Two other girls in my CEA Seville program and I decided that we wanted to spend our puente in Italy, so we chose to explore Venice and Florence! Along the way, we learned some important (and some silly) lessons, so I thought I would share a little of what we discovered!
1. When you are looking for the time that your train departs, it is important to look at the "departure" sign (instead of the "arrival" sign), otherwise you may be very confused and think that your train does not exist. Hannah, my travel buddy, and I were trying to figure out when our train from Milan left for Venice, but of course, we were looking at the wrong side and it took us a while to figure it out.
2. In Italian, peperoni does not mean what you think it means. So, if you order a pizza with peperoni, you will end up with peppers rather than pepperoni - all the same, it was delicious.
| Our first meal in Venice: a delicious Italian pizza with "peperoni." |
4. Venice is expensive. I had been warned that it was expensive, but I was still surprised by how expensive it was. At restaurants, they always charge for water, somewhere between 3 to 5 euro per bottle (of different sizes, too). On the other hand, pizza is one of the least expensive foods to eat. In the six days that we were in Italy, we ate pizza 5 times.
5. It's a good idea to have some knowledge of the language of the country to which you are travelling. The reason I chose to study in Spain was because I speak Spanish. As I headed out for Italy, I realized that I knew almost zero Italian. Thankfully, Spanish is close enough to Italian that I could pick out words here and there and most people spoke English and Spanish in addition to Italian.
6. Sometimes, you pay 4 euros for a cup of coffee and a place to use the wi-fi. And other times, you randomly discover that you get free wi-fi in the middle of the canal on a gondola ride. Whenever we wanted to use our phones, we had to find a place with wi-fi, which meant finding a restaurant or cafe that had wi-fi. But, we also discovered on our last night in Venice that there's some sort of free wi-fi offered in certain parts of the city. My lovely friend Addie found this out while we were in the middle of our gondola ride.
| Left to right: Addie, Me, and Hannah at the end of our gondola ride in Venice. |
| Left to right: Addie, Me, and Hannah enjoying gelato in Venice. |
| Me on Burano Island, Venice. It is well known for its colorful houses and buildings. |
| Ponte Vecchio. The shops on the bridge mostly sell expensive gold. |
11. Churches are not very good landmarks when getting directions. We tried to figure out how to get to a restaurant in Bergamo (just outside of Milan), but there are so many churches in Italy (and Europe in general) that it was hard to tell which church to "turn right at."
12. No matter what, you will have both good and bad parts of travelling. Just try to focus on all of the positive things that have happened. Out of all six days that we traveled, only one was a little frustrating, but it wasn't too bad because we were not actually sight-seeing that day - we were trying to find our last hostel to stay in before we headed to the airport to fly back "home" to Sevilla. All in all, the trip to Italy was a huge success.
| Me in front of the Duomo in Florence |
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