Italy – Part 2
Rome, Amalfi Coast & Cinque Terre
The day before we were due to leave the east coast I realised I was a day ahead of myself and wasn’t supposed to be arriving in Rome on a Thursday, it was meant to be a Friday! Eeek! No accommodation was booked. A quick look on Airbnb and we found a perfect place halfway between the east and west coasts. On the way there Little R spied a beautiful old town out her window about 5 minutes away from our apartment. It was called Spello, we enjoyed exploring its alleyways which were so beautifully dressed with flower pots.
The following (correct) day it was off to Rome. Our friends from London flew out again to see us. They had booked an apartment about 500 meters away from the Vatican for us to stay in and Rouge (our car) got emptied out and parked on the road for a few days rest. The next day it was up early to join the queue for St Peter’s Basilica. BK and I hadn’t seen it last time we were in Rome. The queue moved very quickly and we were inside within 15 minutes. It was an amazing and very expensive looking church! Wee R was hopeful to see ‘Pope’ but it wasn’t to be. However while we were in there they opened up the basement so we saw the tombs of past popes. BK took R home, leaving our friends, C and I to climb the dome. Amazing views of the city. I purchased some postcards to send to some friends for their birthdays this month, then it was back to the apartment for a rest.
The next day we hauled ourselves out of the apartment at 7.30am to bus to the Colosseum. It was free that day (see my tip below) and evvvvvveryone was there, the queue was at least 2/3rds of the way around the base. Disheartened we decided to not go in, but to see if the Roman Forum was having a free entry day too. When our friend went to ask, she was scooted to the front of the queue, got us the 6 free tickets we wanted and managed to score us an extra special skip the line pass for the Colosseum, she’s 8 months pregnant soooo it obviously has its perks! So we happily walked back to the Colosseum where a man took our tickets and escorted us past the normal queue, past the skip the line queue and right up to security. High fives all round. We enjoyed an hour wandering around. Apparently back in its prime it used to seat 50,000–80,000 people, wow! After that it was through the Roman Forum, past the Trevi Fountain, up and down the Spanish Steps and lunch at pizzeria, a quick visit to the Pantheon, then home to our apartment for a well deserved nap! 20,000+ steps that day. After two very full days it was goodbye to our friends, we’ll see them again in London after their baby has arrived.
Top tip – if it’s a free day (first Sunday of every month) go really early or line up and see if you can get a skip the line ticket by the entrance to the Roman Forum, the ticket allows entry to both.
On the way to Naples in the rain, we had our first motorway issue. The toll machine wouldn’t give us a ticket! With the barrier arm still open from the car in front of us and traffic behind us we drove onto the motorway with no ticket so when we got off it was a bit of a drama using google translate to tell the person in the toll booth where we got on so could pay the correct toll, then he gave us a fine for €96 and directed us to ‘punto blue’ so we turned up with our fine and our google translate again trying to explain ‘YOUR MACHINE WOULDN’T GIVE US A TICKET WE SHOULDN’T BE PAYING A FINE!!!’ He understood and canceled our fine and we were on our way.
Due to us being so exhausted from the driving, the big weekend in Rome and the rain we spent the first day resting, which meant we didn’t see central Naples. The following day was perfectly blue skies and we headed off to the stunning Amalfi Coast! Wow! Wow for two reasons, the scenery which was amazing but also driving the road there which was quite the challenge, it took both mine and BK’s full attention in parts. We were glad Rouge was so little, and at one point a car got so close to us the GPS started screaming because the car were too close to the sensors on our bumper. Ugh. Anyway we got there and enjoyed a walk at one of the little villages called Maiori and pizza for lunch on the outskirts of Sorrento. A quick look at Pompei then back home to pack and start the 2000km drive north.
Our first stop heading north was Florence to meet up with my Aunty and Uncle who’d brought a few things over for us. It was lovely to see some familiar faces. Thank you Aunty and Uncle! Unfortunately while in Florence we drove into a restricted traffic zone and think we’ve got ourselves yet another fine! I’ve emailed Peugeot to tell them.
Next stop was Cinque Terre. A set of 5 beautiful seaside villages. We had arranged last year to meet up with some friends from home. We started early and went to the furthest away village of Monterosso. We had a focaccia snack while walking around. We then met our friends in Vernazza where we had another focaccia snack and all the kids found the sand and had a wonderful time. We pushed on to the next one Corniglia and had drinks before meeting with our friends again in Manarola for gelato. We were going to keep going on to the last village, Riomaggiore, but when the train stopped we couldn’t face anymore walking so we skipped it. We got back to Rouge and found we’d gotten ourselves yet another fine! We hadn’t parked in a proper car space as we’d just followed everyone else’s idea of parking on the kerb.
It was a stay in your PJs all day kinda day the next day. Totally exhausted from moving so fast through Italy. Laundry, school and naps 💤
So that was Italy. It’s been nice to see some different bits of the country BUT I will not miss the roads.
I also won’t miss some of the citizens who seemed to have an ‘I’m better than you, get out of my way’ attitude but the beauty and history will always bring me back. Next time it’s your lakes and islands!
Till next time,
Claire
Budget update :
Italy : $1684 under
Total budget : $2912 under
#nailingit 😎