Showing posts with label Venice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Venice. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Life across the sea

Amongst the trip to Italy that E. and I did was the differences we saw of life in the five places we visited.


Venice where the Calle, crowded with people flowing in an endless stream towards somewhere.  Their version of a human freeway as it lacked cars.  Hands holding cell phones, bits and pieces of Italian entered my ears.  When you merged into the narrow, twisting turning flow it all worked seamlessly.  Those who stopped caused traffic jams, where like an ant colony, the flow would effortlessly bypass and the flow would begin again.  Just as suddenly you would find yourself where the crowds have disappeared.  The quiet, the utter quiet, like being in a church.  There we might hear a radio from an open window behind lace curtains or nothing but silence.  We would pass a lone woman pulling her metal shopping cart to buy her food for the day.  Around a corner a coffee / bar / pasticcini with men and women taking their morning cappuccino or a quick shot of espresso with a tasty morning pastry.  As a day goes on it would be for lunch items and well into the night a place for wine.  The place to be to say a morning greeting and chat with the barista.  The many pastries from the panificio we drooled over, through glass windows,  sweets that tantalized us with powdered sugar thick as a layer of finely dusted snow.  Heaven in a brioche.  Venice an island of contrast.  We wondered how many of the Italians we saw were tourist like us or did they live on the island or just come in to work.  Venice that felt like a movie set or Disneyland at night without the fireworks.  The soft stroke of an oar from a gondola, sleek, dark, elegant, romantic.  I think a gondola at night would be the finest time to ride upon for the shadowy canals, quiet and empty of gawking tourist over the multiple bridges.


Vernazza with all the charm you would find in an Italian movie but it was for real.  Colors on the buildings changing to a different intensity as the sun or shade hit them.  A train would arrive in the morning unloading a new group of tourist.  They all would head down as the station was at the top and the sea at the bottom.  Tiny shops selling their tourist fare, cafes bustling all the day.  Gelato in a cone as the day warmed up would be in so many hands.  Licking the sweet tasty flavors that are hard to decide upon.  Early evening where the tiny take out shop had a line as it was selling calamari and shrimp in a brown paper cone.  The on the go appetizer.  Many bought bottles of wine to take to the breakwater with glasses that shops would loan them.  Everyone so relaxed, smiling, content.  Everyone which meant the locals and the tourist.  Time meant nothing.  To live in the moment, to enjoy and savor where you were.  to watch the sun set as the waters lapped calmly this time of year.  This idyllic seaside town.  People watching from above as I would look out our window on the street below.  I would see our landlord as he helped at the pizza cafe his brothers owned.  Setting up the tables early in the morning.  I passed him on the street a few times where we greeted each other in passing.  So kind and friendly.  E. thought she could live in a place such as this.  I wondered how I could.  I could visit here for awhile as were doing.  I would not want to live here as it was too perfect to want to lose that feeling if one stayed too long.  It is better to have the fondness of wanting to return that I would want to keep.  Being here you felt fully alive.  Up and down with your legs on steps, stairs, hills, the sky the sea.  I slept so well here.  I ate so well here.




Lucca where I finally felt lost which I did not in Venice.  I couldn't quite find where I was till I kept track of the street number on the main street that our Bed and Breakfast was off of.  So many shops that looked so similar.  Lots of people on bikes zooming by, lots of people filling the streets where a car was a rare sight but were allowed.  Who wanted to drive though?  Why?  A bike would be much quicker and can dart in and out of the mob of people with the ring of a bell.  So many times I wondered about the near misses of being run over or into a bike.  Charming old bikes with baskets.  Round and round the city the streets circumvented the old wall.  When we took the walk around the town on the wall I felt free of the narrow streets.  I could see out and above where I could not down below.  I can understand why this broad walkway is appreciated by the town locals and kept up so well.  The lovely branch spreading trees that shade so much of the circle.  The manicured wide lawns that are outside the walls below with more trees along the road that circles the wall that obscure the car traffic beyond.  Amazing that it was never bombed in WWII.  This walled town was full of locals going about there day to the Pharmacia, the bookstore, the clothing shops, the cafes, the markets.  Kids crowded one square where for their siesta they hung out.  Watching the tourist?  We looked at their styles compared to American kids.  Not much different though they didn't wear low rider pants.  Skinny jeans were it.  We saw two teen girls who appeared to be pregnant.   A few guys wore mohawks of sorts with their curly hair.  I thought how our school kids would like a longer lunch break as in a siesta time.  It seemed like they went to school in the morning and had a break for an hour and half or so and then went back to school for another hour.




Barga was as quiet as an empty church.   Our journey began on an early morning bus ride that was headed for this medieval walled village.  After we left the main road out of Lucca we started to climb via a narrow switch backing road.   Gorgeous wooded hills that we traversed through.  Out of the bus we wandered through the main entrance of Barga.  No one else passed us for quite some time except one car that surprised us when we walked on the one narrow road a car could go on.  Then the town revealed it's charm of narrow walkways up and down, views that showed off the distant mountains, the Tuscan stones on old buildings, gates, doors, archways, an ancient aqueduct that was above a lush green narrow ravine.  Everywhere we looked we were spellbound.  Yet where were the people?  I don't think many lived in the walled town.  We heard the sounds of people inside an open window and saw some at a couple of cafes.  Small shops in the town were mostly closed or empty.  We ate at a very pleasant cafe and admired the quaintness of this rarely visited place.  Sleepy town?  Certainly clean, positively quiet.  We walked to the newer area of Barga where there were town people going about their lives.  Working, eating, living.  Normal shops for hardware, flowers, food and cafes.  A lazy feel except for the buses that went by every once in awhile or the occasional car.



Lastly was Florence where I have been three times after this trip.  Florence felt like the warm welcome of tourist season had passed.  It needed a rain to clean it's soiled cobblestone streets, marble statues, fountains, and old buildings.  There were more gypsy beggars than I had ever seen on previous visits, who were as persistent as flies.  So much going on everywhere you looked.  Food, food and more food.  Gelato every third place you walked by.  People milling about looking up, waiting in a line, talking, taking pictures.  Horse carriages going by or waiting for the tourist who would hire them.  Artists with easels set up drawing Florence scenes.  The decadent flourish in the windows on the Ponte Vecchio, so many baubles of jewelry of silver and gold.  In the old town of Florence I felt very few locals lived here.  One day we waded through a sea of market carts, filled with scarves, leather jackets, belts, bags, trinkets.  It went on down the street forever the carts.  The lure to have you buy something from a wagon was high.  No lacking in finding any trinket to bring home, the last of Italy to fit into your luggage.  How to bring home the memories of a trip?  I was weary the last few days of our trip.  I looked at the familiar sights with mixed pleasure.  Of high was sharing the inside of the Palazzo Vecchio with E. which she had not seen.  We admired the fine  detailed  frescoes on the walls, of how they could be frivolously funny or wickedly sinister.  Like a dream state we walked and studied the walls, the ceilings of gilt, paintings, details so small you could not speed through unless you had no interest.  This has to be my favorite place in Florence.  What would life have been like?



To leave the city was a bus ride to the airport.  A wake-up to the dread of travel.  Packing up, cramming in all the clothes, camera equipment, the ill fitting shoes, the last of the carefully measured toiletries.  Walking with E. getting her last two gelatos, yes two.  Walking to where we would find the bus near the train station but having trouble finding it.  Rick Steve's directions lacking the right info or decent map.  Struggling to ask a couple on the street where it might be.  The lack of understanding and then a kind gentlemen telling us where to go.  Just barely making the bus!  Riding in a bus with no air, the windows that could open all closed, sweating.  Arriving and the check in, the last cappuccino for me as I stood at the bar.  Going home.  Going home.



On the plane I thought of the island of Burano we visited while in Venice.  The vibrant colors of the homes and businesses.  It was suppose to be known for its lace but how can lace compete with shocking pink, orange sherbert, pistachio green, lavender, coral, contrasting colors side by side that made you want to go home and buy paint to do just the same on your own home.  Happy, expressive, tranquil Burano.  Surely those who live here must be filled with joy.  One house we came upon, with all the windows wide open, someone played a piano.  We stood there and listened.  One moment for us as we listened and watched sashes on windows, curtains over front doors, laundry hung as though they were art.  One moment that made me as happy as I could be to share this with my dear E.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Venice has captured my heart.....

I'm home. Home, sweet home. Back with my Love and son...back with a cold as well.... I have been pouring over the photos I took and reliving the days and nights while in Italy. The trip was wonderful in every way, from the sights, to the food, the smells, to the sounds. The effect of traveling on the senses can best be described as intoxicating. That moment when E. and I walked from our bus to our first step onto our first bridge of many to come in Venice, it was impossible to not feel like you had just landed in a make-believe land. 

Monday, September 12, 2011

Water, water everywhere




Google Earth.....what a web site to visit.  So glad I did this morning.

I zoomed into Venice with my 3D setting on, swooped in close to see uploaded photos that travelers have posted (awesome photos!) and found that what I thought were little streets....well they are but lots of those little streets are small canals of water.

As I said before, E. and I will land at the Venice airport near 1:30 P.M. and I figure it will take maybe an hour to find our bus and get from the airport to the Piazza di Roma where the bus lets us off.  Our idea was to walk from there to our hotel which is just a block back from St. Mark's Basilica.  We figured we could use our map and cross some bridges but I also thought there would be a few main "roads" for walking on. 

Zoom....and I see lots of roads but lots of waterways too.  So many waterways that go this way and that, swirling around and under what looks like tiny bridges.  Like little veins that go who knows where or if one can even walk along the side of this building or not.  I now understand how one could get "lost" in Venice.



Oh E. and I think it will be fun to get lost...just not the day we arrive.  Or, at least I don't want to get lost with sleep deprivation.  Or God forbid, I need to use a loo.

{Did I tell you I am bringing a roll of toilet paper?  Yes, I find European toilet paper to be rather rough.  Very much like crepe paper.  Still will have to pay to use a toilet (1 euro = $1.36), but at least it will be my soft, cushiony toilet paper.}

E. and I talked yesterday about this subject of getting to our hotel.  She is quite confident that we will have no problem finding our way.   I am sighing in my head as she is young with good eyes to read the map if needed.  I think in my head that we are on an adventure and like all good adventures being cranky from sleep deprivation or needing to use a loo or being hungry never happens.  You live in the moment of what you are doing.  You laugh.  I may have to document our walk with my camera.  Facial expressions, large circle under the eyes (mine), and the view.....

I found this online about asking directions in Venice and thought it quite humorous....


If, by chance, you don't know "where you are going to get to where you want to go" you can also ask other passers-by, but first make sure that they, too, are not "foresti" (that is, people from other parts of the world): Venetians are used to giving tourists directions and are well aware of the problems facing those who get lost in this "serenissimo" labyrinth.

One more thing: the way some of the people react may be interpreted as bad manners but here are the explanations:
- if they stop to think before replying : they are only deciding which is not only the shortest but also the easiest way to explain;
- if they say "cross the bridge, turn right, then go straight on, then turn left, then ask again": it is not because they can't be bothered to go on, but the list of directions would be impossibly long and you wouldn't be able to remember it any way;
- if you ask a couple and when they reply they give you two different sets of directions that seem completely contradictory, they are not making fun of you, it just means that different streets take you to the same destination;
- if they "study" you before telling you how long it will take you to reach your destination, they are only trying to evaluate how quickly/slowly you walk: Venetians walk much faster than tourists!

Friday, September 9, 2011

Soon, so soon......

Countdown begins tomorrow.  10 days till departure.

I know that going on a trip may seem like no big deal but first of all I am going without my Love.  Not that I can't handle a plane trip over the big wide ocean for hours and hours packed in like a sardine.  Not that I can't handle carrying my bag / backpack.  Not that I can't handle money even if it is not American.  Not that I would forget or lose my Passport.  Not that I can't sleep without him at night in a strange room.   No, I think I will be just fine.

Of course I do have butterfly's fluttering away at times when I think about getting off the airplane at the Venice airport and E. and I having to find the bus that will take us to the main area that we can find our hotel.  After all I will be drunkenly sleepy at that point crossed with an adrenaline rush of WE ARE IN VENICE!   Just a little flutter....it will pass.   Then I will be bursting with the intoxication of seeing a place I have longed to see, smell, hear and taste ever since my Love talked about when he went there in 1971.   I wanted to go on our honeymoon but the heat and crowds of summer didn't appeal to either of us so we went to Florence which I fell in love with.

Once we step foot onto the streets, walkways of Venice E. and I will begin our adventure.  Yes, I bought a map, not that I can read it with the small print, but E. has perfect vision and I will follow her.  Lead on E., lead on....  How can I describe the joy of this trip!  How I only wish this could be a trip with all three of my daughters.  I could travel with each on their own and gather a different experience, a time that would open and deepen our relationships.  Someday...and someday R. will be with us too.  I know he would have loved to go but it just wasn't the time, not this trip.

E. and I on this journey to places not known till we go to our last stop, Florence,  before we fly home.  There we will go to the familiar sites, to climb to the top of the Duomo and I will feel faint and anxiety will riddle my soul as I look up at Heaven and Hell of the Last Judgement painted by Giorgio Vasari and Federico Zuccari.  On our honeymoon when my Love and I climbed the vast and what felt like endless stairs, when we came to the opening that looked out at the perimeter of the dome at the top, my stomach dropped.  I had never been so high up and on a walk area so narrow,  that hugged half way around the dome.  Those years when there was only a rail that kept visitors from plunging over.  Yes!  I shakily tried to take photos up and of down to the floor and through it all breath.  When we went back in 2001 I fretted all the way up with my family, fearing yet excited to see it all once again.  I worried about making sure someone was holding R.'s little hand as he was all of 5 years old.  Thankfully or not they had added a plexiglass screen that seemed to be about 7 ft tall.  No falling over....my stomach still felt weak and my heart raced.  I could hardly handle this but I did and shared this experience with joy to be with this family I love so much at a place that I felt such a mystery to be drawn to.  The age, the history, the views.  Oh the views...as we walked outside after a short steep climb up the last stairs between the walls of the dome.  Spread before us Florence.

No plexiglass in 1977
Looking down from the rail...me with my fear of heights!


Venice...yes, Venice.  Unknown except by other people's  photos and videos.  I can't imagine seeing this without my Love but I am beyond thrilled to be going even if we won't be together.  I know he understands.  I know he will be thinking of all we are seeing and doing.  He is with me, I will see for both of us.

One thing that I know to be true, you can't put off life.  You can't forever put off tomorrow and dreams.  If you do you will have only "I wish I had...." till you are blue in the face.  I don't have tile on the backside behind my cooktop...so what.  I don't have a new kitchen...so what.   I don't need it all.   I don't ask for it all.  I don't expect all.   Travel?   What does travel mean to the soul?  For me it makes me feel alive.  I know that this gift of this trip would not have happened except because of this last year.  A gift I will treasure for all the days of my life.

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