Wednesday, 22 May 2013

Day 19 - Venice

So today we go to see what Venice is all about. Again, we drive to the ferry station and ferry it to the Venice islands. The place is really crowded today. Patricia issues instructions about where to meet after various excusions. The first one is a gondola ride which I had opted not to take - too expensive! And after seeing the bored faces of many passengers as we walked around, I was very glad I hadn't.

Alex and I took off again to explore. Margi had opted to stay at the hotel as she had been to Venice before. Venice is actually a number of islands linked by bridges. There are no cars and all goods are transported first to the boat stations by truck, then put onto boats to be delivered via the canals.

We first headed towards the Rialto, the famous covered bridge which was the first one built in Venice. This involves heading down a lot of often very narrow alleys. They were lined with shops, particularly around the Rialto area. Venice gets 60% of its income from tourism and it shows. Most of the shops were a variation on the same stuff - magnets, masks, knick knacks. Closer to the Rialto there are the more expensive shops, with designer goods. Down one of these alleys, we came across a shop with masks unlike all the others. I was intrigued enough to go inside and inspect them more closely. They turned out to have porcelain faces and leather ruffles which looked like a soft material. I bought a smaller one for 60Eu, down from the original 75eu. It has a certificate to say it is made in Italy etc. I just really liked it.

To sit down for a coffee in Venice will cost you about 16Eu! and that may not include a tip . We found a coffee bar where the locals were standing around and got coffee for 3Eu but it wasn't particularly nice. Public toilets also cost about 1.50EU

We were supposed to meet the group back at St Marks'Square at 11:30. Down the alleys we went, getting more and more lost, despite Someone maintaining their Northern Hemisphere magnet had kicked in - I make no such claims, I have no sense of direction. Patricia had said that there would be signs everywhere point to San Marco but not where we were! We did get to see the other side of .Venice - no shops, the garbage barges, the workmen who carried cement and tools on boats. Finally after going round and round, and backtracking and lefting and righting, we emerged at St Mark's Sq with 5 minutes to spare.

Then there was an included trip to the Murano Glass factory which is just behind the square. This involved walking up a lot of stairs in a spiral - quite dizzying. We watched a glass blowing demonstration and then a talk about why how the glass is coloured. Then it was off to look at their wares. The only stuff I liked had commas in the prices! Actually that is a thing about prices in Euros - they don't write $1.50 they have E1,50 - a comma instead of the full stop. But these commas were after a few other digits! I have no need for any more glasses that I don't use and I wasn't about to spend 1,000Eu on a pretty ornament. The best part of the tour was that they had free toilets - even if we did have to walk up yet more stairs to get there.

By this time, my legs were about walked out. I was tired and my heel, which has been good most of the tour, had starting hurting again. I decided to skip the trip around the lagoon and head back to the hotel with Alex, who hadn;t been going on the optional tour.

We had the adventure of catching local transport for this. First a water bus, 7Eu, which took us right up the Grand Canal, and this time, under the Rialto bridge. 15 stops to Plaza de Roma where the bus station is. Again, we saw the other side of Venice.
At the bus station, the number 80 blue bus we had been told to catch didnt seem to exist. We found blue buses and asked a driver who told us his bus would take us to the Poppi but we had to go back to the ticket office for the tickets. This cost 3Eu. Until we saw the fields of poppies, we weren't really sure we were on the right bus lol. Then we saw the big supermarket - outlet shopping that is next to the hotel. We stopped into the market and got premade salads for lunch and then walked back to the hotel. The food in the shops is really cheap that we have seen in nearly all cities we have visited.

Later we did another run to the outlets but couldn't find anything we wanted to buy. I had been hoping for some pants or jeans to replace those I had lost but there was nothing in my fatarse size.

Tonight we had dinner at the hotel - a buffet with plenty of good food. There are at least 4 Cosmos groups here now.

Tomorrow we have a long drive to Vienna. The weather is looking a bit cool and I am again cursing the lack of those other jeans. I will just wear the ponte pants I bought for 'good'clothes. I have just finished repacking my bag. I now have an extra bag full of the knickknacks I have bought. I also bought 6 bottles of water for 12 cents each at the supermarket - we all have our little stashes on the bus lol because the autogrills can be expensive. Autogrills are like the 24 hour service stations with food that we have in Australia except there is a bigger variety of food and you have to follow the protocol. In Italy, you can self serve - select what you want although they dish it our for your (like the old cafeterias) and then pay. Or say, for a coffee, go and pay and then collect your coffee.

All in all, I could say that Venice was another disappointment but I had heard many other people say that they didn't think much of it so I suppose that is what I was expecting. Another place, like Greece, that I wouldn't go back to.



Hotel: Poppi

Wakeup: 6:00; Breakfast: 7:00 ; Depart: 8:00

Day 18 - San Marino - Venice

When I woke up, I opened the curtains and found our room overlooked a courtyard with a tower, that looked for all the world like a castle! Our room is small but cosy and the bathroom even smaller - I almost sit with my feet in the shower when I am on the toilet lol! For some reason, all the hotels have bidets which for us Aussies are just a waste of bathroom space. Breakfast was good and plentiful.

At 9am we could either explore San Marino on our own and walk with Patricia for a while. Alex and I wandered off and started climbing the hill. We found the square where the parliament building is and the tourism office where you can get your passport stamped for 5EU - most countries in the European Union don't stamp it and even when we had to show them going into and leaving Greece, there were no stamps. Most disappointing.

The views from San Marino are spectacular. It is high up on a mountain and We could see right across the countryside to the Aegean Sea. The original city is walled, with narrow streets and old stone buildings. San Marino, the republic, actually goes further down the mountain. There are far fewer cars than anywhere else, and not as many of the smelly, noisy scooters.

The city relies a lot on tourism but it is not as ín your face'as other places. There are none of the pedlars that riddle other places. There are lots of small shops and even gun shops. It was a shock to see handguns, rifles and even automatic rifles just in the windows, no bars. From all accounts, a lot of the shopping was very cheap.

After climbing up to the tower, we came back to do the passport stamping thing. But there was no one in the office so we hung around for half an hour waiting. It was freezing in the wind. Finally a woman turned up, glued a stamp into the passport then stamped over it with an official San Marino stamp. Then we went down the hill to sample hot chocolate from a place that Patricia raved over - 32 different flavours. I had chilli and oh my ! it was wonderful - thick, chocolately and with a nice chilli warmth.

Everyone wanted to spend more time in this lovely place - we could have sampled our way through all hot choc flavours! Alas, we had to leave to head off to Venice.

After a couple of hours'drive we arrived at our hotel, Poppi, which is about 30 mins from Venice. It is a nice hotel and our room is a good size. As it fronts onto a main road, there is a windout window, then a sliding window inside that which is double glazed, and totally blocks any noise. We were warned that in the night there are mosquitos and to close the windows.

We had an optional dinner tonight in Venice. We drove to the ferry station and then travelled by a ferry to the Venice islands. The water in the lagoon looked disgustingly dirty with a lot of weed. After disembarking, we had to walk to the restaurant but first Patricia took us to St Marks'Square. It was quite pretty and all litted up, as she would say :) We have a new vocabulary from Patricia. There were pedlars everywhere trying to sell us flying LED lights.

We walked through a number of narrow alleys to get to the restaurant. The waiters just flew around serving everyone. There was another tour group in the back of the room we were in and apparently the restaurant extended back into other rooms as well. I had the fish menu - prawn cocktail, pasta with seafood, fish and veges, and tira misu. All washed down with a light white wine.

Then it was back to the ferry and then the bus to the hotel. Tomorrow we explore Venice.



Hotel: Poppi

Wakeup: ; Breakfast: ; Depart: