Saturday, July 9, 2011

Verona & Venice, Italy (Day 44)


Verona
Verona: Juliet's house
Verona: Dante's house




Verona: Juliet's house

Verona: Romeo's house
Verona: Lyle Lovett poster
Arena Verona
Whew!  On Friday, our tour group moved out of our hotel and got on the road to Verona, Italy.  In Verona, we had a walking tour led by a local tour guide.  She was a fast talker and got a lot of good information in while we went, I liked her!
Venice: St. Mark's Basilica


Venice
Venice: St. Mark's Square
She showed us another statue of Dante Alighieri and told us that he is considered the father of Italian because he was the first to write in it (it was just a spoken language) instead of in writing Latin.  We also learned that the Lion is the symbol for Verona and saw that symbol on the house Dante lived in.  We saw some more Roman ruins and learned that they are commonly found 2-4 meters below the ground!  She told us that Verona is somewhat dependant on agriculture and that they produce wine and olive oil.
Venice

Venice
We also saw the homes of the Montagues and the Capulets.  I know.  I thought it was all made up, but she said Shakespeare’s play Romeo and Juliet pulled from other stories and that the families really did live in Verona.

From Verona we went to our hotel in ("new") Venice, the Hotel Poppi, changed, and got back onto the bus and rode it to the docks to take a boat to the restaurant where we would have dinner.  We had a fun four-course meal at a restaurant called Ristorante Antico Pignolo and then got to walk around and listen to some music in St. Mark's Square.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Pisa & Florence, Italy (Days 42 & 43)

The cathedral and Leaning Tower of Pisa
On Wednesday morning, our tour group left the hotel and drove for several hours to Pisa so we could see the Leaning Tower of Pisa.  What a beautiful building!  Truly, it was so beautifully bright and just so interesting looking, even without the leaning!  The tower is actually the bell tower for a big cathedral that stands next to it.  We only had an hour there and had to eat lunch, so we didn't get to go inside of anything.
Oh how many times this pose has been held!

From there, we continued our journey to our hotel in Signa, a town outside of Florence, Italy.  When we arrived at the hotel, Jennifer and Nancy went to their room for a nap and mom started taking notes about the day while I ventured out to find a grocery store to buy water since you can't drink from the tap here.  Whew!  What a hike!  And when I got to the store, I couldn't figure out which water bottles to buy!  Hah!  My plan had been to look for anything that DIDN'T say something that resembled "mineral water," and anything that didn't have a nutritional breakdown on the bottle; I figured that was a safe bet.  But go figure, that wasn't an option once I looked at every huge bottle they were selling!  After staring at the water for probably ten minutes and not knowing what I was going to do, I decided to watch people.  I saw two different people come in and fill their baskets with packages of one of the brands of water, so I crossed my fingers that it was normal and grabbed three bottles, bought them, and walked about seven blocks home carrying six liters of water!  Hah.

After checking out at the store, I started to remember how far I've come.  It's funny, just a little over a month ago, I was terrified any time I got up to the cashier at the grocery store, hoping they wouldn't say anything to me.  Any time I had to buy something, a ticket, groceries, dinner, I'd be so nervous or would have a phrase in the appropriate language all ready to go and then blank as soon as I needed it.  Seriously, I had some sort of deer-in-the-headlights complex.  I would repeat a phrase at LEAST 10 times to myself and as soon as it was time for me to use it, I'd just stand with my eyes big and mouth open and no words would come!  And now I'm walking around Italy and finding myself saying "oui" instead of "yes" or the correct language, "si," saying "pardon" to get by people and I've have accidentally said "merci" instead of "grazie" a few times.  It's a lot of fun though.  It's a nice little brain workout!  The most important thing to know is how to ask "do you speak English," because from there they'll either say yes and you'll talk or you can play a quick game of Charades.

Anyway, that night, we went to dinner at a place up the street from our hotel called Foffo's.  Mom and I had a little bit of pasta and then went back to the hotel.
Peruzzi Leather store

On Thursday morning, we took the bus into Florence (about a 1.5 hour ride).  When we got there, we had a tour of a leather store.  They showed us how they put gold on the leather (they had leather waste baskets!!), and then they used mom as a model for one of their leather jackets!  Hah!  After that, we had a walking tour of Florence.  I took lots of pictures, but without a tour book or a good map, I honestly can't really tell you what anything is, so sorry in advance!

There was a man (from Poland, mom had to ask him) playing the guitar while we were eating lunch and mom just absolutely loved it, so I got his CDs for her and I took a picture of mom, Nancy and Jennifer with him.

That night, we had dinner at the hotel.
Dante Alighieri statue

Basilica di Santa Maria del Fiore
marble workshop
Congregazione dei Buonomini di San Martino

Basilica di Santa Maria del Fiore
One of these statues isn't real!
River Arno
Tadeusz Machalski

River Arno
Ponte Vecchio

River Arno and Ponte Vecchio

Basilica di Santa Maria del Fiore
Lunch break!
Palazzo Vecchio
in Palazzo Vecchio

Rome, Italy II (Day 41)

Vatican museum
Vatican museum
On Tuesday morning, our tour bus left the hotel at 7:25 am for the Vatican.  Mom and I were planning to get our own tickets to go in to the Vatican museum and Sistine Chapel (no pictures allowed) since we’d already seen in St. Peter’s the day before, and because the price through the tour company seemed like a little bit ridiculous (50 as opposed to 15 Euros).  While we were on the bus though, our tour director announced that the museum wouldn’t be open for regular tickets when we arrived.  Ugh!  I asked him what time the museum opened for the public and he said 10 pm, so we ended up signing up to go with the group.  I thought that was kind of lame that they would take us somewhere like that where we were left with only the option to pay them more money or not see anything, but perhaps that’s how these things go?  (The tour is through a company called Cosmos.  My aunt and cousin had taken a tour with them several years ago and loved it.)

St. Peter's Basilica: Michelangelo sculpture
St. Peter's Basilica
Well, our tour director took us to our local tour guide who would take us through everything, and we got in line.  While we were in line, I was curious so I asked one of the staff people at the Vatican what time the museum would open to the general public.  They said 9 am.  I wasn’t surprised.  We are not fans of this tour director!  All he does is talk (WAY too much) in circles and try to sell us things.  He’s not organized, he gets everyone confused, isn’t thorough, and then is just plain shady.

St. Peter's Basilica: center structure all bronze!
Anyway, thankfully our tour director wasn’t with us for our Vatican tour!  We had a really fantastic tour guide who was passionate about the material; he studied art history in school.  He was so interesting!  He told us that it took nine years to paint the murals in the Sistine Chapel, but that in the 1980s restoration of the artwork began and it took 20 years to clean everything!  There were patches in spots across the chapel that showed how dirty it was before the restoration, it was almost black.

After that, our tour guide took us through St. Peter’s Basilica.  I was glad mom and I had gone the day before before so we were able to focus on what he was saying instead of gawking at our surroundings!  It was nice to learn a little bit about the art inside of it.

The Colosseum
The Colosseum
Once we finished lunch, we got back on the bus and went to the Colosseum.  Very cool!  We still had our guide thankfully, but I wish we would have had time to go up to other levels; we just stayed on the level that you enter onto.  From there we walked over to the Roman Forum and he took us on a quick tour of that as well.  It is crazy how many ancient ruins there are in Rome; it felt like they were all over the place!

The Colosseum: Jennifer, mom, aunt Nancy and me
Roman Forum
Roman Forum
Roman Forum
Between 1 and 2 pm, we finished up with our tours and were taken back to the bus.  Thankfully they let mom, aunt Nancy, Jennifer and me stay in town so we didn’t have to ride the bus back to the hotel and then the metro back to the tourist areas.  Jennifer wanted to see Circus Maximus, the old grounds where they would hold chariot races, so we walked over there for a little bit.  There wasn’t anything there that we could see, but there were some fences up around one end so maybe there was something covered by those.
Roman Forum
Then we walked by the Arch of Janus and made our way up to the Monument to Vittorio Emanuele II.  Woah!  I really love the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. and always think that it’s just MASSIVE when I see it, but this thing was many times the size of the Lincoln Memorial!  It was INCREDIBLE.  HUGE!  From there, we walked to the Pantheon, a building Nancy and Jennifer had been really excited about seeing (they’ve been to Italy before and had seen the other things we’d been to).  By that point our feet were pretty darn tired, so we didn’t stay very long.


The Pantheon

In front of the Pantheon

The Pantheon
Italian Minister of Finance

the media

Dinner
On our way back to the Colosseum to catch the metro, we stopped to get some pizza at a little restaurant.  We noticed a TON of photographers at the next business over, a theater.  After asking our waiter, we found out that some politicians were going to a show in the theater or something.  We had fun watching the group’s reaction each time a new politician came.  At one point, they all started to get really anxious and we could tell someone very important was about to arrive, so I got out my camera since I was sitting in a prime photo taking spot.  I shot a picture of the man who seemed to be the most important of all the people who had gone through (he got the biggest reaction and the crowd disappeared once he went inside), and then showed it to our waiter to ask who it was.  It turned out I took a picture of Giulio Tremonti, the Italian Minister of Economy and Finance, and he was looking right at me!  Geez, between Usher and Tremonti, I guess I could start a paparazzi/newspaper photographer portfolio now!  I've already seen him come onto the TV in two different segments since I started writing this.

On our way back to the hotel we stopped and got some gelato.  Yum!