Florence and Pisa
Dear Gentle Readers
I'm skipping some of the places I visited in Tuscany simply because I am too far behind to catch up. Needless to say, we visited Monteriggioni ( a tiny walled city), San Gimignano (The city of towers, 14 of them) and Pienza overlooking Val D'Orcia with simply stunning views of the Tuscany landscape.
Oh, alright here's a picture, vintage Tuscany from Val D'Orcia.Nuff said, now for Florence. I must admit I had no expectations about Florence, but since we were passing it, we decided to visit it. I am so glad I did! Google Maps safely guided us to a parking place outside the city and we walked, and walked and walked...
Next to it was the Loggia dei Lanzi, an open-air sculpture gallery, containing some noted works like Giambologna' Rape of the Sabine Women and Benvenuto Cellini's Perseus with the Head of Medusa. What's unusual about the latter is Cellini poured the bronze as one piece, not in several pieces as was the practice at the time.
Of course, there was also this masterpiece, a little work by Michelangelo, his famous David sculpture. The piece of marble he sculpted this from was rejected by his contemporaries as being too tall and thin and not any use. Michelangelo didn't listen to them and sculpted probably the most famous statue of all time.
Nature calls so we sought out a public toilet. They charge €1 to spend a penny nowadays. That's inflation! Anyway, I was sitting inside the forecourt of the toilette and I saw this picture of children playing in medieval times. There's children playing with a hoop and stick, one boy with a spinning top, another with a hobby horse and a girl holding up her rag doll. It was a simpler time and not a screen in sight!
We were leaving Florence when I noticed a dome peeking above the rooftops. Thinking it might be mildly interesting, I suggested to Victoria that we go and have a look. A few minutes later we emerged into Piazza del Duomo and found ourselves standing beneath one of the most extraordinary buildings I have ever seen. No photograph can adequately convey the scale of Florence Cathedral. It simply has to be experienced.
The front of the Florence Cathedral. Construction started in1296 A.D. and took 140 years to complete. It's huge and breathtaking, but take a look at the side.
Here they are. Well actually, they aren't. This a replica, the originals were too valuable to be left out in the weather and now reside in the Museo dell'Opera del Duomo.
And that's that. We walked over 17,000 steps that day, the most I have ever walked in one day. Here's the evidence on my smartwatch.
Nevertheless, we still had one more thing to see today - The Leaning Tower of Pisa.
Of course, when you have one of the world's most recognised structures, you have the souvenir shops hoping to make a quick buck (or euro) from you as pass by.
First thing you see is Pisa's wall. It wasn't very thick compared to other cities of the time.
This is the Pisa Cathedral, the leaning tower is actually the bell tower to this but unusual as it is not attached to the cathedral as usual but separate.
An awesome sight and another bucket list item ticked off!
And just to prove we were there!
But that's not the end of the story. As we were walking away from the tower, a tall black man approached us and gave me a high five, then gave me a little sculpture of an elephant and a bracelet to Victoria. Then he revealed his real purpose, opening his bag to reveal leather belts he was selling. I asked him how much and he said €45! I said I was not interested and tried to give him back the elephant, but he wouldn't take no for an answer, he kept saying "for my family, for my family". Then he said "How much would you pay?". I said I don't need a belt, I already have three. But he was bloody persistent eventually dropping his price to €20. Victoria said "Give him €20" which I did and she said under her breath, "to get rid of him".
So now I am the proud owner of a belt I didn't want. That's the second time we have been played and I'm getting very sick of it. The next person who tries this is going to get very short shrift and I will just walk away and ignore them.
P.S. Victoria has been fighting a cold the last couple of days but it hit her hard during the night. She's gone back to bed for another hour to get some sleep. We were planning on stopping in Lucca on the way to Venice but with a 4 hour drive to Venice we may have to bypass it.

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Maureen here, Wish you'd asked me about Florence, It was a highlight for my Mum, She loved it.
ReplyDeleteyou are both certainly seen some very beautiful things. I do hope Victoria is feeling better . love Colleen
ReplyDeleteKerin here. Hope the feet are holding up. You would hate Egypt as far as peddlers. They follow you even if you ignore them and you end up with about 10 of them.
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