On Holy Saturday afternoon we caught two processions. On Easter, there were three Mother Son meetings, known as the S'Incontru. On Easter Monday, there was the procession of Sant'Efisio, the town's patron saint, a prelude to the saint's day celebration around May 1st. In total we caught 14 Easter processions in Sardinia, a personal record, those not in terms of size. All the processions in Sardinia are small by Spanish standards, under a hundred people, carrying rather unimpressive icons, nevertheless they are very much of the tradition.
However, the highlight of our visit was taking the city bus to Molentargius-Saline Regional Park to spot the greater flamingos. The young women at the tourist office confidently assured us that we'd be able to see them - some of them live in Cagliari year round. We were skeptical - wild animals are fickle, have wily ways to elude us. We got up extra early for the excursion. We had great success with flamingos. There were thousands of them hanging out right next to the city. The townspeople must be familiar with them as we are with Canada geese.
John says: I've wanted to visit Cagliari for over 20 years since reading the 1921 travel book Sea and Sardinia by D.H. Lawrence. I was not disappointed.
There was polyphonic singing with men, women and children in the Procession of the Holy Mysteries. Check out the short video below.
Later, in the same procession, the statue of the body of Christ was carried out of a church and a few people threw flowers onto the casket. Another short video.
A few more photos of the very sombre procession from the small neighborhood church up to the Cathedral and back.
We got up early and rode a local bus to Molentargius-Saline Natural Park in hopes of spotting the resident Greater Flamingos. Success!
The Striking Town Hall of Cagliari is the first thing one sees after emerging from the train station.
One day our lunch was pizza slices "to go" from La Piccola Pizzetta, a local institution.
Street Views.
One day we walked to the Archaeological Museum (See the 3000-year-old Bronze Deer Figurine 1st below), passing the imposing ElephantTower (with an open back, and deadly gates), and the remnants of the Roman Amphitheater carved directly into the limestone hill.
Views from the Belvedere. Note that the white dots on the water are flamingos in the salt flats.
On Easter Sunday, there are the S'Incontru processions that represent the Meeting of the Risen Christ and the Virgin Mary. See the one video and several photos below.
And on Easter Monday, the procession of Sant'Efisio, the patron saint of Cagliari.
And finally, the Costa Toscana Cruise Ship in the harbour.
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