The day after my journey
to Venice, the whole group took a trip to Tuscany. I had to wake up even
earlier than the day before just to sit on a bus for a few hours. Eventually we
ended up in Monteriggioni, a small town on the top of a hill that still has its
town walls completely intact. It was adorable to say the least. It had great
views of the surrounding landscape and cute little houses, but not much else.
We only spent about an hour there, and really, more time was not necessary.
Very picturesque, but not that entertaining.
After that, we got back
on the bus and headed off for Siena, which is also built on a hill. We had a
guided tour where we learned about its rivalry with Florence and the annual
horse race, the Palio. The cathedral in Siena was gorgeous (as a lot of
churches in Italy are). I cannot understand how people were able to create
these ornate facades with so little technology. Anyway, inside and out, it was
a great church.
The next day, Florence.
Again, we had a guided tour, but this one didn’t take us into any of the
buildings. We walked around and basically hit most of the major points, Ponte
Vecchio, Palazzo Vecchio, and of course, the Duomo, which has pretty much the
most amazing facade I think I’ve ever seen. Truly incredible in my opinion.
While we were walking around, I had a few “I’ve been here!” moments. I honestly
did not remember that much about my previous trip to Florence, given that I was
only 8, I think it’s understandable. But there were a few times where a memory
I did not even know I had popped into my head; it was kind of weird. On the
whole, I was not that much of a Florence fan. I can’t really explain why, but I
just wasn’t feeling it.
After a bit of free
time, we hopped back on the bus and returned to Ferrara. It was an exhausting
weekend to say the least, but very interesting nonetheless.
Monteriggioni
Its Walls
The Piazza in Siena
Church in Siena
A Bunch of Pope's Heads
Church in Florence
First View of the Duomo
again--pictures of you. assuming you have friends, they can take a few of you. right now, i think you're making things up since there is no evidence you were actually in these places.
ReplyDeletewhy do i need to stand in front of things to prove i was there? i took the pictures, so that's proof enough for me.
Deletegoogle.
Delete