Italy

One of innumerable beautiful canal views in Venice

One of innumerable beautiful canal views in Venice

We were in Venice for a few days in early June and now back for three days in late July. What’s changed?

  1. The crowds are bigger; and
  2. It’s hotter than hell.

Of course, the first thing you have to add is that Venice is a seriously beautiful city. There’s a reason all these people are here. Every so often you’ll hear of some other city being called “the Venice of <somewhere>.” Not true. Never. This is a one-of-a-kind place.

But the crowds. Wow. Earlier in the morning and in the evening it’s not quite so bad; the biggest cruise ships either haven’t pulled in yet or have left. But in the middle of the day it feels as though you can’t move sometimes. And it doesn’t help that temperatures are breaking into the 90s.

Still, did I mention that it’s beautiful? Beauty enhanced by the fact that our hotel was a 12th century building, right on some smallish canal. And sort of coincidentally, when Dan & Laura & Charlie & Elizabeth went for a gondola ride (Mark and I are way too cool to do something that touristy), they went right below our window. See?

The Germains in a gondola right below our 12th (or 13th?) century hotel

The Germains in a gondola right below our 12th (or 13th?) century hotel

Otherwise there’s not a lot new to say about Venice. The rest of them all went to the Guggenheim Museum in Peggy Guggenheim’s old Grand Canal palace while I went to a park to read. They saw lots of modern art and got to read about how she slept with hundreds and hundreds of people. And buried her many dogs right there, too.

Charlie, Laura, Elizabeth, and Dan at the Guggenheim Museum right on the Grand Canal

Charlie, Laura, Elizabeth, and Dan at the Guggenheim Museum right on the Grand Canal

Food is a bit of a challenge in Venice, given that tourists outnumber the locals by 20-to-1, or something like that. One night we went back to a place where Mark & I had gone to in June and liked. It was pricey, but there’s nothing particularly cheap in Venice. This time? Not so good. When we asked about an item on the menu – €7.00 for a plate of olive oil, thinking it must be vegetables or something in olive oil – we were told no, that was the cost of their very special olive oil for dunking bread. Cheap places give it to you for free, but not here. A small bottle of water was €4.00; you can usually get a big bottle for €2.50. And when we’d been waiting for 45 minutes after we’d finished our appetizers and still didn’t have our main courses, they started to explain and justify instead of just apologize, ‘cuz pretty obviously they’d just forgotten about it. Lest we complain too much, though, they did comp us two bottles of wine. So we didn’t complain anymore.

OK, crowds, heat, bad restaurant experiences; that’s too negative. For all that, just walking around Venice for a couple of days is a fabulous experience. Heck, just getting from the train station to near your hotel via the “vaporetto” – the local bus-in-a-boat – on the Grand Canal is a great experience. And there’s great art, of course, too; enough Tintoretto to last a lifetime. It may be a while, though, before I feel the urge to come back and do it again.

Titian's Assumption, in Venice's Basilica di Santa Maria Glorioso die Frari, was on Laura's must-see list, and it was worth it. No less an aesthete than Oscar Wilde called it the most beautiful picture in Italy.

Titian’s Assumption, in Venice’s Basilica di Santa Maria Glorioso die Frari, was on Laura’s must-see list, and it was worth it. No less an aesthete than Oscar Wilde called it the most beautiful picture in Italy.

Me and my old college roommate Jeff. After making these travel plans with Dan & Laura, we discovered that Jeff and his wife Sue were going to be in Venice on a couple overlapping days - preparing to bike the Dolomites for a week, to make it completely coincidental. So Mark & I had a great dinner reunion with them our first night.

Me and my old college roommate Jeff. After making these travel plans with Dan & Laura, we discovered that Jeff and his wife Sue were going to be in Venice on a couple overlapping days – preparing to bike the Dolomites for a week, to make it completely coincidental. So Mark & I had a great dinner reunion with them our first night.

Speaking of old college roommates … they're still crazy after all these years

Speaking of old college roommates … they’re still crazy after all these years

Cool Charlie & Elizabeth

Cool Charlie & Elizabeth

Did I mention the crowds in Venice?

Did I mention the crowds in Venice?

Another beautiful canal view

Another beautiful canal view

The courtyard entrance to our 12th (or was it 13th?) century hotel

The courtyard entrance to our 12th (or was it 13th?) century hotel

On our last night we had drinks at the Westin, right on the entrance to the Grand Canal. Expensive, yes, but with these views totally worth it.

On our last night we had drinks at the Westin, right on the entrance to the Grand Canal. Expensive, yes, but with these views totally worth it.

Mark, Charlie, Elizabeth, and Dan posing along Meat Street

Mark, Charlie, Elizabeth, and Dan posing along Meat Street

Yeah, I’ve gotten a little behind writing here; I guess I was having too much fun with Dan & Laura, et al., to focus on this. We’ve already left Italy and I still have to write about Bologna, Venice, and Rome. Here’s a down payment on all that.

The basic plan for their two-week trip to Italy was to hit the three biggies: Rome, Florence, and Venice. Can’t go wrong there. But after planning for five days in both Florence and Rome, and three in Venice, there were still a couple days to throw in something else. Based on location and cuisine, Bologna won.

The train was everything we love about traveling in Europe: a quick 35-minutes on a high-speed train to travel the 65 miles. Barely enough time to get settled in before arriving in the capital of Emilia-Romagna and the home of what is, by some measures at least, the oldest university in the world. And then it was off to start sampling the food.

This is from the Basilica of San Domenico, founder of the Domenican order who lies buried here. One of the attractions of the church is this sculpture by a 19-year-old Michelango. When Mark saw it was just a candlestick he felt cheated.

This is from the Basilica of San Domenico, founder of the Domenican order who lies buried here. One of the attractions of the church is this sculpture by a 19-year-old Michelango. When Mark saw it was just a candlestick he felt cheated.

Emilia-Romagna is something of a breadbasket for Italy and Bologna has a reputation for having some of the best food in the country. I mean, if a city called Bologna doesn’t just scream out great food, what does, right?

Emilia-Romagna is the name of one of Italy’s 20 regions. Where did that name come from, you might wonder. Well. Near the start of the second century BC, Rome built a road from Rimini – the terminus of the Via Flamina, connecting it to Rome – almost straight northwest to Piacenza; the road was named for Marcus Aemilius Lepidus who was Rome’s consul in the year it was completed. Given the area’s vast agricultural capacity it soon became one of the most important areas in the growing empire. And along that road grew a bunch of cities including Bologna, Modena, Reggio Emilia, and Parma. After most of the Western Roman empire had collapsed, Rimini was attached to the Eastern Roman empire, centered at Constantinople. And since the eastern empire was known to the conquering Lombards as Romania, the region became Emilia-Romagna

And what of Bologna itself? Definitely worth a stop for a day or two. The main basilica stands out in memory in part because the facade was never finished. Strange. And the University, founded in 1088, didn’t leave much of an impression, though the presence of so many students certainly gives the city a youthful feel. Mark & I walked around the area where it apparently is and rather than anything resembling a campus it’s just some buildings scattered among other urban buildings. The Museum of Bologna made a big deal out of anything having to do with Bologna. The city’s symbols are the Two Towers, both of them leaning. Naturally we climbed the taller one for great views over Bologna, but the shorter one leans so much you’re not allowed to climb it anymore.

This is our appetizer for lunch along Meat Street

This is our appetizer for lunch along Meat Street

The highlight, though, was the food. Their specialty is mortadella, the precursor of our bologna with the big difference that mortadella incorporates at least 15 percent of small pork fat cubes. Yum. One street right near the main square was chock-full of restaurants and bars serving huge portions of sliced mortadella along with other meats and cheeses. I’m not sure what the real name of the street was, but for us at least it was simply referred to as Meat Street.

That was it, a short stay in Bologna. Food at the top of the list of interesting things. Now off to Venice.

Looking down at Garisenda Tower. The top leans about 10 feet out relative to the base.

Looking down at Garisenda Tower. The top leans about 10 feet out relative to the base.

Mark & Elizabeth atop Asinelli Tower, some 300 feet above the city

Mark & Elizabeth atop Asinelli Tower, some 300 feet above the city

You could put your head through the bars and lean out over the city as I prove here

You could put your head through the bars and lean out over the city as I prove here

Just me in a colorful shirt

Just me in a colorful shirt

Our travel mates for the next two weeks: Elizabeth, Laura, Dan, & Charlie, posing here in the Bargello

Our travel mates for the next two weeks: Elizabeth, Laura, Dan, & Charlie, posing here in the Bargello

We came through Florence last October and loved it: beautiful architecture, fantastic museums, even great running along the Arno. So when our friends Dan & Laura wanted to travel in Italy this year, there was no question that we’d come back. I mean, it’s Florence.

There’s not much new to say about the city; it didn’t change a lot in the last eight months. A big change for us, though, is that we were a lot more active with the Germains than we were on our own. We can be kind of lazy as we’re traveling around and don’t always get to all the tourist sites one should. And not that rarely we fail to make reservations in advance for key places like Da Vinci’s Last Supper in Milan. When traveling with friends, though, who need to cram more stuff in on a time-limited vacation, we step it up a notch.

A view of Florence from atop the campanile

A view of Florence from atop the campanile

And so it was in Florence. Some of it we saw last year – the Duomo, the Baptistry, the Uffizi – but the big highlight for us was the the Grand Museum of the Duomo, something Dan bought tickets for before he left the States. Wow – what a tragedy that we’d missed it last year. Chock full of great art, along with a full-scale replica of the medieval facade of the Duomo before it was renovated in the 16th century renaissance style. Very cool.

And then there was that David guy. Again, one of those things for which you need to get tickets in advance. So we had tickets in advance. Mark & I have seen him before; we were here in 1995 and we’d both been there years before we met. Still, it’s a danged impressive piece that I probably enjoyed even a little more this time having just read Irving Stone’s biographical novel of Michelangelo, The Agony and the Ecstasy.

David

David

There was one noticeable difference in Florence: while there are a lot of tourists in Florence in October, there are A LOT of tourists in July. Oh my God. The historic core of the city is a pretty small area and there were just thousands and thousands of tourists everywhere. Next time we come here, we’ll do it off season.

We’re traveling with the Germains for two weeks; from Florence we go to Bologna, Venice, and Rome. So without a lot new to say about the city, here are a bunch of pictures.

Charlie and Laura, pretending they like each other

Charlie and Laura, pretending they like each other

The Ponte Vecchio over the Arno River in evening light

The Ponte Vecchio over the Arno River in evening light

The Bargello, the oldest public building in Florence and at one time a prison, houses a wonderful collection of statues and is probably my favorite spot in Florence. This Bacchus was done by a young Michelangelo and was in fact rejected by the Cardinal who commissioned it. After all, Greek gods are supposed to be GODS, not dissipated, louche drunks.

The Bargello, the oldest public building in Florence and at one time a prison, houses a wonderful collection of statues and is probably my favorite spot in Florence. This Bacchus was done by a young Michelangelo and was in fact rejected by the Cardinal who commissioned it. After all, Greek gods are supposed to be GODS, not dissipated, louche drunks.

Here's Verrocchio's David, also in the Bargello. Not quite as masculine as Michelangelo's.

Here’s Verrocchio’s David, also in the Bargello. Not quite as masculine as Michelangelo’s.

Laura in front of Botticelli's Birth of Venus in the Uffizi

Laura in front of Botticelli’s Birth of Venus in the Uffizi

Meanwhile, over in the Grand Museum of the Duomo was this grand Mary Magdalene - living as a saintly hermit after the crucifixion - by Donatello. It looked so modern it was hard to believe it was well over 500 years old.

Meanwhile, over in the Grand Museum of the Duomo was this grand Mary Magdalene – living as a saintly hermit after the crucifixion – by Donatello. It looked so modern it was hard to believe it was well over 500 years old.

So good she needed a close-up

So good she needed a close-up

This colorful painting, also in the Grand Museum, was by Domenico Ghirlandaio, Michelangelo's first art teacher

This colorful painting, also in the Grand Museum, was by Domenico Ghirlandaio, Michelangelo’s first art teacher

Laura & Mark in front of the original doors to the Baptistry of St. John, now kept in the Grand Museum. Created by Lorenzo Ghiberti in the early 15th century, Michelangelo called them the Gates of Paradise.

Laura & Mark in front of the original doors to the Baptistry of St. John, now kept in the Grand Museum. Created by Lorenzo Ghiberti in the early 15th century, Michelangelo called them the Gates of Paradise.

The Baptistry, dating from the early 12th century, is the oldest part of the cathedral complex. This is the ceiling, clearly Byzantine, with no signs yet of the Renaissance to come.

The Baptistry, dating from the early 12th century, is the oldest part of the cathedral complex. This is the ceiling, clearly Byzantine, with no signs yet of the Renaissance to come.

With both the Duomo and the bell tower, there was a lot of climbing to be done. Here are Dan and Elizabeth  far above the city.

With both the Duomo and the bell tower, there was a lot of climbing to be done. Here are Dan and Elizabeth far above the city.

And me and Mark

And me and Mark

Looking down on the Duomo from the bell tower

Looking down on the Duomo from the bell tower

A view of the cathedral while climbing up the bell tower

A view of the cathedral while climbing up the bell tower

And finally, shortly before getting to Florence we discovered that our old friend Karen - from way back in our DC days - was going to be in Florence on her honeymoon the same time we would be there. So we took MA & Karen to dinner to celebrate. Thanks Facebook!

And finally, shortly before getting to Florence we discovered that our old friend Karen – from way back in our DC days – was going to be in Florence on her honeymoon the same time we would be there. So we took MA & Karen to dinner to celebrate. Thanks Facebook!