Hot bath safely behind us we meandered onward anti-clockwise around the nearly island.
We climbed a hill on a narrow road with a double white line painted along the middle. You going up and the bloke driving down would both have to be driving a golf carts in order to keep yourselves within your allotted lane and not tumble off the side of the mountain.
The wild flowers included lavender and bright anemones. We edged through a couple of little villages, up and up and up..
...and eventually downward again and we started to see evidence of the most recent volcanic event that happened here (about 2500 years ago) - jumbled rocky slopes that still don't support much in the way of vegetation.
The last bit of the journey to the crater is done on foot (F's feet in my case). The start of that path was rocky and a bit tricky (for a human - easy for a cat), and steep in places so that F zipped me inside my pack and swung it off her front like I was a baby koala bear while she went along with both her hands and feet.
I taught her that. 4 feet are better than 2.
The rocks are red. Mr B discovered they are also very sharp. The crater is not like the round craters you see on the moon, or the steaming, glowing, smoking ones I have seen on TV. It is more like a grotto - a protected little alcove of lush greenery, really attractive little caves that I was not allowed to explore (humans wouldn't fit - that makes them nervous), ferns and mosses, and different kinds and colours of rocks.
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Mr B standing guard on an interesting cave... |
I saw robins.... much more interesting than rocks.
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