When I start a new post, I always have trouble thinking of a title. Funny that, considering I am generally thought to have an overactive imagination. Maybe I am just not imaginative (Hmm, is that a word? Having a non-English mother tongue, living in NL, and dating a Canadian is really doing wonders for my vocabulary).
I am yet again in my office trying to do anything but work. Used the old settling down and following up on missed email excuse yesterday, and can't come up with anything today. Perhaps this lethargy I am feeling is the onset of a flu? I wish...
I will feel this way for the next few days. I know. Because I always feel this way after yet another goodbye at yet another airport. That's the thing with LDRs. You spend days planning the next meeting. Days arranging it. Weeks waiting in anticipation. These weeks feel like months as you are neither here nor there. Then you spend glorious days together, while trying not to think about the impending departure date. The next thing you know you get home, feeling even more displaced as you are even more convinced that the home you used to call a home is no longer that. Then just as you get acclimatised so to speak, it is time again to arrange that next meeting. Here we go again.
The 2 weeks we had together were fabulous as usual. Ticked 2 things I had to do before I die off my list (TTDBID list). Well actually I cheat. I don't actually have a list. I am not one of those people that have a list ex ante. I have them ex post. Let me explain. You know how some people draw up an actual physical list, while others have them in mind. I am of the latter breed. And you know how some people have lists and stick to them, like when they go to a supermarket. Well, when I go to a supermarket I have a mental list of healthy food I have to buy but end up with an aubergine, carrots, pasta, Doritos, Dip, Frozen chocolate cake, Diet coke (technically healthy as no sugar), jelly babies and bratwurst. I then convince myself that these would have been on the list if I had thought of them. I am legally trained therefore am trained to convince others and especially myself anything.
While in Berne, recovering from daily post conference drinks, we decided to hop to Venice for a couple of days. Of course while at the train station booking tickets, we figured on the way back we would check out Florence. A bit out of the way, but yet so close..and who knows when we will ever be back in the area (well, actually, will be back in Italy in June for another conference, but D can be forgetful and I plead selective amnesia). Back home with our tickets (3 days Venice, 4 days Florence, back to Berne then off to Geneve airport for respective flights) we then proceeded to persuade lil bro and wifey to join us in Venice. As they were driving with lil kiddies, D and I had to amend plans to just get any old hotel when we got to Venice and had to go online and make real bookings. Lucky for us we did as it turned out that it was Easter weekend (ah so thats why those eggs were being sold everywhere) and we had to book a room each in 2 different hotels on Lido. Initially, I was not too thrilled about not being on the mainland, but I felt it was important that lil bro and I have some family time. And am I glad that we chose Lido. It is the last stop on line 1 of the Vaporetti, but only 10 minutes from San Marco. On the first day we were there, we were rather relieved to get away from the hustle and bustle of tourist congested Venice and back to the quaintness of Lido. I dread to imagine Venice in the Summer.
It is difficult to describe Venice as it just has to be experienced. I loved the fact that we could walk everywhere. We could hop on the vaporetti and just choose a stop to explore. To experience the richness of culture (I would have added art and history if not for the fact that it would pale in comparison to Florence, our next stop). We packed in as much activity as we could on the first day, by visiting Piazza San Marco, the Basilica, and Palazzo Ducale. We walked everywhere, crossing not only the Rialto and Academia bridges, but oh so many smaller unknown yet crucial bridges. We visited the Guggenheim and Ca'Doro. We walked, we talked, and we ate. I vetoed D's suggestion to hop on a gondola as 1) the Canal seemed to be continously in a state of gridlock, 2) I did not see hear a single singing gondalier and 3) if I am going to pay €90 for a ride, I want to have the Canal to myself and I want Marco or Luigi to sing his heart out.
Taking a break from the mainland, the next day we took yet another vaporetti to Murano where we had luch and just admired the fabulous (also expensive) glassworks. Then it was back to the mainland to have dinner. Our final day was spent walking around the Jewish Ghetto and having lunch at a Tratorria, sitting by a small canal just absorbing Venice before we headed out to Florence.
We arrived in Florence and it took a bit of getting used to, what with there being no canals. We had booked a hotel through the internet the night before and was pleasantly surprised that it was a stone's throw away from the Duomo. As usual we dumped our luggage and headed straight out to explore Firenze.
Upon chucking our luggage, D and I headed to the Duomo to climb the tower. We would have tried for the dome if not for the extremely long line. The view of Florence and the surrounding Tuscan hills from the tower made the train journey and the climb oh so very worthwhile. After the much easier descent, we headed to the Piazza de la Signora to have dinner. I know, this is rather touristy, but where else can you have dinner in the presence of Ammannati's Mannerist Fountain of Neptune and Cellini's Perseus, holding Medusa's severed head. And not to forget the replica of David. The mind boggles to think that more than 800 years ago, there would have been others in the same spot admiring those same works of art. After dinner, we walked towards the Cattedrale di Santa Maria del Fiore (Duomo) to sit on the steps to admire Ghiberti's gates to paradise which took 50 years to complete (admittedly a copy in place now after the great flood). We walked to the hotel feeling lucky to be in the presence of such history and art, together.
The next day, we signed up for a walking tour. If time is of the essence these sort of tours are fabulous. We were herded back to the Duomo to admire Brunelleschi's dome and to learn the history behind the pink, white and green marble facade of the Duomo. And of course the Rennaisance-esque renovations. We also learned that Brunelleschi lost out to Ghiberti in the competition to create the gates to paradise, and he retreated to Rome where he came up with the idea to build the dome. Funny how fate works..
After the Duomo, we walked around the city, stopping where various other marvelous works of art (or where the originals would have been) were placed. Sometimes casually on a building facade. Sometimes the buildings themselves. The final stop before lunch was the Ponte Vecchio, the oldest surviving bridge which leads us across the Arno River. The bridge is lined with Jewelry stores (ages ago there were butchers but the Medici's changed all that). D was sweating, and I don't think it was because of the walk.
Yet another Penne Arrabiata (my absolute fave) lunch, and it was time to head to Galleria dell'Accademia to pay homage to Michelangelo's David, the original. Now this was never really on my list of TTDBID, but is so on there now. We spent ages just basking in his beauty. Of course we also took some time to look at his 4 slaves, the unfinished works.
Beer and Pizza at the Piazza de la Signora for dinner.
The next day we explored the Pitti Palace the Boboli Gardens. It had been a rather hectic week so we just walked aimlessly the rest of the day, trying to spot the flood markings on the buildings around Florence. D and I had differing views on what to do the rest of the visit. He insisted we go to Sienna and I wanted to go to Pisa. We compromised and did both. We took a day tour to Sienna and San Giminagno, the former being the venue of the famous horse race within the piazza. On our final full day, we took an early train to Pisa, headed straight for the Duomo and the tower and signed up for the walk to the top of the tower. To stand at the base of the tower had been on my TTDBID list, but I have added the climbing up to the top bit (I know I cheat by simulateously adding and tickeing off but in my world, I rule!) We rushed back in time to catch a highlights tour of the Uffizi gallery where a tour guide not only explained in detail the works of da Vinci, Botticelli, Michaelangelo, Raffaello, and Canaletto but also pointed out the other more important works (crucial if you only have a few hours). New add and check: To stand in front off and behold the Primavera and the Birth of Venus.
There is an illness attributed to the beauty of Florence. Stendhal's Disease is an illness diagnosed in about 12 visitors to Florence each year, and resulting from the culture shock and bedazzlement when one visits Florence. Although I can't say I succumbed to this specific disease, I am, and will forever be enamoured with Florence. A new item to add: Must visit Florence again.