Showing posts with label zFood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zFood. Show all posts

Sunday

2. Rome - Piramide/Via Ostiense district

Above: The Pyramid of Cestius (Piramide di Caio Cestio) which gives the Piramide district its name. It was built c. 18-12 BC as a tomb for Gaius Cestius Epulo, a Roman magistrate and member of one of the four great religious corporations of Rome. More at Wikipedia.

Above: Piramide metro station, on Line B of the metro system, and the most convenient way to move about the city. The Colosseum is two stations, Termini four.

Above: The street outside our apartment, Via Ostiense. It's one of Rome's ancient roads (heading towards Ostia Antica), and very busy. The apartment was double glazed and air conditioned, which meant street noise rarely bothered us. Lots of local shops along v Ostiense, including fruit & veg, gelato and bars. We shopped at local supermarkets in the vicinity.

Above: Ben sampling the Italian equivalent of Twisties.

Above: The living / dining room of the apartment - also sofa bed sleeping accommodation.

Above and Below: The extremely well-equipped kitchen.


Above: The main bedroom

Above: The bathroom, which also contained a very welcome washer/dryer.

Above and below: A couple of times we settled in to the cafe at Ostiense railway station for pizzas and coke! This included the morning of our arrival. Our flight arrived about 7am, and we were at the apartment about 9.30am....before the owner had a chance to clean and ready it from the previous guests. We dropped our bags and explored a little of the area. Amazing how you can keep going after a 24 hours with little sleep, with the excitment of "arrival adrenaline"


From 23 to 28 May we based ourselves in the Piramide district, at Via Ostiense 36. We booked an apartment through The B & B Association of Rome, which we found through Slow Travel Italy. It couldn't have been better. Everything went perfectly from the moment of first contact with the organisation and booking, through to the wonderful host contacting us afterwards to say we had left a couple of items, which we arranged to collect. The apartment owners have thought of EVERYTHING you could possibly need. It is one of the best equipped apartments we've ever stayed in.

We loved the feeling of staying in an authentically residential area of "un-tourist" Rome, yet so close to the hubub of more crowded, touristy sites. The gelato shop 3 paces from the apartment is sublime!

This was in sharp contrast to the UNREAL experience we had at the Hilton Cavalieri Hotel in Rome afew days later....

12. Rome - La Cafe Vita






16. Rome - The Conference Goers

Above: View of the vatican and Rome from the Villa Miani, next door to the Hilton
Above: Villa Miani where the formal dinner was held. Next door to the Hilton.




Below: Reception on the rooftop terrace of the Hilton Cavalieri

17. Pompei - the Hotel Diana

We just loved the Hotel Diana - the antithesis of The overblown Hilton Cavalieri. A small, family owned place, the staff are as friendly and helpful as you could wish, the coffee hot (and affordable - 1 Euro a cup!) and the general ambience unpretentious and delightful.

The outside terrace surrounded by orange trees was a lovely spot to rest after a day paying homage to the Ancients, or to bring a few slad makings back for an evening feast, and just generally chat and unwind.

The Diana is 100 m from the main rail station, on a quiet, dead end street, so no passing traffic. If you find yourself sojourning in Pompei, we thoroughly recommend the Diana!




Above: Breakfast at the Diana. Not shown, but also featured were handpicked apricots and oranges from the hotel garden.

22. Napoli - round and about (including one Caravaggio)

To be honest, the whole prospect of Naples has always intimidated me somewhat, and we have skirted around its edges on each visit to Italy - visiting the ancient site of Pompeil, staying in Salerno, visiting the Amalfi coast, travelling through on trains between points further south and Rome...

This time we decided to set aside some time to explore at least part of Naples, with an eye on the national Archaeological Museum and Caravaggio paintings in particular.

We decided to rest our heads in much calmer Pompei, and travel to Naples as a day trip. I think our decision was justified, and although we got a lot from our toe-dipping in Naples, it's still a bit too frenetic and noisy and chaotic for my taste (people pushing and in close proximity in very narrow streets are never my idea of fun, especially with THREE people together, one of them young. You can never walk together and usually end up on a group-march, single file).

Still, I'd now like to return to Naples and discover more.

The pictures are a bit diappointing. It was a grey and drizzly day to start with, and it was hard to get good light in the narrow streets....

Below: Piazza near the central railway station.
Below: Via Tribunali, a main shopping street, in the Spaccanapoli section of the city
Below: In the same area. I don't know what this building is.
Below: A smaller street off via Tribunali
Below: The small octagonal chapel of Pio Monte di Misericordia houses one of Caravaggio's masterpieces, The Seven Acts of Mercy. The chapel is a lovely haven free of the noise and chaos outside. We were there alone for most of our visit and able to sit and contemplate the painting before us for a long time.
Below: The Caravaggio painting, Seven Acts of Mercy.
Below: Piazza Riario Sforza with the Guglia di San Gennaro (Spire of San Gennaro), dedicated to the patron saint of Naples in 1636, to thank San Genaro for saving the city from an eruption of Vesuvius in 1631. The yellow building on the right is the Hotel Caravaggio. It looks nice.
Below: A view of rooftops from the Museo Archeologico Nazionale
Below: Pizza at a local pizzeria near Capodimonte
Below: The Bay of Naples from the park at Capodimonte
Below: Advertising within the central railway station. "Vesuvius and Etna...Never So Close As Now."

Below: A decent reproduction of The Seven Acts of Mercy c 1607

27. Lucca - the town

Lucca is a beautiful town, which was a Roman colony founded in 180 BC. The magnificent walls were built in the 16th to 17th century. Big, fat walls, still entirely intact. Lucca is a great city for walking and bike riding - possibly the most bike-friendly town I've been to in Italy.

Below: A courtyard off via Fillungo, the main shopping street.
Below: The Piazza del Anfiteatro, which is a market piazza which follows the outline of the ancient Roman amphitheatre.


Below: The outside of the piazza di anfiteatro
Below: Piazza Santa Maria, which has the tourist information office, and two bicycle hire shops.
Below: The Saturday market inside the walls
Below: The garden of Palazzo Pfanner
Below: Palazzo Pfanner and the campanile of the cathedral of San Martino

Below: A wall denouncing fascism
Below: a local bar


Below: Shop selling lots of limoncello
Below: Beautiful iron and brick work in the Piazza San Michele

Below: Graffiti at the railways station. Fuck Fascism.
Below: Nazi symbol placed in a bin labelled "Shit"