Christmas, when it provides a setting for a captivating human
enactment of the Christmas story. |
Trapani
Alcamo
Buseto Palizzolo
Calatafimi
Campobello Di Mazara
Castellammare Del Golfo
Castelvetrano
Custonaci
Erice
Favignana
Gibellina
Marsala
Mazara Del Vallo
Paceco
Pantelleria
Partanna
Petrosino
Poggioreale
Salaparuta
Salemi
San Vito Lo Capo
Santa Ninfa
Valderice
Vita
Isole
Egadi
Favignana
Levanzo
Marettimo
Pantelleria
Mozia
Saline Dello Stagnone
Isola Di Formica
Segesta
Selinunte
Cave Di Cusa
Testi
© Studio
Scivoletto e Michelin Italia. Le foto sono di proprietà
dei rispettivi autori. Ogni riproduzione non autorizzata verrà
perseguita a norma di legge.
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Guide of Sicily
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