Saturday, July 30, 2011
Welcome to New York!
Nothing ever quite works out the way you plan. We flew into New York from Rome on time, but we sat (crawled) on the runway for about 50 minutes. Between that and waiting in line for 25 minutes to check baggage at the only desk Delta had, behind a man with a Major Problem, we missed our flight to DC. No more flights out until morning...
Matilda and Anna of Alitaria at JFK in New York are ANGELS. They found us a room and a car to drive us to the motel and back to the airport in the morning. The final flight home ultimately was swift and uneventful. Its only memorable quality is that the airplane was freezing cold. Yet it got us where we needed to go.
Ah...my first night ever in New York, and I did nothing but sleep.
Friday, July 29, 2011
Leavin' on a jet plane..
It's been fun, and I've hardly had time to even begin to document it. I guess that's what the next several months of my life are for.
In the meantime, I have two more weeks of vacation with relatives and friends in Maryland.
On to the next journey!
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
A Few Images from Firenze
Adventure taken: Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Monday, July 25, 2011
Expectations
To those of you traveling in Italy for the first time: do not expect your hotel to provide washcloths. Do not expect it.
Also, my son Eric was wrong when he said I did not want a rainshower head. Wrong.
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Lucky, Lucky Tourists
Everyone said that Pompeii would be unbearably hot. It was instead pleasant -- 80s perhaps? -- and windy. The worst problem we had was the dirt blowing everywhere.
I'm hoping for some dire predictions for the rest of the trips. :)
A Little Something Extra
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Mangia! Mangia!
Adventure occurred the evening of Tuesday, July 19.
Monday, July 18, 2011
Mall Rats
In Munich, a woman, assuming that Amy was German (and she is, at least 25%), tried to give her an advertisement. Tonight it was my turn. A woman tried to press a flyer into my hand and talk to me about it. Tonight, for the first and probably last time, I was Italian.
The big surprise about the mall was that it was just like the posher American malls...and was the first truly clean place I'd seen in Naples. For some reason the Napolitano respect the mall in a way they don't respect their streets or other public places. It was spotless, shiny, lovely.
Surely this does not refer to that Sonny Bono...does it?
At one point, we saw in a line a Guess, a Footlocker, and something else iconically American that escapes me at the moment. We had a good laugh in Sephora when we found L'Oreal Paris among the pricey makeup. And what mall would be complete without Mickey D's?
...with a serious McCafe...
As we left, I noticed the sky was a brilliant, almost cobalt, blue, and the parking lot was planted with what I've been calling umbrella pines since I don't know what they really are. I wish my phone took better pictures. This doesn't represent the beauty of the sky or the trees.
Water, Water Everywhere
Sunday, July 17, 2011
Napoli, Napoli
Typical side-of-the-road view:
Thursday, July 7, 2011
First photo from Napoli
Upcoming entertainment
Inflight entertainment
Priorities
(The photo has nothing to do with the trip, but I needed something fast. That’s Renee, our family friend, standing beside a plane she helped build. It’s still on the same theme: airplanes. Good enough.)
One simply cannot run off to Europe from the United States without using the facilities. And so a blog about a vacation begins not with dreams of the Tuscan countryside or the isle of Capri, but with the potty.
The bathroom in an airplane is a marvel. Smaller than a small dining table top, every square inch is designed for efficiency; the user-friendly design positions the consumables just where the visitor might expect them: toilet tissue, soap, paper towels. The folding door offers ingress and egress using little floor space; the large mirror minimizes the feeling of claustrophobia.
I always make airplane seating decisions based on proximity to the bathroom.
Several years ago I attended a conference in Chicago. Inexplicably, my friend and colleague Bernadette and I had first-class seats on the trip back to Jacksonville. Because I assumed that first class seating came equipped with a first-class bathroom, I recklessly drank my fill of iced tea before boarding. Not until we were seated did I understand the error of my assumption.
The only bathrooms were in the rear of the plane. I, being in first class, was in the very front.
It didn’t take long for the tea to kick in.
Because no passenger can wander around the plane while the seatbelt sign is on, no matter how dire the emergency, my screaming bladder and I had to remain seated for, so it seemed, the entire flight over the state of Indiana. Such relief I felt when that blasted sign went off, only to be foiled again: the flight attendants had begun their long, slow food-service crawl down the aisle, totally blocking my pathway to the bathroom for, so it seemed, the entire flight through the state of Georgia.
Although I didn’t face public humiliation for peeing my pants on a commercial flight, trust me that I came very, very, very close that day. And so, for the eight hours it took to fly from New York to Roma, I was never more than ten happy steps away from the miniature marvel that is an airline toilet.