
A Hiking Trek Through the Wild Terrains of Corsica
Cala d'Istria, one of The Thinking Traveller's rental villas on the island of Corsica
Owen Tozer
A dramatic view of Bonifacio's fortified Old Town
Owen Tozer
I can't help wondering whether I'll even recognize, in this new, vacationer-friendly Corsica, the rough and rugged backwater I fell in love with half a lifetime ago. That was my first ever walking holiday; Meredith and I had been among a group that followed the GR20, a trail billed as the toughest in Europe. Across the empty wildlands we trekked—me, inappropriately attired in canvas sneakers and a skort. Despite the bloodied feet and sunstroke, the experience triggered in me an obsession with survey maps and a desire to return. How exciting, then, to be back all these years later, with Meredith no less, not to mention the knowledgeable Antoine. We'll pick up a trail, he tells us, above Porto Vecchio on the east coast and follow it for some of its 53 varied miles toward the western shoreline, along ancient shepherd paths and through forests of holm oak, chestnut, beech, and Corsican pine, before reaching the mountain village of Santa-Maria-Figaniella. There we'll spend a few nights at Casa Fortificata, a private retreat owned by The Thinking Traveller, a high-end villa-rental company. Finally, amid the herb-scented headlands, sybaritic beach clubs, and lively marinas of the southern coast, we'll rejoin the men, who will stay with us at a second Thinking Traveller villa by the beach. But before any of that, we have the white-knuckle drive into the rocky hinterland to contend with.
Quenza is the last village before the road gives way to mountain wilderness. The narrow way unwinds in continuous switchbacks toward the Aiguilles de Bavella, the iconic 'needles' that look more like an underbite set against the open jaw of the horizon. A dozen hairpin bends later, and we gratefully tumble out of the car and into the remains of the afternoon light. We bounce across the Plateau du Coscione on padded pastures of moss and thick turf that open onto pools of water called pozzines. Pine needles and lemon and mint thyme crushed by our feet perfume the trail through the maquis, the dense scrubby vegetation found throughout the Mediterranean. Semi-wild pigs snuffle beneath the huge granite boulders, solid and immutable as Henry Moore sculptures, that define this otherworldly landscape. Centuries of wind and rain have scooped and hollowed the granite, leaving cavities called taffoni that will likely provide shelter for the wandering swine tonight. When I was last in Corsica, only a generation ago, the taffoni would sometimes house entire families who had moved with their livestock to the highlands for the summer.
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