Florence:
·
We might have been with more Americans on the
train to Florence than we’ve seen the whole trip. And then in Florence itself and in Venice,
it’s loaded. Felt like Boston waterfront
on a sunny day in August. I like
Americans just fine, but I hope we see fewer on the last leg of our trip – it
takes away from the exotic feeling.
·
We took a night walking tour with Irno, who was
in his 60’s and studied architecture. We
don’t think he did the city justice and was mediocre at answering questions
(language barrier and lack of interest
·
But the city is loaded with art all around,
which a tour could spend all week on and not come close to exhausting.
·
We met Claudia from Paris at breakfast. She’s about our age and born to Spanish
diplomats so lived all over the world (went to college and law school in Buenos
Aries) and speaks 5 languages. A rainy
day (which we’ve learned it’s hard to dodge umbrellas in narrow alleys) so we
rode the Hop On Hop Off with her and walked a little, with the highlight being
the museum for Il Duomo, the landmark Catholic dome, which had a ton of
sculptures. I have seen enough of the
Virgin Mary to last the rest of my life but was stunned by some of the
craftmanship, staring at a marble statue from 15 feet away (there was a velvet
rope in front) for minutes trying to decide whether the tapestry was textile or
marble. It is marble.
·
We roadtripped via train to Venice, which is
hard to comprehend from reading about it.
A set of islands who were at their peak of power in the 16th
century. Luckily we had watched Merchant
of Venice with Jeremy Irons and Al Pacino recently, which added to our tour by
Francesco, who included a walk through the world’s first Jewish ghetto. Geto was the area for metalworks where the
Jews took refuge from the Spanish inquisition but were walled in with the doors
locked at night. Germans were locked in
another section but only the Jews were deported to Auschwitz (268, with only 8
making it home.) One of the interesting
architectural features he pointed out was bricking in corners at an angle so a
thief couldn’t stand there.
·
Venice’s population is about the same as Krakow
and others we’ve been to but felt much bigger because the city’s historic area
consumes most of the space, instead of a small section in the middle.
·
We also took a day train to Siena, with Claudia,
who was our de facto guide. The churches
were mostly brick instead of stone like Venice and Florence have. The coolest part for me were the black and
white striped columns to note the town colors, which were based on the horses
they had. I’m guessing they were shaped
like curved Lego bricks on the inside but after 700 years they were in mint
condition, which is mind-numbing to me.
·
I’m learning a little more about the competition
for souls between Franciscans and Jesuits, etc.
Most of the churches had mausoleums or floor tiles they sold to raise
money. I think the most recent I saw was
1888. Some were roped off, while others
had thousands of tourists a day walking over them, slowly wearing away the
names but maybe if they already bought their way into heaven they don’t
care.
·
I would like to learn more about the Medici
family history (Irno covered it only briefly.)
Karen, Claudia, and I talked about how nothing built these days comes
close to the beauty or durability of the 16th century buildings but
not having slave labor makes it cost prohibitive.
·
Venice and Florence were both crowded enough
with tourists in November that we said we have zero interest in visiting in
August.
·
The market in Florence felt like Mexico, with
the stallkeepers mostly looking like they were Mediterranean immigrants, but they
had the prices posted.
·
Our 14-room hotel was across the street from the
train station. Alex, one of the clerks,
explained the hotel was trying to replace the warped 10-foot tall door/windows
but the building is antique and tied up in red tape. It came up because of the guy camped below
our window who I’m guessing is homeless and loud at 3:00 AM (he speaks
something other than Italian or English) and the tram stop. Luckily we’re both heavy sleepers and it
bothered me only one night.
·
But the morning we left we discovered there are
two train stations in town. Luckily, our
train was delayed 6 minutes, which left 4 to spare after a quick cab ride.
·
Although you don’t need a passport to enter France
from Italy, the border police got on the train at the first stop in
France. They didn’t ask for passports
from anyone within my view but they walked about 8 nonwhite passengers (who
didn’t seem to be travelling together) to a bench on the platform and it looks
like they were holding their cell phones.
I might have read it wrong but my speculation is they asked for ID for
those who looked like they might be illegal immigrants and were right.
·
We passed through maybe 20 tunnels enroute. The
ride had some real beautiful stretches but so many I found myself becoming blasé
about them.
·
Italy isn’t in the World Cup this year, so there
wasn’t the excitement about it I was hoping for. Maybe France will be different.
Nice:
·
Nice was almost as touristy as Venice but with a
feeling more about money and less about history. It’s 5th in population for France
but 2nd in cost of living.
·
The beachfront promenade is the highlight of the
city’s scenery, with a hillside park being second. A lot of Gucci-type shops that weren’t
tempting.
·
We took a tour with Janine (sp?) who moved here
from Kherson 5 years ago. Karen and I
gave her a B but she was sweet and tried hard.
The most interesting story was about the bank robbery in 1974 via the sewer
tunnels. They convicted the mastermind, Albert
Spaggiari, in absentia after he escaped to Argentina.
·
France played Denmark Saturday at 5:00 pm local
time. It was the first big event we saw,
with the bars mostly full and a celebration in a square with chanting and fireworks,
including one that caught the canvas awning of a restaurant on fire.
Misc:
·
After this trip, I have decided to make use of
cement in my next house. Not yet sure
how – sink, bench, statue?
·
Throughout Europe we’ve seen a lot of food
delivery on bike and scooter, usually with what seem to be immigrants.
·
Next big trip I won’t cheap out and instead just
pay Verizon the $100/month for overseas use but be careful with my use. The eSIM I bought doesn’t give me text
coverage, which cause headaches with verifying some credit card and some
account logins.
·
Throughout Europe it seems people dry more
clothes on the line than in dryers.
·
If I lived in France or Italy I bet I could win worst
dressed for 5 years in a row.
·
France has millions of people I also bet nobody in the country could believe
I studied French for 3 years. I now know
I’m no match for a language with such subtle pronunciations.
·
Karen and I have decided the restaurants that
are 100% gluten free have generally been our best meals on this trip.
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