What
an amazing few days since I last was in contact… Italy, Austria, Slovenia,
Czech Republic… and great adventures along the way. Just arriving in Prague so I will have to write about this city later.
We
started on Monday in Rome. The city was already crowded with tourists and a
real change from some of the remote places we’ve been in the last two
weeks. I prefer the country to big
cities but it’s hard not to love Rome.
So full of beautiful architecture and sites. Of course, one of our first
challenges was to visit the Coliseum because no trip to Rome is complete
without a photo in front of there.
Then
we had to find some religion at the Vatican and St Peter’s Basilica….
And
re-enact the Audrey Hepburn scene where she throws a coin into the Trevi
Fountain because legend is that this
will ensure that you come back to Rome again one day.
Apparently more
than $5,000 of coins end up in the fountain every day !!!! A lot of people must want to return to Rome
in their lifetime.
Day
2 of the Europe leg we set off for Bologna because (a) there were a lot of
scavenger point there; (b) I’d never been there and (c) It is May Day in Italy
and a lot of tourist attractions and museums are closed for the holiday so
going to Florence seemed a waste of time as most the scavenges there would have
been shut. On the other hand Bolognas had a lot of stuff to do that was
outdoors and we gambled that we’d pick up more points there. We were right. As soon as we got into town we stored our luggage
at the train station (remember – for this leg – we are traveling with all of
our baggage which is a true pain in the butt) and rented bikes. The bikes gave
us an extra 100 points and made navigating the town quicker and easier.
It was nice to be outside, on a sunny day, speeding along And Bologna is
a pretty town with lots of archways and piazza (open plazas).
We
had to climb this VERY TALL tower in the center of town. All the way to the top. It was a tough, hard
climb - which left my legs burning - but the view at the top was awesome.
You could see the entire town and all the surrounding countryside.
We
also had to find this church with creepy marble-inlays on the floor of skulls
laughing at you. Odd, odd, odd.
The
hardest scavenge was to visit a church on the top of this hill right outside
town … but the walk there is steeply uphill (for a few MILES) on a beautiful
arched walkway. Having climbed the tower just an hour earlier, I was
dying by the time I reached the top.. sweating, cussing, hating that I am not
in better shape.
On the way down, there was a hole in the wall where you could
write down your spiritual wish and “post” it into the wall. Obviously I’m not religious at all but - under
the theory that you should always cover your bases – I faithfully posted my #1
wish.
That
afternoon, we hopped on another train and arrived in Venice by late
afternoon. We got extra points that
night if we stayed in a hotel for less than 100 Euros (quite a feat in Venice,
one of the most expensive cities in Europe).
We managed to find a hostel type place with a room for 90 Euros and – expecting the worst – went to discard
our luggage. As expected, the room was
modest with a hard mattress, no air conditioning and limited hot water... but
this was the view out of the window.
And it was onto a quiet canal without a lot
of boats or noise, a great find since we had to sleep with the windows wide
open to try and get some breeze. There
apparently is no awful lodging in Venice – it’s too beautiful a city. We had
dinner and then walked around … over bridges and along canals.. and got hopelessly
lost.
Day3
of Europe saw us up early in Venice – taking the first Traghetto (a non-fancy
kind of gondola) across the Grand Canal to a market.
We had to buy
bread and meats and cheese for a train picnic later that day as we moved on
from Venice. A quick feeding of the pigeons in San Marco square and it was time
to say goodbye to Venezia.
We
made a short lay-over stop in Austria to get some mandatory food scavenges and
headed on to Ljubljana, Slovenia. I’d
never been to Slovenia before and I presumed that it would be a somewhat plain
town with boring Soviet-block architecture and very little charm. Boy was I
wrong. Ljubljana is a lovely Austrian-type town in the mountains. It’s built along
a river with lots of pretty bridges crossing the river every short distance.
We
got 100 bonus points if one of us did a street performance and asked for
donations. Rainey paid the drummer of
a 2-person accordion/drum group to let him handle the drum for ½ hour while we
waited for our dinner. I went around with a hat. It was slim pickings. The accordion guy was
good. Rainey... not so much.
We
were able to have a leisurely dinner in Ljubljana – at a restaurant right next
to the river – and grabbed a few hours of sleep before heading out for Prague (our
check-in destination).
We have to
change trains 4 times to get to Prague from here and some of the connections
are right with only a few minutes spare between when we arrive at one platform
and have to leave on another one all the way across the station. We are going to be running like mad people with
our luggage. It’s going to be rough - and on only a few hours of sleep – YUCK
!!!
1 comment:
Wow what a great adventure, I'm glad to hear from you guys.
Every time I read your blogg I feel transperted to those amazing places you visited.
I'm glad you guys are coming back and hope you got the first place again. :-)
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