Tuscany, part 1

We've had pretty good luck with the weather so far on our trip. A rainy day on the island of Hawaii (where is rains 300 days a year), a bit of rain in Beijing, and the first night in Paris and Rome, but not heavy in either case. It looked like our luck finally ran out, because as we checked in for our Tuscany tour it was raining heavily.

The first stop on the tour was the town of Siena. In the Middle Ages Siena was a rival of Florence, although our guide (from Florence) said it was kind of one sided with Siena wanting to be a rival but Florence not caring much because Siena was much weaker. He also joking told us not to listen to the Sienese guide, so maybe the rivalry still exists.

Original Monte die Paschi bank

Luckily the rain had stopped by the time we got to Siena, our guide handed us over to the Sienese guide who took us on a walking tour of the town. It only has about 50,000 people so you can cover the highlights fairly quickly. One of their claims to fame is the oldest operating bank in the world is there, Banca Monte die Paschi di Siena, continuously operating since 1472.

 

Modern branch of Monte die Paschi
Piazza del Campo

Their other claim to fame is the Palio di Siena which a horse race that takes place in the city. It takes place in the Piazza del Campo, which is the central square in the city. As you can see from the pictures it is not a flat square and not really square shaped either. The race has been run since the 17th century.

The race takes place each year with one horse representing each neighborhood in the city. However only 10 horses can run and there are 17 neighborhoods, so 7 are left out. The racers are the 7 left out from the previous race plus three of the remaining 10 drawn by lot. By the way the neighborhoods are ancient, all composed of a region inside the old city walls. There are various rivalries and alliances between the neighborhoods. The Palio is the biggest event of the year, so it is a huge deal for each neighborhood participating.

Piazza del Campo panorama

The horses are trained outside the city, then 10 are picked and assigned to the neighborhoods by random lot. The horse assignment ceremony is an emotional event with the contingents from the various neighborhoods cheering or weeping, depending of whether they get a good or bad horse. The horse is then taken to a special stable inside the neighborhood, and the day of the race it is taken into the neighborhood's church to be blessed.

The race is three laps around the Piazza del Campo and takes about 90 seconds. They put dirt down for the track so the horses are not running on cobblestones. There are no starting gates, instead just a rope that is dropped. The starting positions are also drawn by lot, however there are basically no rules. We saw a video of the race and it is pretty chaotic. The jockeys literally jockey for position in the starting area and try to disrupt each other, even whipping each other with their crops. Sometimes horses end up facing the wrong way. There is no waiting until everyone is ready, when the starting judge says “go” the race starts, so if you are facing the wrong way there is no time to recover in a 90 second race. The winning neighborhood has a giant celebration and parade afterwards.

They also have a nice church.

After we left Siena we headed to an organic farm for a tour and lunch. The farm specializes in wine, olive oil and saffron, but they also have some animals. They told us the lunch was 95% from ingredients from their farm.

As expected Yanmei really enjoyed this part of the tour.

In the veggie greenhouse

Lunch started with bruschetta, followed by fresh penne pasta in a ragu sauce, then some meats (cold salami, etc.) and cheeses, and finally cookies for dessert. There was a wine pairing with each course, including a strong dessert wine you were meant to dip the cookies into. It sounds good, but it was just okay to me. Yanmei makes better bruschetta, and the pasta was good but lacking in flavor a bit, maybe they skimped on the seasoning to keep the 95% stat. The best part to me was the cheese. The view was nice though, we had a view of the medieval town of San Gimignano.

San Gimignano on the hilltop

San Gimignano was our next stop after lunch.

To be continued…

-David

 

Florence

In the morning we drove the car to Rome Termini station and got a train to Florence. We're struggling with two opposing priorities now. We're both getting pretty tired of sightseeing and want a break. However time is running out on Yanmei's visa, so paradoxically we're trying to squeeze more stuff in. Florence wasn't in our original plan, but we added it. It is only 1.5 hours from Rome by high speed train.

We got to Florence and I had booked a room at a small hotel near the train station. It was overcast, but fortunately the rain stopped before we arrived.

After we checked in we walked around the city.

Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore
Parade through the streets
Ponte Vecchio bridge
There are a whole series of these graffiti on no entry signs. A guy carrying it like a log, paddling it like a canoe, etc.
Arno river

-David

 

More Rome

For our final day we decided to go back to Rome, see a few sights and do some shopping. We took it easy and got off to a leisurely start at 11am. We went directly to the shopping mall parking instead of trying to find the parking garage again, and we figured that might be full by this time anyway.

Yanmei's everyday sandals have a whole forming in them, so she wanted to find a replacement. She ended up buying some nice Italian leather high heel shoes, although those don't replace her flat heel sandals.

Spanish Steps

We stopped at the Spanish steps again, since it is right next to the Metro station. This is one of the spots Yanmei has been, and she said it was much better last time she was there because it was lined with flowers. They must only do that at certain times of the year.

Then we headed towards the Trevi Fountain. Along the way we bought a slice of veggie pizza from a shop, which Yanmei said was one of the best she's ever had. She may have been starving because I found it mediocre.

Unfortunately the Trevi Fountain is undergoing maintenance. I'd heard that the previous day from other people on the Vatican tour. I still wanted to have a look.

After that we headed towards the Pantheon, which was fairly close. I wanted to see that because it is the best preserved Roman building. Also it is free to go inside. 🙂

In front of the Pantheon
Inside, the hole provides the only light source

Then we headed back to the hotel room to relax for the evening.

That night they had fireworks in Rome, maybe to honor our visit. 😉 We watched from the balcony.

-David