Venice

Wednesday, April 8,1998

We arrive in Venice around 4:30 in the afternoon and spend a while figuring out the vaporetti, or water buses. We take one to the hotel and thankfully we were only a 300 yard walk to the hotel from the stop. We got a decent view of Venice although our water bus didn't go down the Grand Canal.

After checking in, we set out to explore a little and find dinner. 2 of the Frommer's picks were close and easy to find but they were closed. We walked quite a way, turned around several times and found Trattoria de Fiore(the narrow, winding streets are a little tricky to figure out at first). We managed to get in without a reservation. For antipasti, we had mixed seafood, which was good, but it was an odd assortment of squid, sardines and other unidentified things. First course, we shared spaghetti carbonara and for second course, Keith had cod in butter and Jill a mixed salad. After dinner, we walked through Piazza San Marco and enjoyed seeing the heart of Venice.

Thursday, April 9, 1998

Now Jill is infected with the cold Keith passed on. Breakfast at the hotel was good and saved us from having to find a cafe. First off we explored piazza San Marco with the help of the guidebook. We took the lift up in the bell tower. Great view of Venice from up there but cold and windy.

The view from the bell tower with the Grand Canal on this side of the peninsula.

From the bell tower looking in the direction of our hotel. Its just before the green awnings on the sea facing shops.

Next we started the merchant trail to Rialto Bridge. Lots of signs point the way through the maze of shops between San Marco and Rialto. Rialto Bridge was neat &endash; all white marble, but as crowded with tourists as Ponte Vecchio in Florence.

The Rialto Bridge.

The view from the Rialto Bridge.

Keith on the other side of the Rialto Bridge.

Explored a bit more and found lunch at a little pizzeria where Keith had pizza inferno (spicy sausage), Jill had tortellini with meat sauce and veggie soup. Afternoon was more window-shopping and a nap. We had walked for nearly 4 hours.

Jill in front of a particularly picturesque canal.

Went out again but it was raining. Found some gelato to tide us until dinner. We decided to walk the main waterfront strip from our hotel in the direction away from San Marco. Headed up a main canal and found ourselves at the arsenal. It was neat &endash; it's where ship repairs have been done for the navy for many years. We decided we could connect to a restaurant for dinner through the small back streets so we started through the maze. We found a little local wine bar with little decoration but 4-6 different jugs of wine and a case of small sandwiches for snacks. We had a few glasses of wine, only 1500 Lira, or about $1.40.

The Bay of San Marco (Saint Mark).

The wine bar. Notice the large jugs of wine and the siphon hoses attached to fill glasses and bottles.

We kept walking and found a neat little restaurant with reasonable prices and awards/recommendations in the window. It had a half-hour before it opened, but we popped our head in for reservations. They were full, but we got reservations for the next night. Headed on to Trattoria Rivetta for dinner, and got there about 7:10. People were looking at the menu outside but we went on in and were glad we did, the place filled up fast. We had house red wine, antipasti legume (mixed vegetables) and fried calamari, then Keith had grilled scampi and Jill veal scallop bolognese style. All were great including the tiramisu dessert!

Wandered home through San Marco and had espresso with Bailey's at "our bar" (just a bar we liked but didn't know the name of). Pretty tipsy by now, so we take the long way home.

We stop on a bridge on the way home and some other tourists take our picture. The Bridge of Sighs is behind us, but the flash just didn't make it that far.

Friday, April 10, 1998

Jill's cold is at its worst. Slow start with another breakfast at the hotel. Morning activities were San Marco Basilica and glass shopping. The basilica was pretty cool and the interior covered with mosaics made of tiny tiles. We paid to get into the museum at the top, which wasn't a big deal, but it got us to the balcony of the basilica where we had a great view of the piazza.

Keith on the balcony with the bay behind him.

On the balcony with the square in the background. Notice the thousands of pigeons.

We went in a couple of glass shops looking for a fish scene in glass. Instead, Jill fell in love with a vase. We went in more shops and thought about the vase a fish piece, then had a mediocre lunch of pizza and calamari then went back to Jill's favorite glass shop. We bought the vase and a fish scene there. We carried the heavy purchases home and Jill stayed in for a rest while Keith went and toured Palazza Ducale (the palace and prison for Venice in its heyday) and got to cross the canal inside the bridge of sighs (a famous bridge used to bring prisoners from the prison to the courthouse).

Jill wakes up and we decide to go for gelato and a vaporetto ride up the Grand Canal. It started raining and only got harder. Our 45 minute vaporetto ride was cold but fun &endash; amazing how many buildings face the Grand Canal.

Another vaporetto passing us.

After boat ride we head to our cheap wine bar, then to Trattoria da Remigio where we had reservations. We have more wine, shared mixed seafood antipasti and then Jill had baked lasagna and veal scallops in tomato and herbs. Keith has Spaghetti alla Amatraciane and mixed fried seafood (included heads and tails on the small fish). Tiramisu and espresso make the meal &endash; now we wait an hour and a half until 11 p.m. when high tide hits (it was an unusually high tide, but not as high as it can get). Keith goes to see the high tide, but Jill decides to stay inside and warm.

Keith's dinner has a head and a tail. And he ate them both!

Piazza San Marco under a foot of water. Everyone walks on platforms above the water. This is the same square as the one with pigeons in it above.

Saturday, April 11, 1998

Checked out of the hotel late in the morning and headed out for our last day of our honeymoon. Item number one was a gondola ride. We paid 120,000 Lira (about $70) but it was worth it. The morning was actually pretty out, but the wind was a little chilly. The ride took us by Marco Polo's house, an old renaissance palace, someone else famous's house, some old churches and then out into the Bay of Saint Mark, under the bridge of Sighs and then back to where we started. We enjoyed it, but felt silly when other tourists were taking our picture.

A bunch of gondolas.

Us going under a bridge in a gondola.

Jill was impressed with the gondolier ducking under the bridges.

A busy intersection in Venice.

The gondola in the rough seas of the San Marco Bay.

Going under the Bridge of Sighs. The prison is on the right and the palace and courthouse is on the left.

We decided to head north and take a look at a famous horse statue. We also tour another old church. And then, to Jill's delight, we catch the vaporetto to Murano &endash; the glass island. We shop a little, but are still happy with our purchases. We watch 2 furnace shows where both glass blowers make vases and horses. Pretty neat.

We catch the vaporetto all the way back to San Marco. We wander down some alleys and stop in a hole-in-the-wall trattoria. Jill orders the tourist special: spaghetti bolognese, salad, calamari and espresso. Keith had a Pizza Volcano &endash; spicy pepperoni and Gorgonzola. He also helps Jill with some of her meal and a half a liter of red wine.

We then take care of our last touristy thing: we buy an oil painting of Venice. We catch the water bus to the airport where we camp out for a couple of hours and sample our first Italian beer. Actually, 5 or 6 of them.

The flight is Lufthansa and is comfortable and comes with a couple of small bottles of wine. In Frankfurt, Jill and I decide to try a couple of big German beers. Then we go nuts and buy a bunch of Swiss chocolate. We get on the next and last flight and after a couple more wines, we finally crash. We arrive in Singapore tired, disheveled and with a touch of the cold each, but happy.