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	<title>Your Catchphrase Here! &#187; Italia</title>
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	<description>Rantings of a Lunatic</description>
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		<title>A repeated adventure, with a twist</title>
		<link>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/04/13/29/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/04/13/29/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Apr 2005 17:51:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Christopher</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Italia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Personal]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.christopherschultz.net/?p=29</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We return to Cinque Terre]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
    When Katie and I honeymooned in Italy, we took a tip from a good friend,     Aaron Tristler, about heading to an area along the Mediterranean coast in     Liguria called     <a href="http://www.cinqueterre.it"><i>Cinque Terre</i></a>,     or Five Lands. If you&#8217;ve ever seen pictures or video of Italy&#8217;s coast     where there&#8217;s a rough, rocky coastline with houses clinging to their     sides (such as are featured in     <a href="http://imdb.com/title/tt0328589/">Under the Tuscan Sun</a>, for     example),     just asking to fall into the ocean, then you&#8217;ve probably seen     <i>Positano</i>, which is on the <i>Amalfi Coast</i>, just south of     Pompeii. <i>Cinque Terre</i> is has very much the same look about it, but     it turns out to be not one, but five distinct little hill-towns connected     by hiking trails and rail lines. </p>
<p>
    Nearly two years ago, we boarded a train from Florence and went to     <a href="http://torre.duomo.pisa.it/">Pisa</a>,     our first stop on our journey. We had heard that there was nothing to see     in Pisa except for     <a href="">The Tower</a> (this fact was confirmed by a rental car agent     just the other day when a pair of English-speaking tourists were renting     a car to go to Pisa and other places; I was more curious why they would     rent a car to go to Pisa in the first place: it&#8217;s just 1 hour away by     train!), so we decided to &#8220;do&#8221; Pisa on the way to <i>Cinque Terre</i>,     since we had to change trains there, anyway. </p>
<p>
    <i>Cinque Terre</i> was amazing, and we vowed to return to the picturesque little     communities when, not if, we came back to Italy. We came back to Italy,     and so we had to return to <i>Cinque Terre</i>. </p>
<p>
    My sister (Jessica), brother-in-law (Wayne), and my 10-month-old nephew     (<a href="/?p=4">Joshua</a>)     were visiting for the week, and we decided to repeat our initial     excursion from Florence. &#8220;You can&#8217;t go to Italy without seeing the Leaning     Tower of Pisa&#8221;, so we decided to do that, again, too. Just a quick     day-trip. Easy out, easy in. Take the train the whole way&#8230; it couldn&#8217;t be     easier. </p>
<p style="font-weight:bold;"><a name="pisa_cinque_terre__pisa">Pisa</a></p>
<div style="float:right; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
    <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/to_pisa.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Joshua yearns for Tuscan grassland</p>
</div>
<p>
    With Joshua in-tow, we borded the train to Pisa and had a nice ride     playing with him, talking, and watching the Tuscan countryside rush     past. We had all sorts of romantic visions of what each building might     be, and then joked about how a small town-looking area with city walls     might actually be a penitentiary. </p>
<p>
    Pisa is largely an uninteresting town for tourists. There&#8217;s only one spot     where anyone wants to be, and that&#8217;s the <i>Campo dei Miracoli</i>,     or Field of Miracles, which contains Pisa&#8217;a immense Baptistry, Duomo,     and, of course, <i>The Tower</i>. The tower really is leaning quite a bit.     Apparently, it was an engineering cock-up from the very beginning. I&#8217;m a     Software Engineer, and even <i>I</i> know that building a 60m tower,     you can&#8217;t hold it up with a 3m foundation floating in sand. Apparently,     in 1173, this was not considered common knowledge. </p>
<div style="float:left; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
    <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/towering.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">The <i>Leaning</i> Tower of Pisa</p>
</div>
<p>
    On neither visit have I elected to climb the tower. One guide says that     it&#8217;s €15 per person, but I haven&#8217;t even looked. I perfer to be dwarfed by     the tower and surrounding buildings. The field itself is very beautiful:     something that I miss about Florence is greenery. There is virtually no     grass and no trees in the city. Sure, you can go out to the Piazzala     Michaelangelo (which has quite a view of the city) and see trees, but it&#8217;s     hard to find a tree that you can sit under and feel the grass between     your fingers. The lawn in the <i>Campo dei Miracoli</i>, on the other hand,     is kept as well as a golf-course, and has a strict &#8220;keep of the grass&#8221;     directive, which many tourists ignore and walk across the field, anyway. </p>
<p>
    Unfortunately, it takes about 20 minutes to walk from the train station to     the <i>Camop dei Miracoli</i>, and there&#8217;s about 20 minutes of excitement     there (gotta get a picture of you     <a href="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/look_ma.jpg">holding     up the tower</a>, for     instance), so it&#8217;s a one-hour trip for a few photo-ops. Walking through     the streets of Pisa, which are filled mostly with tourists walking from the     station to The Tower, I noticed a few people who were most likely local     Pisa residents. They seemed to be completely ignoring the presence of the     masses of people wandering through their streets. I wonder if they dislike     all those people doing nothing but walking from the train station to the     <i>Campo</i> and back again. I suppose if they don&#8217;t own a consession stand     or souvenir store, then you have no reason to enjoy the constant stream     of foreigners stumbling through your streets. </p>
<p style="font-weight:bold;"><a name="pisa_cinque_terre__cinque_terre">Cinque Terre</a></p>
<p>
    After another train change in <i>La Spezia</i>, we were on the last     10-minute leg of our journey to <i>Cinque Terre</i>. Shortly after leaving     <i>La Spezia</i>, the train ducks into a tunnel that ploughs directly     through the mountains on the coast. Occationally, the rails pass very     close to the surface of the mountains, and the track peeks out and gives     passengers a great view of the sea. Unfortunately, I was only quick enough     to snap a picture of the tunnel wall with a bit of water on the left as     we re-entered the dark tunnel. </p>
<p>
    The first town on an east-to-west traversal of the <i>Cinque Terre</i> is     <i>Riomaggiore</i>. Even the     <a href="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/towering.jpg">view of     the sea from the train platform</a> is gorgeous. Both this trip and that     of two-years-past included very little of <i>Riomaggiore</i>, which is too     bad. I&#8217;ll have to go back, because there is much more to see than the     area around the train station and the beginning of the inter-town hiking     trail. I suppose a day in each town would be a nice way to spend a     vacation, but we didn&#8217;t have the time. Instead, we sat down at a     restaurant overlooking the sea and relaxed for a bit. </p>
<div style="float:right; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
    <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/lunch.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Every meal should be in a place like this</p>
</div>
<p>
    We started looking at the menu when my phone rang. I had to attend a     conference call for work, so I sat on this fantastically beautiful     terrace     <a href="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/conference_call.jpg">on     the phone</a>. The group ordered, among other things,     <a href="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/carpaccio.jpg">octopus     <i>carpaccio</i></a>, which I was forced to finish when     nobody else wanted to eat more than a single piece.     It was at this point that I started getting sick. I could feel that     morning&#8230; the slightly stiff and sore neck; the tickle in the back of     your throat; the occational sneeze. I was hoping that it would get better,     but my sickness turned out to be the backdrop upon which the rest of     the day&#8217;s events would unfold. </p>
<p>
    We elected to walk from <i>Riomaggiore</i> to <i>Manarola</i> because     Katie and I knew that the walk was beautiful, short, and easy to navigate     in spite of Joshua&#8217;s presence. In fact, we had Joshua in a relatively     <a title="Wayne and the baby-backpack" href="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/snugli.jpg">easy-to-carry     backback</a>, so the hiking would only have been limited by our ability     to navigate the trails with an extra 50 pounds of equipment and baby     on our backs. This trail, however, had a boardwalk and everything: you     can take a stroller along this trail without a problem. </p>
<p>
    This is the last good picture that my camera took. Take a good look,     because it might be the last useful thing that it ever did.          <img style="float:left;margin:1em 1em 1em 1em;" title="Last. Picture. Ever." src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/last_pic.jpg" /><br />
         Just after this picture, I asked a gentleman on the boardwalk to take     our picture. I handed the camera to him and said &#8220;just press&#8221; and     indicated the button on the camera that you press to take a picture.     No sooner than he lifted the camera up to his face to look at the LCD     display did he <i>drop it</i>. From about mouth-level. I watched in     horror as the camera bounced off of the ground, regurgitating the     battery it had swallowed before we left the house, spliting open along     the factory-sealed seam, and careening toward the edge of the boardwalk,     where I was sure that it would fall into the ocean that had, moments     prior to its demise, been the focus of it&#8217;s attention. </p>
<p>
    I grabbed the camera before it could go any further and surveyed the     damage. The attempted murderer was apologizing profusely for the assault     on the camera even before it hit the ground. I was too polite in saying     that it was okay, and, after snapping the case back together and feeding     the battery back into the camera, I was able to turn it off and back on     again; the lens moved in and out and the LCD worked, so I was pretty     happy. He took camera back, took the picture of us, and we verified that     it had been taken. The camera looked like it was okay, despite having     been broken nearly <i>in half</i>. It turns out that the camera has lost     its ability to focus properly at all zoom levels except when zoomed all     the way out. Therefore, the remainder of the pictures from this trip, as     well as others with my sister and brother-in-law, are coming from their     camera. I appreciate the fact that they were willing to let me go through     the trouble of copying <i>every single one</i> of their digital images     from their camera to my computer before they put them on theirs. </p>
<div style="float:right; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
    <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/via_dell_amore.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Make-out point</p>
</div>
<p>
    Broken camera in hand, we resumed our stroll from <i>Riomaggiore</i> to     <i>Manarola</i>, which includes a trip through the <i>Via dell&#8217;Amore</i>.     Although I think it&#8217;s a pretty area, there&#8217;s not a bit of amorous     graffitti in the tunnel. I actually find that the little garden distracts     from the dramatic beauty of the cliffs themselves. Then again, I suppose     the <i>Via dell&#8217;Amore</i> is not the place to have images of tossing one&#8217;s     <i>amore</i> over the railing. </p>
<p>
    As we rounded a corner where a conveniently-placed Bar sits along the     boardwalk, <i>Manarola</i> comes quickly into view, looking a lot like     one of <a href="/?p=5">our sand castles</a>    that has been half-consumed by the waves. The houses of the town peek     out from behind the rocks as if they are hiding from something. We     didn&#8217;t stop in <i>Manarola</i>, because the trail had been closed between     it and <i>Corniglia</i> due to rock slides &#8212; yikes!. In fact, we decided     to skip <i>Corniglia</i> altogether and visit the next town west &#8211;     <i>Vernazza</i>. Katie and I had never been there, and we had read and     seen pictures of a castle defiantly standing on a promontory at the head     of the town harbor. The train stops at each town, and you arrive at     the train station for <i>Manarola</i> before the actual town when hiking     in the direction we were. We hopped the train and were off to     <i>Vernazza</i>. </p>
<div style="float:left; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
    <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/manarola_cliffs.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Houses in Manarola along the high cliffs</p>
</div>
<p>
    <i>Vernazza</i> is, in a word, <i>verra-nice&#8217;uh</i>. As we emerged into     the town square, I motioned to the area in general and asked my sister,     <i>&#8220;couldn&#8217;t you just spend the rest of your life on these eight     blocks?&#8221;</i>, to which she replied, <i>&#8220;I think it would get a little     boring.&#8221;</i> Stupid Americans. What do they know? </p>
<p>
    Vernazza offers, to me, what each and every town in the <i>Cinque     Terre</i> offers: a small town where it&#8217;s possible to know and be friends     with <i>everybody</i>, a very slow pace of life where you can enjoy each     and every day in relaxed contentment, and, of course, spectacular views     of the hills, cliffs, and sea. The <i>Cinque Terre</i> are a scant two     hour train ride from several major cities (Florence, for one) and, from     my cursory study of a map on the train, maybe 3 or 4 hours from     Monaco. I have a small fetish for tiny countries. I&#8217;ve already been to one     of the two countries wholly contained by Italy, and I hope I have time     before I leave Italy this time to visit San Marino. </p>
<div style="float:right; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
    <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/vernazza_harbor.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">What more could you want?</p>
</div>
<p>
    We whiled away the afternoon playing with Joshua around     <a href="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/vernazza_castle.jpg">the     castle</a> and taking in the beauty that surrounds and permeates the     whole area. When we arrived in <i>La Spezia</i> that morninig, we had     consulted the train schedule and decided that an 18:46 train would be an     ideal departure time. I&#8217;m not sure what time it was at this point &#8212; I     turned off my phone at the end of the conference call and I had no other     timepieces &#8212; but we were content to spend as much time as we wanted in     this paradise on the cliffs. </p>
<p>
    As the sun went down, we returned to the train and took it to our last     stop in the <i>Cinque Terre</i> &#8212; <i>Monterosso</i>. One the five towns,     I think this one has the longest stretch of beach-front property, which     is all completely open. There&#8217;s a &#8220;new town&#8221; near the train station and     an &#8220;old town&#8221; which is maybe 1km way to the east. We headed for the old     town to see some sights and eat dinner. Food shortly trumped sightseeing     so we sat down at a restaurant just behind the beach for what turned out     to be a marathon meal. The food was excellent in spite of my being so     sick that I was almost ready to lie down on the beach and die. </p>
<p>
    Our waitress <a href="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/shanghaied.jpg">picked     up Joshua and played with him for a while</a>, and then ran off with him     to show the rest of the staff. When she didn&#8217;t come back for a few     minutes, we figured that, between Joshua and the meal, we could just stand     up and call it even. Fortunately, she returned with Joshua, who seemed     oblivious to the entire episode. </p>
<p>
    We returned to the train station well after dark and began out next     adventure: trying to get home. Apparently, the 18:46 train would have been     a <i>brilliant</i> idea had we followed through. Unfortunately, we didn&#8217;t,     and so, at around 22:25, we found ourselves on the platform at Monterosso,     trying to figure everything out. This included buying a ticket, as the     <i>biglietteria</i> was closed for the evening. There appeared to be a     machine opposite the closed ticket office that dispensed tickets if you     knew enough about the process to get one. In spite of my lack of Italian     language prowess, I do know a lot about computers and this one, though     primitive with only a double-line LCD display, had definately crashed. </p>
<div style="float:left; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
    <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/train_tunnel.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Train Tunnel at Vernazza</p>
</div>
<p>
    Katie suggested that we simply get on the train and figure it out later.     I, having been brainwashed by my mother about how I&#8217;ll be sent to a gulag     if I ever hop a train with no ticket, decided to check out the area around     the station to see if anyone had any information about how to get tickets     when the office was closed and the <i>macine biglietti</i> was hosed.     My search yielded <i>niente</i>, as everything was closed this time of     night. There was a woman on the platform, waiting for a train to Genoa,     who I asked for help. She sheparded me to the machine inside, and then     frowned. I guess she also understood that the machine was <i>muerte</i>. </p>
<p>
    So, we hopped the train. </p>
<p>
    For maybe my second time <i>ever</i> on an Italian train &#8212; particularly a     regional (i.e. local) train like the one we were on, a ticket-taker walked     through the door at the back of the car. He asked us for our tickets, and,     while Katie was contemplating giving him her <i>Cinque Terre</i>-only     ticket (which she had apparently never validated), I told him that the     ticket machine at <i>Monterosso</i> was not working. He frowned and said,     <i>&#8220;no ticket?&#8221;</i>. <i>&#8220;Si, no ticket&#8221;</i> :( He asked where were going,     and we indicated that we were going to Pisa, via <i>La Spezia</i>, and on     to Florence. He shrugged and continued walking through the car. </p>
<p>
    I thought we were home free. I figured he was thinking <i>&#8220;they&#8217;re just     stupid tourists, and it&#8217;s really not worth my time to go through the     process of selling them a ticket. It&#8217;s only five more minutes on the     train, anyway.&#8221;</i> I was wrong. He returned with a ticket book, and     started flipping through it, apparently looking for <i>the     instructions</i>, since he looked like he had no idea what he was doing.     He sold us tickets all the way to Pisa, which was nice, because we     were likely to have the same problem in <i>La Spezia</i>. He asked again     where we were going. <i>&#8220;A Firenze&#8221;</i>. He wrinkled his brow and     grimaced. Then, he checked his watch and frowned. <i>&#8220;I dunno,&#8221;</i> he     said, which wasn&#8217;t encouraging. Just then, his buddy walked through the     door, wearing the same conductor&#8217;s outfit and one quickly informed the     other of our situation. The newcomer glanced at his watch and also     frowned. With the double-frown, I was starting to get worried. </p>
<div style="float:right; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
    <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/joshua_tower_top.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Joshua in Vernazza from Above</p>
</div>
<div style="float:left; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
    <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/joshua_tower.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Joshua in Vernazza from Below</p>
</div>
<p>
    It became evident that it was going to be a close-call at Pisa. It would     be a stretch to catch the last train of the night. At <i>La Spezia</i>, we     waited anxiously for our connecting train, and then relaxed once aboard.     It takes about an hour to get from <i>La Spezia</i> to Pisa, and it     appears that about fifteen minutes of that time is spent pulling around     a curve that is within spitting distance of the train station in Pisa.     The entire car stood up and piled into the space between the compartments,     waiting for the doors to open. And waiting. <i>And waiting.</i> We must     have waited for a good ten minutes just standing there. </p>
<p>
    When we got off the train, I assumed that our chances of catching the last     train to Florence for the evening would be nil. So, I asked the two nice     looking old ladies in front of me as we disembarked where the bus station     was. They considered the question for a moment, and then decided that they     should simply show me. I started off after them when Katie shrieked at the     top of her lungs to come back. I bid <i>grazie</i> and <i>arrivederci</i>    to the ladies and went back up the stairs to the platform. Katie was     hunched over the schedule with Wayne and Jessica huddled around her.     <i>&#8220;We&#8217;ve got a train, and we don&#8217;t even have to switch platforms! It     should be here right now!&#8221;</i> In the world of trains, if it&#8217;s not here     <i>right now</i>, it&#8217;s already gone. The clocks on the walls were two     minutes faster than my cell phone&#8217;s clock, but I think Trenitalia runs by     their own clocks instead of my cell phone. </p>
<p>
    I trotted down the platform and asked someone who was wandering around on     the tracks wearing a highly reflective service uniform if he knew where     the train for <i>binario tre</i> was. He muttered something in Italian     that I didn&#8217;t understand, and came over to us to look at the schedule.     <i>&#8220;Aah&#8230; solo festa,&#8221;</i> he said, and I nearly fell over: Sundays only.     Well, I suppose it&#8217;s technically &#8220;festival days and Sundays&#8221;, but trust     me, today was no festival day. If we made it home that night, I would     have promised to hold the biggest <i>festa</i> Florence had ever seen. </p>
<div style="float:right; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
    <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/group_in_monterosso.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">All of us in Monterosso, con sunset</p>
</div>
<p>
    We were stranded in Pisa. </p>
<p>
    We decided to ask the taxis how much it would cost to take a cab to     Florence. It sounds completely foolish, but we figured that, if a double     room costs €60 and the train costs €15 for all four of us, that our     breaking point would be around €135. Each cab said the same thing (which     was, in itself, encouraging) that the ride would be somewhere in the €140     range, but that they wouldn&#8217;t do a flat rate &#8212; only metered. We figured     that they were probably underbidding the price a little, so we abandoned     the idea of taking a cab. A women in line for taxis was adament about us     going to the hostel where she and her two travel mates were headed. She     even wrote down the name and telephone number for us, in case we wanted     to try. Honestly, we were more interested in a place to stay as close to     the train station as possible. </p>
<p>
    After some debate, we decided that the best thing for <i>il bambino</i>    was to get a room in Pisa and just call it a night. Katie and I were     determined to get back to Florence, especially when we found out that     there was only one room at the <i>pensione</i> we found near the train     station that had availability (we had called from the train and they     had two rooms available). After taking care of Wayne and Jessica, we     proceeded to determine the location of the bus station. Guidebook maps     seem to indicate that the bus station is, in fact, directly in front of     the train station. When we looked at the signs on our way out, it looked     like all the busses were local busses &#8212; those that did short, intracity     routes and returned to the same spot. </p>
<p>
    Since we were there, we asked the guy at the desk in the <i>pensione</i>.     He seemed to know less about the bus situation than <i>we</i> did, and directed     us around the corner, which was <i>away</i> from the train station. I was     skeptical, but I knew from the (in service!) ticket machine at Pisa that     there was a bus to Florence leaving at 00:46&#8230; we just needed to find     out where to wait. </p>
<p>
    As we came within a block of the place indicated by the hotel attendant,     I heard the unmistakable sound of bus brakes and a large diesel engine.     I jogged up ahead and around two corners to find the source of the noise.     Sure enough, right where he had indicated, there was a <i>Lazzi</i> bus     parked on the side of the road. I was elated! It was even there about 25     minutes early, which would be nice, &#8217;cause we could get onto the bus     and just relax&#8230; no sitting on a concrete bench in the middle of the     night waiting for the damned bus! </p>
<p>
    Unfortunately, this was not the bus to Florence. So, I asked the driver     <i>&#8220;dové la autobus a Firenze?&#8221;</i> He waved his arms and said a     <i>lot</i>, and the only work I understood from all of that was     <i>stazione</i>: the train station. I told him that I was confused,     and he simplified it for me: <i>&#8220;bus at train station&#8221;</i> (in English),     and then motioned towards the station. I replied that I <i>knew</i> where     the station <i>was</i>, but I didn&#8217;t know where to catch the bus to     Florence. He motioned for me to get on his bus. Katie appeared out of     nowhere, as if the potential for success was so great that it had whisked     her off her feet and deposited her next to me as a witness to my triumph:     this bus driver was going to take me either to the place where I will     catch the bus to Florence, or he will be so enraged by my stupidity that     he will actually drive me all the way to Florence just to make me shut     up. </p>
<p>
    He drove the three blocks to the train station and opened the door     where we had started: right next to a sign that said <i>&#8220;Linea Verde&#8221;</i>,     the green line through Pisa. I rolled my eyes and got off the bus. I     turned to the driver and said, <i>&#8220;Qui?&#8221;</i>, and indicated the place     on the cement where I was standing. <i>&#8220;Qui!&#8221;</i>, said the driver.     Just to make <i>absolutely</i> sure that we were seeing eye-to-eye,     I asked, <i>&#8220;La bus a Firenze &#8212; qui?&#8221;</i>. He replied a conclusive,     <i>&#8220;Si&#8221;</i>. Contented, we decided to find a place to sit. We still     had twenty minutes or so left until the bus came, so we had to     amuse ourselves in that time. I decided to re-read all the signs that     we had looked at before, just in case I was missing something glaringly     obvious like &#8220;Intercity Bus Stop&#8221; somewhere. </p>
<p>
    Just then, a well-dressed man approached Katie and asked her if she needed     to get to Florence. She replied that she did, and he offered her a ride in     his car. I overheard some of this, and came back to where the two of them     were talking. He said that he would take us for €50, which actually     sounded like a pretty good deal. I let Katie make the call. <i>&#8220;We don&#8217;t     have that much money,&#8221;</i> she said. I had almost double that amount in my     pocket, so she must have decided against hitching a ride at some point.     He looked at the two of us, and quickly became very apologetic, half     bowing as  he backed away, saying <i>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry, no problem, si?     I&#8217;m sorry.&#8221;</i>. </p>
<p>
    I turned to Katie and said <i>&#8220;were you just propositioned?&#8221;</i>.     <i>&#8220;I think so,&#8221;</i>, she laughed incredulously. </p>
<p>         Since I was sick, I had been drinking a lot and needed to locate some     facilities, <i>pronto</i>. A lengthy survey of the train station yielded     neither restrooms nor an alley dark enough for a substitute. We returned     to the alleged bus stop, and noticed that there was a pizzaria that was     apparently open. And it was <i>hopping</i>! I guess when you&#8217;re the only     place in town that&#8217;s open past midnight, everybody drops by. </p>
<p>
    We bought a bottle of water, mostly to be polite, and took care of     business. I asked one of the cooks if he spoke English. I was determined     to get to the bottom of this whole bus situation, and at this point,     I was settling for nothing other than an English conversation that I could     actually understand. He frowned and shook his head. I pointed to another     cook and asked <i>&#8220;Lui parla inglese?&#8221;</i>: does he speak English? He     shook his head and I proceeded to point to another person behind the bar     and ask again. He called to his co-worker to come over and talk to me.     He spoke a little English, but it was good enough for me. I said very     simply that I was going to Florence, there was a 00:46 bus and I wanted     to be on it. I only needed to know where it stopped. Fortunately, he     completely understood (or feigned complete comprehension) and said that     the bus comes <i>&#8220;just outside&#8221;</i>, indicating the area directly outside     the pizzaria. </p>
<p>
    Once again contented with an explanation, we went outside to take a look.     Standing in the middle of the street, with one bus parked away in a corner     of the circle (don&#8217;t ask me how that works, I just know this this bus     was definately parked in a <i>corner</i> of the circle) where the busses     stop, and a nearly empty piazza all around us, we decided to stand in the     middle of the circle along the grass &#8212; ready for action. My cell phone     said it was 00:43, so Trenitalia must think it&#8217;s about time to be leaving     for Florence by now. </p>
<p>
    Just then, a bus came <i>flying</i> through the streets of Pisa, tearing     across the intersection just in front of the train station, and into the     circular drive where we were standing. It came to an abrupt halt, and we     could already hear the driver animatedly ushering his friend off the bus     out onto the sidewalk. The two of them lit up cigarettes, exchanged a      few words, and then the driver stalked off through a door in the side of     the train station. We walked up and asked the two people standing outside     the door to the bus, <i>&#8220;a Firenze?&#8221;</i> We were greeted with a very     friendly, <i>&#8220;Si! Si! Thees-a bus going-a to Florence!&#8221;</i>. </p>
<p>
    <i>Fantastico</i>. Now all we had to do was figure out how to buy a     ticket. The machine inside the station only sells <i>train</i> tickets,     though it has the complete bus schedule available, and you can even buy     a train ticket that includes complex transfers, including busses. An     oversight in customer use-case planning resulted in the unfortunate     inability to purchase <i>only</i> a bus ticket. And, if there had been     anything resembling a ticket office anywhere near the train station in     Pisa, I would have already found it and violently assulted any ticket     machine that refused to give me a ticket for whatever reason. </p>
<p>
    To avoid a lengthy destruction of public property trial, I asked the     friendly gentlemen in front of the bus where I could buy a ticket for     this particular bus. They exchanged a look, looked at the train station     entrance, consulted their watches, and then nodded at each other:     <i>&#8220;In la bus&#8221;</i>, and indicated that we should buy our ticket from     the driver once we were on the bus. </p>
<p>
    The driver emerged from the train station and exchanged a few animated     words with his buddies outside the bus. He looked around at the small     collection of people waiting on the curb and said <i>&#8220;okay-ee! ever-body     to Firenze!&#8221;</i> and climbed in. We all piled in and sat down     on the bus, which appeared more cavernous than it should due to the     dearth of passengers at this late hour. </p>
<p>
    The driver was very friendly and spoke a tiny bit of English, which he     enjoyed using. He verified that we were, in fact, going to Florence, and     specifically to <i>Santa Maria Novella</i> &#8211; the main train station in     Florence. The tickets were the same price as the train ticket would have     been: €5 each. After processing each passenger in such a way and expelling     a gentleman who appeared to have no verifiable address, he checked     his Trenitalia-synchronized watch, closed the door, and we were on our     way. </p>
<p>
    After a gentle turn around the circle at the bus stop, he accelerated     quite a bit onto the abandoned street which runs approximately east     from the station. He turned on the radio which was playing quite outdated     American pop songs and cranked up the volume.     As soon as we were headed straight on that road,     he really put the hammer down. I didn&#8217;t know these intercity busses     could accelerate this fast, or even sustain the speeds that we reached     in the streets of Pisa. I checked: no seat belts. There was an &#8220;oh,     shit bar&#8221; on the seat in front of me. I grabbed it tight with my left     hand and thought to myself <i>oh, shit!</i>. I grabbed Katie&#8217;s leg and     held on tight with my right hand. She seemed comforted by my gesture,     until I admitted that it was mostly to prevent <i>me</i> from flying     through the window <i>when</i>, not <i>if</i>, we hit a parked car. </p>
<div style="float:left; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
    <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_04_04_pisa_cinque_terre/scenic.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Southeasterly view from Monterosso&#8217;s beach</p>
</div>
<p>
    Not knowing where we were going was part of the problem. The other part     was that were travelling at &#8212; by my estimation &#8212; a significant fraction     of the speed of sound. I expected our sonic boom to be setting off car     alarms behind us for blocks and blocks.     The center line of the road shimmied back and forth as we went     around blind corners, taking the most efficient path for the enormous     yacht we were all in. We came so close to cars parked on the side of the     road that I felt like we were going to take off their side-view mirrors,     bumpers, or even more along with us to Florence. </p>
<p>
    I was hoping to sleep on the bus &#8212; a nice, relaxing ride with a few bumps.     I used to take a 45-minute bus ride to school and back every day for 6     years on a yellow school bus with crappy rubber seats. I figured that     catching an hour of sleep on this ride was going to be cake. I was wrong.     There was no way that any sane person could sleep on this trip &#8212;     especially anyone that had decided that the best place to sit was in the     first normal seat on the bus &#8212; the rumble seat was taken by the driver&#8217;s     buddy, who appeared poised to leap directly out through the windshield     at the first sign of danger. Then, the driver began to sing at the top of     his lungs. </p>
<p>
    It was in semi-English, because he only knew the words to the chorus of     the song he was singing &#8212; the verses were too complicated so he would     just hum along with them and yell out the occasional unmistakable word.     His voice was hoarse from all the cigarettes, singing, and verbal     antics exchanged with his <i>amico</i> in the front seat. </p>
<p>
    Finally, we left Pisa and emerged onto a roundabout for getting onto the     &#8220;Fi-Pi-Li&#8221; &#8212; the Firenze-Pisa-Livorno highway connector. We careened     around the roundabout and were slingshot onto the highway where the driver     performed a harrowing merge and went into the left lane without missing a     beat. After passing a car, we went back over to the right lane for a     while. Whenever we would approach a car from behind, the driver would pull     within no more than 10cm of their back bumper, hover there for 1km or so,     and then lurch into the left lane to go around them. And it goes without     saying that, after passing, he would cut off the driver in the other lane     mercilessly, as if to punish him for not driving faster.     <i>At least we&#8217;ll get there quickly</i>, I thought. </p>
<p>
    Soon, we took an exit for a town I had never heard of. At one in the     morning, <i>this</i> town was completely dead. It was the Italian     equivalent of Terre Haute, Indiana, and we were again racing through     narrow streets. We approached a traffic light &#8212; probably the only one     in the entire town &#8212; which was red. He made a soft right-hand turn     through it without slowing down a bit, taking up the entire width of the     road with the bus. <i>&#8220;Eets okay-ee!&#8221;</i> he yelled, anticipating our     protestations, which were of course frozen in the backs of our throats. </p>
<p>
    We pulled into what had to be the bus station, but looked like a parking     lot for a drugstore, and the bus screeched to a halt. <i>&#8220;Okay-ee! Eets     Firenza!&#8221;</i> the driver bellowed and laughed uproariously as he and his     comrade stepped off the bus to smoke. As the bus sat there, heaving oddly     up and down, we slowly felt our blood pressure and heart rates returning     to normal. We watched the driver and his friend discuss some     inconsequential topic, the driver waving his hands like a maniac and     talking so loud that we could hear him very clearly through the glass     windows. His friend was much more subdued but played along and chuckled     at nearly everything he said. We decided that the driver was motivated by     his desire to stand at the bus stations and smoke cigarettes with his     friend. We concluded that he was driving so fast so he could enjoy as long     of a break as possible, which made sense in our minds. That, and the fact     that he was probably mainlining espresso whenever he got the chance. </p>
<p>
    We left the &#8216;Haute and resumed our journey towards Florence. Having relaxed     quite a bit, Katie and I attempted to discuss objectively the situation     we were in. I suggested taking a short video of us driving through a town     to show just how crazy the trip was. She said, <i>&#8220;nah, nobody&#8217;d believe     that we hadn&#8217;t doctored the video. You know, sped it up. Besides, we don&#8217;t     get any sound, and his singing is half the fun!&#8221;</i>. She was right and I     knew it: this was going to be another one of those experiences that I     will never believe that I actually had, and there is no record of it ever     happening, save for my and Katie&#8217;s memories. </p>
<p>
    In another town, we slowed down in an unlikely place and made what     appeared to be an unscheduled stop. The driver&#8217;s friend stood up and got     off the bus. We were stopped near a corner and there was a <i>tabacci</i>    on it. <i>Oh, he&#8217;s getting cigarettes</i>, I thought. Instead,     the driver closed the door and drove off. Puzzled, we looked behind us,      and saw our now ex-passenger was going into a door next to the     <i>tabacci</i>, which we assumed was his home. Wow, curb-side service!     I decided that we should try to get the same treatment. After all, Santa     Croce isn&#8217;t <i>that</i> far from the train station by bus. </p>
<p>
    At our penultimate stop, the driver re-verified everyone&#8217;s destinations.     <i>&#8220;Firenze &#8212; Santa Maria Novella, si?&#8221;</i>. <i>&#8220;Si,&#8221;</i> I responded,     <i>&#8220;but Santa </i>Croce<i> é un po piú bene&#8221;</i>, which apparently sounded     like Greek to him. He wrinkled his brow, came back to our seat, and     said <i>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry, I want to understand,&#8221;</i> and looked hopefully at     the guy behind us. He was the one who had told us that this was the right     bus and that we could buy tickets on the bus, too. He appeared to be in     a position to help us again. They exchanged a few words, and I only     understood the driver asking him, <i>&#8220;dové&#8221;</i>, and his response:     <i>&#8220;In centro&#8221;</i> &#8212; in the city center. Things were looking promising     for our ride directly to our front door. </p>
<p>
    Having never driven in Florence, I&#8217;m always amazed whenever I come into     the city by auto at how the city center jumps out at you from nowhere.     Much of non-historic Florence is, to me, virtually indistinguishable from     any other non-historic part. I try to identify where I am to orient     myself, but just when I think I&#8217;ve got it all figured out, an unmistakable     landmark jumps out at me from a place where it shouldn&#8217;t be. This hadn&#8217;t     happened yet when our friend behind us got out at another unscheduled     stop in what ended up being the north side of Florence. <i>Uh, oh</i>,     I thought. <i>There goes our navigator.</i></p>
<p>
    We pulled into Santa Maria Novella station right on time: 02:45. The bus     stopped and the driver got up and stretched, facing the back of the bus.     There were only three of us left: Katie and me, and another guy who had     spent the entire ride on his cell phone at the back of the bus. The driver     bid us all a <i>buona notte</i> and we all got out. <i>Male,</i> I     thought. <i>No door-to-door service</i>. </p>
<p>
    We went to the taxi stand where most cabbies were literally asleep at     their wheels. We had to give the first one in line a rather loud and     uncourtious <i>buona sera</i> to wake him up. <i>&#8220;Quanto costa a Sante     Croce?</i>&#8221; &#8212; how much to Santa Croce. Our Italian is so poor, but I like     to think that our attempt is appreciated, and hey, we get the point     across. He grunted, frowned, and said in a heavy Italian accent,     <i>&#8220;meeneemum charg-ay ees eight ay-uro&#8221;</i>. <i>Eight euro to go ten     blocks? Forget that. We&#8217;re walking.</i></p>
<p>
    Katie didn&#8217;t protest. It was cold, and we were walking corpses, but     we&#8217;d be damned before we were going to pay more for the cab ride home     from the bus station than we paid for the whole trip <i>from Pisa</i>! </p>
<p>
    It seemed to get colder as we walked. We approached our front door at     about 03:00. Home sweet home. <i>&#8220;At least it&#8217;ll feel nice and toasty     inside compared to our walk home,&#8221;</i> I said. <i>&#8220;Not if you left the     windows open all day and night,&#8221;</i> Katie replied. Which, of course,     I had. </p>
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			<wfw:commentRss>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/04/13/29/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Pasqua a la Fiorentina</title>
		<link>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/30/pasqua-a-la-fiorentina/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/30/pasqua-a-la-fiorentina/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Mar 2005 12:20:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Christopher</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Italia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Personal]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.christopherschultz.net/?p=28</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Easter in Florence]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style="float:right; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
   <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_03_27_pasqua_a_la_fiorentina/duomo_is_big.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Florence&#8217;s Duomo dominates the city</p>
</div>
<p>
    It seemed a little daunting, going to      <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Maria_del_Fiore">Cattadrale     di Santa Maria del Fiore</a>,     for Easter Mass. It happens to be the 4th largest church in the world     (depending on whom you ask and what your criteria are, the others may be     <a href="http://www.aviewoncities.com/rome/sanpietro.htm">St. Peter&#8217;s in Rome</a>,     <a href="http://www.stjohndivine.org/">St. John the Divine in New York City</a>,     and <a href="http://www.stpauls.co.uk/">Saint Paul&#8217;s in London</a>),      and I was sure that the mass was going to be entirely in Italian, a     language in which I have attained little mastery. Fortunately,     <i>amen</i> sounds the same in Italian as it does in English. </p>
<p>
    We woke up in the morning to pouring rain &#8212; not a good sign when your     travel plans consist primarily of walking. Florence&#8217;s <i>Duomo</i> is only     a leisurely 10-minute walk from our front door, but rain always dampens     one&#8217;s spirit as well as the cuffs of one&#8217;s pants. Fortunately, about     five minutes after we had intended to leave, birds began singing outside,     and we were convinced that the rain had stopped for the time being.     We set out, umbrellas in tow, toward the Basilica under a low canopy of     light grey clouds. The rain had subsided, and lots of people were making     their way through the city to various churches. </p>
<p>
   For the first several blocks, I was convinced that we were headed in the    wrong direction, despite my clear recollection of how to get to the Duomo    &#8212; we walk by it almost every day. Today, most of the foot traffic seemed    to be in the direction opposite to the way we were going. I guessed that    these particular inhabitants preferred other churches to the Duomo &#8212;    particularly today when the mass is likely to be overrun with tourists    who may be less than faithful. </p>
<p>
   Another reason why there was no clear destination for the hundreds of    people we saw that morning was that Florence is home to at least    8 gigantic basilicas and churches    (<a href="http://www.mega.it/eng/egui/monu/smnbas.htm">Santa Maria Novella</a>,    <a href="http://www.greatbuildings.com/buildings/San_Lorenzo_Florence.html">San Lorenzo</a>,    <a href="http://www.emmeti.it/Welcome/Toscana/Firenze/SSpirito/sspirito.uk.html">Santo Spirito</a>,    <a href="http://www.emmeti.it/Arte/Toscana/ProvFirenze/Firenze/santa_maria_carmine.uk.html">Santa Maria del Carmine</a>,    <a href="http://www.mega.it/eng/egui/monu/xbasilic.htm">Santa Croce</a>,    <a href="http://www.knowital.com/Towns/Florence/Guide1/html/florence_-_orsanmichele.html">Orsanmichele</a>,    Il Duomo, and    <a href="http://www.wga.hu/database/churches/trinita.html">Santa Trinita</a>), as well as dozens of smaller churches    around the city. It is easy to see why, ninety minutes before the most    important mass in the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Catholic">Catholic church</a>, there would    be mass confusion in the streets with each person going to the church    of their choice for Easter. </p>
<div style="float:left; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
   <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_03_27_pasqua_a_la_fiorentina/procession.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Colorful procession of the ox-cart</p>
</div>
<p>
   When we arrived at the Duomo, the square was filled with hundreds of    tourists, there to see the procession of medieval costumes and trumpet    fanfare. A traditional ox-cart loaded with enough fireworks to bring    down the roof of the cathedral was parked out front, waiting for    the beginning of the mass to detonate and burn for a good 15 minutes.    We watched for a few minutes, and then decided that we had better get    inside and find seats before we found ourselves <i>standing</i> through    an entire mass which was likely to be longer than usual. </p>
<p>
   It turns out that few people were gathered to the right of the alter &#8212;    most had gathered in the    <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cathedral_diagram#Nave">nave</a>,    where all of the temporary seating had been set up, and the best place    to get a view of the ox-cart outside, poised for subsequent conflagration.    We sat down and took a few pictures before the mass started. We also began    to notice that, inside the cathedral, it was <i>freezing</i>. Since the    church has few windows to let in a great deal of light, and no noticeable    heating system, it is still cold from the winter. Even when the sun is    bright and lightly baking those in the square, the church remains dark    and cold. </p>
<div style="float:right; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
   <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_03_27_pasqua_a_la_fiorentina/us.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Katie and me in the Duomo</p>
</div>
<p>
   There seemed to be quite a lot going on outside that we could not see.    Trumpets would occasionaly sound, the crowd would cheer, and everyone in    the church was looking around, trying to get a better look at either the    action outside or the tremendous architecture inside. I was trying to guess    the country of origin for all of the people surrounding us. I listened to    their speech and decided that there were a number of Italians and Americans    &#8212; which came as no surprise to me &#8211; as well as German, Polish, and a few    Asian languages. My capacity to identify languages pretty much stops at    the eastern edge of Europe&#8230; I haven&#8217;t had enough friends who speak Asian    languages often enough to have learned to recognize certain sounds that tip    me off as to the language of the speaker. I might be able to discern    Japanese from a Chinese dialect if I heard them at the same time, but    I have to admit that I am very ignorant with respect to these languages    at this point in my life. </p>
<div style="float:left; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
   <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_03_27_pasqua_a_la_fiorentina/dome_inside.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Judgement Day on the interior of    Brunelleschi&#8217;s Dome</p>
</div>
<p>
   The architecture in the Duomo is impressive. During the rennaisance,    Europeans finally re-learned everything that the ancient world had already    figured out, and then somehow lost along the way. Art and architecture were    re-born, and people started building <i>big</i>.    <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunelleschi">Brunelleschi</a> was    both an    artist and an architect, and he apparently managed to get an exclusive    commission to build the huge dome of Florence&#8217;s Duomo by both making    <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorenzo_Ghiberti">Ghiberti</a>   (of <i>Doors to Paradise</i> fame) look    like an incompetent, and being a hell of an engineer. It appears as though    the dome itself has stood the test of time, while the cathedral itself    has required bracing along the way, due to the crushing weight of the    massive roof. Arches line both the interior and exterior isles of the    nave, but appear to be buckling somewhat under the stress. Various    means have been used to forestall further weakening of the arches and    columns, such as adding iron rods driven through the columns to the    roof &#8212; apparently to hold the two supports of the arch together. </p>
<div style="float:right; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
   <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_03_27_pasqua_a_la_fiorentina/fiorentini.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Florentines in costume</p>
</div>
<p>
   Upon review of the pictures I took inside the cathedral, I have to say    that the duomo looks smaller in the pictures. It is simply <i>massive</i>.    The ceiling is so high that looking directly up at the inside of the dome    invokes a strong sense of vertigo, so it was fortunate that I was already    sitting down. The pictures taken, in general, have a very warm illumination    to them. That is due to the <i>faux</i> candles that are mostly used around    the church. They emit the usual, vaguely yellowish light given off by    incandescent light bulbs. A few of the candles were real, and added to the    yellow glow which lights the inside of the basilica. </p>
<div style="float:left; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
   <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_03_27_pasqua_a_la_fiorentina/ox_cart_explosion.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">The ox-cart explosion lasts at least    fifteen minutes</p>
</div>
<p>
   The service finally began with what I can only assume was a long    introduction and welcoming of all the guests, tourists, and faithful    to Florence&#8217;s Duomo. This was one of the only Catholic masses where    it wasn&#8217;t entirely obvious when to stand up or sit down. Since so    many of the visitors were non-Catholic (like the German family who    accidentally took part in the Eucharist and wasn&#8217;t exactly sure what    to do with the wafer) or non-Italian-speakers (such as our family),    many of the attendants were unable to follow the printed mass program    (such as I, who, for reasons still unclear to me, was apparently    the owner of a 3-year-old Easter program&#8230; it is <i>very</i> difficult    to follow a mass in another language when you&#8217;re expecting a totally    different set of phonics to be uttered by the priest). </p>
<p>
   In spite of my program buffoonery, I knew exactly what was going on when    the organist apparently laid down full-out on the keyboard, producing an    absolute cacophony of air-powered sound from the gigantic pipes.    For Easter, a synthetic dove had been rigged, hanging from a wire extending    from near the alter, down the length of the cathedral, out the door and    into the street outside. The dove burst into life (and flame) and shot    right out the door, and into the ox-cart waiting outside. The next fifteen    minutes or so were occupied watching the ox-cart spew smoke, flames, and    sparks while the crowd outside cheered repeatedly to the belching of this    Florentine Easter tradition. </p>
<p>
   Once the commotion died down, the mass continued just as it had left off &#8212;    very strange that such a secular (or at least not particularly Catholic)    event should postpone the most important even in the liturgical calendar.    I guess that&#8217;s what happens when religions, over time, adopt the policy    of <i>embrace and extend</i> when events of cultural importance exist    in the places into which the faith is spreading. </p>
<div style="float:right; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
   <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_03_27_pasqua_a_la_fiorentina/mmm_smoked_mozz.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Omelettes with fresh, smoked,    buffalo mozzarella</p>
</div>
<p>
   I had intended to make breakfast before church, but let&#8217;s face it: nobody    was going to get up that early, so we had brunch after mass instead.    I made omelettes with smoked buffalo mozzerella, which was an entirely new    taste thrill for me. The mozzarella was <i>super</i> smoky. While being an    interesting thing to try, and might be good to have occasionally,    not much can beat a big salty sphere of mozzarellific goodness. Mmmm&#8230;    <i>insalata caprese</i>&#8230; </p>
<p>
   I have also started getting accustomed to our limited means with respect    to the kitchen in our rented flat. We have a single serrated knife,    a single, thin, aluminum pan, and two pots of different sizes. Oh, and    something that looks kind of like a mini watering-can, complete with    spout, but matches the pattern of the two pots. I&#8217;m not sure what its    intended use is, but I used it to beat the eggs and milk together and    pour it into the pan. We have one of those infuriating plastic &#8220;pasta    spoons&#8221;, which I believe was invented explicitly to make sure that one    didn&#8217;t eat too much pasta, and a large, shallow plastic spoon with    holes in it &#8212; kind of like the wire spoons used to retrieve things    from large vats of boiling oil when frying things. I have nearly perfected    the art of pouring the omelette from the pan into the spoon and then,    with a flick of the wrist, returning the eggs, folded in half, back    into the pan. Luckily I am capable of flipping the omlette with nothing    more than a flick of the wrist on the handle of the pan. </p>
<p>
   The previous day, at the <i>Mercato St. Ambrogia</i>, I acquired the    necessary ingredients for my Easter meal. I had originally intended to    get lamb &#8212; probably chops, since we have only microwave and toaster    ovenw &#8212; but settled instead on a beef fillet bathed in sage and other    herbs, inserted into a loaf of bread and finally wrapped in prosciutto    and lashed together with string. I wasn&#8217;t sure how well the toaster oven    was going to work, but hey &#8212; why not? </p>
<p>
   I decided to just kick the toaster oven up as high as it would go to sear    the meat, and then re-evaluate the situation. Since the oven doesn&#8217;t really    stay warm when its heating cycle turns off the elements, I ended up leaving    the toaster at this high setting for the duration. The problem turned out    to be not the heat, but the <i>electricity</i>. </p>
<p>
   I believe that Katie and I are the first guests to rent this particular    apartment from the owner. As such, it is missing some important things,    such as a garlic press or a 30-amp circuit. With the toaster oven at 250    degrees (Celcius), the breaker tripped approximately every 6 minutes.    The worst part was that it wasn&#8217;t just tripping the breaker for the kitchen    &#8212; it was tripping the <i>main</i> breaker. That means that the apartment    itself can&#8217;t provide enough power for the toaster oven, which is pretty    sad. Needless to say, this wasn&#8217;t exactly convenient for cooking. </p>
<p>
   We decided that, to minimize the changes of the circuit breaker being    tripped (or, at least to maximize the time between mandatory trippings),    we had better turn <i>everything</i> off. We unplugged anything that could    possibly draw current, including nightlights and even things that were    already completely turned off like the CD-player. We sat in total darkness    and watched the toaster oven&#8217;s orange light to see if it was still on.    The breaker tripping didn&#8217;t make <i>that</i> much noise, and sometimes we    couldn&#8217;t hear it, so we had to watch. I wanted to light a candle, but we    decided that trying to coax a decent flame out of a napkin thrust into    the heating element of the toaster oven was going to be a bad idea,    generate a lot of smoke, and prolong the cooking time of the fillet. </p>
<div style="float:left; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
   <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_03_27_pasqua_a_la_fiorentina/picorino_by_candlelight.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Darkest caprese salad ever</p>
</div>
<p>
   I found the concept of sitting in total darkness pretty stupid, so I    decided to venture forth into the sleeping city to get matches. Of course,    everything was closed except for pharmacies and a few other places, and    nobody had matches. I finally went into a club and tried to describe what    I needed. I didn&#8217;t have a cigarette, and therefore didn&#8217;t look like I    needed matches &#8212; much less a whole pack to take away with me. After a few    confusing minutes, I was offered a plastic cigaretter lighter. After issuing    many <i>gratzie</i>s, and making sure that nobody got mad as I approached    the door, I returned home. </p>
<p>
   Progress was being made. Katie and my father were trying to rig a ladies&#8217;    compact mirror on a shelf so that we could see the eye of the toaster    oven from the living room, instead of having to stand in the kitchenette,    staring. They got it going, and I lit a candle so we could at least have    <i>some</i> light. </p>
<p>
   We sat at the candlelit table and enjoyed our caprese salad made with    picorino cheese that my parents got in Siena. Occationally, one of us    would get up to re-set the breaker. Thank god we don&#8217;t have fuses like    our apartment at home. We would have frozen to death with all the    stores closed for Easter. </p>
<div style="float:right; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
   <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_03_27_pasqua_a_la_fiorentina/slicing_the_fillet.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Slicing the Easter Fillet</p>
</div>
<p>
   After one hour and fifteen minutes, we decided to take a look. I turned off    the oven and then, with the lights back on, checked the fillet. It was    perfect. I&#8217;m not sure how I could have cooked it any better. So, we laid    it asside and made all the other stuff for dinner &#8212; asparagus and fresh    pasta with butter, garlic, and grated cheese. By the time these had    been prepared, the meat had cooked over a bit, but was still very good. </p>
<p>
   Using <i>the</i> knife on <i>the</i> cutting board, I carved the meat    for Easter dinner. It turned out to be wonderful, in spite of the fact    that it was no longer pink inside. Everything tasted great, and we had    wine and <i>aqua frizzante</i>, and a big laugh about the fact that this    would certainly be a memorable Easter, bizarre as measured by just about    any standard. </p>
<p>
   With the lights turned back on, I thought about how I would actually    prefer that the lights be turned back off. There was a calm quiet    during that time, and the illumination from the halogen bulbs in our    apartment were harsh after the softness of the candlelight. Maybe    we&#8217;ll turn off the lights again when we have a meal at home on a quiet    day. </p>
<div style="clear:both; text-align:center; margin:0em 1em 0em 1em;">
   <img src="/wp-content/uploads/older/2005_03_27_pasqua_a_la_fiorentina/buona_pasqua.jpg" /></p>
<p style="font-style:italic;">Happy Easter</p>
</div>
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		<item>
		<title>È Gratis?</title>
		<link>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/29/e-gratis/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/29/e-gratis/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Mar 2005 12:53:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Christopher</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Italia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Personal]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.christopherschultz.net/?p=27</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Katie guest-writes, again.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
   Here&#8217;s another post from Katie. Sheesh.. she needs her own blog. </p>
<blockquote>
<p>
    It&#8217;s Katie again. I feel compelled to share about my and Christopher&#8217;s     recent <i>gratis</i> (free) experiences.  The first came when I was returning     home from the grocery store, about 2 weeks into the trip.  When I walk     alone I tend to keep my eyes ahead of me so I won&#8217;t get any unwanted     &#8220;<i>Ciao Bella</i>!&#8221;, but this days I was feeling friendly, looking at the     shops I  passed.  As I passed by a cobbler&#8217;s shop,  I glance up and said     <i>Buona Sera</i> (good evening) to the shop keeper standing in the store.  He     responded in kind, as expected, but then continued to chat, saying &#8220;how     are you?&#8221; in Italian.  I was then forced to use all of my linguistic     skills, which really aren&#8217;t much, to try and keep up my end of the     conversation and understand what he is saying.  After some initial     confusion, I tell him that I am an American and he asks me &#8220;which     part?&#8221;.  I say Washington DC, and he gets excited and motions me into     his shop.  He has a collection of post cards, including some from DC.     He motions to one specific DC post card and says that it is from his     friend, and then quickly indicates another post card featuring a woman     with enormous breasts and declares that this woman is unfortunately not     the friend in question. We both chuckle.  Then he reaches for his shelf     and hands me a small box containing shoe polish. Upon seeing the     confused look on my face, he motions to my feet indicating the proper     direction of use.  I had that part figured out &#8212; just not the part about     why it was in my hand.  Was I supposed to pay him for it? Was it a gift?      He then asks if I am a student (No) and I try to explain I am here with     my husband- not knowing the word, so we settle on <i>ragazzo</i> (boy) and he     seems to understand enough.  At this point I am ready to leave, and so I     say <i>Grazie</i> repeatedly and head out, with my free shoe polish in hand. </p>
<p>
    Chris, on the other hand, has been working on his relationship with the     owner of La Ch@t &#8212; a man in his upper 30&#8242;s, maybe &#8212; who is always very     well-dressed and always talking to the young college girls who come in     to use the computers.  So he doesn&#8217;t really chat with either one of us,     I guess I spend too much time hanging on Chris.  Anyway, each day, Chris     has tried to extract more conservation out of <i>signor La Ch@t</i>. We even     went to the 4th anniversary party for La Ch@t at a local bar/club where     he recognized us and even said hello. Then, yesterday, while Chris was     working on his laptop, as usual, the owner comes over Chris and hands     him a neck tie.  Of course Chris was confused and the owner mumbled     something about people giving each other gifts at easter, or that he has     changed his tie and was no longer in need of the services of this one &#8212;     it is not entirely clear.  Of course Chris says Grazie, and we leave. </p>
<p>
    Ok, I know this is a lame blog entry, but why we we getting free stuff     from strangers?  Is this just the way of business, like a free sample,     just bigger?  Are we supposed to give something in return?  Are these     gentlemen expecting anything more than a thanks?  I am so confused&#8230;     but on the other hand I do love free stuff&#8230; </p>
</blockquote>
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		<title>May I please introduce Katrina</title>
		<link>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/23/26/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/23/26/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Mar 2005 17:11:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Christopher</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Italia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Personal]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.christopherschultz.net/?p=26</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Katie guest-writes in my blog.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
    My wonderful wife has decided to post an entry in my stead. I find it     difficult to write about the mundane details of daily life, so I will     permit her to do so instead. </p>
<blockquote>
<p>
        Buona Sera!  Mi chiamo Katrina.  Since my husband has not updated his         blog in awhile, I decided to take matters into my own hands, and when he         sees how awful my attempt is, he will realize to never let me touch his         blog again.  Like when washing dishes you accidentally break a few so         that you won&#8217;t be asked to do them in the future.     </p>
<p>
        I am here to give an update to what we have been up to.  Our typical day         is pretty relaxed&#8230; wake up around 9 or 10- have make some café         (espresso) with latte (milk), head to the market to buy food for lunch         and dinner — buy prosciutto, provolone and focaccia for lunch — and         consider buying various meats for dinner until you give up and just buy         sausage because it is easier to count the number than figuring how many         kilograms of meat to to get — then to the outside portion for         vegetables, each vendor having their own way of doing things, and always         the two-toothed old man chasing you with a large knife with a small         piece of mozzarella on the end as a free taste.     </p>
<p>
        No market trip is complete without our stopping by the wine shop (Baccas         Nudo) and have them fill &#8216;er up. They have large jugs of various wine         along the wall and you pick your variety, give them your bottle, and         they fill it, cork up, and charge you €2 — can&#8217;t beat that deal!  Then         we go home for lunch or stop somewhere for pizza, Chris works, I read.     </p>
<p>
        About threeish we usually hit the town, wandering around piazzas,         exploring outside the center of the city, or going to Piazza Santa Croce         to people watch — kids playing football (soccer), mothers taking         children out for walks, and teenagers hanging out with a Frisbee, soccer         ball, or maybe even an accordion.  Then its home for dinner and a bottle         of wine.     </p>
<p>
        Afterwards perhaps gellato and a walk to Piazza Republica to see the         street performers play an up beat tune that involves abusing an acoustic         bass, or a Charlie Chaplin like man who draws a crowd by teasing his         volunteers and making a child do obscene hand gestures — always funny :)         Then back home to bed, to do it all over again.  Yeah, its a rough life.     </p>
<p>
        We have broken out of the routine by visiting Fiesole — a hill-town that         overlooks Florence with museums and an extensive array of hiking trails         — or going out to dinner at a place that is next door- incredibly cheap,         but I am confident it is run by &#8220;the Family&#8221; if you know what I mean,         but I can live with a  little Don for €3 tortellini.  (As a side note to         Mom, I hope this satisfies your blog craving, I will be sure to write         again soon!)     </p>
<p>
        Below are a few selected pictures  there are so many Sante Croce ones         because we spend a lot of time there — it is only 3 blocks south.     </p>
<p style="text-align:center;">
        <a href=""><img style="border:none;" src="/wp-content/uploads/older/DSCN3722_sm.JPG" /></a><br />
        A sample from the Market.     </p>
<p style="text-align:center;">
        <a href=""><img style="border:none;" src="/wp-content/uploads/older/DSCN3771_sm.JPG" /></a><br />
        Hanging in the piazza on a lovely day.     </p>
<p style="text-align:center;">
        <a href=""><img style="border:none;" src="/wp-content/uploads/older/DSCN3809_sm.JPG" /></a><br />
        From the hike in Fiosole along the Etruscan walls.     </p>
<p style="text-align:center;">
        <a href=""><img style="border:none;" src="/wp-content/uploads/older/DSCN3755_sm.JPG" /></a><br />
        Countryside in Florence.     </p>
<p style="text-align:center;">
        <a href=""><img style="border:none;" src="/wp-content/uploads/older/DSCN3768_sm.JPG" /></a><br />
        Ahhhh&#8230;Firenze     </p>
</blockquote>
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		<slash:comments>4</slash:comments>
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		<item>
		<title>Questo addatore é no bene!</title>
		<link>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/15/questo-addatore-e-no-bene/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/15/questo-addatore-e-no-bene/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Mar 2005 15:52:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Christopher</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Italia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tech]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.christopherschultz.net/?p=25</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Chris gets a shocking lesson in power conversion.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
    Before leaving for Italy, I double-checked to make sure that the power     adaptor (brick) was capable of handling European voltages. Sure enough,     the good people at HP have furnished me with a power supply capable of     accepting 100-240V at 2A and 50-60Hz, which covers most of the world.     What I did not have was the adaptor necessary to convert the North     American square, slender prongs into the round ones used in Italy.     Italy also has two different sizes: <i>picolo</i> and <i>grande</i>. </p>
<p>
    No problem. My dad has been overseas quite a bit, and he even has     <i>extra</i> ones because not all of his trips have been as     well-planned (or packed) as they could have been. So, I borrowed     pair of adaptors which, when used appropriately, can get me     plugged-in just about anywhere. </p>
<p>
    There&#8217;s only one problem: they&#8217;re dual-pronged instead of tri-pronged. </p>
<p>
    One day maybe a year ago or so, as I was sitting on Brian&#8217;s balcony,     enjoying the first few warm days of the spring. It didn&#8217;t matter that     I couldn&#8217;t see my own laptop screen&#8230; I wasn&#8217;t intending to get any     great amount of work done that day. Brian has a pair of outlets on     the balcony, which was nice, because our laptops can&#8217;t stay alive     very long with the wireless network in constant use. So, we were     plugged-in. Brian happened to be using an extension cord from inside     the house and I was using my laptop on one of the external outlets,     with one of those &#8220;grounded outlets are for suckers&#8221; electrical     adaptors that simply eliminate the ground line (my laptop has a     3-pronged plug, and the outdoor outlets are dual-pronged). </p>
<p>
    Occationally, I felt like I was being bitten on the inside of my forearm     by a small insect or something. It seemed strange that an insect would be     situating itself directly between my arms and my laptop, where I was     resting my wrists on the keyboard. Yes, it&#8217;s not very good posture, but     I&#8217;m pretty well-insured. </p>
<p>
    It seemed to be getting worse. I was scratching my wrists and trying     to locate the bug, which I assumed was too small to see. Then, the biting     stopped. I concluded that the bug was either dead or gone, and I didn&#8217;t     care which. So, I continued with my work. </p>
<p>
    I was about to get up to go inside for something to drink, and I put     my stocking feet down on the floor and was biten again, this time, very     sharply. I immediately took my feet off the floor and the biting stopped.     Eureka! </p>
<p>
    The mystery was solved: without a ground plug, my laptop was grounding     itself through me: a nice briney material connected more directly to     natural ground &#8212; the concrete, in this case &#8212; than anything else.     So, I was shocking myself over and over. With my feet off the ground,     I was safe from the circuit created by Brian&#8217;s outlet, my foot, and     the ground. </p>
<p>
    In a house full of tech gear, this was easy to fix; not so in Italy. </p>
<p>
    So, I have been to many stores to try, in broken English, or broken     Italian, like this morning, to describe what I want. It is very difficult.     I can communicate that I&#8217;m looking for a 3-pronged adaptor (<i>addatore     electrica</i>), but asking for one with a continuous ground line is     proving to be nearly impossible. I told one woman this morning that     I was being shocked by my computer with my current adaptor. She     said she understood, handed me two adaptors that didn&#8217;t seem to connect     the ground lines, and said &#8220;no shock&#8221;. So, I said &#8220;okay&#8221;, and bought one     of them, since I already had one that matched the other. </p>
<p>
    At home, I tested it out and shocked myself. <i>Molto grazie,     signorina</i>. </p>
<p>
    Yesterday, I found a guy who had precicely what I was looking for. It was     €8,50, and I told the salesman that I&#8217;d look for a better deal. Today,     I was back in his shop, and after I asked him for the <i>addatore     electrica</i>, he went right for the one on which we had settled the     day before. I am currently sitting, barefoot, with my wrists resting     on my keyboard, typing this post. </p>
<p>
    I am not being shocked. </p>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Far from Routine</title>
		<link>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/12/far-from-routine/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/12/far-from-routine/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 12 Mar 2005 16:43:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Christopher</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Italia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Personal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tech]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.christopherschultz.net/?p=24</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The end of our first week is rapidly approaching.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
    It&#8217;s been almost one week and I&#8217;ve only had a single emergency at work.     (<a href="#far_from_routine__past_tech">skip the technical details</a>).     Apparently, an unscheduled reboot of our intranet server irreparably hosed     our LDAP database, which needs to work in order for everyone to use our     intranet web site, including some of the software demonstrations that we     have available, our on-line <a href="http://www.webdav.org">DAV</a>-based     file server, and our <a href="http://www.bugzilla.org">bug database</a>. </p>
<p>
    Fortunately, the last time something terrible happened to our intranet     server, I actually took the time to schedule regular backups of everything     we have, including major databases such as our LDAP directory. I just had     to take the time to figure out what was going wrong. I thought that     restarting the LDAP server process would help, and so I did that, and I was     about (I think) to get into our intranet web site. I must not have used     HTTPS because I found out later that it was still broken. Of course, when I     only check my email twice a day, and only once while anyone in the States     is awake, it&#8217;s hard to find out that things are still broken. </p>
<p>
    Fortunately, most problems in a UNIX operating system are fixed by this     short and sweet process: </p>
<ol>
<li>Murder the process</li>
<li>Delete the files (in this case, the database)</li>
<li>Re-start the process</li>
<li>Re-load the database from a backup</li>
</ol>
<p>
    That took me about 45 seconds to do. Too bad it took my 24 hours to figure     out the problem. At least I didn&#8217;t do the opposite and use a 45-second     investigation to effect a 24-hour solution ;) </p>
<p><a name="far_from_routine__past_tech"></a>    Having not been disconnected from the umbilical cord I typically maintain     between myself and the Internet for quite some time, I&#8217;m still getting used     to the idea of doing things offline. For example, I don&#8217;t want to write     these blog entries while sitting in an Internet Point, because it costs me     money to do so. Therefore, I write them at home and then upload them     quickly. There&#8217;s a way I can send an email to     <a href="http://wordpress.org">wordpress</a> to post the entry for me,     but I haven&#8217;t set that up, yet, so I have to use good old     <a href="http://welcome.to/metapad/">metapad</a> to write them, in HTML. I started     out using <a href="http://www.openoffice.org">OpenOffice.org</a>, but then     realized that, although being great for writing normal documents, I can&#8217;t     easily export it to HTML &#8212; at least not HTML without tons of junk in the     resulting document. </p>
<p>
    Sending and receiving email is also strange, since I end up just syncing     everything when I connect, and then leaving to go somewhere else. I read     the email at my leisure, and write back when I read the message and have     something to say. The next time I connect, everything gets sent, and a new     batch of mail comes in. On top of that, my first trip of the day occurs at     about four o&#8217;clock in the morning on the east coast of the US, so nobody&#8217;s     going to read anything anytime soon. I find myself having difficulty     phrasing some things, especially when time is involved. If I have to say     &#8220;I&#8217;m about to do [whatever]&#8220;, then, by the time the recipient reads the     message, whatever it was will likely be done. So, should I say &#8220;I&#8217;ve     already done [whatever]&#8220;? Probably not, because, as I write the message,     I haven&#8217;t actually done whatever it is that needs to be done. </p>
<p>
    Now I know why there are all of these obscure kinds of cases in languages.     Describing the past in the future tense is bizarre.     &#8220;By the time you read this, I will have completed the task I am about to     start.&#8221; It&#8217;s a head-scratcher. </p>
<p>
    It&#8217;s still somewhat cold here in Florence, so we have to make the most of     the time when the sun is available for warmth. That means that we get up,     have an espresso, and then get out into the city to do whatever. The past     few days have been spent going to markets to get food for a single day.     We come home and Katie makes something to eat for lunch while I do some     work so I can keep my job. Then, we try to go out and do something     enjoyable in the city. Usually, it&#8217;s nothing more exciting than a stroll,     which is actually quite nice. </p>
<p>
    For at least two reasons, I find myself in the unexpected position of not     wanting to go into any of the classic Florentine historical sites. Katie     and I hit most of the big ones when we were here on our honeymoon:     The Uffizi, Bargello, and Academia galleries, most of the basilicas,     the Palazzo Pitti and attached Boboli Gardens, and     most of the piazzas where people mostly hang out and try to sell you     sunglasses and prints of famous works of art. Around Easter, my parents     will be coming to visit, followed by my sister and brother-in-law and my     new nephew, Joshua. During their respective visits, I&#8217;m sure we&#8217;ll play     Florentine host to them, taking them from one point of interest to the     next, so there&#8217;s really no reason for me to do all of that, now.     The real question is how to convince them that they don&#8217;t need to see     the big sites, but that they should help us fill-in the gaps that we     missed in the past&#8230; </p>
<p>
    After our stroll, where we try to wander aimlessly through the city,     especially in, around, and into places we&#8217;ve never ventured. For example,     today we went across the Arno (the &#8220;left&#8221; side) and then west to see     Santa Maria del Carmine. My mother was interested in the frescoes there,     so we wanted to see how long it would take and if it was a nice walk.     What she doesn&#8217;t realize is that you can&#8217;t walk 10 meters without seeing     a fresco! </p>
<p>
    With the afternoon waning, we return home and I generally work from then     until dinnertime. Another trip to the La Ch@t for an email refresh (this     time, while my colleagues are actually awake!) and I return to work. It     helps me keep my mind off the fact that it&#8217;s still pretty cold. </p>
<p>
    There&#8217;s a warm front coming in, and it rained this morning, so hopefully     things will be warming up somewhat soon. I&#8217;d rather not wait for Easter     to roll around before I can wear fewer than 3 shirts plus my jacket when     I go out. </p>
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		<title>Octopi and Brains</title>
		<link>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/09/octopi-and-brains/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/09/octopi-and-brains/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Mar 2005 13:40:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Christopher</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Italia]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.christopherschultz.net/?p=23</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Katie and I have our first market expreience.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
    Today, we went to an open-air market to buy food for today. Yesterday, we     ate every meal (except breakfast) at restaurants, and now it&#8217;s time we     started buying food and cooking at home. </p>
<p>
    We were more than a little intimidated walking into the market. We had no     idea how a transaction was even supposed to go. We tried stalking a few     people to see what they would do. There was a lot of critical evaluation     of fruit, vegetables, and other goods, but not too much buying. Any time     we saw someone actually paying for something, we only saw the money     exchange, and not the transaction, start to finish. We decided to wander     around and decide what we might want to buy before we dove into the process     of an actual purchase. </p>
<p>
    We took several laps around, mostly because almost everything looks like     something we&#8217;d want to eat. There were a lot of things that I had never     seen at a market before, probably because I&#8217;ve never gone down to     Eastern Market in D.C. to poke around, and my trips to New York have never     included a trip to a market. There were piles of fish, both salted and     non-salted, just laying everywhere. Actually, the fish area was the most     interesting because they had stuff like whole octopii, squid, and     something that I didn&#8217;t exactly recognize, but was vaguely like an     octopus, because it had large tenticles with suckers, but not much else.     Perhaps the rest of the body had been hacked-off because it took up too     much room on the display table. They had some kind of fish that looked     like a shark about 1 meter long, with smooth, grey skin. I couldn&#8217;t see     the head, which probably didn&#8217;t make much of a difference because I     couldn&#8217;t identify the thing unless it had a sign on it, anyway. And then,     it would probably be in Italian, and I wouldn&#8217;t know what it would be     called in English. </p>
<p>
    Suprisingly, it was the non-fish-related tables that had things that     seemed a little less appetising to me than the fish tables. Some     people don&#8217;t like liver, so I suppose they don&#8217;t like looking at it.     Then, there&#8217;s <i>trippe</i> (tripe), which doesn&#8217;t really look     bad, but you&#8217;d have a hard time getting me to eat it. In Italy, tripe     is, I guess, a delicacy. As we were leaving the market, we passed a     <i>tripperia</i> cart, selling boiled-tripe sandwhiches and small cups     of wine. Maybe some other time. </p>
<p>
    You could also buy the heads of various animals, such as pigs and     chickens &#8212; including the neck. It was suprising to me to see such     items, but only because I am not accustomed to seeing them. I guess     Americans don&#8217;t like using all of the animals that they slaughter,     or at least they don&#8217;t want to see the recognizable parts. The closest     thing I&#8217;ve ever seen in a supermarket was pig feet, but those aren&#8217;t     particularly vivid in terms of images of life. The head is much more     compelling. </p>
<p>
    The only thing that I had to turn away from was brains. I&#8217;m not sure     what kind of brains they were, but they were certainly brains. And not     just one or two brains. There were at least 5 brains on a plate inside     a glass display case, and they were covered in blood. It looked like     the scene in <i>Hannibal</i> where Ray Liota&#8217;s skull has been sawed     open to reveal his brain, and he and Anthony Hopkins were eating it     together. </p>
<p>         We had to force outselves to think about a single meal so that we wouldn&#8217;t     be overwhealmed with the variety. We certainly didn&#8217;t need     to buy an entire rack of lamb, dozens of sausages, thick cuts of beef,     etc. all at once. I decided that, since we are pretty bad at numbers,     we should pick things that have very well-defined quanta, like sausages.     You typically don&#8217;t purchase fractional sausages, so we can simply ask     for one sausage, and see how much it costs. </p>
<p>
    Fortunately, we stick out like sore thumbs linguistically, especially     because I&#8217;m sure we speak slowly and methodically, indicating that we&#8217;re     trying <i>way</i> to hard to pronounce things correctly. It&#8217;s kind of     liberating, because that indicates to them that they should speak very     slowly, but continue in Italian. I would prefer that they don&#8217;t switch     to English, because then that will make me lazy. I really <i>do</i> want     to be able to conduct this kind of discourse in Italian. </p>
<p>
    The first purchase was, in fact, the sausages. The vendor was nice, and     produced a receipt with a printed price when I asked him how much it cost.     I would have preferred him to repeat the cost over and over while I     tried to emulate what he was saying, but it didn&#8217;t happen. Perhaps as time     goes on, they&#8217;ll make an exception for us. On the other hand, I should     probably spend some quality time with a language book instead of making     the market vendors teach me Italian. </p>
<p>
    The vegetable dude was much more forgiving. He repeated the price while     holding up his fingers. Of course, I have forgotton what he said and how     many fingers he was holding up, but I&#8217;ll get better over time. </p>
<p>
    For loose fruits and vegetables, it turns out that transaction protocol     was very easy. You simply say hello and they hand you a bag. It&#8217;s pretty     much all downhill after that. </p>
<p>
    We&#8217;re back at home, now, eating lunch. Tomorrow, we&#8217;ll go back, a little     bit wiser and hopefully more effective. </p>
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		<title>Changing money is a dirty business</title>
		<link>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/09/changing-money-is-a-dirty-business/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/09/changing-money-is-a-dirty-business/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Mar 2005 13:37:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Christopher</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Italia]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.christopherschultz.net/?p=22</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Katie and I struggle to convert large amounts of currency.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
    Yesterday morning was tough. </p>
<p>
    We had until 13:00 to convert traveler&#8217;s cheques worth USD 2000 into     Euros. The first bank we went to, recommended by Lucilla, had a USD 400     limit on currency exchanges. This was going to be a long morning. </p>
<p>
    After leaving the first bank, I was sure that, by the time we had converted     half of our money, the <i>guardia di finanza</i> (fraud squad) would     be trailing us around the city. By the time we had 15 minutes left,     we decided to cut our losses and go to a bank on the <i>Piazza della     Signoria</i> in the center of town, where we knew we&#8217;d get ripped-off.     At least they were willing to exchange any amount of money. </p>
<p>
    After paying Lucilla, we went out for lunch. Unfortunately, we didn&#8217;t     have breakfast because we wanted to have time to convert our money.     It&#8217;s still pretty cold outside, so we headed for Piazza di Santa Croce     to see what we could find. Although Santa Croce is a tourist attraction,     it&#8217;s still a little bit out of the way, and therefore not as expensive as     some other parts of the town. We actually decided to eat outside,     because the sun was beating down and warming us up. The wind had almost     completely died out, so it was a very pleasant meal. </p>
<p>
    We took a stroll for about an hour and wandered through some of the     wonderful sights of Florence &#8212; the enormous Duomo, the square below the     Uffizi gallery, and the Piazza della Repubblica, before returning home to     plan the evening. </p>
<p>
    Before dinner, I returned to La Ch@t and signed up for Internet access     and posted yesterday&#8217;s story. We had a wonderful dinner and decided that     we can&#8217;t afford to do it all that often. Time to start working on     making food in our flat. </p>
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		<title>My 36-hour Day</title>
		<link>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/08/my-36-hour-day/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.christopherschultz.net/index.php/2005/03/08/my-36-hour-day/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Mar 2005 18:51:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Christopher</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Italia]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.christopherschultz.net/?p=21</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Today started like any other day. I got up earlier than Katie and started to clean up the place. Even though this is my usual routine, today was not to be a normal day. We had company coming over, and not the kind of company where you can simply stash everything in your bedroom until [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
    <i>Today</i> started like any other day. I got up earlier than Katie     and started to clean up the place. Even though this is my usual routine,     today was not to be a normal day. We had company coming over, and not     the kind of company where you can simply stash everything in your     bedroom until they leave. <i>Serious</i> company. Jay Gelman was coming     over for a rather long stay, and there was nothing we could hide from     him. Actually, Jay wasn&#8217;t coming <i>today</i>, but rather     <i>tomorrow</i>, which, as you will see, are not entirely     distinguishable from one another. </p>
<p>
    Back to my routine, I am on the computer, allegedly <i>finishing things     up</i>. That&#8217;s when Katie usually gets up and starts making coffee, and     today is no exception. The fact that I don&#8217;t get my customary     hand-delivered cup is of no consequence. I&#8217;m really trying to finish     &#8220;something&#8221; up very quickly, and pretty permanently. Today, I&#8217;m actually     going to turn off some computers. </p>
<p>
    As per usual when I am either working on my computer or cleaning up the     house, I become distracted many times over, each task left unfinished as     I see something else that needs doing. These are the actions of an     unorganized, rushed spirit. I am anxious. Very anxious. </p>
<p>
    Katie joins in voluntarily with the house-wide tidying. I finally complete     my work on my computer and shut it down for the first time in a very long     time. I also shut down Katie&#8217;s computer because neither machine will see     much use for a while. I have neither lost interest in computers nor been     fired from my job &#8212; not yet, anyway &#8212; and yet, here I am,     shutting down the computer that I use every day to make my living.     I&#8217;m disconnecting the umbilical chord. Leaping into the unknown with quite     few unheroic looks over my shoulder. Katie is taking the entire process     in stride. </p>
<p>
    The awkward dance is interrupted by hunger &#8212; another fixture in our     daily routine. We generally do not consider food until it demands     consideration of its own accord, and introduces a certain amount of     disorientation along with its growing immediacy. We call Brian and     Heather, who accept our offer for a quickie breakfast at the bagel     shop. The errand turns into a much more complex outing than originally     anticipated, but ultimately results in placating the beast for the     time being. We return home, worried that our preparations will require     time that we simply do not have. </p>
<p>
    We complete our tasks early, and are surprised that we have time left     over, and we&#8217;re not sure what to do with ourselves. Best not to get     there too early, because then we&#8217;ll be saddled with another form of     anxiety &#8212; just as bad but at the same time much worse, because     we&#8217;ll know we&#8217;re that much closer to our next big adventure. We load up     the car and take out the mountain of recycling material down to the bins     in our parking lot. We decide that we cannot sit around any longer doing     nothing, and decide to leave. </p>
<p>
    Brian and Heather drive us to the airport after we call Jay to tell him     that the house will be empty whenever he is ready. The adventure begins. </p>
<p>
    There are mundane details regarding our airline travel. We never received     our tickets in the mail. We still haven&#8217;t paid the taxes due on the     tickets purchased using frequent-flier miles. The in-flight staff is very     gruff, and I&#8217;m pretty sure that a woman was thrown off the plane before     it took off because she was questioning the authority of the airline     gestapo. </p>
<p>
    The gentleman next to me reminds me of a G.I. Joe character and requires     the overhead air stream to be pointed directly at my right ear, pushed     to the upper limit of its output. To my constant detriment, I am plagued     with a complete and utter avoidance of any kind of confrontation with     people who are unknown to me. A reasonable person would turn to their     neighbor and calmly ask &#8220;Pardon me, sir, I am very cold. Would you mind     terribly if I changed the aim of your air hose slightly, as well as     turned it down just a hair?&#8221; In a moment of triumphant pride, I seize     the opportunity to <i>turn it down myself</i> while Sargent Slaughter is     in the aft lavatory. </p>
<p>
    The airline food is not very good, but that&#8217;s to be expected. Knowing full     well that becoming dehydrated is a recipe for jet lag, I carefully plan     my trip&#8217;s intake of liquids and juicy solids including the moist, but     poorly seasoned chicken cutlet in front of me. I have bet on the fact     that if I drink a lot of other things, a few mini bottles of Scotch will     help me sleep and not cause me too much dehydration. Sure, a     semi-inebriated sleep isn&#8217;t as restful as normal sleep, but at least     it&#8217;s sleep. I must fall asleep or tomorrow is really going to suck. </p>
<p>
    Alcoholic beverages turn out to be five bucks a pop. Helpfully, they&#8217;ve     also provided our European friends with a price in their home currency     &#8212; four Euro each. Thanks. Already, there&#8217;s a 30% exchange rate     markup on Euros, which means that it would really cost me $5.20. I     bought these Euros two years ago when the rate was lower, so I could     make out slightly on top. But, I&#8217;ll be damned if I&#8217;m going to pay for     booze on an international flight. It&#8217;s downright barbaric to charge for     liquor on a transatlantic flight. </p>
<p>
    Sgt. Slaughter finally gets tired and cold and turns his air hose off     of his own volition. <i>Slow and steady wins the race</i>. At least I     tell myself that. Hell, it only took three and a half hours plus a     clandestine kamikaze run during his trip to the head. Most of the     lights in the cabin are extinguished, and the only really disturbing     light is coming from the projection screen 6 rows up. It&#8217;s     <i>Pay it Forward</i>, which is a pretty good movie. Fortunately,     the airline has decided that my particular seat did not require a     headset, and who am I to argue? I have to sleep anyway. Yeah.     That&#8217;s the ticket. </p>
<p>
    Besides, why watch a movie when I can hum along to all the mindless     boy-band-like songs that I heard on the radio earlier today while on my     dump-and-chase romp through the house trying to pretend to a guest that     I&#8217;m not one of those people who ends up being found by the police weeks     after dying when one of the tunnels through their hoarded possessions     collapses because there wasn&#8217;t enough structural integrity within the     section of wire hangers and junk mail to keep the roof up.     Modern rock my ass. Oh, man. I traded liquor for tea. It was a     calculated move. I had rejected coffee &#8212; even decaffeinated     &#8212; for tea because coffee is a diarrhetic. Foolishly, I hadn&#8217;t asked     for decaffeinated tea. Stupid, stupid, stupid. Speaking of stupid, why     can&#8217;t I get this stupid song out of my head. Maybe if I really     concentrate, I can get another one, one that doesn&#8217;t suck. Wait. Nope.     That one sucks, too, and it&#8217;s got a faster beat. Maybe if I concentrate     on Mozart, I can slow down the pace of my brain and drift off to sleep.     No dice. </p>
<p>
    I open my right eye to see Haley Joe Osment getting the crap beat out of     him by some school bullies. I switch eyes and Katie has her earphones on     and is watching the movie. She must be in the same boat I&#8217;m in. The     Colonel next to me is also watching it. We&#8217;re all screwed. I know they&#8217;re     showing three movies on this flight, and the second one is almost over.     This doesn&#8217;t look good for me. Time to really concentrate on falling     asleep. Have you ever tried that? Does it work for you? Yeah, me neither. </p>
<p>
    I think I may have slept for 20 minutes or so. I ended up watching the     last 45 minutes or so of Taxi, whose only redeeming quality was that     Jeff Gordon makes an appearance at the end. That gives you some     indication of the quality of this film. Finally, I get the only good     news I&#8217;ve heard or thought up, or thought up hearing, since the flight     began. We&#8217;ll be landing in 45 minutes. That&#8217;s about the time when the     entire population of the 747 decides that they&#8217;d better get in line     for that bathroom <i>right now</i> because otherwise they&#8217;ll have to use     the facilities <i>on the ground</i>. Horrors. It&#8217;s amusing to me that some     people end up standing in line for almost 25 minutes before being      shooed back their seats by the in-flight enforcers. </p>
<p>
    Frankfort is a cool airport. A bit retro while being completely modern.     I suppose this is how a lot of Germany feels. The Germans are supposed to     be supremely stylish, but I don&#8217;t know enough to know the difference.     One big problem in my opinion: too much smoking. In the US, it&#8217;s almost     a crime to smoke cigarettes, at least in the Washington D.C area, and I     wouldn&#8217;t be surprised if that personal freedom was one of the next to     go. Frankfort Airport, in sharp contrast, has <i>smoking bars</i>. I&#8217;m not     talking about a joint where you can get a pint and smoke a cigarette     or cigar. I&#8217;m talking about an elbow-high counter-top, with nothing     else around it, practically in the middle of the corridor in the     terminal. And it&#8217;s not just one&#8230; there are dozens of them. Just a     few short hours earlier, I recalled walking past the &#8220;smoking room&#8221; at     Dulles International Airport as four or five people walked in, each     holding the door for the next. I commented to Katie, &#8220;sheesh, they need     an airlock on that thing because it just lets the smoke billow out of     the room,&#8221; and here they are in Germany, puffing away in the middle     of the terminal. What struck me was that these smoking bars exist in     places which are clearly sanctioned by the airport (they have signs     and everything), but no attempt of any kind of ventilation has been     made, leaving the smoke to just hang around in the air. The constant     eddies inadvertently produced by travelers serve to evenly distribute     the smoke to every corner of the airport. I really believe that people     should be allowed to smoke. I just really don&#8217;t want to have to     breathe it. Especially not for five hours, which was exactly how long     my layover was. </p>
<p>
    There&#8217;s an art to avoiding madness during an airport layover. You can take     the easy way out and sleep in the boarding area until your plane is ready     to board. Or, you can do what we did and tour the airport, wandering     aimlessly in and our of duty free, travel electronics, and magazine     stands. After trying to head-off the hunger beast at the pass by     suggesting a bite to eat, we decide that we really should get some     food. Unfortunately, 5 hours is just enough time to strand yourself in a     city by missing your plane if you foolishly leave the airport. So, we     decide to stay and endeavor to ferret out some authentic German cuisine.     I suggest brats, sauerkraut, and beer. Katie points out that it is     eight o&#8217;clock in the morning, and I acquiesce. There&#8217;s really no need     for sauerkraut this early in the morning. </p>
<p>
    After trying very hard, we find a place willing to charge us 17 Euro for     two coffees, two eggs and 4 sausage links. We return to the boarding     area where Katie tries to keep her eyelids open with her pinky fingers.     I tell her to just go to sleep. I&#8217;m pretty sure that it was at the exact     moment she lost consciousness that the gate attendant announced that     we&#8217;d be boarding immediately. We travel <i>mit dem bus</i> to the regional     jet, which, from the length of the bus ride, probably departed from Zurich. </p>
<p>
    The Alps are absolutely breathtaking. [<b>Update 2005-03-12: <a href='/wp-content/uploads/older/alps_from_plane.jpg'>photo</a></b>] </p>
<p>
    We passed over Zurich(?) and the terrain immediately transitioned from     rolling hills and farmland to endless miles of show-capped peaks.     Actually, the entire range was bathed in snow, as were the aforementioned     hills. But, snow-capped peaks has a nice ring to it. I definitely have to     go skiing here. Soon. </p>
<p>
    Unfortunately for Katie, the descent into Amerigo Vespucci Airport was     less than smooth. I thought she was kidding when she backhanded me after a     mock-vomiting incident in her lap. But the immediate opening of her     air hose to full-blast-in-the-face after a sudden drop of a few dozen     feet made me feel bad that I had joked about being queasy. I&#8217;m usually     the one eying the steel-belted, quadruple-ply bag in the seat back in     front of me, although I&#8217;m fortunate never to have required its services. </p>
<p>
    Getting out of the plane, I catch a glimpse of a rather high hill out of     the corner of my eye. I had never really noticed that Florence is nestled     in between several very majestic, green hills. Being outside the city     offers me a new perspective that I hadn&#8217;t appreciated during our first     trip, hundreds of digital photos now a blur in my mind.     I snap a picture and the colors immediately begin to run. </p>
<p>
    It was June when last I laid eyes on fair Florence. It is <i>way</i>    colder than I expected it to be. I&#8217;m sure it was only 50 degrees or so     (11 in the local system) but it was windy, especially on the airport     runway which we had to cross to get to the terminal, which is reminiscent     of my trip through Central Wisconsin airport, except without all those     gates. </p>
<p>
    All bags accounted for &#8212; let&#8217;s find a cab. We retrieved the     second-to-last bag on the carousel, and were pretty close to the end of     the line leaving the airport. I&#8217;m sure it only has a single runway, so     I&#8217;m skeptical about the popularity of the Florence Airport for     taxicabs. We jump directly into one and were on the road in a minute     or so. </p>
<p>
    As we left the airport, I mentioned to Katie that we should see how     much it would cost to rent a bicycle or even a scooter for a day. By my     count, scooters outnumber people three to one in Florence. Scooters line     the streets for blocks and blocks. If Ford Prefect had first researched     Florence instead of wherever he did, I&#8217;m sure his name would have ended     up being Vespa. </p>
<p>
    The ride to our flat took ten minutes, and probably should have taken     fifteen or twenty. We almost ran several vehicles off the road, including     bicycles, and had our fair share of close calls with pedestrians.     I can honestly say that whatever desire I had to take any kind of     wheeled vehicle on the streets of Florence has evaporated completely.     After all of the weaving, honking, and near-death experiences, we made it     to our destination near Santa Croce. </p>
<p>
    We had made excellent time, and the property manager was not scheduled to     meet us for another 45 minutes or so. We decided to look around for a     bank, because we were going to need to convert our traveler&#8217;s cheques into     euros. On the way, I saw an Internet <i>joint</i>, and decided to poke my     head in. I call them <i>Internet joints</i> because I don&#8217;t know what     else to call them. In the US, I would probably call it an Internet Café,     because most places that have fee-based Internet access also serve     overpriced coffee and pipe Williams Sonoma&#8217;s <i>Play and they will buy</i>    CDs all day long. I could also call it an Internet Access Point, but     that term implies <i>wireless</i> access point to me. Ergo <i>joint</i>. </p>
<p>
    The woman behind the counter reading a novel is young. Very young     &#8212; probably around my age or a bit younger. Maybe a college     student. This is fortunate, because she is likely to speak very     good English. Despite my willingness to both speak Italian and to     simultaneously butcher it, this is a conversation that definitely     needs to be conducted in English. Trying to explain that I have my     own laptop that I&#8217;d like to use to connect to the Internet on their     network is something that I cannot even begin to describe     <i>in Italiano</i>. It turns out not to be as expensive as I had     feared. If I pay in advance, I can get a pretty good deal since I     will be using fractional hours each time I need to connect. I need     to shop around a little bit, but if you are reading this, it probably     means that I went ahead and made the deal. </p>
<p>
    One block away from <i>La Ch@t</i>, we find a bank. Banks in Italy     have single-person cylindrical tubes that allow one person to enter at a     time, and scan you for large amounts of metal such as a gun, samurai     sword, or bag full of padlocks. In order to enter, you must push a button     on the outside of the door, which then rotates open. You step in,     wait a moment, and then the inner door opens &#8212; like an airlock.     We were attempting to master this new type of door when we realized that     it will not open no matter how much we try to outsmart the device.     The bank is closed. We read the sign on the door which seems to indicate     that it will reopen in 20 minutes. This is a perfect time for espresso,     which we have been desperately needing since we stepped off the plane     in Frankfort. </p>
<p>
    We haul all our bags, which are still carrying around with us, into the     café across the intersection. A very friendly old man &#8212; probably     the owner &#8212; comes over to serve us. He looks disappointed when     we order two café lattés, so I order a 5-inch pizza along with our     drinks. Yep. Coffee and pizza is just as good as I had remembered.     We relaxed for a few minutes before Katie decided to return to the bank.     I stayed in the café, since there was no better place for me to wait     with the bags. There is no way we were going to get those bags into the     bank, so I&#8217;d have to wait on the street otherwise. But, we had paid     for the table, so I felt entitled to continue to sit. </p>
<p>
    Katie returns after about 4 minutes, which I figured was a world record     in terms of currency exchange. Unfortunately, this particular bank does     not exchange traveler&#8217;s cheques, so we will have to visit another bank.     By this time, we need to meet the property manager, so we return to the     flat about 3 blocks away. On the way, we stop at a <i>Bancomat</i> and     withdrawal as much as we can. </p>
<p>
    We enter and meet Lucilla, who is very young and speaks excellent English.     I&#8217;m sure that&#8217;s why she manages this property for the owner,     Isabella. We tell her apologetically that we have been unable to exchange     our cheques, which we got for the express purpose of travelling with     large amounts of cash. She says that she completely understands,     and that her associate, <i>Mauricio de la Muerte</i>, will stop by first     thing in the morning to collect the balance. Seriously, though, she     plans to return the next day or two days later to collect the balance.     I give her my cell number so that she can call and set up a collection     time. She knows of a bank in the Piazza della Repubblica that will do     currency exchanges, and shows us on the map where they are. Feeling like     an idiot, I start the tour of the flat. Thirty-five seconds later, we&#8217;re     standing in our living room, again, saying goodbye to Lucilla. </p>
<p>
    I have a conference call scheduled for four o&#8217;clock, and I have     15 minutes. I send a text message to one of my colleagues that I&#8217;m     ready to go, and Katie and I step out the door to explore more of the     surrounding area. My phone rings after a few blocks and I stop paying     attention to where we&#8217;re going &#8212; Katie is doing all the driving.     For the next 13 minutes, I followed Katie around the back streets of the     east end of the city. When I was finished, we were emerging into a piazza     with a post office and supermarket. I believe Katie was trying to find     the supermarket, so that we would know where it is. I decide to enter,     because I will want something to eat for dinner. Katie stays outside with     her bottle of water, no wanting to attempt to explain to the employees     why she&#8217;s drinking it and doesn&#8217;t intend to pay for it on the way out.     I browse around, discovering that it&#8217;s pretty much like an American     supermarket except that I only recognize every fifty brand. I can     usually tell what is contained within any given package, because it&#8217;s     mostly food and there are pictures. I decide that a baguette,     parmasean cheese, and wine makes a great meal. I grab these things     and then wait in an enormous line to pay. </p>
<p>
    The woman at the checkout rings up my items and says something to me     in Italian as she considers the bag in her hand. I look at her and     proudly state &#8220;<i>Non parlo L&#8217;Englese,</i>&#8221; which prompts her to change     the look on her face from partially blank to completely blank. I     quickly straighten up and say &#8220;I mean&#8230; <i>non parlo L&#8217;Italiano!</i>&#8221;     She holds the empty bag up a little higher, and Katie mutters to me     &#8220;she wants to know if you want to buy the bag.&#8221; Feeling like an idiot,     I decline the bag and we walk out with a bottle of wine and a     cartoon-style brick of cheese stuffed into my coat pockets while     Katie wields the baguette as protection from marauding wine-and-cheese     thieves. </p>
<p>
    Fortunately, the supermarket is only 2 blocks from our flat, so we go     home to rest. It is about 5 degrees in our flat, so Katie situates     herself on the couch while I prepare the food. There&#8217;s a bottle-opener     in the kitchen, which is fortunate, because otherwise I would be forced     to resort to using the swiss-army-style knife that we brought with us.     Using a swiss army knife to open a bottle of wine is about as easy to     do as cleaning a fish with the same knife, which leads me to question     the usefulness of the whole swiss army knife concept. By the time I     have the wine open, Katie already has her eyes closed. I decide to skip     the cheese, and break-off a quarter of the baguette and sit down on the     couch. We toast to our first day in Florence and finish the bread. </p>
<p>
    I want to go back out into the city before it gets dark. It is only     six o&#8217;clock or so, leaving us with at least forty five minutes of     daylight left. Katie declares that she is both tired and cold, and     will not be going out again. I&#8217;m freezing, too, but my thought was     that we would warm up hiking around the streets. Not wanting to go     out without her, I take a very hot shower and get ready for bed. Katie     is nearly asleep when I climb into bed with my laptop. Normally, she would     complain that I wasn&#8217;t going to sleep after getting into bed, but tonight,     she doesn&#8217;t care one bit. Finally, Sunday is over. Wait. It&#8217;s Monday.     How did two days go by that quickly? Oh, well. I&#8217;ll figure that     out, tomorrow. </p>
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