On the buses

About to leave the flat and find a hop on – hop off bus to start the day. Probably head for Vatican first up before the crowds. Yesterday it was quite pleasant before lunch, the crowds really picked up in the afternoon though. I don’t fancy the ticket line after lunch.

Apparently shopping is also on the agenda today.

That’s it for now. It’s only 8am. I’ll update this entry this evening. 

Back again. The sightseeing bus is another thing worth doing early. We were first on the first bus. By the time it was halfway around the loop it was full. We hopped off at the Trevi Fountain for some essential shopping then struggled to get back on again an hour later. The lineups at some of the stops would have taken several empty buses to clear. Those people were in for a long wait.

  
The blog app is having a moment. If it would let me add a caption it would read “Marcus Aurelius column”, but it won’t so it could be anything you want. If you want to know more about the column I’ll have to refer you to Google, as this is a travel blog not a history lesson.

The shopping hasn’t lived up to expectations so far. The only things that have been purchased thus far are a t-shirt and a couple of postcards. I think our problem is that we don’t really want anything in particular and impulse buying is tempered by the prices. That will change. 
  
This caption should read “typical street down which a bus can easily pass – at speed”.

The Vatican has been postponed until tomorrow and begs some further research. The lineup at 9:30am looked like it was a kilometre long, no exaggeration. We spent some time at the Piazzo Venezia and looked through the Santa Maria in Aracoeli church on Capitaline Hill. Some famous people are buried here dating from prior to 1500s.

  
I don’t know what this is, we’ll call it “another church and another column, in Rome”. Turns out its Trajan’s column on which Marcus Aurelius’ column is modelled. Thank you Google. Still don’t know what the church is. Note the building on the left. It’s being renovated. The hoarding is painted hessian, so as not to detract from the normal streetscape.

We continue to be amused and bewildered by the traffic in Rome. It could be best described as chaotic. The bus trip was like having a ring-side seat to traffic bloopers. I understand why the council doesn’t bother fixing up all the bent and broken or defaced traffic signs – nobody follows them. It is amazing where a bus will fit. A lot of cars seem to have scrapes down the side, so obviously it doesn’t always work out well.

Bought some groceries this afternoon to trim back the food costs. Beer was 1.50Γé¼ for a 66 cL (660 mL) bottle at the supermarket, compared to 6Γé¼ for 40 cL at the sidewalk cafes. I don’t expect that you will see a lot of public drunkedness at 6Γé¼ a glass. And yes beer is a grocery item.

We’re going to give the bus another go about 7pm, to see what the place looks like in the evening.

Went back, did another lap on the bus, all are now nervous wrecks from the number of near misses. The only thing we stopped to look at was the Circus Maximus, scene of chariot racing and the Ben Hur movie. Milly didn’t know who Ben Hur was (nor I think cares). We walked around the track but no one wanted a race, which makes me the winner by default.

Carp Diem,

Steve J.

A step-by-step guide to Rome

Wow. It’s been a big day. We have seen about half the city and all on foot. Milly’s FitBit recorded 21,000 steps, Michelle’s recorded something like 24,000 (shorter legs). Our feet can confirm that there were a lot. We have promised ourselves that tomorrow will start with a bus tour of the city, with no walking involved until we do the Vatican.

The day started with the Coliseum (or Colosseum). The place is amazing. Apart from the size and ingenuity of it all, I wonder at the abilities of the Romans. We think that we are very clever in this day and age with all our technology, however I think the Romans had an edge on us. The whole thing was built without the aid of any computer-aided structural analysis and not a union organiser in sight. Still it was built and what’s more I bet the MCG won’t last nearly as long as this thing. A couple of hours very well spent. 

 

Colosseum with catacombs visible on right
  
Ancient monument in foreground (aka Michelle), Colosseum in background
 

We then wandered around the Roman Forum archeological site and the Palantino. The sheer size of the site was impressive, as was the fact that every second staircase ended in thin air, providing a hint as to the original extent of the buildings. They were impressive enough in their dilapidated state.

 

Roman Forum
 
By about midday we were tired and thirsty and retired to a cafe outside the Roman Forum. The water fountains dotted around are a great idea, as there aren’t any other form of refreshment within the site. Also no toilets. Fortunately it was hot and we drank nowhere near enough so the lack of toilets wasn’t a factor.

After lunch (composed entirely of gelato) we decided to wing it and just wandered up and down the myriad of interesting side streets. We managed to stumble across the Pantheon, Trevi Fountain, Italian Parliament, Piazza Navona and a whole lot of other things I’ve never heard of. 

After we had tired of this we found ourselves at the River (Fiume Tevere) and decided to turn around and head back. I wonder which way that is? After another hour of aimless wandering – bordering on hopelessly lost – we were reduced to buying a map as some of the instructions provided by the locals seemed dubious. Using the GPS on the phone would have been a good option if it had worked. Must look into that.

 

Trevi Fountain, unfortunately undergoing renovation but still impressive
  
Something else, somewhere in Rome
 

It appeared we had walked northwest in a straight line for about 5 kms. How is it that, if lost in a desert you wander in circles (a well known fact learnt from Hollywood movies) but if you try and wander in a circle you head off in a straight line?

All in all a fairly good day. Something got itself smeared on the lens of the camera about 1:30pm, so I’ll have to go back to some of those places and retake the photos (maybe). I didn’t notice the smear as, without reading glasses, the whole preview screen looks blurry, so one blur more or less wasn’t that obvious.

Enough for now, sleep beckons.

Steve J

Roman holiday

We are here. Last leg from Dubai to Rome (only 9 hours) seemed to take longer than the first leg from Brisbane to Dubai (14 hours), but we are here so all good.

Landed in Rome just after 1pm, then taxi to the city. Wasn’t sure we were going to survive that. I wasn’t bothered by the 110 km/hr all the way, as some of the road was even posted for 110. I could even live with the tailgating, swerving, lack of signalling and cutting in. I think I expected that. It was the answering the mobile phone and sending texts while speeding, tailgating and swerving that was just a bit too much. Especially as Milly and I were sitting up front.

Our digs are in an old apartment block only a stones throw from the Coliseum. Michelle got onto this place through AirB&B and our host, Aldo, has even provided groceries to make us comfortable. 

 

Milly checking out the locals
 
We had a wander around this afternoon to figure out the lie of the land. The touristy stuff starts in earnest tomorrow.

Rome looks much like Rome should. Beaut little cobblestone streets and lots of charm.

It all looks like this, narrow 80 km/h cobblestone streets

Everything looks like it needs maintenance. The Coliseum you expect to look like a bit of TLC is required, but everything else looks like it could be 2000 years old as well. I noted that every road sign is peeling, every guard railing is dented (hardly a surprise), grass growing through the bitumen.

We are off to the Coliseum tomorrow, Wednesday, then who knows what.

 

Steve and Michelle arrive in Rome
 
That’s enough for now. Off to bed.

Steve J.

Dubai leg

Fortunately we have made Dubai, arriving about 4:30 local time. Stepped out of the plane onto a bus and got hit by 34 ┬░C. Then a 15-minute bus ride to the terminal.

Fourteen hours is a bloody long time sitting in a very squeezy seat. Must be murder if you’re 20kgs heavier than I am. I’ll let you know on the way home.

We are all pretty sleep deprived (as attested by the air of terseness in the camp…) but looking forward to finishing off the first leg. We leave Dubai at 9:10 local time and get into Rome after lunch.

  
No pictures, it’s not worth taking any yet, it’s just an airport and a plane.

Steve J

On our way – D Day

Usual last minute rush and drama. Took cat to kennels (cattery really) first up in morning. Nearly had to take him home again as we were told he should have had his cat flu shots two weeks ago, not Friday. An extra charge for keeping him in quarantine. Better get used to forking over money for stuff.

Everything else okay, everyone up-sized their bags before we left, just to guarantee we take too much stuff. Caught shuttle bus to Brisbane at 1700 and had an easy run through customs, etc. Plane left on time at 2100 and we are presently cruising at 30-odd thousand feet at 900 kms/hr. Three hours down and not even to Darwin. Eleven to go.

That’s enough. Wanted to get a post in every day near the start. You know they’ll get sparser as I go. I’ve already missed a day as it’s just after midnight!

Cheers, Steve J.