Monday, May 12, 2014

Amalfi Coast

The first weekend in May I traveled to the south of Italy to the Amalfi Coast and visited the cities of Sorrento, Capri, Positano, and Pompeii. Here are the top 10 from the trip! Coming up this weekend..... THE COLEMAN FAMILY WILL BE INVADING ITALY AND I COULD NOT BE MORE EXCITED! We have a lot packed into the 9 days they are here which includes Florence, Rome, Lake Como, Milan and Cinque Terre. It will be extremely busy but totally worth it. This is the only time since I've been in Milan that I hope this week prior to them arriving goes by fast!

1. Mike Ditka. To start off our trip we had to take a train to Florence before meeting the bus2alps crew to get on a bus to Sorrento. Bus2Alps is a tour group throughout Europe known for planning and organizing trips for Americans who are studying abroad. On the train we were seated in business class and the best part of those seats were getting free snacks/drinks! We have yet to take any form of transportation that offers something as little as crackers because we take the cheapest transportation there is. Emma and I are 95% sure we were seated across from Mike Ditka on that train ride. I was sleeping the whole train ride and Emma was on her phone trying to figure out if it was him or not. She didn't tell me till I woke up when we got to Florence and by then it was too late to ask. BUT, we’re pretty sure it was him.

2. Bus Ride. After getting to Florence we had to get on the bus for Sorrento. We were under the impression that the ride would be 3/4 hours max. Boy were we wrong... (The theme of the weekend was we were NEVER prepared for anything. This was just the beginning.) The bus ride was going to be 7/8 hours... Way more than we had planned. When we were waiting to get on the bus, before we knew how long the ride was going to be, we noticed everyone had pillows and we did not know why. After they said how long the bus ride was actually going to be we understood why. I slept for most of the bus ride unlike majority of my friends and woke up in Sorrento at 3 am to Emma chucking gummy sharks at my face...

3. Blue Grotto. Friday morning we had to meet the group at 7:30 am to make our way to the island of Capri. We woke up to clear skies so we dressed as if that would be the weather for the rest of the day; another time when we were very wrong. We took a ferry to Capri and then had a boat tour around the island. We found out during that tour that many celebrities have villas on the island of Capri such as Mariah Carey and Leonardo Dicaprio. During the boat ride we stopped at the Blue Grotto and for the first time in 3 weeks it was open. The entrance to the grotto is so small that we all had to lie down on the bottom of the boat, including the driver, who then had to pull us through the opening with a chain connected to the top of the entrance. Once inside it was breathtaking. The water was so blue and it wasn't even sunny out. The light from outside passes through an underwater cavity and shines through the seawater which creates a blue reflection that illuminates the cavern. We couldn't imagine what it was like when the weather was beautiful. The blue grotto is one of the 7 Natural Wonders of the world, which after seeing it makes sense why. After the grotto is when all hell broke loose. It had been sprinkling a little before we went in but we didn't think anything of it. Once out and back onto our original boat it started down pouring. None of us 4 girls had umbrellas, I was in a romper, Annie in shorts, Emma in a tank and Alex was also dressed as if it was summer. To say we looked stupid was an understatement. When we got to the Marina we ran into a store to buy umbrellas, ponchos and Emma and Alex needed sweatshirts. Of course right after we purchased all of these things it stopped raining and actually started to clear up.

4.Anacapri. After we got situated we took a train up half of the mountain and then a bus up to the top city called Anacapri. At Anacapri we took a single person chair lift to the highest point of Capri which takes you up 589-m to Monte Solaro (which takes about 15 min one way and is a lot higher than any other chairlift I have been on while skiing).  During the chair lift Emma yelled to me the randomest thing you could think of, "What would you do if you took your infant on this thing with you?" Of course we told her no one would ever do that and I kid you not 10 min later a guy was coming down the chairlift with an infant in his arms. Once we got to the top we were speechless. The view was amazing because it felt like the end of the earth, where sky meets sea. All you could see was water and sky and it was all so blue. After walking around, eating some really good pasta with eggplant and tomatoes, shopping, getting amazing lemon slushies, going through the gardens that overlook Faraglioni (the famous three spurs of rock which rise out of the sea), taking pictures (where I tried getting over a fence to go out on the edge of the cliff and ended up getting stuck. My friends ask me quite frequently if I'm a dancer why am I not more graceful) and tasting limoncello and chocolate, we finally made our way back down the mountain and then got on the ferry home to Sorrento.

5. Friday Night. That night we took a bus into the town of Sorrento to find dinner. We ended up at this super cute restaurant and took our time at dinner. We really are turning into Italians. Without realizing it, I ordered almost the same thing I had for lunch that day, pasta with eggplant and tomatoes but at least this time it was baked pasta. We ordered a few bottles of wine and spent a good few hours eating, drinking and talking. After our dinner we made our way to English Inn which was this outdoor bar that everyone in our group was going to that night. They were playing all old school songs so we danced our butts off that night.

6. Down pouring once again. Saturday morning we woke up to it down pouring and to get to the ferry to go to Positano we had to make our way down to the water by walking down this huge hill. Italy has mostly cobble stone on the roads so walking down this steep cobble stone hill while it was pouring was not ideal. It was still raining once we got to Positano so we made our way to a restaurant for lunch where I got four cheese pizza that was so good. Positano is perched on an enclave on the face of a hill and winds down towards the waters of the Amalfi Coast.

7. Rock Beach. After lunch we shopped around because there were so many quaint shops and restaurants. A bonus was that the clouds went away and the sun finally came out. After we grabbed some amazing slushies and made our way down to the beach to just sit and take in the water and the atmosphere of everything. The water surrounding the Amalfi coast area is known for how blue and clear it is and if you search around the beaches (which are rock beaches) you can find plenty of different colored sea glass.

8. Dinner. Saturday night we had a late dinner at a local restaurant where I had homemade ravioli, a side salad and of course we ordered wine, sat, talked, and hung out for awhile.

9. Pompeii. Sunday we woke up and got back on the bus to go home but on the way stopped in Pompeii (which means cross roads). We were set up with a tour guide to receive a tour of the ruins whose name was Antonio. Throughout the whole tour he kept referring to us as “Ma famiglia.” The information he gave us was so interesting. There were three cities affected by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, with Pompeii being one of them. When the volcano erupted 7,000 ft. of it blew off and covered 30/40 feet of the cities which extended the land 700 ft. The ocean use to be 300 ft. from the city center but after the eruption is now a mile away. There are other mountains surrounding Pompeii which are called the back bones of Italy and the people that lived on these mountains were called the strong ones. When building Pompeii, they first used rock and lava to build the city but it was too hard to work with so they switched to limestone. They then used yellow tufa because of how soft it was. They got the brick techniques that you can see throughout the city from Africa and Morocco and brick was also a lot cheaper during that time. Throughout the houses you can see holes where they would put the shrines for gods and a common one in stores was the commerce god. Houses had summer and winter parts and married people slept in different rooms and even had their own dressing rooms and closets. My favorite part of the houses had to be that they had designated nap rooms. The city center was filled with marble and surround by public buildings which meant no homes were in this area. There was an election room, government area market and something dedicated to the god Apollo surrounding the city center. The people of Pompeii used a lot of "technology" that we still use today such as indoor plumbing, water fountains, building structures etc. They were a lot smarter than I would have every thought. We also saw the red light district which one could locate by a "symbol" in the cobble stone of the streets that was a "male body part" pointing in the direction of the red light district. There was so much more information that we got from Antonio that really made the tour worthwhile.

10. Getting Home.  After Pompeii we made our way back to Florence. We had had a friend check for us the times of the trains from Florence to Milan for Sunday night and we found out since we weren't supposed to be getting back till 9/10 there were only 2 we could have possibly make - one at 9:25 and another at 10 which was actually sold out (we were hoping to be able to get last minute tickets at the train station because sometimes the train websites are weird). At the beginning of the bus ride we were making really good time and we got our hopes up that we could make the 9:25 train. Then we hit traffic. It was so bad that people were actually standing outside their cars taking pictures. We finally got to Florence at 9:45 pm... We sprinted off the bus and ran to the train station and the ticket station said the 10 pm was completely sold out. We went to talk to the ticket people who confirmed the train was sold out but you could always talk to the conductor. So we begged them to let us on which they did, in standing room, and we had never been more thankful to be on a train. Then once we got to Milan we grabbed a tax,i since the metro was closed, and our spirits were lifted not only because we weren't stranded in Florence for a night but because the taxi driver was playing good music and he sang along with us to it.

Lookout over the Marina from outside our Hotel in Sorrento
Blue Grotto in Capri
Entrance into the Blue Grotto in Capri
During the downpour on the boat in Capri
Overlook at the top of the chairlift in Anacapri
The famous Faraglioni
The famous Faraglioni in the background
Lookout of Capri while on the chairlift
Lookout from the top of the chairlift
Emma and I after the chairlift
Feeling like I'm on the edge of the world
The Amalfi Crew
Positano
The coast of Positano
Sunset from the harbor in Sorrento
Mount Vesuvius
One of the gardens in Pompeii
Plaster cast of a Pompeiian volcano victim, made from a centuries-old hollow in solidified ash. One below is a pregnant women
City center with Mount Vesuvius
One of the many streets in Pompeii
An amphitheater in Pompeii
SO HAPPY TO BE ON THE TRAIN HOME TO MILAN


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