Europe

  • Italy

    Sunday in Rome

    I could have gone to see the pope in St. Peter’s Square but I wasn’t up for that. Instead, I took the metro train to the Trevi Fountain station. I had seen the fountain briefly on my Vespa tour, but just wanted to see it again on this beautiful sunny day. I decided to follow the crowds from the station, and ended up at the Spanish steps instead. The Spanish steps aren’t Spanish, they just used to lead to the Spanish embassy. At the base of the steps is the Via Condosi, a famous street full of mostly high-end shops. Some of the shops had lineups outside due to covid…

  • Italy

    Rome Vespa tour

    On my last evening before meeting my group, I had signed up for a Vintage Vespa tour. The Vespa is the iconic scooter that is symbolic of Italy. The scooter you would picture near a fountain in Rome, with a dark handsome driver. Its name means Wasp. However my driver was not a young hot guy, but an old guy who thought he was hot. Buddy, it’s not you that people are staring at, it’s your vintage Vespa! I hopped on with Orazio and he showed me ancient baths, miles of the Aurelian walls around the city up a hill to a viewpoint, a church, homeless people, and one of…

  • Italy

    Rome

    Getting There I arrived in Rome around 9 am with very little sleep – the flight attendants woke us up for breakfast around the time I would normally have been going to bed due to the 8 hour time difference. There is a regular train from the Rome Fiumicino airport to the Termini station in the city centre where my hotel is located. There you can connect to the metro, then you would walk about 15 minutes to the hotel – that might have been too much for me on no sleep! But knowing now what I didn’t know then, it would have been fairly easy and cheaper of course.…

  • Italy

    How to Get to Italy 2021

    Why Italy? I finally made it to Italy in October of 2021! How did I get there? Here’s my story….. I had booked a trip to Chile and Argentina in April of 2020 with G Adventures, a Canadian small group adventure travel company.  I’ve travelled with G Adventures many times and highly recommend their trips.  I had booked flights through Air Canada (which is my only choice for international travel from Regina).   Then covid came.  Just a few weeks before I was to leave, G Adventures and Air Canada informed me that the trip was off.  Both companies gave me credits.  This made sense to me, since if travel companies…

  • Romania

    Bucharest

    We travelled by train through the Carpathian Mountains to Bucharest, a city of 8 million.  It’s quite a contrast to the other places we have seen in Romania.  It’s unkempt and uncared for, with angry graffiti and parks filled with weeds to complement the massive Communist era buildings. We went for a tour of the Palace of Parliament, the second largest government building in the world, after the Pentagon.  It was built under the direction of dictator Nicolae Ceausescu in the 1980’s but has never been finished. It has 1100 rooms decorated with chandeliers and gold. A palace nearby was also built for his wife and second in charge Elena.…

  • Romania

    Bran Castle and Brasov

    We left a previous century in Viscri to join a traffic jam going to Bran Castle. Vlad the Impaler may or may not have stopped here once, but it’s known as Dracula’s castle. It’s very popular, with tours for Halloween and princes from the Middle East renting it for parties. It was hard to move inside the castle for all the tourists, and even in the many shops outside. We got through the traffic to the nearby town of Brasov. It has a beautiful town square where our hotel is located. There is a funicular up the hill to the Hollywood style town sign, and the area where Vlad impaled…

  • Romania

    Sighisoara and Viscri

    We travelled into the Transylvania area, through hills and forests. We stopped in Bistrita for lunch, where the Roma or gypsies were making themselves known. They were the last of the Asian people to migrate to Europe, were originally enslaved, then freed with nothing and nowhere to go, without status or citizenship. I bought a pasty for lunch while a gypsy with babe in arms touched my arm to beg for it. On to Sighisoara, a picturesque medieval hilltop town with pastel homes and cobblestones. Its claim to fame is that Vlad Tepes, of the Dragul family, was born here. He became known as Vlad the Impaler, sticking his enemies…

  • Hungary,  Romania

    Eger and Maramures

    We took a tram then train to Eger, in wine country, and stayed in a pension, a local home made into suites. I lost the coin toss, so I could choose either the bed in a dark cubbyhole behind the bedroom door, or the bed in the kitchen by the balcony. Kitchen it is! We walked around the town, which is the centre of traditional Hungary, where the first Magyars came from Asia and settled. The Hungarian language is known as Magyar. It’s a small city but has massive churches and a castle. Lunch was goulash and lemonade, which is made with many flavours in Hungary. After a supermarket dinner…

  • Hungary,  Romania

    Budapest to Bucharest

    Budapest in September is beautiful! I was last here in May 2010 and didn’t see much because of driving rain that turned your umbrella inside out. This time it’s around 25, sunny and green. After a day to get on the right time zone, I met my tour group. We went to a street festival with dozens of food trucks for dinner, then to the Jewish quarter to a ruin bar. Szimpla Kert was the first of these popular clubs, built into abandoned buildings and decorated with thrift store furniture, cars, or whatever, then just add a few bars and bouncers at the door to control the lineups. The next…

  • England,  Jordan

    London and arrival in Jordan

    I arrived in London around 8 am with about an hour’s sleep (it’s 6 hours ahead of Regina time), bought an Oyster card to use on the underground, and set off for my hotel.  It’s really the only way to go to central London, cabs are horrendously expensive.  An hour or so on the underground later I reached my station, and had to wander only a few minutes before finding my hotel, the Z Hotel Soho.  It’s the best location, right in the middle of the theatre district with restaurants everywhere, a bargain in this area at about $250 a night, but the tradeoff is it’s a little cramped. My…