| Scouting for walk venues - 24th September 2006 |
The Environment Commission within the committee is always on the look-out
for new venues that promise to offer our members not only scenic beauty
but interesting anecdotes in history, archaeology or some other
educational aspect. It organises expeditions with people who have
subject-matter
knowledge or interest on the site to be briefed on the various
characteristics of the particular site with the sole aim of passing on
that knowledge and interest to its members when the walk is finally
decided upon.

The first of such discovery visits involved Gnien Ingrau in Mellieha, a
location that promises very interesting archaeological and historical
attributes besides the beautiful scenes. On Sunday 24th September Dr Louis Vella led the small group of seven
scouts to the site, where he explained that up to the last century it was
held that the goddess Calypso inhabited that site and not the (now infamous) Gozo cave. A
copy of the lithograph from Lacroix drawn-up more than three hundred years
ago indeed shows the hill overlooking Ghadira, described as the sacred
shrine of Calypso. In truth the site offers much more than the stark
simplicity of the Gozo cave, and the gradient of the hill from Ghadira to
the Mellieha heights (today built-up) is smooth and impressive. Rock
cuttings and multi-layered caves further intrigue the mind about the site.
Professor Frank Ventura kindly accepted the invitation
to explain the Ptolemy co-ordinates in an attempt to find out whether the
site could fit in with the location of an important prehistoric shrine,
which the first century astronomer and geographer cites as one of the five
important places in the Maltese Islands. According to the learned workings
of the Professor it could well be that the site indicated by Ptolemy was in
fact at Gnien Ingrau.
Satisfied with the significance of the venue it now remains to trace the
trail that takes it all in entertainingly.
Alex Vella