Saturday, August 20, 2011

Italy/Greece : Day 7 - Assisi -> Florence

Hi did you miss me? I've been trying to get rid of this pesky cold. Yes, I'm still sick, but not as bad as I was. I've also managed to give the cold to Chris. Poor Chris... he starts school on Monday...

Anyway, back to the trip =oD

We had a 6:15 wake-up today, and it's back on the bus again for a 3 hours bus ride to... Florence!

On our way, Fabrizio got a call from our last hotel. Jim left his money belt at the hotel. The desk guy at the hotel volunteered to drive it to our hotel in Florence. How nice is that? Jim paid him for his trouble, of course.

Welcome to Florence!

We took a 1 hour walking tour of Florence. Our radios which have been wonderful up to now, failed us... or maybe it was the tour guide. Anyway, it was very hard to understand what she was saying...

This is a church. I looked up the name later, and it's called Santa Maria del Fiore. It's in the Duomo plaza.

Now here is a door from the building across from the church. Dante was baptized here and the door has special significance, but it's not the real door. We couldn't understand the guide, but she talked about the door for a long long time, so it must be important.

We walked to another plaza full of statues. This plaza was PACKED full of people! The statues were amazing, but most of them were plaster copies of ones in museums. Oh, that lady with her hand up... that's our guide.

Here's the Neptune fountain. The Italians call him the "Fat Man." Does he look fat to you? Maybe he's only fat by Italian standards. Remember the elevator incident? hahaha!


And here's David! We'll see the original tomorrow at the Gallery of Accademia. What struck me about all the statues in the plaza is that they are all bigger than life! The statue of David is 17' tall.

I won't bore you with all the statues, but here is one more... They just referred to this statue in the book I'm reading. I was very excited that I had seen the statue IRL!

The tour ended with a trip to a jewelry store and a leather factory. Everything was very expensive. We didn't buy anything... but again, those shopping ladies were in HEAVEN! We left the tour after that and wondered on our own. We've been in Italy for 6 days and haven't had spaghetti, so after looking around, Jim spotted an outdoor cafe in the Santa Croce Plaza. Notice that the plaza is empty behind us? Well, it's raining! We had hot spaghetti outside under the umbrellas in the rain. A perfect meal! YUM!


That church behind us in the picture is Santa Croce. We walked in after lunch and found that they house the tombs of some famous people: Michelangelo's, Dante's, Machiavelli's... Here's Galileo's...

After leaving Santa Croce, we walked to the Ponnte Vecchio. This is an old meat factory bridge that they've converted to a tourist haven! Jewelry shops GALORE!

Oh, and also gelato, hehehe...

On the other side of the bridge, I fell in love with some pictures by water color artist, Adelina Quadri. We bought one of her paintings and she gave us a little painting for free (for Cheryl). It's a perfect souvenir from a European vacation. I still need to get a frame for it. I'm waiting for a Michael's 40% off coupon.

Here's an interesting tradition. All around the Ponnte Vecchio, there are locks left by tourists. They've all got names and dates on them. If we'd known, we would have brought a lock to leave!

Poor Cheryl has a cold. We headed back to the hotel so she could take a nap before dinner... poor girl. She was so much looking forward to seeing Florence. We also got Jim's money belt. All the money and travelers checks were still in it!

We went to dinner at Fabrizio's favorite restaurant. It was good, but our spaghetti lunch was better. Poor sick Cheryl went back to the hotel and the rest of us walked back to the Piazzo Vecchio for a closer look of the statues:


In the piazzo we saw the signature green cross of a Farmacia. That's when we go the medicine that I told you about last week.

We got back to the hotel at 9:45pm... wake-up tomorrow at 6:20!

Tip of the Day: If you are going to leave our money belt at a hotel, do it in a town run by Franciscan monks.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Italy/Greece : Day 6 - Sorrento -> Assisi

Welcome to Pompei! Our day started at 6am, and our first stop of the day is Pompei. Fabrizio changed our itinerary so that we would be there first thing in the morning before it got hot and crowded.

We had a GREAT guide through the ruins! He told us stories and really had us imagine what life would be like in this city.

And it was a city, bigger than 100 football fields and buried under 60 meters of ash.

Actually 10% of Pompei is still buried... Who know what else they will find!

They have some buildings fully intact:


Now this was really interesting... they put all the pottery, statuary and other stuff they find in this gated area. It seems that the highlight for most people were the dead people. It was hard to get close to the fence.

Here is a great view of Mt. Vesuvius. The volcano is still active and people are living on the side of it... what are they thinking?!

By the time we were leaving Pompei, the tour buses from the cruise ships were just arriving... perfect timing again, Fabrizio!

Today is a travel day (5 hours on the bus), which is fine because as we drive back North we are driving into rain.

We did make a stop at the Cassino War Cemetery. I have to admit when we recited what we did this day, we always forget the War Cemetery. It wasn't memorable, even Fabrizio couldn't remember where it was, and the driver got lost.

It was only sprinkling lightly when we got to Assisi. It is a medieval town built on a hill. It is famous for the St. Francis Basilica.



We got a tour of the Basilica. We weren't prepared, so those of us in shorts had to buy a cover-up in the foyer for 50 cents. There must not have been photos allowed, because I don't have any photos of the inside. There are three churches in the Basilica, all built on top of each other. St. Francis is entombed in the bottom. We each left candles there.

Getting back to our tour guide, Marco. He was great! He was very enthusiastic and knowledgeable about St. Francis and the art there. It was a fun tour!

Our hotel was very nice. After Fabrizio kept warning us about the "moderate" accommodations, I expected the worse, but it was one of my favorite hotels.

After dinner, we took a walk in Assisi in the rain.

There are 14 churches in the one little town of Assisi:


It's a good thing all roads lead back to the Basilica, because we were lost! Yes, okay... we should have listed to Cheryl. Anyway, from the Basilica, it was easy to make it back to the hotel for a good night sleep.


Monday, August 15, 2011

Italy/Greece : Day 5 - Around Sorrento

We got to sleep in until 7am! You should have heard the cheer when Fabrizio made that announcement. hahaha!

We were so used to getting up at 6am that we were still up early. The kid's room is right below ours. Good Morning Chris and Cheryl...

This morning we are taking a shopping tour into Sorrento. Our first stop is an inlaid wood demo. Hmmm... interesting and pretty, I guess. A lot of people from the tour were buying platters, music boxes, picture frames, and chess sets, but we didn't buy anything.

The kids took off for downtown Sorrento soon after that. Jim and I waited for Fabrizio to take us into town. He was going to tell us where we can find a birthday card in Italian for my nephew. We've been looking everywhere! Well, everywhere we would find a birthday card here... markets, drugstores, and book stores, but no luck. Turns out that to get a birthday card in Italy, you need to go to a tobacconist at a store called a tobacchi. They sell tobacco products, newspapers, and greeting cards. So after getting the card, we shopped a little downtown.


The kids did their shopping in their own way...


We shopped all morning and had lunch on a local farm. They make all their own food and ingredients from what they grow.

Some of us got put to work making pizza...

TIME TO EAT!!!

YUM! Cheryl's favorite meal!

Those of us who still had energy climbed on a bus to the Amalfi coast and Positano. The drive was fairly short, the road was twisty, and the views were gorgeous!

The town of Positano was crowded. We walked to the beach and put our feet in the water. (NOTE: at the time we thought it was the Mediterranean Sea, but I just looked it up. It's the Tyrrhenian Sea) I wish we had our swimsuits. The water felt wonderful!


We did a little exploring... I LOVE those grapes hanging down over Cheryl's head!


Everyone was ready to go back to the hotel early, and most slept on the bus. It was a LONG day... and it's not over! We have another BIG meal tonight at the hotel. All this food is getting to me, so I decided to go for a run through the park adjacent to our hotel. It wasn't a big park so I went round and round and round. When I was done, I stopped on the terrace to cool off and what did I see?


Cheryl and Chris going for a swim! There were a LOOOOONG staircase running down the cliff side, so I went down to say "hi."


I left them to it and went back up ALL THOSE STAIRS!!!

Later when I saw the kids at dinner, they asked, "Hey, Mom! Did you know there was a elevator?" Huh? Now you tell me! hahaha!

What we learned today... If you visit a farm, wear pants and long sleeves or the bugs will eat you alive!