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Topic: From your travelling correspondent in Italy  (Read 1095 times)

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    • Well House Consultants - PHP Courses
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From your travelling correspondent in Italy
« on: October 10, 2004, 07:40:04 PM »
Venice, Sunday 10th October

I look out of our hotel room, across a misty grand canal, to Ferrovia, the main station. It's 07:30, and there's already a few drab-anoracked, pack laden young tourists around - perhaps heading out of town. Wooden poles in the water - treetrunks stripped bare of branches and leaves - look out of place until you notice one or two gondolas, nose it, between some sets of the poles and realise that they're mooring controls. Bright blue plasticised covers add a morning brightness to the gondolas, which otherwise and during their working day are predominantly funeral black.  Lisa stirs, takes out her camera and is now photographing the bathroom, but that's a whole other story.

We flew from Bristol to Venice yesterday - an EasyJet flight which is only a year or two old, but nearly full. Good, efficient "Flying Bus" service.   Venice Airport was smaller than I expected. Luggage came through quickly, entry was just a wave of our passports at an official, and we caught the bus down town.  Like Bristol Airport, Venice isn't well connected into the local road / rail network - we realsed this as our bus turned onto the single carriagway road as we left the airport and headed through towns on what would be a typical A road in the UK.  They say that the excitement of a journey is in the travel rather than the getting there, but I have to say that Venice is the exception.

[Phone rings due to Lisa's bathroom activities]

From our hotel, a maze of back alleyways leads a mile or so through an old town where tarmac is replaced by water. Bridges jump you from section to section of the town. Very occasionally you can forget that you're in this strange place as you pass between high buildings up an alleyway, but more often you're in sight of bridges or waterside.  The Grand Canal threads its way through the area like a letter S splitting the area into two inner quarters, joined by the Rialto bridge, with each quarter spilling into outer areas.  We're staying in one quarter and it's the less commercialised.

We walked through to the other quarter last night, over the bridge, ate at a fish restaurant there, where the passing  traffic was not cars but Gondolas and motor boats and saw St Mark's square with quartets playing outside each of the cafes.  All very good, and the area so huge that there were areas of silence rather than areas of interference between, even  though the music in each area was perfectly clear to hear.  And, to round off the evening out, a ride on the water bus all the way around the "S" back to Ferrovia and our hotel.
-- Graham
Well House Consultants - Open Source training
Well House Manor - Hotel in Melksham, Wiltshire


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Re: From your travelling correspondent in Italy
« Reply #1 on: October 10, 2004, 08:02:27 PM »
And here's a picture from our window ...



Copyright LisaE, reproduced with her kind permission
-- Graham
Well House Consultants - Open Source training
Well House Manor - Hotel in Melksham, Wiltshire


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Re: From your travelling correspondent in Italy
« Reply #2 on: October 11, 2004, 12:08:22 AM »
Beautiful! Keep the journal coming.
Lived in Cheltenham, England> 2003-2004
Lived in London, England> August 2005- April 2009
Back home in Brooklyn, NY since April 2009


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Re: From your travelling correspondent in Italy
« Reply #3 on: October 11, 2004, 05:39:12 AM »
On board "Costa Meditteranea", early morning.

We joined the ship at Venice last night, an embarcation procedure that had us waiting 2 hours in a dockside warehouse to have our hand baggage security screened and to wave our passports and tickeks at staff, but soon forgotten as we got on board, found our cabin, explored parts of this 10 deck floating "palace".  I looked hard for a better word than palace, but couldn't find one.  I wanted something that's over-the-top, new, people at your beck-and-call but with 900 staff and 2400 passengers, we don't have the exclusivity of a palace.

Sailed at 6, out between the islands and past St. Mark's, then on to a group meetup in the Rodeo bar.  That's really why I'm here - a conference - and so are perhaps 120 others.  Surreal at the meetup to have Neil (in charge of the group) introduce a number of people from the geek world.  The guy a couple over from me turns out to be Rasmus Lerdorf, the originator of the PHP language that powers much of this website, and later I'm toungue-tied as we brush past each other. Plenty more chances to meet, and I must remember I'm paying to see him and othes speak, to ask questions of them, etc.

We're seated at tables of 8 in the restaurant, and Neil has placed many of the "Brits" together.  Three eminent names at our table and a fascinating evening had by all.  Notable that our table was the last to clear in the entire dining room, which must be significant of something though I know not what.  And so to sleep, as the ship slide South down the Right Hand Side of Italy.  Conference sessions this morning and afternoon, and the port of Bari sandwiched in between. I had better post, wash, shower, and breakfast.
-- Graham
Well House Consultants - Open Source training
Well House Manor - Hotel in Melksham, Wiltshire


Re: From your travelling correspondent in Italy
« Reply #4 on: October 11, 2004, 07:11:59 AM »
Love the view! :)  Hope you're having fun. 


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Re: From your travelling correspondent in Italy
« Reply #5 on: October 12, 2004, 04:08:22 PM »
Yes, great fun thanks .... but you do know we're working, don't you?

 
« Last Edit: October 12, 2004, 04:12:32 PM by GrahamE »
-- Graham
Well House Consultants - Open Source training
Well House Manor - Hotel in Melksham, Wiltshire


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