Florence in a Day

Friday, July 1st, Florence in a Day.
Breakfast is included with our room and is reasonably good with unlimited cappuccinos, slices of ham and cheese and an array of rolls and croissants. We walk to the Duomo and wait briefly in the Florence Pass line and within minutes of opening are climbing the narrow winding stone staircase up to the dome. I am grateful that it is cool inside this stone cathedral but my heart pounds as I climb the stairway, prodded on by those behind me. Several hundred steps later we pop into the interior of the dome and I am able to catch my breath. Looking up, the glory of heaven and the depths of hell swirl around the elaborately painted ceiling of the dome. 
Duomo dome painting
Detail painting of Hell

Down below the people are small specks on the floor of the vast cathedral. We circumnavigate half way around the interior walkway of the dome before resuming the climb up yet another spiral stone staircase. A final short and almost vertical stairway pops us out onto the view platform at the exterior of the dome. According to which guide book one reads, there are between 414 and 463 steps in total.

View of Florence from the Duomo

Final climb to the top of the Dome

Although it is just 9:00 A.M. the Florence sun is already brutal and a mirage of heat waves shimmer across on the red tile rooftops. We circle around the Duomo platform inhaling the 360-degree views of the Campanile, the Vatican and the Arno River with its many bridges. Although there does not seem to be a time limit, after 10 minutes we begin our winding descent and have a second chance to view the interior of the dome. We circumnavigate the other half of the interior walkway craning our necks to admire and memorize the exquisitely painted dome. The sunlight shocks our retinas when we exit the dark of the staircase and pop out onto the blinding plaza. 

Across the plaza is the Duomo Museum and we spend two delicious hours wandering the timeless rooms filled with Roman sculptures, Gothic triptychs and a remarkable unfinished pieta carved by Michelangelo. The museum is beautifully curated, uncrowded and cool.

John admiring Gothic Triptych
Michelangelo’s unfinished Pieata

John admiring the Ghiberti Doors
Magdalena, carved in wood

We find a small café in the museum complex and sit for a cappuccino and a bite to eat before setting out across town to the Academia where we will see Michelangelo’s famed David. On our way we pass an TI (Tourist Information) and pop in to ask directions to Bank Italia which we believe is the sister bank to our bank back home. We retrace our steps to the indicated spot but there is no ATM and frustrated, we circle back towards the Academia. When we arrive, the lines snake down the block and the priority access line is so long that we leave feeling foolish for buying the expensive Firenze Card. We walk toward the Uffizi Gallery, also on our priority list and when we arrive, our Firenze Card gains us immediate entry and after a security and bag check we are free to wander the immense hallways and galleries of this world class museum.

Uffizi Gallery hallway

The Botticelli room is one of the highlights, but each gallery is a visual treat and seeing the familiar paintings is like visiting old friends. I see tears welling in Art’s eyes as he gazes at some of the masterpieces he has only seen in pictures and I feel great satisfaction watching our son’s appreciation as he drinks in the centuries of art and history. The octagonal Tribura Room is a tiny jewel of a gallery where we are only allowed to peek through the doorways into the opulent interior. 

Art, Venus of Urbino, Titian
Drawing, Giovanni Bellini

Octagonal Tribuna Room, 1584, Uffizi

Detail of Spring, Botticelli
The Birth of Venus, Botticelli

Not far from the Uffizi is the Bargullo Gallery, a must-see according to Rick Steve’s. We slip inside the ancient museum and after the crowds in the Uffizi, it is strange and wonderful to have this museum virtually to ourselves. This museum houses Donatello’s famed David and a number of other remarkable bronze sculptures.  Although the Uffizi Museum certainly deserves its fame, it is interesting how this jewel of a museum is virtually tourist free.

Bargello Museum

Marty, Donatello’s David

It is 4:30 when we walk back towards the Academia Museum for a final try at entry to admire Michelangelo’s David. Our feet throb and the afternoon is hot and humid and the priority line into the museum is still long. There are simply too many people already inside to allow immediate access. Disenchanted, we stroll around the block, find an outside café to rest and order drinks. Art and I order Campari Spritzers and John orders a Negri and the cool sweet alcoholic drinks take the stress out of the lines and puts a glow on our late afternoon.  We order second rounds accompanied by savory appetizers and revived and fortified we walk back to the Academia for a third try at entry.

Michaelangelo’s David

We have timed it perfectly and get immediate access to the Academia Museum with a 40 minute window before closing. The last time I saw David was some 30 years ago and he was exhibited outside. Today he stands monumental at the end of the Academia Museum’s immense gallery. Crowds of tourists gaze up at the flawless white Carrera marble David admiring his fine features, immense hands and his nudity. Seeing David in this interior venue is inspiring and the perfect culmination for our day in Florence. 

Ponte Vecchio Bridge

Crossing the Ponte Vecchio Bridge

Our near perfect day in Florence complete, we wander slowly back towards our hotel, crossing the Ponte Vecchio Bridge and paralleling the river. We stop and read countless menus but cannot agree on a restaurant for dinner.  Art leaves us in frustration and returns to the hotel.  We have been wandering a labyrinth of cobblestone streets that open onto a plaza. The evening light casts a warm glow over the square and John and I choose an outdoor café and enjoy a simple dinner of salad, a cheese and meat platter and a bottle of white wine. We talk and laugh and enjoy people watching from our corner table adjoining the square. Our meal is exactly 40 Euros or about $45.00. In most instances, service is built into the prices and tipping is not expected. 

Back at the hotel, I call to reserve a hotel in Venice and am fortunate that one of the Rick Steve’s recommendations, Pension Guerrato, has availability. Art walks the short distance to the train station to buy us train tickets to Venice tomorrow morning. 

Florence to Venice

Saturday, July 2nd Florence to Venice

Our train to Venice leaves at 10:15 a.m. and I relax and write this journal on our high speed train traveling 300 kilometers and hour. Just as on a plane flight, a stewardess offers us drinks and snacks and we arrive in Venice in just two hours.  It is shortly after noon and Art rushes to the TI office to buy Vaporetto passes that includes a student museum discount card for John.

Canal scenes from the Vaporetto
Canal scenes from the Vaporetto

Vaporetto stop for Pension Guerrato
Detail of Venetian architecture

Within minutes we are stepping onto the #1 Vaporetto that will take us to the Mercado Rialto canal stop for our Pension Guerrato, a Rick Steve’s recommendation. The Pension is just short walk from the Vaporetto stop through the fruit and vegetable market and left down a narrow cobbled alley. The inviting and informal lobby is on the second floor and our reservations are in order. We are presented with a very heavy brass key to our top floor room, five flights up with no elevator. John sighs and hauls both his and my suitcase up the creaky stairs. Our spacious room is delightful with a rooftop view of Venice and heavy crossed beams across the garret ceiling and a sparkling modern bathroom.

Entrance to Pension Guerrato

View from the window of our pension

Within minutes we head out to explore Venice and walk the maze of narrow streets towards Saint Mark’s Square. The square is blindly bright and mobbed with tourists and I feel a bit disoriented but Art is prepared with the Rick Steve’s audio guide tour and we plug in our head phones and listen to the orientation to Venice and find our bearings.

View of Saint Mark’s Square
Facade of Saint Mark’s Basilica

The line into Saint Mark’s Basilica is impossibly long so we put that off for tomorrow and wander the back streets of Venice towards La Balute, a point across from the Grand Canal. On the way, we find a tiny corner bistro/bar with three available stools inside and cool down with late afternoon Campari Spritzers.

Tapas at a back street Venetian bistro
Narrow canal scene

We pass an exhibit for Zaha Hadi and pop into the museum to inquire about ticket prices with plans to return tomorrow when we have more energy to enjoy the exhibit. Away from the throngs of tourists we sit at the point in the shade of the Della Dogana Museum, our legs hanging over the edge of the cement pier.  Venetian style, Saint Mark’s square is across the inlet from where we sit and we watch the traffic jam of assorted boats zip by.  Vaporettos, gondolas, shuttle taxi boats and private yachts motor by and when a large cruise ship passes in the distance, waves surge and splash our legs.  Two artist’s sketch the scene and we are among just a handful of tourists and photographers enjoying this out of the way vantage point off the Grand Canal.

La Balute point, away from the throngs of tourists
Art on pier pilings, La Balute
The pier at La Balute
La Balute Plaza
Away from the throngs of tourists

We wind our way back through the maze of narrow streets, crossing tiny arched bridges and enjoying the intimacy of roads less traveled but the narrow streets soon join the main shopping street artery, swimming with streams of tourists.

Canal off the beaten tourist route
Main tourist artery, Venice

We pass shops of colorful Venetian glass, glittery jewelry and tacky tourist souvenir shops crammed with cheap and garish carnival masks, T-shirts and copies of Venetian sculpture. It is dinner time and in our usual dysfunctional manner, we read every restaurant menu before settling on a restaurant not far from our hotel. The restaurant only has inside seating and although, John and Art have a window view of those crossing the small adjoining bridge, I have no view and the restaurant feels claustrophobic. The food is not memorable and once again it is the affordable and very drinkable wine that puts a soft glow on the evening.

Evening light along the canals, Venice
Evening light, Venice

Outdoor cafe dining, Venice
The tide encroaches

 We finish dinner shortly after 9:00 P.M. and the “football” game between Italy and Germany has just begun. Art and John want to watch but there are no restaurants that will allow us to sit and order just drinks without dinner. Around the corner from our Pension, a throng of young people gather, standing room only, drinking beer and watching the game on large outdoor screen.  Art returns to our hotel and John and I continue to look for a bar where we can sit, drink and watch the game. Although there are dozens of restaurants spilling out along the canal, we must order dinner in order to sit. I notice that the tide is coming in and many of the table and chair legs are a few inches underwater.

Fans watching Italy vs Germany

Evening in Venice

We walk back to the square near our hotel where now charged and boisterous young people, stand, drink and cheer on the game. I leave John to enjoy the lively scene and walk the short distance back to our pension and climb the five flights to our room. As tired as I am, I am unable to sleep soundly until two hours later, I hear John softly enter our room. Italy lost to Germany.

Venice in a Day

Sunday, July 3rd, Venice in a Day.

Considering our intense itinerary, today we allow ourselves to sleep until 7:30 and after an 8:00 A.M. breakfast at our pension, we walk to San Marco Square. It is nearly 9:00 A.M. when we purchase our tickets to the Dodge Palace and enter the palatial courtyard. Although the Palace opened at 8:30 we have beat the majority of the tourists and after checking John’s backpack and my purse, we follow the arrows through the ornate rooms of the Palace. The baroque frescoed ceilings and walls are iced and sculpted in a gilded froth and reproductions of Roman sculptures sit on pedestals along the walls. Having seen the real thing, these reproductions are bland. Glass displays showcase Roman coins, ornate jewelry and fragments of pottery. It is the immensity of the Palace where the governing of Venice took place, not the collections housed within that is of interest.

Dodge Palace Courtyard
Dodge Palace Ballroom
View from within the Dodge Palace

 We follow the numbered arrows across the Bridge of Sighs where ill fated prisoners took their last look at freedom before going to the dungeons below. We wind through several floors of dungeon cells; impregnable and depressing with heavy steel bar mounted securely into the blocks of stone before being granted our freedom to exit into the bright sunlight of San Marco Square.

Dungeon doors and window bars
Detail of dungeon bars
John looking out from the Bridge of Sighs
Detail of stone window

Retracing yesterday’s route, we walk to the Zaha Hadid exhibit, get both a senior discount and a student discount and enter the elegant museum. This gorgeous Venetian style building is elegant and airy. Refined and delicate decorative paintings cover the walls and ceilings and when we reach the galleries, enormous and elaborate Murano Glass chandeliers decorate each room.

Staircase to the Zaha Hadid exhibit
Looking out the window
Murano Glass Chandelier

The building and the chandeliers are in great contrast to Zaha Hadid’s work. The exhibit is an excellent retrospective into her design, architecture and painting and we rest our feet and watch a video about her design process and her struggle to be acknowledged as a woman in her field.  After all the classical Roman and Renaissance Art we have consumed over the past two weeks, this exhibit is a refreshing glimpse of a contemporary genius.

Zaha Hadid Sculpture
Zaha Hadid Painting
Airport design
Architectural model for an airport
Zaha Hadid exhibit
John, Zaha Hadid paintings

We stumble upon a back street Cafeteria Bar, the Bacaro da Fiore on Calle De Le Botteghe. We are finally beginning to understand the system of pricing and levels of cuisine in Italy. These Cafeterias are not like our cafeterias but tiny delis with platters of appetizers behind glass that we can point to. They are all made in house, fresh and inexpensive and the Campari, prosecco, wine and beer are affordable. In addition, it is much more fun to be in this environment than at a tourist café where location determines the price and the quality of food is disappointing. There are just 3 stools and two tiny tables and a couple is just leaving one of the tables and the three of us squeeze and sit togetherorder our drinks and a platter of Italian tapas and enjoy the ambience of back street Venice.

Bistro cafeteria bar

We eat grilled eggplant, fried sardines and a various assortment of croquettes stuffed with mysterious meats and fillings. The sardines are not my favorite but the other tapas are delicious and I hesitate to give up our table but we have other museums to visit and walk to the Correr Museum, included in our Doge Palace ticket. After the world class art and museums we have recently visited, this museum is disappointing and after an hour we leave to brave the line to visit the interior of Saint Marks Basilica. After 30 minutes in the sweltering sun we reach the entrance to the Basilica and are told that we must go check our back pack and purse. We walk down a nearby street to the bag check and return to the head of the line and enter this fabulous Basilica. No photos are allowed inside but the tiny mosaic tiles glitter in the dim interior and we circumnavigate the uneven and ornately tiled floors. Aside from Notre Dame in Paris, this is my favorite cathedral/basilica by far. Wanting to memorize and absorb the magic of this Basilica, we circle back around and find the stairs to the terrace above. There are less than 200 steps up to the terrace and we pay our 5 Euros each and circumnavigate the platform that overlooks Saint Marks square and the Canal beyond.

Art, Marty and John, St Marks Basilica
View from terrace of St Marks.
Forbidden photo of interior

According to the Rick Steve’s guidebook, Cathedral Madonna dell ‘Orto is a hidden jewel and we make our way towards this out of the way church. John feeds the pigeons in the square before we pay our entry of 5 Euros each and turn on the Rick Steve’s audio guide and circumnavigate the airy Cathedral admiring the many Tintoretto’s, the airy architecture and Tintoretto’s elaborate tomb guarded by exquisite lions.

John feeding pigeons
Lion guarded tomb, Madonna dell ‘Orto
Interior, Madonna dell ‘Orto Cathedral

We wander back towards our hotel stopping at a back street café where the timing is perfect and we are allowed to sit and order Campari Spritzers before the prime dinner crowd. A very gregarious British couple gives up their seat for us and when another tired family arrives looking for seating, we slide down and enjoy our game of musical chairs and conversation.

Campari Spritzers, Venice
Happy hour, Campari Spritzers
Fun with olives:)

We wander off in search of dinner and are fortunate to find a not too touristy restaurant where John orders a whole fish and the food is tasty and reasonably good.

Whole fish
Gone fish