Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Friday, 16 August 2013

Italia!

So, after our disaster with the south of France, we headed to Italy. En route to Pisa we had a couple of hours in Ventimiglia, a beautiful quiet town on the seafront where we watched surfers and explored the market. 

Leaning Tower of Pisa

We arrived in Pisa at night, and Joe was the first to spot the Tower - it was surreal seeing it with your own eyes! Our hostel was right by the tower which was incredible, although the lack of a kitchen proved difficult. We shared a room with four other people - two of which were very grumpy and only cheered up after having sex - unfortunately for us we walked into the room as they were under the duvet, and it was pretty obvious what they'd been doing. Joe couldn't sleep due to 'snorey girl' - she was SO LOUD. 



During our day in Pisa we just wandered the streets, followed the river, and had a picnic lunch in our hostel. We also did our first hand-wash which was.. interesting. It took about 40 minutes, and nothing smelled particularly clean afterwards. After collecting some free tickets to explore the cathedral, we split up to have a photo competition - whoever could get the most 'leaning tourist' photos in ten minutes won.
Picnic Lunch in Pisa
When packing up to leave the hostel, my bag felt curiously light - and then Joe realised he'd left half my clothes outside drying still! We grabbed them and then got on the train to Rome.

Colosseum
Rome was.. Rome. It was much more 'London-y' than anywhere we'd been so far - a huge city with so many tourists. We stayed in one of the only hostels left and it was rather awful. The beds gave us bites, and it was like sleeping in a hospital ward. Also, there was no kitchen, so we had to eat a lot of microwaved rice. Yet again we had a rubbish experience with Mr & Mrs Faustus in our dorm, who hogged the one bathroom constantly. I must admit that I did get Rage.
We walked to the Spanish Steps where we met Immy & Ryan (two friends from college) who happened to be in Rome at the same time as us! We bought Colosseum passes cheaply and quickly at Palatino Hill, and then explored the Roman ruins. The colosseum was so impressive, and much more intact than I had thought it would be. We sneakily tagged onto a guided tour led by a man who reminded me of Spencer from Criminal Minds. Joe bought tea bags and I bought iced tea to cheer us up for the next two nights at the horrible hostel. 

Inside St Peters Basilica
The next day we got the metro to the Vatican and tried to get in. Unfortunately, the Pope gives his address on Wednesdays, so the place was a crammed madness. After at least two hours, we sardined our way through security and got in. It was worth the wait! Not only did we see the Pope himself (and the Popemobile), the St Peters Basilica was incredible. The Sistine Chapel etc cost 18 euros each to get into, so, being the poor people we are, we didn't do that. 

We wandered more streets, exploring Rome on foot, and then visited the Trevi Fountain, which is beautiful. It's a tradition to throw a coin in over your shoulder, and Joe and I did so, albeit with a 1cent coin each! 

Throwing a coin into Trevi Fountain
Naples was our next stop! In the Lonely Planet guidebook, Naples is described as 'raucous, hell-broth, dirty, loud, anarchic.." And all those things are true. People say you either love or hate Naples - also true. We both agreed that the only reason we'd really go back would be for the pizza. However, by the end of our stay there we had sort of grown attached to the place. There is nowhere quite like it - walking out in front of cars and expecting them to stop, clinging onto your bag because there literally are pickpockets everywhere. We even haggled the price of a bag down without meaning to. And the pizza. Oh, man. So cheap, and so good. We went to a place that had featured on Heston Blumenthal's programme, and it was delicious, and only cost about 15 euros! We also visited Egg Castle, which was really cool! I felt like I was in Fort Boyard.

Mount Vesuvius
We spent a day visiting Pompeii. No one tells you just how much there is to see there! Nothing is very well sign-posted, and there are loads of stray dogs - I really wanted to bring one home with me.

Caught in the rain!
VENICE was next. We stayed in Venice Mestre - outside the main part people think of as 'Venice' in a hotel (!) but still in a dorm- a three-bed dorm?! The best part about being in a hotel was that our beds were made for us, AND the free massive breakfast! Also, it was only a quick and cheap bus journey to get in and out of Venice itself! In Venice, we spent the day wandering the streets, eating ice cream and pizza, and taking lots of photos of canals and bridges. It is a lovely, serene place that you can get utterly lost in.

Beautiful Venice
On our last morning in Venice, we packed up ready to leave, then went down for breakfast. It got to the time when we needed to leave to catch our train, but we were both still munching away. Obviously given the choice between catching our train and eating more food.. we stayed to eat. Luckily we actually made the train anyway!

Things we learnt:
1. People have sex in dorm rooms, even if other people are in said dorm room.
2. If your bag feels unusually light, you've probably forgotten something.
3. Get Colosseum tickets at Palatino Hill to avoid the queues, and bring your passport if you're an EU resident to get a discount.
4. Don't visit the Vatican on a Wednesday.
5. Always take full advantage of the free breakfast.

That concludes Italy - the land of surprisingly polite people, cheap pizza, and an easy train reservation system. In my next post, I'll update on Slovenia and Croatia!

Wednesday, 5 June 2013

Europe!

Hello! 

I haven't updated this for a while, because things have been pretty busy! I am currently in Bled, Slovenia, and don't want to make this a hugely long post and hog the hostel's computer, but I do want to give a quick update as to my time in Europe so far.


Joe and I set out for our Interrail trip on the 19th of May from East Midlands airport. The Ryanair flight was an experience - they try to sell you things every ten seconds of flight time. We landed in Barcelona and set off finding our hostel! Barcelona was pretty good - we had three days there which was definitely enough time there, but we were sad to leave our hostel - HelloBCN was brilliant, central, cheap, clean, secure and friendly. Man, it was kind of bad to start off our trip with such a great hostel because in comparison everywhere else had a lot to live up to! In Barcelona we visited La Sagrada Familia -  a huge cathedral that's been under construction for like 200 years or something and isn't due to be finished until 2080, we ate chorizo, drank San Miguel, walked along the beach, and climbed up a huge hill to a fort.

Leaving Barcelona we had our first Interrail experience with our very first train trips. We stopped en route to the station to buy fartons - these delicious doughnut-y pastry things - and therefore missed our train to Montpellier. We were stuck with no more train times, and when we looked at later trains they were all booked up or we had to pay a huge reservation fee. After having a bit of a panic, we asked at the information desk and spoke to a very helpful man who even printed out the next train times for us and told us that we wouldn't need to pay a fee. We hung around the station, bought a huge bottle of water that we christened 'the whopper', and then got on our first interrail train!

Our hostel in Montpellier was pretty disappointing compared to HelloBCN. We stayed in the HI hostel, the only one in Montpellier, which meant I had to buy a HI card to be able to stay there. For only €11 it's worth it, because I've used it a couple of times since in places that you can only stay in if you have one. Despite booking a dorm room, we were given our own room with two beds in, which was brilliant because we could just dump all our stuff on the floor without worrying about being messy and getting in other people's way. We spent that afternoon/evening exploring Montpellier - the sun was glorious and the buildings there are beautiful. Unfortunately, the hostel only had a microwave so we were a bit stuck for food to do - ended up having lasagne that was horrible. 


We then moved onto Nimes, which we loved! The hostel we stayed in was another HI one, and we decided to camp, as they had a facility where they provided a tent and blankets etc and you could camp in the little wooded area by the hostel. It was a fair trek from the station/town to the hostel, and involved a lot of hills (I don't like hills, especially not with a big backpack), but it was  a lovely little place. I used my French with the hostel lady which was good, and we dumped our stuff and then explored Nimes. It's just so beautiful. We sat down on a quiet little street at a cafe and had drinks - the atmosphere was lovely. That night, however, was not. We were SO COLD. Literally freezing. Neither of us got very much sleep, and we kept falling down 'the abyss'  - the cold gap between our air beds.

There was no check out time for campers at the hostel, so we decided to make the most of that by visiting Pont du Gard that morning. We got on a bus there, and paid to get in, which wasn't too expensive. Unfrotunately we were both in pretty bad moods due to the horrible night before, and also only had just over an hour there before the bus back to Nimes. You didn't really need much longer there, it's not like there's tons to do. We got off the bus and then raced up the hills to our hostel, grabbed our bags and raced back down to the train station. The train we got was supposed to get us in at 11pm, which was pretty awful. Still, we had booked a night at Nice, so we knew we had somewhere to stay. Unfortunately, our train was held up while we were on it. We didn't arrive in Nice until about 1.30am, and then had to phone the hostel for directions. Joe tried, because I was in a terrible mood and had slept for most of the delayed part if the train journey, but the man only spoke French so I had a go. We eventually found our hostel and checked in - I managed to communicate fine with the man which was a good feeling to end the pants day! We crashed into bed at about 3am, and decided we'd just ask in the morning about booking an extra night or two so that we could actually see Nice/Monaco/Cannes. Why had we ever thought just one night there would be enough? In the morning though, things got even more pants. Our hostel (which seemed lovely, even at 3am) and all hostels in the surrounding area were completely booked up. Why? The Monaco Grand Prix, happening that weekend. Woops, we missed that one!

We were pretty fed up that we weren't going to get to see Nice at all, or Cannes or Monaco - which would have been even more awesome to see while the Grand Prix was on - but we regrouped and decided to leave France behind and go to Italy instead. The beauty of a flexible interrail pass, hey?! We booked for two nights at Pisa to recover and chill out for a little bit, also realising that we needed to slow down our pace a bit, and then we set off that day, having spent a grand total of just three nights in France.

Things we learnt:

1. Always have directions from the station to your hostel.
2. Use the Deutsche bahn website. It is all you will ever need.
3. Get the next train's times, just in case you miss yours.
4. Book hostels with kitchens - it's harder than it sounds to do without.
5. If you want a day somewhere, you need to book two nights there.

I will continue with our adventures in Italy in the next post!