My first trip to Sicily in 1998 was more devoted to meeting my Sicilian
relatives than searching for insulators. The fact was that even if I wanted to
go hunting for Sicilian insulators, I would not have time for it. I spent most
of the trip meeting over 100 of my Sicilian relatives and eating one delicious
seven course meal after another.
I decided very early on that it was not going
to be that way this time. Planning the trip with my father and two kids, who all
accompanied me on the trip, I reserved time on the itinerary dedicated to me for
the pursuit of insulators. My father has a particular distaste for insulators
stemming from my childhood hobby of bringing home bucket after bucket of
insulators from the nearby New York Central Railroad. However, seeing the
opportunity to enrich his grandchildren with Sicilian culture, he had no problem
taking the kids with him while allowing me to go off on my own.
After crossing
the Straits of Messina on the overnight train from Rome, night gave way to day
and I had my first opportunity to look for those crown jewels of the mythical
island of Sicily. Of course I was torn between observing the spectacular
Mediterranean coast line, the coastal mountains and insulators. Being a veteran
insulator hunter and collector, I was able to take in the scenery and spot
insulators simultaneously.
From my previous observations, I had concluded that
there is very little evidence that glass or even porcelain insulators were ever
used for telecommunications. Nonetheless, I spotted what looked like a
communications pole line, with three or four cross-arms, paralleling the rail
line at some distance. Unfortunately for me as a glass collector, the insulators
were all white porcelain. I spent the remaining time on the train checking-out
various high voltage transmission lines, all replete with green and clear glass
multi-parts of various sizes and green or clear glass suspension insulators.
After arriving at the city of my relatives and spending several days making
the rounds and eating delicious seven course meals, it was time to break away
and see what I could discover. So, I took my father and my kids to the bus
station and sent them to Palermo for the day.
Having no idea of where to find
any insulators, I drove to the next town over in a small Fiat my uncle kept on
hand for visitors. Like most European roads, Sicilian roads do not necessarily
go directly from one town to the other without meandering several miles in
between. Nonetheless I found my way there and back and on the way back I saw the
shimmer of glass on a downed pole. I pulled the car over and found a pile of
wooden and concrete poles where the power company had recently replaced a line.
I was able to retrieve two CD 1055 green glass spools on the end of one of the
poles. The other poles were outfitted with CD 522s in green and clear glass but
pieces were all that was left of them.
Having packed the spools away in my
backpack and headed down the road again, it occurred tome that I had been
looking up at the insulators in use and that maybe I should concentrate on
looking toward the ground. Almost immediately I started seeing piles of concrete
poles along side the road. Unfortunately I only found two more spools.
Mid-August in Sicily is the time of year the farmers burn their fields to free
up the soil for plowing. Their practice is to set the fires and walk away
allowing the field to burn by themselves. The fires burn everything in their
path including in-service wooden poles. They also bake the insulators on the
downed poles. Several times I had a CD 522 or a spool in my hands, only to have
the pieces shatter upon my attempts to remove them.
One of my Sicilian cousins,
Giovanni, is an electrician who had given me two CD 522s on my last trip. Upon
visiting him and his family, I discovered that he had already gotten me five
insulators, one glass CD 677.7 MIVA T-bar, two white porcelain T-bars and two
other white porcelain pieces. While I was very grateful for his efforts, I told
him that I was more interested in the glass pieces than the porcelain ones.

Nine glass t-bars from Sicilian buildings and
photo (below, left) of how the
t-bars were installed.

Feeling bad about not
having gotten me more glass pieces, the following morning Giovanni picked me up
in a borrowed truck and ladder and we drove into town. Once in I town, we
started plucking the abandoned glass T-bars off the side of buildings. It was a
normal summer day in town, typical of any Sicilian city, with old women dressed
in black carrying on their daily chores, pensioned men walking the streets in jackets and ties discussing the politics of the day and
children playing games. It was no surprise that, being out of the ordinary, we
attracted a bit of attention to ourselves.

Downed pole from narrow gauge railroad.

Street light with four glass spools and a glass guy wire strain.
Most of the spectators simply
watched. However an old lady about four feet tall and dressed in black approached us
suspiciously. As my Italian was not quite good enough to answer her let alone
understand what she said, I thought I would let my cousin handle this one. Very
calmly he told her that the "lights" were being upgraded and that we
were removing the old equipment. She was not satisfied with the answer provided
to her but after getting no where with my cousin she spouted what I assumed was
a expletive in Sicilian dialect and walked away frustrated. We retrieved nine
glass T-bar's that day.
Later in the trip I had another chance to get away so I
drove to a spot I saw on one of our excursions - an old narrow gauge steam rail
bed. I walked along the bed for miles looking for evidence of an old pole line
and trying to imagine the old steam locomotives hauling sulfur down from the
mountains to the ports. The pungent smell of wild fennel in the air and a gentle
Mediterranean breeze made up for the 100 degree plus heat. I found the remnants
of a pole line but no insulators other than pieces of white porcelain.

CD 375 FIDENZA multiparts.
On the
return trip, I drove through a town where I noticed a unique street light
arrangement. The lights were spaced every hundred feet or so suspended from guy
wires attached to the buildings on either side of the street. The power feed ran from light to
light paralleling the street. At each street light were four green glass spools
carrying the power feed. The guys were insulated by green glass block guy
insulators, the likes of which I had never seen before. Neither the spools nor
the blocks were in the Albers/Woodard book.
 |
Some of the interesting porcelain pieces found
on the outside walls of old
buildings
including a t-bar and a "spook". |
Power poles with a mixture of glass and porcelain. . . |
 |
and a beautiful group of four purple CD 522s! |
 |
 |
After taking some pictures, I drove around a bit thinking I might find a junk pile of these pieces, but I had no
such luck.
Toward the end of my stay in Sicily, I spotted a downed high voltage
pole with six green glass multi-parts. Why the pole was there is a mystery to me
because there were no other power transmission facilities in the area. The
multi-parts were all CD 375 FIDENZAs. I would have liked to grab all six of
them, but having noticed the disgusted expression on my father's face and the
thought of lugging the things around, I grabbed one, took a picture and
continued on my way to a scheduled sightseeing excursion leaving the remaining
five pieces behind.
On the return train ride to Rome, I caught a glimpse of
several CD 522s in purple and spotted what appeared to be a CD 128 on the side
of railway building. Soon thereafter I spotted another CD 128 in light blue on
the side of a railway shed. Having no other option, I made note of the locations
leaving any retrieval of such pieces to a future trip.
As with any other
vacation, this trip to Sicily was too short and consequentially too little time
was spent on my favorite pastime, hunting for insulators. The future looks
bright, though. I recently received a call from a cousin who was so intrigued
with my search for insulators that he has already retrieved several more pieces
which are in transit to me at this time. Needless to say, I can't wait to see
them.
