Archive for the ‘Day Trips’ Category

Pompeii – via CN Traveler

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

The June issue of CN Traveler has a good article on Pompeii — here.   We’ve visited many times and can include a day trip to Pompeii with private guide from Rome or the Amalfi coast.   Having a guide is essential, not just for understanding the history behind the  jumble of ruins laid out before you but the insider knowledge of how to navigate through the massive site and keep the crowds in the distance.

From Blog Photos

Visiting Pompeii with the crowds in the distance

After last visit on a HOT August day, we ventured into the modern town of Pompeii for good seafood lunch with crisp white wine.  The dining room was elegant, the food good, the service friendly and most importantly it was a cool respite from the midday sun. 

From Food

Seafood Risotto

From Food

Grilled Fish dressed with olive oil and a squeeze of lemon

Cortina d’Ampezzo

Monday, January 25th, 2010

The New York Times ran an article on skiing and most importantly eating in Cortina d’Ampezzo in the Dolomites.  http://travel.nytimes.com/2010/01/24/travel/24cortina.html 

It echoed many of our observations from a few years ago on our first visit.  We ate very well both on and off the mountain.

From Food

Pork shank with roast potatoes and spinach made for a hearty informal lunch

From Food

Homemade Farfalle with Wild Boar Ragout

Cortina is easily accessable from the US with flights to Venice followed by a 2 hour transfer to Cortina.  After skiing for a week, you can easily incorporate a few days in Venice with minimal crowds before your return to the US.

From Italia!

Goat cheese from Cascia

Saturday, July 25th, 2009
From Food

This slightly aged goat cheese comes from the area around Cascia in the Valnerina.  It was a perfect slice of creamy, piquant heaven.  We ate it after dinner dressed with a little olive oil and few turns of the pepper mill.  Cascia is the hometown of Santa Rita and welcomes thousands of pilgrims each year to its basilica.  I’m going to make the trip on Tuesday just to buy some of this “heavenly” cheese. 

Wild flowers on the Piano Grande

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

The end of June/early July brings out the wildflowers in the mountains around Norcia.  We took a fantastic day trip from central Umbria to the Valnerina, Norcia, and Castelluccio.  The locals told us that the flowers were having a bit of an “off” year due to an excess of rain but the Piano Grande didn’t disappoint.  In addition to the wild flowers, there are cultivated fields of lentils that hide from the sun in a symbiotic relationship with carpets of yellow flowers (the lentil itself has tiny white flowers).  One of the other highlights of a trip to Castelluccio is the lunch at a local agriturismo.  The pappardelle with wild boar sauce is a rustic food lovers dream.  Hand cut, thick bands of fresh pasta drenched in a rich sauce filled with chunks of wild boar and seasoned with juniper and bay leaf.  Heaven! 

From Castelluccio – Wild Flowers

For the full album of pictures click here.

Girasole

Friday, July 10th, 2009

Early July is the “high” season for sunflowers in central Italy.  These shots are from the area around Gualdo Cattaneo.  It is an unspoiled landscape of sunflowers, vineyards, and grain fields.  For a link to the whole album click here.

From Girasole

 

Photsynth

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

Microsoft has come out with a new online “photo stitching” technology called Photosynth that creates panoramas of your photos.  I tried it out with an upload of some shots from the Pian Perduto in Castelluccio in Umbria. (If you don’t have the Photosynth viewer it will ask you to install it.)  Photosynth says that I was 47% successful and I agree — even though the photos were taken in a series it does not seem to recognize the road in the center as part of the photo series.  I haven’t given up yet however and will keep trying.  

 

A “normal” photo of the Pian Perduto — to see the “synth” click here  (If you don’t have the Photosynth viewer it will ask you to install it.)

Ancient Milan

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

Travelers gravitate to the ancient sites of Rome, but don’t let Milan’s status as a modern international city obscure its important ancient past.  Of course, celebrated sites like the gothic Duomo and Da Vinci’s Last Supper are must sees, but consider adding The Archaeological Museum of Milan to your short list.     

The museum is located in the former Monastery of San Maurizio, which is near Santa Maria delle Grazie (home of the Last Supper), and is well worth a stop on your way to or from Da Vinci.   You do not need a reservation and will most likely have the place all to yourself.  The monastery itself is in the midst of Milan’s richest ancient archeological deposits and features some well preserved architectural structures as well, such as a Roman tower and walls dating from the 3rd – 4th century AD.  The origins of present day Milan can be traced to the 5th century Celtic settlement of Mediolanum, which was a Roman city by the 2nd – 1st centuries, and this small museum does an excellent job of informing us of this early history.  Notable pieces of the collection include glass (an incredibly ornate goblet among them) and kitchen objects from Roman times and a couple of interesting mosaics, all with some general descriptions in English as well as Italian.  One really interesting  part of the exhibit is the section of tombstones dedicated to informing us about the jobs and lives of the citizens of Mediolanum.  There are a number of tombstones of individuals and couples with engravings and descriptions of their careers while living.  My personal favorite:  the stone of a teacher (maestra) featuring an engraved bust of her, with a description of her excellence and success as a great disciplinarian of students – further illustrated with an engraving of her whipping a child. 

 

There are several tombstones on display, with translations only in modern Italian, so it would be useful to visit the museum with a professional guide.

Sunflowers

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

 

The sunflowers were a bit late in arriving this year but by mid-July, Umbria was in full bloom.

Infiorata di Spello

Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Already one of Umbria’s most beautiful towns, Spello celebrates the Feast of Corpus Domini each year by laying extravagant floral carpets (infiorate) over the streets. Floral artists, young and old, create larger than life depictions of religious themes, or recreations of sacred art using only the petals of flowers. The townspeople labor all night on the eve of the Infiorate to map out their designs and apply the petals, most finishing between 7:00am and 10:00am on Sunday. In these early morning hours, people come to admire the floral masterpieces before the bishop of Spello carries the host on a procession through the streets at 11:00am. As the church leaders work their way through the streets of the town, only the bishop actually walks on the carpets of artfully laid petals.

Infiorata di Spello

Multi-year slide show of the Infiorata

Palermo Fish Market

Saturday, October 27th, 2007

Maria spent her shore visit to Palermo at the local market.

Palermo Market

Click on the photo to see her album.