A Handful of Photos from Corsica

It has been an eventful year, most notably, becoming a father! ❤️

This blog post, however, features photos from Corsica, from a summer vacation back in August 2017.

Current, Δt: 5 years, 4 months, 27 days, 16 hours, 7 minutes, 40 seconds
Corsica #01
Corsica #02
Corsica #03

We flew down to Ajaccio via Nice with Air Corsica. I still remember having to supply my full credit card details in an email to pay for a change of flights. Oh GDPR, where were you?! 😂

But apart from that, I had no other complaints… or wait a minute… After having boarded the plane, we could see the ground vehicle coming towards us with all the bags stacked. Mine, a large blue backpack, fell off the first car and then all the subsequent cars drove over it. Nice, pun intended.

Ajaccio! Beautiful city (except for all the damn cars in the inner city)! It is maybe best known as the birthplace of Napoleon (1769). Idk. We stayed in the hotel situated in the middle of the following image:

Corsica #04
Corsica #05
Corsica #06
Corsica #07

The island, which is the 4. largest in the Mediterranean sea, has a rugged coastline, and mountainous interior (thanks ChatGBT!). Awesome! And photogenic! It also features many intriguing towns with narrow, twisty roads to explore.

Corsica #08
Corsica #09
Corsica #10
Corsica #11
Corsica #12
Corsica #13
Corsica #14

Baguette 😏

Corsica #15
Corsica #16
Corsica #17

After staying in Ajaccio for a few days, we left for Porto-Vecchio, which in Norwegian sounds like a spell to make something disappear! Anyway, Bonifacio, the city furthest south, is a spectacular attraction that we had to visit. The same idea had approx. 1 million other tourists that very day. Clever thinking.

Corsica #18
Corsica #19
Corsica #20
Corsica #21

It sure looks like something straight out of Game of Thrones! 🤩

Corsica #22
Corsica #23
Corsica #25

In Bonifacio, the famous “Escalier du Roy”, or the “Staircase of the King”, is a series of steep, narrow steps that lead up to the citadel. The stairs were built in the 14th century and were originally used as a defensive structure.

These two tourists passed the “go no further” sign and thought, “heeeeeya, let’s continue”…

Corsica #26
Corsica #27
Corsica #28
Corsica #29
Corsica #30
Corsica #31

On our way back to Ajaccio to catch our plane, we did some further sightseeing of the island and even found a secret river full of locals that had escaped tourist hell for a cold swim. We also got another shot of “epic mountains” 🤤

Corsica #32
Corsica #33
Corsica #34
Corsica #35
Corsica #36
Corsica #37
Corsica #38
Corsica #39
Corsica #40
Corsica #41

Cheerio 2017, and hey there 2023! 🎆

Me, just now

Author: Håkon Treider

Enthusiastic photographer with a Master's degree in Computational Physics currently employed by Cognite as a Senior Data Scientist (https://www.cognite.com)

Leave a comment