La Scoperta del Giorno (Today’s Discovery): Inside a Nasone
Today
we’re launching a new (and not daily) RST feature: La Scoperta del Giorno (the discovery of the
day or, better put in English, Today’s Discovery). The Italian word “scoperta,”
and its English equivalent, “discovery,” are similarly constructed; each is
based on the verb “to cover” (coprire/to cover) and each is converted into
“uncover” or
“discover” with a prefix (the “s” in Italian, the “dis” in English).
The big event of September 20 was a huge pro-Palestine demonstration starting in Piazza dei Cinquecento in front of Stazione Termini, which we attended along with about 50,000 other people. But La Scoperta of that day took place about an hour after the “manifestazione” had left Termini to proceed through the city to the university. We were not part of the ongoing march, but headed home on foot, through Piazza Vittorio, where we took a break for a coffee at a sidewalk bar just outside the Piazza. There, sitting at a table, we could see dozens of those who had been at the demonstration—or were still part of the ongoing march—pouring out the gate of Piazza Vittorio and heading for a nearby nasone (one of thousands of “big nose” water fountains in Rome, most of them flowing constantly) to have a drink and fill up their water bottles.
The line was
long, because a second nearby nasone wasn’t working. Then a man reached inside
the top of the non-functioning fountain and, within no time, it was working!
How did he do it?
By inspecting other nasoni, we soon learned that some but not all of them have a handle inside that turns the water on and off.
The handles were likely installed in 2017 during a severe drought when more than 2,000 of the nasoni were “turned off.” Since the handle revelation, we have often tried, usually without success, to remove the cover to access the handle—or just to see if there was one. Here's a nasone without a handle:
Most of the covers appear to be fixed—that is, not easily removable by a passer-by. It looks like one needs a special round tool with a triangular interface to get the cover off.
Some nasoni have handles to turn the water on and off! That’s La Scoperta del Giorno for September 20, 2025.
Bill
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