Friday, July 4, 2008

Roma!

We're in Rome! Our train ride here was a smooth ride. We got a place to store our luggage (which has now reached "ridiculously heavy" status), got in our assigned seats, and enjoyed a swift air conditioned ride to Rome. The catch came when our taxi driver cheated us and charged WAY too much for our ride. But oh well, we got to our hotel! It's called Nizza (like Pizza with an N...see how I remember it?) The room is much bigger than our last and the bathroom has a real tub, but then things get a bit confusing. The AC is about as effective as an astmatic child in a balloon blowing contest, we compare the pillows to bags of rocks, and the shower head points to the middle of the bathroom and there's no shower curtain to stop it! It is hilarious! The TV is the best though. I'm going to make an instructional video on how to use it because it is insane. I'm going to be a millionaire my marketing shower curtains, air conditioniners, tv's, and dvd players over here. But the hotel really is great. They serve some wonderful coffee and croissants in the morning and the elevator arrives at our floor whenever I sit down to wait for it.

The first day, we developed a great system to avoid a heat stroke. We'd go visit places on our list (The Pantheon, the Trevi Fountain, gelato stands) and on the way between each of them, we'd stop in each church we passed. They are always beautiful, quiet, and cool. They even started saying mass in German for a tour group of teenagers so we stayed.

The sights here are unreal. I'll load pictures soon because anything I say just won't cut it. We visited ancient Rome yesterday. The Colosseum, Circus Maximus, and the Roman Forum were first of all incredibly old, and secondly filled with so much history. The whole city is like that. We were walking around the other day and passed a place that looked like some ruins, so we stopped to read the sign. In small writing on one of the places marked in those ruins it said, "This is where Caesar was killed". In any other city, a sight like that would stand out way more than a slight mention on an average map.

We've been having some great food too (duh). I went with veal with tomato sauce and a side of spinach with olive oil and lemon the other night. Talk about good. The veal was in little chunks still on the bone (is that a shank?). It was amazing and only about 9€.

We went to the Vatican today and that is by far my favorite thus far on the trip. The Sistine Chapel is a sight everyone should see. They didn't allow pictures, but there are some online I'm sure. Michaelangelo was quite the guy. St. Peter's basilica is ginormous and every nook and cranny is filled with something more amazing than the nook and/or cranny you just passed. We visited the tombs of the popes and (of course) climbed to the top of the dome. We cheated a little (per my request) and we took the elevator up to skip 200 of the 551 steps. I was able to get a rosary for my mom and get it blessed in St. Peter's (by a German priest I chased down and who originally thought I was trying to sell him the rosary), so that was exciting.

After that (and taking a few pictures of the Swiss Guard and their wonderful outfits), we began our treck home, which we are still on. We stopped in Piazzo Nuovo and listened to a 4 man band, then watched a hand puppeteer (guy who puts gloves on that look like costumes and makes his hands dance to look like people dancing...odd). After this, we'll head off to dinner to celebrate the 4th of July with the Italians!

I can't believe we're leaving on Monday! The trip has flown by!

(P.S. Thankfully, there have been no pigeon incidents since the bombardment. I appreciate your prayers. They are helping keep me out of ... it...)

P.P.S. I forgot to mention that we went to see Sex and the City the other night. It was great, but before the movie started, I got stuck in the horrible bathroom stall. After a momentary freak out and Rebecca's help on the outside, I made it out. The movie theaters here still have an intermission, so right in the middle of the movie it stopped for a few minutes. Some people thought it was the end so they left. They must have been very disappointed.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Luck?

The past couple days in Florence have been very memorable. First of all, if being pooped on by a pigeon is luck, I must be the luckiest person in the world. Yesterday on our day trip to Siena, two different pigeons got me, and two others ran into my head. This wasn't all at once either, it was over the span of 4 hours. It was hilarious.

Earlier that day at the train station, one of them flew right into the back of my head. The first time a pigeon bombe me, it got me on the inside of my left foot. Obviously, this was a sniper pigeon. I had even commented to Rebecca, "Wow, that bird had it out for someone. Good thing it missed me." We then climbed to the top of the bell tower (which was a maze of around 325 tiny steps), I look down, and realize that it did not miss me. We crack up, I clean up, and we make our way to the big church there. As soon as we leave the church, I am bombed again, this time on the head. We were cracking up at this point. Again, I go clean up and we move on. The final attack was by far the mildest and was a mere skimming of the head in the Siena train station. Quite impressive, right?

Well Siena was really cool. The town is divided into something like 17 sections, each with a mascot. My favorite was the turtle (shout out to Amanda) and Rebecca's favorite was the goose. The people in each section are expected to only marry someone in their section. Each July and August, there is a horse race around the town square. The race happens tomorrow, so we got to see it all set up. They lay sand down and put up wooden bleachers and people either sit in the bleachers or in the middle of the track. The race last for only 90 seconds but is apparently quite a big deal. A rider from each section of the town races on horses that are chosen at random. If someone does marry someone from a different section, they return to their home sections during the time of the race. Very old school. I think the race is pretty dangerous too since it's a bareback horse race with people right up next to the track, seperated only by a wimpy fence. We're gonna see who won when we get to Rome. My bet is on the turtle, because slow and steady wins the race. Haaa...

Today we saw David and he was a lot taller than I thought he would be. We weren't supposed to take pictures, so we started taking some by not aiming at all (so we wouldn't get caught). Those came out great (off center, of only random body parts), so then we hid in the crowd and aimed to get some good ones.

After David, we tried (again) to go to the science museum, but it closes at 1:00 on Tuesdays (cuz that makes sense) so we were denied. With much objection, we suffered through another serving of gelato. The food has been amazing so far. Your meal is out to you a lot quicker than in the US, and they've apoligized to us if it takes longer than 10 minutes or so. Niffer's should learn from this.

Last night, Reba and I went to the movies (an English speaking one, of course) and they were showing The Other Boleyn (sp?) Girl. That was a crazy story that neither of us knew very many details of before the movie. It was good to go to the movies and get a little taste of home. We've been borrowing movies from our hotel's collection, but after an hour or so, the DVD player sounds like it is going to take off into outer space, so that's not so cool.

Well tomorrow we head to our final stop, Rome! Our train leaves at 10:15 AM and I will be glad to take my last train for a while. The train always ends up getting us some way (no AC, no seats, no reservations, pigeon attacks, etc), so I'm interested to see what tomorrow brings! Ciao!