This past weekend, Katy and I both went on our last big trip of the semester - the Amalfi coast. We went with the school, because it was just easier that way, school trips are good for when you want to just have everything planned out and all you really have to do is follow directions and be where there they tell you, when they tell you. All the transportation and lodging is taken care of, for, of course, a "small fee". But I think it was still worth it for a trip like this where there's a lot of traveling involved, including busses and ferries across the water to the island of Capri.
So, we started our weeked EARLY Friday morning. We all met at a park downtown at 6:30 AM and got onto our respective private motor coaches, there were so many students on this trip, we had two tour busses. The first few hours of the trip passed quietly as most people slept and Katy and I just tried to avoid the poor choice of movie they were showing on the bus TV. The first was in Italian with english subtitles, and actually wasn't as bad as the second one, which was, in my opinion, just terrible, but oh well...
A few hours into the trip we mad our first stop, which I soon discovered was referred to by our trip director as a "pee-pee stop", which might sound strange when you read it, but to hear this old Italian man saying it, it's actually kind of cute. After this we were back on the road and on our way to Napoli, where we would stay for a few hours to have lunch and explore a tiny bit. Napoli is the third largest city in Italy, following Milan and Rome, and is apparently notorious for pickpocketing, which made me a bit nervous, but I just zipped up my bag and kept a close eye on it at all times, and thankfully nothing bad happened.
Lunch in Naoli was of course to be pizza, as Naples is notoriously known for their pizza. So Katy and I found a restaurant/pizzeria along the street where we sat outside in the sun and were able to look out onto the water. We sat to look at the menus, and it didn't take me long to see "melanzana alla parmiggiana", which, for those of you who are wondering, that means an eggplant and parmesan cheese pizza - I knew what I was getting! Ever since I've been in Italy, I've developed a huge love for vegetables here, they're so delicious. And eggplant is probably my favorite one of them all. I will get anything that I see it on, pizza, pasta, sandwiches, lasagna, you name it, if it has eggplant on it, I will happily eat it. So, I got that pizza and Katy got the traditional Pizza Margherita. In all honesty, I have to admit, the pizza was alright, but it didn't really knock my socks or anything like that. I certainly wasn't impressed with the black hair I found in my pizza either... if that's how Naples does pizza, then I'm really not so much a fan.
Anyways, after lunch it was back on the bus to drive along more of the Amalfi coastline toward Maiori, where our hotel was. Oh my goodness, what a drive! The only way I can even begin to explain it is if you've ever driven the road to Hana in Maui. Basically it's this very narrow windy road with the trees and rocks right on one side, and a very steep cliff down the the water below on the other side. Such a gorgeous sight, but a little nerve-wracking if you're on the cliff side of the bus... Once we were safe and sound at our hotel we were told that we still had about an hour before we needed to meet back up again in the hotel lobby for dinner. Katy and I put our stuff in our room and went off to explore and walk along the water. We found some gelato along the way from this great, cheap little place called Mamma Mia, of all things! We climbed out onto some big rocks and sat and talked and watched the sunset until it was time to head back to the hotel. It was so nice and peaceful out that evening, such a wonderful place. Dinner was not quite as peaceful, but rather loud and chaotic, but not bad. In comparison to the dinners we were served from out hotel on our first trip with the school to Rome months ago, I'd say this was better. They brought out the food just like before, pasta first and then the meat dish. However, after seeing the meat dish, I was almost tempted to go vegetarian... something about being served french fries and deep fried breaded chicken just didn't seem to fit... oh well, dessert was good! And actually, I think the first night's meal was better than the second, which was a seafood pasta dish, tentacles and all, followed by some sort of cooked sea-bream with potatoes. Hey, it can't all be great, right?
So anyways, our first full day we got up early in the morning and caught a ferry over to the island of Capri. It was a gorgeous day and I was so happy for the sun and blue skies! We got on the island in the late morning and were told we'd have the whole day to explore, lay out on the beach, whatever we wanted really. Some people even went on the boat tours to see the famous Blue Grotto.
Katy went out on another boat tour to see some more of the island and some other random colors of grottos, and I stayed on the island. The first boat ride over was enough for me, especially since I knew we'd still have to take the boat all the way back later that night.
I was pretty content to just some beach and sit in the sun. Now, the beach that we wanted to get to was on the opposite side of the island from where we had come in on, and to get there, you had to hike all the way to the top, walk through the city center and then all the way back down to the other side to the water. Needless to say, it was quite the trek. The beach was not that impressive, rather small and rocky, but still very pretty and I laid out for only an hour before getting sufficiently sunburnt. It didn't help that I borrowed some girls TANNING LOTION, thinking it was sunscreen... girls from Guatemala and girls from Alaska probably don't share the same SPF number... oops! Yet again, I go in the sun, and I get burned. It's okay... for me, it's totally worth it, the only real painful bummer was the burnt tops of my feet. Katy got a lot of sun too, mostly on her neck. So I called her Red Neck and she called me Lobster legs. It worked out well.
After a long day in the sun we headed back to the coast for dinner again and to wrap up the evening at out hotel.
The next morning, Sunday, began early, but not quite as early as the first, thankfully, and we soon found ourselves back on the bus complete with a tour guide. We were headed in the direction of Pompeii to take a tour of the ruins. It was another hot and muggy day and the tour was getting a little long, in my opinion, but it was still very interesting and useful, I'm glad we went.
After our tour we had some really terrible Pizza Margherita from a local restaurant before getting back on the bus for our long trip back to Florence. The trip home was rather uneventful, watched the first Bond movie... Dr. No? I believe? And then The Devil Wears Prada. Not so bad. I obviously favored the second feature, but both were fine. Again, much better than the films we watched on the way to the coast.
So, we finally made it back into Florence a little ahead of schedule around 8PM, ready to be back after a long and full weekend. Tired and hungry, Katy and I visited our local Kebab man before going back to our apartment to rest and get ready for the week ahead of us. All in all, I'd say it was a great weekend and I think we were both happy to have gone, but also happy to have been done with our last big trip of our time here in Italy.