Travel photos

The Forum, Rome, Italy
Italy is one of Europe’s most attractive and complex countries, crammed with thousands of years of turbulent history encompassing among other evocative names: Hannibal, Julius Caesar, the Roman Empire, Nero, gladiators, Anthony and Cleopatra, Charlemagne, St Peter, the Vatican, Popes, the Borgias, the House of Medici, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Galileo, Mussolini and the Mafia. No other country can get even close to that many historically important figures or self-indulgent nouns.
Florence Pictures, Tuscany,  Italy
The country embraces some of the world’s most fascinating ancient cities, with Rome, Venice and Florence topping a global list of ’see before you die’ candidates, as well as an unbeatable collection of art treasures led by Rome and Vatican museums.
Throw into the tourist pot cute hilltop villages, rolling golden vistas, good wine, opera, predictable sunshine, a serious attitude towards food with always edible, good value cuisine and you have one of the world’s most attractive destinations.

Rome Pictures, Italy
Roma
Upsides:
- summer sunshine is pretty well guaranteed and the Mediterranean is warm and inviting.
- the food and wines are superb and good value compared to most of Europe.
- anybody with a camera cannot fail to go home with stunning pictures of Italy.
- the law is generally considered to be an ass in Italy and Italians frequently disregard it, so anti-establishmentarians [always wanted to use that word] will enjoy life here.
- train and bus services are frequent and cheap, though frequently late too.
- the sights, large and small are unbelievable.
- there’s so little rain in summer that mosquitoes don’t breed.
- roads have posted limits but no apparent police control on them.
- Italians seeing a powerful car in the rearview mirror will let it pass as soon as practical.
- town centres are very walkable even if you do have to lurch deliberately in front of moving vehicles in order to cross a road at a pedestrian crossing. They won’t stop if you just stand there hoping.
- English has many similar roots to Italian via Latin so some bits of the language are kind of understandable.

Vatican Pictures, Italy
Vatican City, Rome
Where to go:
The lakes and good value ski slopes of far north Italy, the Italian Riviera coast for summer beaches though they’re many are small and stony, visiting a couple of little hill towns – but most tourists would want to spend at least a few days in the magnificent cities of Rome, Florence, Venice, Genoa, and perhaps Pisa or Bologna before worrying about the smaller places like Verona and Lucca.
In the south of Italy – which starts below Rome – the coast of Amalfi is stunning, as are the two ancient sites of Pompeii and Herculaneum. From there things get very unsophisticated and tourism drops off dramatically, but the scenery of the Gargano peninsula is lovely while distant Sicily offers a Afro-rustic version of traditional Italy along with a couple of excellent beaches and ancient Greek sites. And then there’s Sardinia island, offering Italy’s best beaches and a delightful capital, Cágliari.

Venice Pictures, Italy
Venice, Venezia, Veneto
Downsides:
- Italian cuisine is excellent – pasta, pizza and risotto. Then more pasta, pizza and risotto, hmm. Then more of the same – if you are in a tourist area and on a budget or elsewhere and don’t read Italian [No, knowledge of French or Spanish is surprisingly not going to help with menus]. Nor is international cuisine readily available. Chinese? Mama mia!
However, if you can unleash a fat wallet or have studied up on Italian food words then the cuisine can be superb.
- directional signs for pedestrians have the same lack of continuity [or just lack] that road signs have. GPS, map-reading skills, patience, imagination and/or a grasp of Italian language will be essential to successful navigation in Italy.
- roads between magnificent towns are often sadly drab, garbage-strewn and bordered with concrete excrescences.
- while some Italians are cheerful, welcoming and speak English not a lot of those types work in the service sector so don’t expect to see a smile or hear ‘Have a nice day’ from your waiter or ticket collector. Never mind, you don’t have to tip them!
- mainland Italian beaches are frequently small, stony and packed or large, sandy and pay-your-way.

 Genoa Pictures, Italy
Genoa, Genova, Liguria
Best time to go to Italy:
The shoulder months April-June and Sept-Oct generally have the best weather and fewer tourists or cars on the road. The latter months are also good for swimming.
Winters will be decidedly chilly in north Italy but bearable in Florence, Rome and further south.
July and August are the worst months for tourism due to excessive heat, crowds and busy roads, though the sea will probably be delightfully refreshing.

Lucca Pictures, Tuscany,  Italy

1 comments:

Stephina Suzzane said...

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