Saturday, June 29, 2013

Venezia!

We're having a good time in Venice! Lots of tourists here but the weather is great. Tonight we're going on a gondola ride. 

Friday, June 28, 2013

Summer!

We have started our summer out with a bang! Emmy and Eric arrived a week after school got out. After a fun evening in Rome, we went straight to the Dolomiti (with Jess and Maria also). We spent 3 nights in the Dolomiti hiking, eating and staying at the refugios (high mountain huts/lodges). There was more snow than we expected but we had a good anyways. After the Dolomiti, we went down to Lake Garda. While Emmy & Eric went mtn. biking (the area is famous for it), Andy and I discovered some cool hiking trails. We were all sad to leave. Now we're on our way to Venice for our next adventure! 
This is Andy in front of a snack shack that was on top of a mountain by Lake Garda. We had fun sitting by the fire, drinking coffee and wine, and talking to the owner. Hiking in Italy is way better than hiking in the U.S. 

This was the view from one of our refugios in the Dolomites. 
Polenta is a local specialty in the Dolomites! Very delicious! 

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Giant Asian Hornets

While getting off the bus yesterday, 
we discovered one of these hanging out in front of 
the school (kind of hard not to notice)...

I had never seen anything like it before! It looks like a regular honeybee only 10 times larger! Scary! 
 



Thursday, June 6, 2013

Chewing

Chewing is:

a) a pleasurable experience

b) an onerous task

What do you think?

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Massa critica

We took to the streets along with thousands of other bicyclists yesterday for Critical Mass (or the Italian version of it, called Ciemmona). It was AWESOME. We rode along the Tiber for about 5 miles, shutting down traffic and getting angry and bewildered looks from non-cyclist Romans. A really fun Saturday afternoon. We'll get some photos up here soon. 

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Date Night goes awry

We have a new contender for "Weirdest Experience in Rome."

Friday night had gone so smoothly. Caitlin had taken her second-graders on a field trip to the Vatican Museum, a fun and educational trip, albeit an exhausting and stressful one. Major highlight: Mummy!

I had six hours of relatively boring class at business school, learning how to negotiate and how to be a leader. Standard stuff.

We met up at a friend's apartment near Castel Sant'Angelo to walk her dog. Found a nice cafe nearby and had some wine and a bite to eat. Nice afternoon, great weather. We walked back home along the river, a lovely escape from the crazy traffic of Rome. We started on dinner from the bio box: potatoes, zucchini, bell pepper and chicken. Good stuff. Friday night, time to relax, another hectic week conquered.

That's when all hell broke loose.

I had just sliced some garlic to go along with the potatoes (trying to emulate Aunt Laine's famous Potatoes Au Gratin). Caitlin had finished her bath, and was pages away from finishing her book, A Feast For Crows. That's when I heard the cry from the bedroom.

"Andy, you'd better come check this out. Something's going on outside."

I set the burners on low and walk to the bedroom. We stick our heads outside. There is a religious congregation outside, about 20 people holding candles. Priests in their frocks hold bibles, and one lady is shouting Italian phrases into a megaphone. It appears to be directed at our door.

The hungry folks in line at Dar Poeta don't seem to mind. About half of them are tourists or American students, so they're getting a kick out of the proceedings. An unusual number of them are peering up at our building. They don't usually notice us, I think.

That's when I notice the puddle of water near the congregation. The lady with the megaphone appears upset. We see our next-door neighbor also leaning outside his window. We're on the third floor (the fourth floor in American parlance).

"Our neighbor is throwing buckets of water onto the religious people," Caitlin says. Hoo boy.

I turn to our neighbor. I don't know his name, but we exchange pleasantries when we pass in the hall. The only time we really talk is when he asks me to keep the front door open, or when he thinks we're trying to park our bikes in the hallway (we're not.) "Too many bikes," he grumbles. Still, he always struck me as a lovable grump.

Now he turns to us, as we all lean out our windows. "Two thousand churches in Rome," he says in excellent English. "And they choose this one." He shakes his head in frustration.

Caitlin and I are getting a kick out of this. Caitlin waves at our friend Giancarlo, who has stuck his head out of his first-floor window. He gives us a wave, a smile, a shrug, and finally a thumbs-up. As if to say, "Crazy, huh?"

I hear someone calling our names. It's Amy, our Gaelic football teammate from the UK. She's in line at Dar Poeta. She doesn't know what's going on. Neither do we, really.

We're waving to her, and I start to say something clever like "Another day in Trastevere!" when the wave hits. Caitlin is to my right, and our neighbor is to her right by about 2 meters. He is holding a bucket, now empty and dripping. We are wet. Caitlin took the brunt of the splash to the face. Our neighbor has dumped another bucket onto the vigil. We took an unexpected blow. Our neighbor has terrible aim with his water bucket.

Caitlin is pissed. We dry ourselves off, wondering where that bucket came from and what it is used for. Caitlin decides to take Bath No. 2. I go say hi to Amy. By the time I get back upstairs, a police officer has showed up. He buzzes our apartment. (I suspect he buzzed all the apartments.) We hear him outside our door, talking to our neighbor. "Non c'era io!" we hear our disgruntled neighbor protest. ("It wasn't me!")

We don't open our door. We try to make sense of what has happened. But of course there's no making sense of these things. They just happen, and we just have to hold on tight. Occasionally we get a random splash of water to the face here. Most often, the water is not intended for us, but it soaks us nonetheless.

Stunned, we eat our dinner. Date Night has not gone the way we had planned.