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Italy Trip (All Over)
Posted on 9/3/17 at 9:47 pm
Posted on 9/3/17 at 9:47 pm
(no message)
This post was edited on 11/12/17 at 12:23 pm
Posted on 9/3/17 at 11:49 pm to Drew Orleans
I have been to all of these places. If you have any specific questions I will try to answer them. Venice - One of the most beautiful and unique places on earth. Vernazza - Our favorite restaurant was Gambero Rosso. It is on the square by the harbor right across from the church. Hike from town to town. The Mediterranean scenery from the trails is spectacular. San G - We are going back to Tuscany and Venice next spring. We stay at a place about 15 minutes from San G. Positano - We spent a week there in 2014. Fabulous place. If you want to plan a big, blow out dinner, my wife says the most romantic restaurant she has ever been to is La Sponda in La Sirunise Hotel. It has large windows overlooking the Mediterranean and is lit with 400 candles. And the food is delicious.
Posted on 9/4/17 at 12:10 am to Drew Orleans
I'm going to Capri in a few hours actually, will report back
Posted on 9/4/17 at 1:29 pm to Drew Orleans
I have a sticky review of Florence, Tuscany, Positano, and some Capri. The pics are probably squashed because of Photobucket.
Pics are gone. Eff'ing Photobucket
Pics are gone. Eff'ing Photobucket
This post was edited on 9/4/17 at 1:31 pm
Posted on 9/4/17 at 1:50 pm to Drew Orleans
great itinerary. bellagio on lake como is spectacular area to see also but your choices impressive. venice is unique for sure.
Posted on 9/4/17 at 8:12 pm to Drew Orleans
I hated Venice, there's no spirit left in it. It's all tourists. I was content with a single day, and bored on the second day.
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:44 am to Drew Orleans
Venice:
Favorite place I have ever been. Weather was beautiful while we were there. Loved sitting in Piazza San Marco and having drinks while listening to the orchestras. Drinks were extremely expensive, though. The Rialto Bridge, Basilica, and Doge's Palace where all really cool. We also headed to the islands of Murano and Burano while there. Got to see the glass blowing and the cool colorful houses.
Pisa:
We were originally scheduled to go to Pisa, but audibled to Siena, which was awesome.
Florence:
Uffizi is a must. Try to get into the Vasari Corridor. Really neat and hard to do. It exits into the Boboli Gardens, which are beautiful. Basilica of Santa Croce is really cool. Tombs of Dante, Galileo, Machiavelli, and Michelangelo. The actual statue of David is in Galleria dell'Academia. Skip it. Line is huge and it is the only must-see thing there. There is an exact replica somewhere else in the city. Donatello and a lot of Medici are buried at Basilica di San Lorenzo. Worth swinging by if you are chasing Ninja Turtle tombs.
Rome:
Rome is cool, but it is A LOT more spread out than the other places, so seeing things in a timely fashion is very difficult. An under the radar thing to check out is Santa Maria della Concezione dei Cappuccini, which is a church made of skulls. Vatican is an absolute shitshow. If you are claustrophobic in the slightest, you will have a panic attack on the way to the Sistine Chapel. St Peter's Basilica was much less crowded, though. Coliseum, all the fountains, Villa Borghese are all cool spots, as expected.
You will be swarmed by migrants trying to sell selfie sticks. It gets really annoying and kind of takes away from the luster. Really bad in Venice, Florence, Rome. Didn't see as many in Siena or Orvieto, which leads me to believe that you won't have as much of an issue in the smaller towns.
Favorite place I have ever been. Weather was beautiful while we were there. Loved sitting in Piazza San Marco and having drinks while listening to the orchestras. Drinks were extremely expensive, though. The Rialto Bridge, Basilica, and Doge's Palace where all really cool. We also headed to the islands of Murano and Burano while there. Got to see the glass blowing and the cool colorful houses.
Pisa:
We were originally scheduled to go to Pisa, but audibled to Siena, which was awesome.
Florence:
Uffizi is a must. Try to get into the Vasari Corridor. Really neat and hard to do. It exits into the Boboli Gardens, which are beautiful. Basilica of Santa Croce is really cool. Tombs of Dante, Galileo, Machiavelli, and Michelangelo. The actual statue of David is in Galleria dell'Academia. Skip it. Line is huge and it is the only must-see thing there. There is an exact replica somewhere else in the city. Donatello and a lot of Medici are buried at Basilica di San Lorenzo. Worth swinging by if you are chasing Ninja Turtle tombs.
Rome:
Rome is cool, but it is A LOT more spread out than the other places, so seeing things in a timely fashion is very difficult. An under the radar thing to check out is Santa Maria della Concezione dei Cappuccini, which is a church made of skulls. Vatican is an absolute shitshow. If you are claustrophobic in the slightest, you will have a panic attack on the way to the Sistine Chapel. St Peter's Basilica was much less crowded, though. Coliseum, all the fountains, Villa Borghese are all cool spots, as expected.
You will be swarmed by migrants trying to sell selfie sticks. It gets really annoying and kind of takes away from the luster. Really bad in Venice, Florence, Rome. Didn't see as many in Siena or Orvieto, which leads me to believe that you won't have as much of an issue in the smaller towns.
Posted on 9/5/17 at 12:56 pm to Drew Orleans
quote:Cool to go see once, but you you've been there, you don't ever have to go back. We did all of this. And there were a few more museums and places we probably could go see, but it's not as special to me as BOD seems to perceive it. Just a ton of tourist shops. Few people even actually live in the city anymore.
Venice: Favorite place I have ever been. Weather was beautiful while we were there. Loved sitting in Piazza San Marco and having drinks while listening to the orchestras. Drinks were extremely expensive, though. The Rialto Bridge, Basilica, and Doge's Palace where all really cool. We also headed to the islands of Murano and Burano while there. Got to see the glass blowing and the cool colorful houses.
Florence and Rome were easily better.
quote:I'll second this. Siena was much better.
Pisa: We were originally scheduled to go to Pisa, but audibled to Siena, which was awesome.
quote:This is all great advice, except the David. His comments are bullshite. You have to see that thing in person. The real one and not just the fake they have in the Piazza della Signoria.
Florence: Uffizi is a must. Try to get into the Vasari Corridor. Really neat and hard to do. It exits into the Boboli Gardens, which are beautiful. Basilica of Santa Croce is really cool. Tombs of Dante, Galileo, Machiavelli, and Michelangelo. The actual statue of David is in Galleria dell'Academia. Skip it. Line is huge and it is the only must-see thing there. There is an exact replica somewhere else in the city. Donatello and a lot of Medici are buried at Basilica di San Lorenzo. Worth swinging by if you are chasing Ninja Turtle tombs.
Just get a tour guide with a fast pass. Don't be cheap and just skip the line. If you are spending two weeks in Italy, you can afford to do it right.
Also, the Santa Maria del Fiore (Il duomo/ Giotto's bell tower/ St. John's baptistry) is a MUST - absolute priority.
Other cool things to see:
Santa Maria Nuova, Santa Maria Novella, Ponte Vecchio, Piazza della Signoria (Palazzo Vecchio), Loggia dei Lanzi, Walk around Pitti palace while seeing the Boboli gardens, buy some leather goods while there (they make shoes, jackets, and most of the super high-end name brand purses are made here... so just buy the same thing from one of the workers just without the branding). Mercato del porcellino is cool along with the il porcellino fountain (brass pig).
quote:Take taxis. Don't be worried about the cost. They aren't that expensive and your time is more valuable in Rome. Go see the hallmark items. Coliseum, trevi fountain, Spanish steps, Victor Emanuel, Trajan's Column, and Pantheon, etc. You have to see the Vatican. It would take you 21 years to see it all if you spent 8 seconds on each item 24/7/365. SO, yeah... you can't see it all. But the pure talent and craftsmanship on display is overwhelming. And I personally liked St Peters more than the Sistine. The sheer size still blows my mind.
Rome is cool, but it is A LOT more spread out than the other places, so seeing things in a timely fashion is very difficult. An under the radar thing to check out is Santa Maria della Concezione dei Cappuccini, which is a church made of skulls. Vatican is an absolute shitshow. If you are claustrophobic in the slightest, you will have a panic attack on the way to the Sistine Chapel. St Peter's Basilica was much less crowded, though. Coliseum, all the fountains, Villa Borghese are all cool spots, as expected.
Again, small private tours are the way to go. You can get some cool back door tours and skip most of the herd. If you are wanting fine dining, this is the city to do it. Lots of 3-star Michelin places about.
In super rural Italy, they don't speak alot of English unless they are running the hotel/lodging. But everywhere else, everyone speaks English. However, if you make a half-assed effort to try Italian, they really respect you and we got more free shite and superb service just by not being the typical assholes they usually see.
Oh. and bring back some Grappa if you can. You have to hand import it, b/c it's the only way to get it in the US. If you don't want it, I'll buy it from you and have you ship it to me! Lol.
This post was edited on 9/5/17 at 1:06 pm
Posted on 9/5/17 at 1:05 pm to Drew Orleans
Venice 2 full days and nights - ADEQUATE, but you'll likely miss out on the glass stuff on Murano/Burano with only 2. Not a big loss, but just being fair.
Vernazza 1 night, Pisa - FINE
Florence for 3 nights - PROBABLY RIGHT AMOUNT
San Gimignano for 2 nights - (I'm guessing the chianti/ wine stop/siena. I'd recommend also going to see montalcino (brunello) and montepulciano). You can probably spend another day here. Actually, there are some old castles you can stay at in this area. And that's really cool. I think there is one that is between the two areas. Like in Rapolano terme or serre di rapolano.
Pompeii for 2 hours - FINE
Positano for 2 nights - FINE, BUT COULD STAY LONGER. HEAVEN.
Capri for 2 nights - WAY TOO LONG. THIS IS A DAY TRIP. EASILY DONE FROM POSITANO BY BOAT.
Rome for 3 nights - COULD PROBABLY DO ANOTHER DAY. BUT 3 IS ENOUGH IF YOU HUSTLE.
*I'd shorten the time in Capri and shift it to either wine country or Positano/Rome. Depending on what you are wanting to do.
Just my thoughts. Do what you like.... but report back!!!
Vernazza 1 night, Pisa - FINE
Florence for 3 nights - PROBABLY RIGHT AMOUNT
San Gimignano for 2 nights - (I'm guessing the chianti/ wine stop/siena. I'd recommend also going to see montalcino (brunello) and montepulciano). You can probably spend another day here. Actually, there are some old castles you can stay at in this area. And that's really cool. I think there is one that is between the two areas. Like in Rapolano terme or serre di rapolano.
Pompeii for 2 hours - FINE
Positano for 2 nights - FINE, BUT COULD STAY LONGER. HEAVEN.
Capri for 2 nights - WAY TOO LONG. THIS IS A DAY TRIP. EASILY DONE FROM POSITANO BY BOAT.
Rome for 3 nights - COULD PROBABLY DO ANOTHER DAY. BUT 3 IS ENOUGH IF YOU HUSTLE.
*I'd shorten the time in Capri and shift it to either wine country or Positano/Rome. Depending on what you are wanting to do.
Just my thoughts. Do what you like.... but report back!!!
Posted on 9/6/17 at 7:40 am to Drew Orleans
I would cut one day in Capri and make it a day trip. Make that cut day a day trip to Pompei.
Posted on 9/7/17 at 2:28 pm to Drew Orleans
Enjoy the gelato in San Gimignano. Also, there are some cool torture museums.
Posted on 10/5/17 at 2:55 pm to Drew Orleans
Not sure if you've already had your trip or not. We spent 10 days in Italy visiting the Cinque Terre, Florence, and Tuscany.
San Gimignano might be a decent home base for Tuscany, but the town itself was a bit of a tourist trap if you ask me. We had a very good time in Volterra which is a town west of San Gimignano. Our favorite time of all was on a whim to a small village called Monticchiello which is probably a few hours south of San Gimignano. Had the best meal of our lives there and that village is spotless compared to the rest of Italy which has a surprising amount of graffiti.
San Gimignano might be a decent home base for Tuscany, but the town itself was a bit of a tourist trap if you ask me. We had a very good time in Volterra which is a town west of San Gimignano. Our favorite time of all was on a whim to a small village called Monticchiello which is probably a few hours south of San Gimignano. Had the best meal of our lives there and that village is spotless compared to the rest of Italy which has a surprising amount of graffiti.
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