After a very pleasant (and expensive) 4 hour journey on the high speed rail, we arrived in Venice. Walking out of the train station you really feel like you’ve just transported to a whole nother world. It’s really quite magical stepping out on the grand canal with the old buildings pressed right up against the water and the speed boats whizzing by with the gondolas working their way along the periphery and the smaller channels. It really is like no other place on Earth. Although some of the excitement fades a little bit when you have to wait 40 minutes in a long line to catch the next taxi boat. But once you’re finally on it, what a nice ride, about 30 minutes to my stop. I wish all taxi trips from the train station to the hotel could look like this!
My hotel was a two minute walk from St. Mark’s Basilica, so a pretty great, central location. Although in hindsight I would have rather stayed a little further out in the less touristy parts of Venice, because every restaurant by St. Mark’s costs you an arm and a leg. The hotel lobby and the room were covered with golden wall paper, old antique furniture and paintings of Venice on the walls, definitely a cool vibe, although the hotel was certainly outdated. Fine with me. Free breakfast also. I took a little nap to start because it was hot as shit and walking Venice in the middle of the day with all the people and the cruise ship passengers out and about is not my idea of a nice time. The sun doesn’t set until 8:40, so I’d have plenty of time to get my wandering in when the sun got lower and the light was nicer. Same as Rome, it’s so much nice in the late evenings and early mornings.
I’ve read it doesn’t really matter where you go in Venice, basically everywhere is beautiful, and yeah that’s basically true. I just haphazardly picked a direction and went on my way. Venice’s little islands are connected by a whopping 400+ bridges and it’s real treat hanging out on the bridges for a bit and watching the gondolas slide through the water underneath. I can’t even imagine how many gondolas are in this city. It’s amusing watching them get into traffic jams sometimes because the city is just so jam packed with tourists this time of year. Every once in a while you’d see a gondola paddler not wearing the classic striped shirt, like is it even a real gondola ride if the guy just has on a white t-shirt? I say no.
On the other hand, it really isn’t hard to get away from the crowds either. 15 minutes walking to outskirts where the locals live, away from the main tourist channels and there really aren’t many people around. I walked around a place called Sant Elena on the far east part of town, which is probably a 30+ minute walk from St. Mark’s square, and it was like a ghost town. This was on a Sunday evening around dusk and it felt like it was deserted, definitely kinda eerie.
I was hoping to do the two main tourist activities, St. Mark’s Basilica, and the Doge Palace, but being caught up in doing stuff in Rome I kinda forgot about the booking in advance thing. So there was no way to do Doge Palace, and instead of $5 ticket to get into St. Mark’s I’d now be spending $40 for another audio guide walking tour. Ugh. And then when they assign you into groups there seemed to be a bunch of young, well spoken tour guides around, and yet once again I got the old 5ft Italian lady who can barely walk. Agghgh.
The church was definitely interesting to see, but these audio guide tours just really kinda suck. Anyway, the interior decorating was much different than St. Peter’s basilica, with a mix of gothic and Byzantine styles. Lots of mosaics! Lots of gold mosaics, often depicting things from the old testament. Apparently in the 9th century Venice was hoping for more prestige than their current, boring patron saint, St George was getting them, so some enterprising individuals took St. Mark’s body (the Evangelist) from Alexandria in Egypt, stored it under some pork to get by the muslims, and brought it to Venice. Now they have a way cooler and famous patron saint. Adios George! And as Venice got even more rich the church in its current form was renovated in the 11th or 12th century. They say Venice would reach it’s peak in the 14th century.
As for meals, just like in Rome (and everywhere in Italy I guess), you feel like you can’t just have something quick and easy like a piece of pizza or sandwich when there’s so many local specialties around. There’s a classic shrimp and polenta dish, bigoli in salsa, which is like thick spaghetti noodles in a sardine sauce, there’s dried and salted cod, squid ink risotto, and appetizers called cichetti which are toasted pieces of bread with lots of different stuff on them. It get’s a bit pricey trying everything! The nice thing was that eating outside of the St. Marks area was much more chilled out, plenty of open outdoor tables, and 30% cheaper. I really should take some food photos though. The only thing I didn’t really care for was the squid ink risotto.
The 2nd night in Venice some storms rolled through, so I was able to take some nice shots right at dusk, although I really could use a tripod. It was refreshing to have some clouds! Every single day in Italy was sunny, blue skies, almost no clouds, which I can’t complain about, but for the best photography you really need some clouds and moody skies! The next morning I was up early again and greeted by some lovely pink and orange tones in the sky before the sun came up. A very nice way to end my 6 days in Italy! I was running around like a chicken with it’s head cut off to maximize those 15 minutes of pre-sunset colors :)
Overall thoughts on my short time in Italy:
Italy is very very very nice. It’s beautiful, it’s clean, it’s safe (mostly), the food is great, etc. And I’m definitely glad I got to see Rome, one of the most well preserved, historic cities in the world, and Venice, certainly one of the most unique cities in the world. Two must see spots checked off the list. And I kinda wish I would have thrown in a very quick trip to Florence just to take a quick glimpse. But really, I wouldn’t want to spend that much more time in Italy. I had just about reached my museum and church quota from Rome and Venice.
I guess my rule of thumb when traveling is that if the general crowd is all couples, honeymooners, and families, it’s probably not going to be somewhere that really fits the vibe I’m looking for. People dressed up in designer clothing? Nahhh. Large crowds? Nope. Long lines and booking things well in advance. Mmm no thanks. I mean I would definitely go back to Italy, but it would probably have to be with a girl, and hopefully not in summer season, and hopefully when I’m more flushed with cash. The good news is that if I ever have to get a real job doing 1-2 week vacations (which is looking increasingly likely after this year) I’ve still got almost all of the normie vacation spots in western Europe and the Caribbean that I haven’t been to yet.
In hindsight it probably would have been good to delve a bit more into Roman history before coming. But really, I’ve never been a huge history geek, and I’m not going to pretend to start being one just because I’m in Italy for 6 days, like lots of people seem to do. On my last day in Rome I did a catacomb tour and there was one American family on the tour and it was like they felt obligated to raise their hand and ask about every inane question that crossed their mind. Which is normally fine to an extent, but when you’re asking about what type of oil was used to light the lamps, or how they cut the rocks, and holding up the tour at every stop, you’re starting to go too far. Nobody cares. The tour guide already has an hour of facts and stories and dates ready that you’re just going to forget next week anyway! But unrelated to that tangent, if you actually are a huge Roman history person, you could easily spend weeks in Rome and never get bored.
Another thing about Italy, which might be blasphemous to some, is that Italian food doesn’t exactly blow me away. I mean the food is at a very high standard, it’s fresh, it’s tasty, it’s not loaded with preservatives and sugar and corn syrup. But it doesn’t wow me! Sometimes it feels kinda boring. I’ve had some meals traveling around in Asia that have really floored me, a big WOW experience. Honestly I don’t get that from Italian food. Of course I’m not eating in high end restaurants in Italy, but still. I think Western European cuisine on the whole is a bit bland sometimes on the whole. Give me the spice!
So while I was happy to see Italy, I’m thinking lake Bled and going up into the Julian Alps and Triglav National Park in Slovenia is more of what I’m looking for in this trip. Lots of hiking, stunning scenery, swimming in lakes, not feeling like a total schlub for wearing hiking shoes, shorts, and a t-shirt!
And here’s just a few more from Venice