Last weekend was our final fieldtrip.
1) Napoli. I learned about Naples in my English class. At one time it was a destination city, but now it is run down and dirty. When we first arrived, we drove by the train station. The next block, there was a dead body covered in a white sheet. Hmm. Well, we went to a museum with artefacts from ancient times. Many statues. We saw Kouros and Doryphoros, 2 statues that show the development of controposto, or weight shift in the body. Also, a giant statue of Hercules. He must have been very strong! The ancient Romans were huge fans of Hercules, and we saw him in Paestum also. I recognized many statues of emperors from my Classics class. After the museum, we had free time for lunch. We all got pizzas, but they also served snake and turtle.
2) Pompeii. We went to see ancient Pompeii. Mount Vesuvius loomed in the background. Claudio showed us how dust normally flies away from the city, but on the fatal day that Vesuvius blew up, it was blowing towards the city. I was excited to see many things from my textbooks here. They were able to pour plaster into some of the holes in the rock and dust and found that those were organic remains. They had remains of bodies, human and dog, and some of them you could see toes or skull sticking out the ends. That was very sad. But the houses and buildings (theater, amphitheater, brothel, shops, bakery, temple, basilica, forum etc) were very cool to see. Also fascinating how much archaeologists can discover from little clues. They have not uncovered the entire city in hopes that technology will improve and they can learn more.
We stayed the night in Pompeii. The hotel fit all 70 or so of us. We had a community dinner in the hotel: penne with red sauce, veal, potatoes, bread, ice cream (they did not have any gelato in Southern Italy). Afterwards, we went for a walk down the main street of modern Pompeii. Even though I was stuffed, I needed to try the regional pastries- one looked like a shell. The outside was crunchy and buttery and the inside was very dense with little bits of fruit in it. The other looked like a cork. They poured liquid on top, and the whole thing was very wet. I asked why, and they told me it was baked with rum. Pretty good, very unusual.
3) Paestum. Mainly three Greek temples here. They looked like the Parthenon. We also went to a museum that showed us more grave goods and other artefacts found. 5 hour drive back.
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Airport Fiasco
Sunday morning, we woke up at 7am to have the hotel breakfast and go to the airport. We successfully took the metro to the airport and got to the gate for our 1030 flight (planning to get back to Orvieto around 4ish). Flight delayed. Around 130, they gave everyone food vouchers. We had already eaten lunch, but were happy to have a snack. At 230, they said we could get refunds. We waited until around 3. I was getting a little irritated, because the people at the gate said they have no idea what was going on and could not tell us anything. I started asking questions and learned: they do not have any information, they do not know when the plane is coming, do not know where the plane is coming from, they are waiting for information and will tell us when they get news, but do not know where the information is coming from. They tell us that we will have to go to the ticket office if we want to know anything else or want to know about changing flights/getting a refund. Fine. We go out of security to the ticket office. They say that we need to go back to the gate for information. So, we decide to stand in line for Customer Service. When we get to the front, they tell us that we can wait, transfer to the next day or get a refund. We file the complaint for a refund. Next, we go to another airline. As I step up to talk to the lady about tickets, a woman from our flight comes over in tears. Moira talks to her as I learn that a ticket will cost 300 euro. The girl is sobbing and saying free, they change and pointing towards our old airline, Veuling. Veuling does not cancel the flight, but moves the entire plane full of people to an Iberia flight at 740. This plane leaves around 815. We catch the last shuttle to Rome (11:36), but there are no trains back to Orvieto. We wander the streets looking for hostels that Moira's mom emailed to her. We try three, all full. So we start trying random hotels. I bargained with one guy who finally accepted 50 euro for the night. We get to the room at 130. We leave the room at 6 for our 630 flight. Neither of us can stay awake on the train, so we set an alarm. We got home at 8. What a relief to be back in Orvieto!
The rain in Spain!
So, last weekend we had no field trip on Friday. My room-mate Moira and I decided to go to Madrid.
Friday: We took the train to Rome. Then the Leonardo Express to the Rome airport. Then Veuling airlines to Madrid. Then the metro to downtown Madrid near our hotel. [Arrived around 530 pm] We stayed at the Victoria 4, near the Puerta del Sol. It was very swanky. The room had a stand-up shower, unlike our apartment. Very exciting. We decided to head out to hopefully find some Tapas. The man at the front desk (who was very helpful for boarding passes, museum tickets etc) told us about the Plaza Santa Ana, where there are many restaurants with Tapas. We thanked him and headed up the street following his directions. We did not get two store fronts down before we saw a Tapas bar. We had to try it. It was delicious! We ordered some Sangria, which came with an appetizer. SO delicious. Toast with some sort of seasoned potato spread and olive oil. We next some garlic shrimp.. which came also on toast with aioli sauce. We left this place to go to Santa Ana. We got there and it was a big square with many restaurants around it. We were not impressed by any of them, so we continued wandering around the neighborhood. It started to rain, so we went into the next place we found with Tapas and ordered their specialty: Patatas Bravas. Basically gourmet french fries: potato quarters deep friend and served with Bravas sauce- spicy, orange, not exactly sure. Delicious though. We continued on our journey and stopped in one more restaurant where we tried almond, brie and chicken croquettes. They were pretty good. Our favorite place was definitely the one next to the hotel. Later, we met with Moira's Spanish friend Fernando. He and his friend showed us around a bit and brought us to a club called MOMA. It was pretty empty. They explained that no one in Spain goes out before 2am. They could not remember the last time that they were out so early. We asked to head home, and Fernando and friend went on with their night.
Saturday.. complimentary breakfast in our hotel. The bread in Spain is the best! Coffee is not as good as Italian coffee. We went to the Prado Museum for our 930 reservation. They gave us a guide to the museum which included mini pictures of all the masterpieces. It was a treasure hunt to find these, especially since the images were in no particular order. Very fun. We saw Goya, El Greco, Velasquez. After the museum, we went to the Botanical Gardens next door. More rain. Very green and beautiful. Madrid is having a photography festival, so we saw two photo exhibits- one about landscapes and taking pictures at the same place at different times to show geological/seasons changes. The other I did not understand.. very bad pictures that were pointed mostly at the ground with some of a building etc. There was a greenhouse in the gardens that housed desert, subtropical and tropical plants (all separated). Very fun to see such different climates so close together. Next we went to the Plaza Mayor. As we walked, we were rained on the whole way- a good excuse to go into shops along the way. Plaza Mayor was beautiful. Luckily, the outside is covered, so we could walk around the edges and not be in the rain. We had lunch and ordered paella and 'escalopines,' which we thought were scallops but were actually slices of meat. Didn't see that coming! But it was still tasty. Still raining. We left out a different exit and found an awesome indoor market. It was incredibly, like what I see on the Food Network. I was looking for Bobby Flay haha. They had fruits, meats, breads, sweets, seafood and take-away restaurants with tables dispersed throughout. Since we just ate, I got some fruit squares, a dulce de lece truffle and some nut/chocolate clusters. All were fantastic! And it all came in an adorable box. Next, we tried to go to the Palazo Real. It was closed. But, we went into the Cathedral next door. Very different- seemed to be ancient architecture with modern frescoes and paintings. We headed over to the Plaza d'Espagna. It seemed to be more of a business park than a traditional plaza, but there was a massive fountain which was cool. We walked back on the Gran Via (big street with shops and theaters). Continued shopping in this area. [Katia this next part is for you] then we found a giant candy store with every type of delicious Spanish gummy imaginable. We laughed, thinking about this candy as the new type of Tapas. We took the metro back to our hotel. Took a power nap and headed out for dinner. Of course we went to our favorite Tapas place from the night before. This time, they gave us a different appetizer- more toast with salame and salmon on top, also green olives. We ordered a different type of garlic shrimp- that came out steaming and sizzling. Yum! We also ordered guacamole with anchovies. It was very spicy and lemony. Delish. We bonded with the waitor by telling him that everything was the best (looking up how to say it online). Then we met a random group of Sevillians. My favorite was Jesus, an English teacher, also my new pen pal. Went back to the hotel for some rest because we had an early start to the airport the next morning.
Great weekend, despite the rain!
Friday: We took the train to Rome. Then the Leonardo Express to the Rome airport. Then Veuling airlines to Madrid. Then the metro to downtown Madrid near our hotel. [Arrived around 530 pm] We stayed at the Victoria 4, near the Puerta del Sol. It was very swanky. The room had a stand-up shower, unlike our apartment. Very exciting. We decided to head out to hopefully find some Tapas. The man at the front desk (who was very helpful for boarding passes, museum tickets etc) told us about the Plaza Santa Ana, where there are many restaurants with Tapas. We thanked him and headed up the street following his directions. We did not get two store fronts down before we saw a Tapas bar. We had to try it. It was delicious! We ordered some Sangria, which came with an appetizer. SO delicious. Toast with some sort of seasoned potato spread and olive oil. We next some garlic shrimp.. which came also on toast with aioli sauce. We left this place to go to Santa Ana. We got there and it was a big square with many restaurants around it. We were not impressed by any of them, so we continued wandering around the neighborhood. It started to rain, so we went into the next place we found with Tapas and ordered their specialty: Patatas Bravas. Basically gourmet french fries: potato quarters deep friend and served with Bravas sauce- spicy, orange, not exactly sure. Delicious though. We continued on our journey and stopped in one more restaurant where we tried almond, brie and chicken croquettes. They were pretty good. Our favorite place was definitely the one next to the hotel. Later, we met with Moira's Spanish friend Fernando. He and his friend showed us around a bit and brought us to a club called MOMA. It was pretty empty. They explained that no one in Spain goes out before 2am. They could not remember the last time that they were out so early. We asked to head home, and Fernando and friend went on with their night.
Saturday.. complimentary breakfast in our hotel. The bread in Spain is the best! Coffee is not as good as Italian coffee. We went to the Prado Museum for our 930 reservation. They gave us a guide to the museum which included mini pictures of all the masterpieces. It was a treasure hunt to find these, especially since the images were in no particular order. Very fun. We saw Goya, El Greco, Velasquez. After the museum, we went to the Botanical Gardens next door. More rain. Very green and beautiful. Madrid is having a photography festival, so we saw two photo exhibits- one about landscapes and taking pictures at the same place at different times to show geological/seasons changes. The other I did not understand.. very bad pictures that were pointed mostly at the ground with some of a building etc. There was a greenhouse in the gardens that housed desert, subtropical and tropical plants (all separated). Very fun to see such different climates so close together. Next we went to the Plaza Mayor. As we walked, we were rained on the whole way- a good excuse to go into shops along the way. Plaza Mayor was beautiful. Luckily, the outside is covered, so we could walk around the edges and not be in the rain. We had lunch and ordered paella and 'escalopines,' which we thought were scallops but were actually slices of meat. Didn't see that coming! But it was still tasty. Still raining. We left out a different exit and found an awesome indoor market. It was incredibly, like what I see on the Food Network. I was looking for Bobby Flay haha. They had fruits, meats, breads, sweets, seafood and take-away restaurants with tables dispersed throughout. Since we just ate, I got some fruit squares, a dulce de lece truffle and some nut/chocolate clusters. All were fantastic! And it all came in an adorable box. Next, we tried to go to the Palazo Real. It was closed. But, we went into the Cathedral next door. Very different- seemed to be ancient architecture with modern frescoes and paintings. We headed over to the Plaza d'Espagna. It seemed to be more of a business park than a traditional plaza, but there was a massive fountain which was cool. We walked back on the Gran Via (big street with shops and theaters). Continued shopping in this area. [Katia this next part is for you] then we found a giant candy store with every type of delicious Spanish gummy imaginable. We laughed, thinking about this candy as the new type of Tapas. We took the metro back to our hotel. Took a power nap and headed out for dinner. Of course we went to our favorite Tapas place from the night before. This time, they gave us a different appetizer- more toast with salame and salmon on top, also green olives. We ordered a different type of garlic shrimp- that came out steaming and sizzling. Yum! We also ordered guacamole with anchovies. It was very spicy and lemony. Delish. We bonded with the waitor by telling him that everything was the best (looking up how to say it online). Then we met a random group of Sevillians. My favorite was Jesus, an English teacher, also my new pen pal. Went back to the hotel for some rest because we had an early start to the airport the next morning.
Great weekend, despite the rain!
Monday, June 7, 2010
Long time no blog
First, updates. We lost the internet connection in my apartment, so I can only get on the internet Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays. Or, at an internet cafe on my ipod. I am slightly sick. Probably from my long day on Saturday (more to come). This weekend is the long weekend. So far, it is just going to be myself and Moira. We want to either go to Palermo, Sicily or Madrid, Spain.. exciting! We will decide today. Tonight we're going to Italian yoga at 10. It is going to be a blast, because we won't understand what they're saying. I'm going to look up how to say left and right before I go haha. I am updating since last Wednesday, so it will be a long one.
I just went to the grocery store and finally got brave enough to order some cheese from behind the counter. I was a bit nervous, because I do not understand the kilogram weight scale. One of my friends told me how she ordered a half kilo of cheese, which is about one pound. But, the man behind the counter understood and just asked if he should cut where the knife was. I got gorgonzola and some sort of soft white cheese.. I tried it and it seems like it will melt well. Tonight I'll be making some grilled cheese all'Orvietana with it. Yum!
Last Wednesday.. we went to Tivoli. First, we went to Hadrian's Villa. He was an emperor in the first century AD. Apparently, he was gay and this was one villa that he escaped with his lover to. He worshipped his lover like a God and even had sanctuaries for him. The coolest part was probably the Maritime Theater. It was a little area with a moat around it. So beautiful! On the island, there were baths and everything they would need to spend a weekend on it. Everything was mostly in ruins, but my classics teacher was leading the tour so he told us all the stories. It was lots of fun! After, we went to downtown Tivoli. It was not the nicest place in the world. For lunch, I had mushroom pizza. It was SO delicious! Very buttery. It was the closes thing to street food that I have found, even though it was in a building. We also got gelato here (of course). Next was Villa d'Este. It is a gorgeous Renaissance-era mansion. But the main attraction here is the fountains. There is a huge garden with magnificent fountains and pools. Unfortunately, when it was time to go check out the fountains, it started POURING! I was soaking wet (which made for a very cold and miserable bus ride home). However, the fountains that I did get to see were very cool. And the sky was gorgeous!
Thursday... last weekend was the Corpus Domini festival. It honors a man that lost his faith, but found it again when he broke his communion wafer and the blood of Christ dripped onto the tablecloth. They have processions through the street and different celebrations all weekend, including medieval costumes etc. On this night, they had 'shopping under the stars' where the stores stay open until 1am. We were shopping around, when we got to a stage area. It seemed like something was about to start. It was a Michael Jackson dance tribute show. It was so much fun to watch. My favorite were the six year olds who danced to ABC... there were five of them wearing white suits and afro wigs. I forgot my camera. Our friends showed us a new gelato place by the Duomo- best place yet! I like capriccio which is hazelnut flavor with nutella stirred in.
Friday... fieldtrip to Tarquinia. Tarquinia is a city where they have Etruscan tombs. First, we went to a park where they have the actual tombs. You walk down into these creepy tunnels. They smell exactly like the drying room at ceramics. At the bottom, there is a window into the tomb, to keep the climate controlled. It was exciting to see the same tomb paintings that are in my textbook! They seemed much smaller than in the book. Next, we chose whether we wanted to go straight to the beach or to a museum then the beach. I chose the museum. Claudio showed us around and there were grave goods from the tombs we had just seen. Pottery, jewelry, statues, etc. Also many Etruscan sarcophagi (which means flesh eater), they are coffins with an statue of the person buried within reclining on top. We then went down to the beach and ate at 'Happy Days.' It looked better than 'Snoopy's Island.' They offered us ristorante or pizzeria. The ristorante did not have a menu, so we chose pizzeria. After my margherita pizza, I had a cafe freddo which was basically a coffee milkshake in an espresso cup. It was delicious! They had the most amazing beach chairs- they had screens that pull down over your face to shade it from the sun. We wanted to see midieval dancing when we got back, but could not find it. Darn.
Saturday... Florence! We took the train up to Firenze for the day. I went with a girl that I know from Blue Chip and her friend (the other 4 people were no-shows). We had a great day. First thing we did was look for a cafeteria (for coffee) I ordered an espresso and a ciambelle (donut). When the guy was handing me my pastry, he handed it to me under the glass, where I couldn't reach it. I still tried to grab it and was just scratching at the glass. He was looking at me like 'hello, stupid tourist, please take your donut' and when he realized what was going on, we both roared laughing haha. So funny. First, we went to the Duomo. The church part was not open yet, but we went to climb Brunelleschi's dome (436 steps). It was unbelievable, like the Sistine Chapel but painted on the dome at St Pietro. We climbed to the first level to see the interior painting. Then we climbed more steps to go on top of the dome for a panoramic view of the city. Gorgeous! The steps were crazy though.. some of them were small spiral staircases, some were almost vertical. I was ducking my head the whole time. We then shopped around. I'll show you what I got when I get back. We walked around to see the sights for the rest of the day. On the way back to the train station, we realized that we were cutting it close. We started running through the streets. The other girls were surprised at my saavy at crossing streets... said I was pulling James Bond maneuvers ha. One of the girls got tangled in her purse and heard someone say "she looks like she's going to puke," because she was so confused. I am uncontrollably laughing just thinking about it. No one in the computer lab seems to mind. Anyway, we made it on the train with a few minutes to spare, luckily we had already validated our tickets. Took a bus back to the top part of Orvieto.
When I got there (around 10:30), my roommates were all waiting for me. I had told them that I'd be back around 830ish, that was my best guess. We had talked about going out together to see the night life. I figured they would have left without me. No, they were waiting. They even called Alba to get the phone number of one of the girls I was with oops. So, I hurried up to get ready and we went for it. I had the best time trying out my Italian on people at the bar. One guy said "You teach me English, I teach you Italian." Perfect! It was fun, because everyone was on about the same level in the other person's language. I met the owner of the bar, who was very nice and said that I could work there. Good to know that if I happen miss my flight back, I have a job here.
Sunday.. since I had been awake from 630am to 230ish am the night before, I allowed myself to sleep in til 1130. Finally. We looked around for midieval archery, but never found it. We did find cheese making though. They were pretty much done making a fresh batch of ricotta cheese, the mideval way. Interesting.
Today.. finished up my analysis of my book for class.
Thanks for reading!
I just went to the grocery store and finally got brave enough to order some cheese from behind the counter. I was a bit nervous, because I do not understand the kilogram weight scale. One of my friends told me how she ordered a half kilo of cheese, which is about one pound. But, the man behind the counter understood and just asked if he should cut where the knife was. I got gorgonzola and some sort of soft white cheese.. I tried it and it seems like it will melt well. Tonight I'll be making some grilled cheese all'Orvietana with it. Yum!
Last Wednesday.. we went to Tivoli. First, we went to Hadrian's Villa. He was an emperor in the first century AD. Apparently, he was gay and this was one villa that he escaped with his lover to. He worshipped his lover like a God and even had sanctuaries for him. The coolest part was probably the Maritime Theater. It was a little area with a moat around it. So beautiful! On the island, there were baths and everything they would need to spend a weekend on it. Everything was mostly in ruins, but my classics teacher was leading the tour so he told us all the stories. It was lots of fun! After, we went to downtown Tivoli. It was not the nicest place in the world. For lunch, I had mushroom pizza. It was SO delicious! Very buttery. It was the closes thing to street food that I have found, even though it was in a building. We also got gelato here (of course). Next was Villa d'Este. It is a gorgeous Renaissance-era mansion. But the main attraction here is the fountains. There is a huge garden with magnificent fountains and pools. Unfortunately, when it was time to go check out the fountains, it started POURING! I was soaking wet (which made for a very cold and miserable bus ride home). However, the fountains that I did get to see were very cool. And the sky was gorgeous!
Thursday... last weekend was the Corpus Domini festival. It honors a man that lost his faith, but found it again when he broke his communion wafer and the blood of Christ dripped onto the tablecloth. They have processions through the street and different celebrations all weekend, including medieval costumes etc. On this night, they had 'shopping under the stars' where the stores stay open until 1am. We were shopping around, when we got to a stage area. It seemed like something was about to start. It was a Michael Jackson dance tribute show. It was so much fun to watch. My favorite were the six year olds who danced to ABC... there were five of them wearing white suits and afro wigs. I forgot my camera. Our friends showed us a new gelato place by the Duomo- best place yet! I like capriccio which is hazelnut flavor with nutella stirred in.
Friday... fieldtrip to Tarquinia. Tarquinia is a city where they have Etruscan tombs. First, we went to a park where they have the actual tombs. You walk down into these creepy tunnels. They smell exactly like the drying room at ceramics. At the bottom, there is a window into the tomb, to keep the climate controlled. It was exciting to see the same tomb paintings that are in my textbook! They seemed much smaller than in the book. Next, we chose whether we wanted to go straight to the beach or to a museum then the beach. I chose the museum. Claudio showed us around and there were grave goods from the tombs we had just seen. Pottery, jewelry, statues, etc. Also many Etruscan sarcophagi (which means flesh eater), they are coffins with an statue of the person buried within reclining on top. We then went down to the beach and ate at 'Happy Days.' It looked better than 'Snoopy's Island.' They offered us ristorante or pizzeria. The ristorante did not have a menu, so we chose pizzeria. After my margherita pizza, I had a cafe freddo which was basically a coffee milkshake in an espresso cup. It was delicious! They had the most amazing beach chairs- they had screens that pull down over your face to shade it from the sun. We wanted to see midieval dancing when we got back, but could not find it. Darn.
Saturday... Florence! We took the train up to Firenze for the day. I went with a girl that I know from Blue Chip and her friend (the other 4 people were no-shows). We had a great day. First thing we did was look for a cafeteria (for coffee) I ordered an espresso and a ciambelle (donut). When the guy was handing me my pastry, he handed it to me under the glass, where I couldn't reach it. I still tried to grab it and was just scratching at the glass. He was looking at me like 'hello, stupid tourist, please take your donut' and when he realized what was going on, we both roared laughing haha. So funny. First, we went to the Duomo. The church part was not open yet, but we went to climb Brunelleschi's dome (436 steps). It was unbelievable, like the Sistine Chapel but painted on the dome at St Pietro. We climbed to the first level to see the interior painting. Then we climbed more steps to go on top of the dome for a panoramic view of the city. Gorgeous! The steps were crazy though.. some of them were small spiral staircases, some were almost vertical. I was ducking my head the whole time. We then shopped around. I'll show you what I got when I get back. We walked around to see the sights for the rest of the day. On the way back to the train station, we realized that we were cutting it close. We started running through the streets. The other girls were surprised at my saavy at crossing streets... said I was pulling James Bond maneuvers ha. One of the girls got tangled in her purse and heard someone say "she looks like she's going to puke," because she was so confused. I am uncontrollably laughing just thinking about it. No one in the computer lab seems to mind. Anyway, we made it on the train with a few minutes to spare, luckily we had already validated our tickets. Took a bus back to the top part of Orvieto.
When I got there (around 10:30), my roommates were all waiting for me. I had told them that I'd be back around 830ish, that was my best guess. We had talked about going out together to see the night life. I figured they would have left without me. No, they were waiting. They even called Alba to get the phone number of one of the girls I was with oops. So, I hurried up to get ready and we went for it. I had the best time trying out my Italian on people at the bar. One guy said "You teach me English, I teach you Italian." Perfect! It was fun, because everyone was on about the same level in the other person's language. I met the owner of the bar, who was very nice and said that I could work there. Good to know that if I happen miss my flight back, I have a job here.
Sunday.. since I had been awake from 630am to 230ish am the night before, I allowed myself to sleep in til 1130. Finally. We looked around for midieval archery, but never found it. We did find cheese making though. They were pretty much done making a fresh batch of ricotta cheese, the mideval way. Interesting.
Today.. finished up my analysis of my book for class.
Thanks for reading!
Monday, May 31, 2010
The rest of Rome
So... we stayed at Hotel Giada and it had everything required... beds, a shower, multi-use soap that was at least 75% water, but most importantly free breakfast (croissants, bread, cereal, milk, nutella, jam, toast, orange juice, espresso etc).
First stop: the Colliseum. We took the metro. When we stepped out of the station, the Colliseum was standing right across the street! There were gladiators walking around as if they were completely normal. We saw one getting on his Vespa. I whipped out my camera and called out Ciao when he was backing out. He laughed at me and said that I owed him tre cento euro (300 euro) for the picture before driving off. Anyways, the Colliseum was awesome! We payed some street hustlers to take us on a tour instead of standing in line. It worked out very well! The guide told us all about the different areas etc.
Next, we took a cab (to ensure that we arrived before the market closed) to Campo de Fiori. It was a little square with different stands of fruits, vegetables, sauces etc. Lots of fun to look around. We walked through this square to the Piazza Navona. It is a gorgeous square with a fountain in the middle. There are shops and restaurants all around it. Street performers (like in SF) waited for tourists to come by and interact and artists set out their work' mostly paintings.
On the walk to the Trevi Fountain, we got a little lost. We walked past the Pantheon (going to see that on the next trip to Rome) and up to a mansion. We finally found it. It was beautiful. I did not know it would be so big, or attached to a building. At this point it was about 2, and clearly time for lunch. I had a margherita pizza with dough that kindof tasted like naan (great idea for a restaurant- Indian/ethnic pizzeria). We then travelled over to the Spanish steps, with the help of directions from our waiter. They were so crowded that we could barely see them.
Our final stop was the Borghese gardens. They were absolutely gorgeous! I could hardly believe that we were still in Rome. Everything was very green and there were trees everywhere. It was like a little wonderland. Roller-skaters did tricks around tiny cones laid out on the street (the whole thing is blocked off to cars). People rented surreys and mini-bikes for kids. We explored and found a fountain, lots of couples canoodling on big grassy hills, and a lake. The lake was gorgeous. A Grecian temple sat on the edge of it. People rented row boats to float around and bask in the sun (it was a decent size, but not big enough for intense rowing).
We walked back to the metro and went to the hotel. We walked around town that night and had a so-so dinner. But incredible gelato. I got half rasberry, half strawberry and it was absolutely divine. Yum!
First stop: the Colliseum. We took the metro. When we stepped out of the station, the Colliseum was standing right across the street! There were gladiators walking around as if they were completely normal. We saw one getting on his Vespa. I whipped out my camera and called out Ciao when he was backing out. He laughed at me and said that I owed him tre cento euro (300 euro) for the picture before driving off. Anyways, the Colliseum was awesome! We payed some street hustlers to take us on a tour instead of standing in line. It worked out very well! The guide told us all about the different areas etc.
Next, we took a cab (to ensure that we arrived before the market closed) to Campo de Fiori. It was a little square with different stands of fruits, vegetables, sauces etc. Lots of fun to look around. We walked through this square to the Piazza Navona. It is a gorgeous square with a fountain in the middle. There are shops and restaurants all around it. Street performers (like in SF) waited for tourists to come by and interact and artists set out their work' mostly paintings.
On the walk to the Trevi Fountain, we got a little lost. We walked past the Pantheon (going to see that on the next trip to Rome) and up to a mansion. We finally found it. It was beautiful. I did not know it would be so big, or attached to a building. At this point it was about 2, and clearly time for lunch. I had a margherita pizza with dough that kindof tasted like naan (great idea for a restaurant- Indian/ethnic pizzeria). We then travelled over to the Spanish steps, with the help of directions from our waiter. They were so crowded that we could barely see them.
Our final stop was the Borghese gardens. They were absolutely gorgeous! I could hardly believe that we were still in Rome. Everything was very green and there were trees everywhere. It was like a little wonderland. Roller-skaters did tricks around tiny cones laid out on the street (the whole thing is blocked off to cars). People rented surreys and mini-bikes for kids. We explored and found a fountain, lots of couples canoodling on big grassy hills, and a lake. The lake was gorgeous. A Grecian temple sat on the edge of it. People rented row boats to float around and bask in the sun (it was a decent size, but not big enough for intense rowing).
We walked back to the metro and went to the hotel. We walked around town that night and had a so-so dinner. But incredible gelato. I got half rasberry, half strawberry and it was absolutely divine. Yum!
Ti amo, Roma!
My weekend in Rome was absolutely spectacular. We went as a group on Friday. My group toured the Vatican museum. I did not see the Pope. Everything was very beautiful though. I enjoyed the different sculptures. The famous paintings were mostly frescoes. Raphaelàs Scuola di Atene and the Sistine chapel. The Sistine chapel is amazing! It is a giant room full of painting. Not just the ceilings, but the walls too. They have an announcement that asks everyone to be quiet and not take pictures. Guards walk around asking people to put away their cameras and saying SHHHhhhhhhhhh! We joked about if they have to audition for the job interview.. who can Shh the loudest. We went out the wrong door and got kicked out of the museum. Oops! But we had finished the tour anyway. We went to see Basilica St Pietro. It was also incredible. The ceilings were so tall and everything was immaculately decorated with lots of mosaics. There was a deceased pope or cardinal of some sort on display. I didn't look too long, but snapped a picture and read a sign, referring to the "remains." We also marched up to the top and walked around a dome with more mosaics. It was too high for me, and my heart skipped a beat every time I looked down, with only a hand rail and little fence. Yikes! When we went to look for lunch, it was cold and rainy. Vendors tried to sell us umbrellas. However, the slight rain did not faze us and we proceeded to get gelato anyways. I had Pinochio.. hazelnut and nutella with lots of little hazelnuts in it. They absolutely love hazelnut here.. nocciola everything! So delicious.
We met up with the group to get our stuff off the bus and begin our journey to the hotel all the way across town. Moira and I headed off to the metro. We first thought maybe it was an above-ground metro and tried to get on the bus. After this momentary mishap, we continued on. Turns out the tickets are the same. 1 euro gets you anywhere in Rome. We were nervous to go in, because everyone warned us several times to watch out in Rome.. pickpockets everywhere. But it was not like everyone had said. We felt safe. The metro dropped us off at the Termini (train station) and we walked a few blocks to the hotel. We stayed at Hotel Giada, no known relation to the food network star. Our friends, who had cabbed it over, were there waiting for us. We followed the reccomendation of the man at the front desk for dinner and I had Minestrone soup. Compared to the soup that I"m used to, this soup had less flavour but was very fresh.
That"s all for now. More Rome to come. I will try to upload some pictures before class in half an hour. Ciao!
We met up with the group to get our stuff off the bus and begin our journey to the hotel all the way across town. Moira and I headed off to the metro. We first thought maybe it was an above-ground metro and tried to get on the bus. After this momentary mishap, we continued on. Turns out the tickets are the same. 1 euro gets you anywhere in Rome. We were nervous to go in, because everyone warned us several times to watch out in Rome.. pickpockets everywhere. But it was not like everyone had said. We felt safe. The metro dropped us off at the Termini (train station) and we walked a few blocks to the hotel. We stayed at Hotel Giada, no known relation to the food network star. Our friends, who had cabbed it over, were there waiting for us. We followed the reccomendation of the man at the front desk for dinner and I had Minestrone soup. Compared to the soup that I"m used to, this soup had less flavour but was very fresh.
That"s all for now. More Rome to come. I will try to upload some pictures before class in half an hour. Ciao!
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Mercoledi 5-26
My classes seem like they are going to be great. I had my classics class first. We had a lecture about the Urnfields, the Villanovans and the Etruscans. My professor is Dr. Soren. I had him before, and he is very nice and funny (lots of jokes). He is also the director of the program. We are going to take some fieldtrips to local museums for this class. I did the introduction reading for this course, about Roman art. My second class is creative writing- travel narratives. We will read relevant books and write about our experiences. I started reading Traveleràs Tales Italy. It is very enjoyable. My professoràs name is DR. She is a nice little lady who is very passionate about Europe and culture. We are going to have readings of our journals in this class, which should be fun to hear other peopleàs stories.
Moira and I accidentally went on a hike on Lunedi. We were exploring different areas of Orvieto and found many public parks. We ventured down a spiral staircase and found a path that apperently goes all the way around Orvieto. Very beautiful!
Today we took another, more formal tour of Orvieto. First, I visited the Duomo. I had seen it before, but this time I actually got to go inside. The main part is ok, it is definately impressive with its size. But the Signorelli chapel is absolutely stunning. The entire room is covered in frescoes, mostly about the apocalypse. Our tour guide, Claudioàs mom, knew a lot about the paintings, architecture and mostly everything about the church.
Second, we toured the Orvieto Teatro Manicinelli. It is average size. The curtain has a painting of a battle that occured in Orvieto- they showed us the hi-tech way they roll it up to protect the painting. There is also a magnificent room upstairs where weddings and other events are held. It is beautiful. With this guide, we also climbed the town clock tower. We were there at 1230, when the bell rings 12 times, then 2 more to indicate 30 minutes. (The 2nd highest amount of rings it makes- only to 1245). I got some great pictures and the view was absolutely incredible!
Third, we toured the Orvieto underground. I was excited to see this, because Katia and I had seen a documentary on the History Channel about underground cities. It was fascinating. There were perfectly rectangular wells, pigeon holes (raised pigeons for high-class people, esp for times of need), creepy little passageways, equipment for making Olive Oil (I learned that evoo made in freddo is the best). The caves network throughout the entire city, but many are private now.
Overall, still having a wonderful time. I had some delicious chocolates today- hazelnuts, orange flavoring and cappucino (my fave of the three yumm!).
...Tomorrow I have classes. I need to study for a quiz and write a journal. Friday, we tour Rome. There are two groups- one tourgroups the Vatican museums and the other takes a walking tour. A few weeks later, we will switch tours. I might miss the walking tour, because Dr. Soren is taking his students on a special tour of ruins and archaelogy stuff, related to class. Not sure which tour I go on first. A few of us (Myself, Moira, Nallely and Julia- who was in my Italian class) are staying for the rest of the weekend. I will likely be leading the group, because of the research I did talking with Mimi. Thanks again! Hope everyone is having a wonderful day!
Moira and I accidentally went on a hike on Lunedi. We were exploring different areas of Orvieto and found many public parks. We ventured down a spiral staircase and found a path that apperently goes all the way around Orvieto. Very beautiful!
Today we took another, more formal tour of Orvieto. First, I visited the Duomo. I had seen it before, but this time I actually got to go inside. The main part is ok, it is definately impressive with its size. But the Signorelli chapel is absolutely stunning. The entire room is covered in frescoes, mostly about the apocalypse. Our tour guide, Claudioàs mom, knew a lot about the paintings, architecture and mostly everything about the church.
Second, we toured the Orvieto Teatro Manicinelli. It is average size. The curtain has a painting of a battle that occured in Orvieto- they showed us the hi-tech way they roll it up to protect the painting. There is also a magnificent room upstairs where weddings and other events are held. It is beautiful. With this guide, we also climbed the town clock tower. We were there at 1230, when the bell rings 12 times, then 2 more to indicate 30 minutes. (The 2nd highest amount of rings it makes- only to 1245). I got some great pictures and the view was absolutely incredible!
Third, we toured the Orvieto underground. I was excited to see this, because Katia and I had seen a documentary on the History Channel about underground cities. It was fascinating. There were perfectly rectangular wells, pigeon holes (raised pigeons for high-class people, esp for times of need), creepy little passageways, equipment for making Olive Oil (I learned that evoo made in freddo is the best). The caves network throughout the entire city, but many are private now.
Overall, still having a wonderful time. I had some delicious chocolates today- hazelnuts, orange flavoring and cappucino (my fave of the three yumm!).
...Tomorrow I have classes. I need to study for a quiz and write a journal. Friday, we tour Rome. There are two groups- one tourgroups the Vatican museums and the other takes a walking tour. A few weeks later, we will switch tours. I might miss the walking tour, because Dr. Soren is taking his students on a special tour of ruins and archaelogy stuff, related to class. Not sure which tour I go on first. A few of us (Myself, Moira, Nallely and Julia- who was in my Italian class) are staying for the rest of the weekend. I will likely be leading the group, because of the research I did talking with Mimi. Thanks again! Hope everyone is having a wonderful day!
Monday, May 24, 2010
"Puo prendere un photo?"
The title of this blog is how I ask to take pictures. Usually effective, and I hold up the camera. I had to post the pictures above, because below was very difficult. They have descriptions, but no indication of which post they're related to. Sorry! But please enjoy them. I do! :)
Pictures!
We double-dipped on a really delicious lunch for today. They have the best bread- little rolls almost ciabatta like, but very soft. I had chicken sausages with some vegetable that I think were radishes? Uncertain but I have a picture. Then Moira and I accidentally took a hike. We were walking around a neighborhood behind the Duomo (big gorgeous Cathedral) and found one of many Giardinio Communale- public parks that they put on the edge of the cliff because it has a beautiful view (Orvieto is built on the top of a mountain and held up by big rocks/walls). Then we found a spiral staircase and a little trail that goes around the base of the city. We had a guided tour by Claudio- an Italian guy who works with the program. For an idea of what he's like, he was described as "having killed someone in Torino just to see him die." Not really, but a scare tactic to make us behave. Then Nallely and I crisped some leftover pizza in the oven and made a salad for dinner. I had to take a siesta this evening. Here are some pictures:
This is a tart that our land-lady left for us. It is pretty common to have the cookie type crust with fruit on top and a lattice on top. Very good. This tasted like blackberry- maybe currant.

This is Adriana. She brought me to her house, around the corner from ours, to see her window garden.
This is a tart that our land-lady left for us. It is pretty common to have the cookie type crust with fruit on top and a lattice on top. Very good. This tasted like blackberry- maybe currant.
This is Adriana. She brought me to her house, around the corner from ours, to see her window garden.
Italia! Giorno Quattro
Hi everyone! I made it safely and it is SO beautiful here. I have mostly been walking around with my roomates checking out everything there is to see. Here is a brief summary>
Day 1 We settled into our appartment which is a walkup with two floors of rooms. I met one of the neighbors, Adriana, and she showed me her flower pots. I got to use my Italian yay. I had some cherry gelato, but it tasted like vanilla. I learned that I need to "gusto" before I decide which one to try. We had pizza for dinner at a restaurant in a cave. The wait staff was very moody and did not appreciate our attempts at Italian, but we sure had a great time trying.
Day 2 More exploration of Orvieto. I like to try menu options even if I don't know what they are. I ordered "Insalata tonno e pomodoro" Pomodoro means tomato and I found out tonno means tuna fish. It was good and served with bread. I had Umbrichelli all'Orvietanna for dinner- spice thich spaghetti type pasta yum! I bought lotion, but it is actually soap.
Day 3 There was a festival- Palombella. A dove descends a zipline in a little tube and lots of firecrackers go off. Then two men carry the dove to the priest who presents it. The dove represents the holy spirit. I found a delicious patiseria near our appartment. Tried for breakfast.. very delicious! Also went to the supermercato down the hill. We took a tram and got very lost but eventually found it. More gelato- best ever Hazelnut with nutella mixed in.
Day 4 Today we had a meeting to get our class schedules etc. I have Classics from 12 to 1 and English from 430 to 530. Very excited! Haven't started any of my novels. Oh well, there are more important things to do.
PS( excuse the punctuations, the computer is Italian and very difficult.
I can't figure out how to upload pictures???? Hopefully soon
Day 1 We settled into our appartment which is a walkup with two floors of rooms. I met one of the neighbors, Adriana, and she showed me her flower pots. I got to use my Italian yay. I had some cherry gelato, but it tasted like vanilla. I learned that I need to "gusto" before I decide which one to try. We had pizza for dinner at a restaurant in a cave. The wait staff was very moody and did not appreciate our attempts at Italian, but we sure had a great time trying.
Day 2 More exploration of Orvieto. I like to try menu options even if I don't know what they are. I ordered "Insalata tonno e pomodoro" Pomodoro means tomato and I found out tonno means tuna fish. It was good and served with bread. I had Umbrichelli all'Orvietanna for dinner- spice thich spaghetti type pasta yum! I bought lotion, but it is actually soap.
Day 3 There was a festival- Palombella. A dove descends a zipline in a little tube and lots of firecrackers go off. Then two men carry the dove to the priest who presents it. The dove represents the holy spirit. I found a delicious patiseria near our appartment. Tried for breakfast.. very delicious! Also went to the supermercato down the hill. We took a tram and got very lost but eventually found it. More gelato- best ever Hazelnut with nutella mixed in.
Day 4 Today we had a meeting to get our class schedules etc. I have Classics from 12 to 1 and English from 430 to 530. Very excited! Haven't started any of my novels. Oh well, there are more important things to do.
PS( excuse the punctuations, the computer is Italian and very difficult.
I can't figure out how to upload pictures???? Hopefully soon
Sunday, May 16, 2010
Italy Countdown: 3 days!!!
I am heading off to Italy this Thursday! I will be in Orvieto for 5 weeks taking classes (Rome and Roman Architecture, Intro to Creative Writing- travel narratives), then doing some sight-seeing around Venice. From Venice, I will fly to visit a friend in London. I am so excited!
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