July 1, 2009
We arrived in
From
When we finally reached
At the meeting point, the guide told us to take 40 minutes of free time. Everyone dispersed looking for the nearest restaurant. Claire, Sam, and I almost went to a couple of sidewalk cafés, but they would take too long and were a little pricey. Eventually, we returned to this pizza place we had passed on the way and had some delicious Italian pizza for one Euro per slice. It was awesome. I had a prosciutto and mozzarella slice which was delicious. After pizza we prowled for the best gelateria (aka- ice cream place). I had a scoop of hazelnut and it was fantastic. I don’t know what they do to Italian ice cream to make it so much better, but everyone should make it that way. We sat on a bench by the window and polished off our cones before meeting up with the group.
After meeting up with the guide and the group, another local guide led us to the Piazza del Campo which is the main
The Il Palio is held on July 2nd and August 16th of each year, and we were actually in town on July 1st to witness the preparations. Basically, the city is divided into 17 neighborhood districts which all compete against each other in this horse race. They each hire a jockey to lead their neighborhood to victory, and each neighborhood has a specific flag displaying their quirky mascots. Some of the mascots include: the snails, dragons, rhinos, geese, turtles, and caterpillars. Apparently, the geese hold the record for the most wins, but the dragons were favored to win this year. Flags of each district were hung everywhere, and people were representing their ‘hoods by wearing the flags as scarves around their necks. After the race, the winner’s flags are the only ones that are able to remain flying.
The tightly packed sand that is brought in to cover the piazza is a very specific kind of dirt that coined the name “he race. The race this year only lasted 72 seconds.
After viewing the piazza and hearing the history of the race we took a walking tour of the city where we saw a number of medieval buildings, narrow winding streets, and churches- some with really interesting frescos on the ceilings. One of the banks we saw had these creepy little sculptures of heads of old men poking out from the top floor. The sides of buildings still had large metal horse loops from the middle ages that were used to tie horses to the buildings. At one point, a parade of the dragons strolled past us with some guys decorated in green, gold, and purple drumming on big bass drums while carrying their district’s flag.
Funny story: On the side of one building I saw one of those yellow caution signs with a stick figure man slipping off of a ledge. Someone had taken a sharpie and written in “This is
The coolest thing we saw on the tour was The Duomo, an Italian Romanesque cathedral which was striped in green and white on all sides except for the front façade which was intensely decorated with sculpture, frescos of the Virgin Mary, and elaborate arches. The intricate architecture of the building was topped off by a large dome which came to a point with a golden sphere holding a gold cross. When this gold structure was last cleaned last month, they found a small note hidden inside the sphere that basically said, “We were here and cleaned this steeple,” and listed two names and the date, which turned out to be from about 300 years ago. Our guide said stuff like this happens all the time in
History Lesson: St. Catherine of
After visiting another church and having some free time to buy souvenirs, we loaded back onto the bus to head towards San Gimignano. But it wasn’t quite that simple. One girl hadn’t made it back to the bus. She had left our group early on in the tour to explore the city on her own, promising to meet up with the group at the end of the tour. We waited about 20 minutes where the bus was supposed to pick everyone up at the outskirts of town before we drove five more minutes down the road to the tour bus check out station. I guess SAS had been trying to get in touch with her in the meantime and managed to talk to her on her cell phone. She had made the mistake of meeting at the wrong church and said she was taking a taxi straight to where our bus was parked. We waited another 20 minutes or so before our guide got a call from the girl. She said she was just going to take a train back to
It was about an hour bus ride to San Gimignano from
We entered the town of
Claire, Sam, and I decided to stop at one of the restaurants in the main piazza for a snack before the ride back. We ate at a table outside and split a bottle of rosé wine as we munched on a caprese salad. It was very relaxing, and even in the more crowded piazza you could still tell how quiet and peaceful the town was. It was definitely a completely different atmosphere from the busy crowds of
We were running late to get back to the bus, but we kept seeing SASer’s walking back towards the town in the opposite direction from where they should have been headed to catch the bus. Eventually, we found out that everyone was going back to find a bathroom because our driver wasn’t planning on stopping for the entire three and a half hour trip back to Civitavecchia. We turned around and followed their lead, but then got distracted. One of the SASer’s mentioned a gelateria that was just up the hill that was supposedly amazing. It had actually won the award for “Best Gelato in the World” four years in a row…this wasn’t something that could be passed up. We had the choice of bathroom or gelato…and we chose gelato. Haha. I don’t regret it at all either because it was the best ice cream I’ve ever had. All three of us got the tiramisu flavor, and it was amazing- a perfect end to the day.
The guide complained a little bit about us being late to the bus, but it was so worth it. I slept the entire ride back to the ship, and even though Claire and I had planned to go out in
So cool. I can't wait to see all of your pictures!
ReplyDeleteLove the addition of the pictures! I miss you so much!
ReplyDeleteStay beautiful ;)