Wandering Villa Giulia
I took a short stroll through Villa Giulia, one of Palermo’s ‘pleasure gardens’, on a spring day this year and saw beds of lavender; pots of colourful flowers; tall, lean palms; long avenues; porticoes; a majestic statue of a lion looking to the Tyrrhenian Sea; time worn stone urns; busts headless; and views to Monte Pellegrino in the distance, beyond the port of Palermo.
To return one day
This quiet, strolling garden, built in 1777 and named after a viceroy's wife faces the Tyrrhenian Sea and sits next to the city’s exotic botanic gardens. Many years ago it was ‘a wasteland of rubbish’; no more though.
It is worth a visit and one day I would like to return for a longer walk to appreciate Villa Guilia’s classical layout a little more and details missed.
Salve,
Suzanne
Note: Cadogan 1998 Sicily guide quoted.