Sunday, March 11, 2012

Ciao Regazzi!

 In the second week of the new semester we already had a Puente, so I took advantage of this one to visit some friends in Italy. I was flying out of Madrid, so I decided to go a day early and do some site-seeing, since I had yet to explore the capital of Spain. Madrid is beautiful in some parts (like the enormous plazas, palace, and Retiro park), but I definitely prefer Barcelona or Granada. On Sunday I flew into Bologna, Italy in the morning, and after eating a pizza and panini (I had to cram in as much Italian food as possible in one short week) I caught the train to Padova, where my friend from UCSB, Ezezz, is studying for the whole year.

My favorite restaurant sign in Madrid: "Prohibited to speak of the Crisis"
Ezezz met me at the train station and then we walked the streets of Padova as the sun was beginning to set. It is such a beautiful city and I immediately re-fell in love with Italy (I had been to Rome and Florence 4.5 years ago). The beautiful colored buildings, arched walkways, and accordion-playing street performers all added to the city’s charm. When we arrived at Ezezz’s apartment I met one of her Italian roommates, Eleanora, who was so nice. She made us dinner, and later we met up with Ezezz’s friend Hannah from England for some drinks and pizza bread. I turned 21 in the restaurant and they sang me “Happy Birthday” in Italian.

Beautiful buildings in Padova
The next day Ezezz and I went over to Hannah’s flat, where she made me crepes for a birthday breakfast! I was so blown away by her generosity—I met her the night before and yet she was celebrating my birthday like we went way back. Crepes with all the fixings, and she even laid out candles in the shape of 21.


Ezezz and I then caught the train to Venice. We were so lucky that the sun was out and it was a beautiful day in February (which rarely happens in Wintertime in Northern Italy). The great weather made Venice all the more beautiful, and we wandered our way through tiny alleys and canals for hours. We had a picnic lunch on the waterfront—the whole time I couldn’t help thinking how memorable this birthday was.

On the Rialto Bridge over the Grand Canal in Venice
Where we ate our lunch
Yummy picnic
When we returned later that night to Padova, Ezezz’s roommates made us dinner, and a birthday cake!! We all sat around the table for hours speaking an odd mixture of Italian, English and Spanish, drinking wine and stuffing ourselves on one of the most delicious cakes I’ve ever had! It was definitely one of the best birthday ever, and far from the typical American 21st. Although I met most people a day before, I truly felt surrounded by life-long friends.

My birthday cake!
The next day was spent sightseeing in Padova, and then later that night I took the fast-train to Rome. Somehow I managed to find a 10-euro ticket online for this train, even though the normal rates are upwards of 75, so I was skeptical the whole time and half of me was waiting to be thrown off the train when the conductor came around. However, everything went smoothly and I landed in Rome three hours later. While waiting for the bus to the city center I met three Spaniards studying abroad in Italy, and we had such a fun and lively conversation for the next half-hour. (Also it should be noted that they were drinking inside the bus—oh Spain, you never cease to impress me….) It was so cool to be traveling in Italy but still use my Spanish for directions and casual conversations with people. Although sometimes traveling and sightseeing tends to blend together after a while, the people I keep meeting during my trips (like these three students) make each  experience so memorable.

At midnight I met my high-school friend Dana and her two roommates (who are studying for the semester in Rome) in Campo de Fiori, as well as my sister Katie!! She was traveling in Germany and found a cheap flight to hop on down to Rome for a few days. We all shared an exciting reunion in the plaza, and then walked a few minutes to Dana’s gorgeous apartment in the heart of the city.

The next day we went all over the city site seeing. I’d already been to Rome 4 years ago, so I didn’t feel a frantic urge to pack all the history into 4 short days. So instead we took a leisurely route, saw a big park and the Pantheon and a church decorated with human bones (very cool!), and also ate the best gelato I’ve ever had. For dinner that night we went out to a really nice restaurant and splurged on an amazing Italian feast. That country really gets food right, that’s all I can say.

Katie and me
On Thursday Katie and I walked to Vatican City and the Coliseum. I was very intrigued the whole time by some of the worst street performers I’ve ever seen—Rome seems to have a plethora of sub-par mimes and gladiators. One Statue of Liberty mime was fanning himself with his book prop, a man dressed all in gold was turning side to side in a miserable attempt to stay still, and a gladiator had the nerve to talk on a cell phone while trying to solicit a paid photo!

Dana and me
Katie and I took a train to Naples on Friday, and for part of the ride I sat next to a woman with the most adorable puppy. It must have been less than 6 weeks old, and it was climbing all over me and licking me. Definitely worth the cost of the train tickets right there. When we arrived in Naples I felt like I was in a different country. It was swarming with black market products (someone offered me an iPhone 4 for 20 euros—I still sort of regret not buying it….) and people aren’t lying when they say it’s a dirty city. Nonetheless, it certainly had some life to it, and we wandered around the streets for hours looking for a perfect pizza in pizza’s homeland. It was good, although I do have to say that pizza in the U.S. is sort of unbeatable if you’re a thick-crust person. In Napoli I also tried a Sicilian Canoli—not too sure why everyone in the world doesn’t just adopt Italy’s cuisine. We took the train back that same day and went out in Rome on Friday night. I’m sort of worried that after Spain (which even among Europeans is known as the craziest country for night-life), everything might seem lame to me. When everyone wanted to go home at 2 I was supremely disappointed, and I can’t imagine how I’ll feel in I.V. next year when the cops come around turning off the music at midnight.

The puppy on the train--my heart's melting as I write this....
Mmmmmm Canoli
Katie left on Saturday morning, and for the remainder of the day the rest of us dedicated ourselves to an eating marathon, since I knew I would soon be returning to the land of ham and more ham. They brought me to a pizza place that did not disappoint—truly some of the best pizza I’ve ever had (which sort of negated the purpose for going to Naples….oh well….). I’m shocked that Italians aren’t as obese as Americans—slices of pizza aren’t too common, and instead everyone is served their own individual pizza. Obviously we each finished ours, with room to spare for some delicious gelato later.

I felt like I was living the "Eat" part of "Eat, Pray, Love"
My flight back to Madrid was also great, owed to the fact that I sat next to a wonderful gay couple that taught me all about the difference between the three Mafias in Italy. We chatted the whole way—and not just about the Mafia—once again with a mixture of three languages. When I made it back to Madrid I was forced to book a last-minute hostel, because the late bus going back to Granada was full. It turns out my hostel-mate was a guy from Rome—small world!

My trip to Italy was one of my favorite trips this year, mostly because it was so much fun to meet up with so many people from home. I’ve started to feel a bit jaded from traveling, because as I’ve mentioned before, a lot of places start to look and feel the same (#firstworldproblems). But what truly set Italy apart, besides the mouthwatering food, was the amazing hospitality of Ezezz, Dana and her roommates, and seeing my sister after 6 months. And every interaction I had with strangers or near-strangers added immensely to my amazing memories. Italy was the first country I’ve re-visited from my Europe trip years ago, and I can’t help but feel that two or three or one hundred trips to that gorgeous and gastronomical heaven will never suffice. 

2 comments:

  1. i would go back just to try that gelato! and even to savor the higher quality tomatina!

    ReplyDelete
  2. "Gastronomical heaven" is the perfect way to describe Italy! Sounds like you had a really special trip. How cool that those amigos new and old made your birthday so awesome. So glad you had such a good time. BTW I kind of know Ezezz! I actually just met her at orientation but we became Facebook friends. Small world!

    ReplyDelete