Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Discovery Cove

Subjects in wetsuits may not be as fat as they appear.
When it comes to vacations, some people like adventure.  They jump out of planes & into caves.  They tickle sharks & capture it all on their GoPros which have been carefully stapled to their foreheads.  Others prefer a more relaxed approach, lying on a beach perhaps & drinking bourbon margaritas while cultivating the beautiful suntans that will later manifest as strips of skin to be peeled off before envious audiences at vacation recitals.

Not me.  What I want, in return for my hard earned tourist dollars, is to spend my days waiting in lines & being lectured to by disinterested guides.  Ahhh…that’s the stuff!

My dreams came true recently at Seaworld’s Discovery Cove.  Discovery Cove is one of those great ideas that can only be improved upon by half-assing all of it.  It’s a water park, of sorts, but it offers so much more & delivers somewhat less.  Our cast of intrepid adventurers consisted of:  My sister and her husband, my brother and his 11 year old daughter, my wife & self.

The hardcore fun starts immediately upon arrival.  You wait your turn to check in.  This is fun because all your day’s food & drink are included but you don’t get anything until you check in. Now, on the day we went, the crowds weren’t that big but, fortunately, someone bungled our reservations so I got to wrestle with my blood sugar for about an hour while things got “worked out.”  As it happened our family of six was split up into random subgroups and it took some fancy wrangling to get us all on the same ticket.

Problem solved!  We burst through the lobby doors, tummies a-rumbling, vision slowly a-fading.  “I think the cafeteria’s this way!”  I hollered to no one in particular while pointing indiscriminately.  But our haphazard forward thrust was cut short.  It was time for our complimentary photo, just like on the cruise ships.  I was very excited because everyone always looks awesome in ambivalently executed snapshots.  Also, I’d just seen a beautiful red & blue parrot & was calculating the best approach to capturing & devouring it before anyone could stop me.  “Say ‘cheese!’”

You betcha!

The picture is taken.  We can collect it  in the photo store on the way out.  By God!  There’s still a half hour of complimentary breakfast to dig into & my stomach is making some impressive sounds.  Think of Wagner writing an opera for hippos on steroids.  Take a moment to enjoy.
You’re welcome.

And so we were stopped again.  It was time for the orientation & introductory lecture.  A nice young lady with a dazzling smile informed us that we were currently standing here: where the was no food.  In this direction was some stuff that was also not food.  And over there was some other shit that didn’t even rhyme with food.  She hoped we would enjoy our visit.

As I mentioned, there were six of us now careening toward the cafeteria.  I’ve little doubt that certain land speed records were ignominiously shattered.  Our teeth were bared.  We’d begun chewing before we even saw food.  No one dared stand in out way.

Breakfast consisted of greasy croissant sandwiches of egg & cheese.  Some had sausage (not the spicy kind, of course).  Some had ham (the really salty kind, of course).  There was also orange juice, impossibly bitter coffee, cloyingly sweet tea, cereal & pastries that seemed to have been manufactured in bulk.  Sarcasm aside, it was fucking delicious!!

Our bellies full, our hunger stated, we half walked/half farted our way to collect our wetsuits.  Now, so far, all the staff with whom we’d interacted had been very friendly, eager to please & as helpful as the Seaworld bureaucracy would allow.  The young lady running the wetsuit stand, however,  displayed an overt contempt of the typical Seaworld guest & all the sundry glorious interpretations of physical fitness.  We were handed wetsuits that were one to two sizes too small with the promise that they would stretch in the water.  They didn’t.  I haven’t worn anything with the word “medium” on it since I was in junior high school.  Flattered as I should have been at the very notion that I could fit into a medium, it is far more likely that I was the subject of some wager.  “I bet he loses consciousness.”  That type of thing.

At last, we were ready to enjoy Discovery Cove.

There’s a Lazy River.  Now THAT’S for me.  It’s even got the word “lazy” in it. It’s a man-made flowing waterway that takes you around most of the park.  You can cling to one of those foam floating noodles, if you could find one, & just while away the hours trying to keep from falling asleep & drowning or occasionally scrambling out of the way of massive pods of German toddlers snorkeling & trampling everything in their adorable Teutonic way. 

The river has periodic gross changes in depth.  This is undoubtedly to assure that everyone scrapes a knee or the tops of toes.  No one leaves without a souvenir.  The waters take you through caves, waterfalls and an aviary!  Whilst floating through the aviary, one can get uncomfortably close to rare exotic birds.  It was all shockingly birdpoop free.  You know enough about me at this point to realize that I would tell you all about the slightest fece in painful detail.  Alas, dear reader!  I must disappoint us both. All in all, the Lazy River was simply great!  I could’ve easily spent the entire day floating in that special place between awareness & napping, staring up at the sky with unfocused eyes from beneath the slowly moving branches, remembering only to shut my mouth when gliding through the aviary.  Just in case.

Our chaotic reverie was interrupted.  The time had come to swim with the dolphins.  I had agreed to this with some considerable trepidation.  The idea of enslaving any living thing for personal amusement troubles me.  And Seaworld has suffered from the negative propaganda resulting from the movie Blackfish and the heart wrenching footage of porpoises being taken from their family/pods.  The sounds of dolphins & orcas grieving for their babies is hard to stomach.  Discovery Cove feels a lot like a rationalization.  “See? Our slaves are happy here!  Quit your bellyaching & climb onto this porpoise!”  Also, I’ve owned dogs all my life so there’s some ambiguity in my perspective.

I was thrilled to find out that our dolphin adventure was to be preceded by a lengthy sign-in process followed by a lecture.  At the sign-in,  we discovered yet again that our family had been arbitrarily split up.  When this was pointed out to the young lady at the desk, she sighed heavily and mustered every ounce of politesse while she laboriously proceeded to solve “our” problem.  I was quite happy at the thought of returning to Lazy River & offered a solution: refund my share of the dolphin exploitation fee & I’ll be on my way.  Miraculously, an alternative was found immediately when she crossed my name from one group & added it to the one that contained my kin.  A half hour later, we were again ready to be lectured.

To be fair, the first part of the lecture contained some genuine value.  Don’t wear jewelry because it night fall off & get sucked into a blow hole.  Don’t carry stuff in your hands because dolphins will take it.  Don’t poke them in the eye.  All living things hate that.  Now, you know.  This was followed by a short and at once interminable film of dolphins enjoying their lives in the wild: hunting, playing, enjoying pod life & being adorably dolphin like.  All of this set to a Lion King styled soundtrack which soulfully conveyed triumph and wonder utilizing electronic music and a gospel singer.  We thought it was hysterical.

Then, we were led out to the dolphin lagoon.  In groups, of course.  There we were introduced to an Atlantic bottle nosed dolphin named Jenny & were taught simple commands to make Jenny perform various tricks.  She waved at us, made interesting noises from her blow hole & rolled over so we could see her belly.  We touched her & marveled at the rubbery smoothness of her skin.  The highlight of the whole experience was when we grabbed onto her fin & Jenny pulled us across the lagoon.  It is both exhilarating and heartbreaking.  I am shameless in my hypocrisy.  Jenny was captured in 1980.  It is entirely likely that she’s now incapable of surviving in the wild.  In addition, the trainers seemed genuinely fond of their charges & Jenny appeared happy so far as I can tell.  Still...

I wanted to clear my head my making it fuzzy.  This would require copious amounts of complimentary beer.  The options are woefully limited to the worst of domestic light beers.  Luckily, one of the snack huts offered Dogfish Head on tap.  I decided to drown my moral ambiguity in that.  Also, it was time for lunch.

The cafeteria was crowded for lunch so the line was pretty long but that’s not a horrible thing when one is still full of breakfast sandwiches & slurping a second or third Doghead Fish.  The lunch selections are what one would find on one of the lower priced cruise lines or higher end old folks homes.  Tastes are so varied & subjective, the decision was made to do away with it altogether.  One is invited to adjust the taste scale of his or her meal with ketchup and salt which were provided in generous amounts.  I eschewed either for the naturally nonexistent flavor of my club sandwich & pasta side salad.  Besides, my fourth Fishhead Dog had made me happy enough.

My siblings & niece had signed up for some simulated deep sea adventure.  My sister’s husband wanted to finish his beer & start another in the smoking tent.  My wife wanted to go snorkeling.  I longed for urine warm embrace of the Lazy River.  We agreed to disband for a bit.  I grabbed my floaty noodle & an apparently abandoned life vest.  Once in the water, I wrapped the vest around my legs & placed the noodle under my neck, creating an ersatz raft.  I floated thusly, only vaguely conscious for about an hour until I was politely but firmly informed that I was not allowed to enjoy the parks assets so thoroughly.  In addition, admonitions from female lifeguards with their Baywatch swimsuits & reflective sunglasses will always be interpreted as flirtations from tipsy middle-aged fellows like myself.  I handed over the vest with a wink and the self assurance that “I still got it.”

My wife showed up, just in time to experience my beer fueled, testosterony puffiness.  We floated happily together for a bit & then she suggested we snorkel in the Grand Reef.  She’d liked it enough to want to do it again & show me it’s highlights.  So, off we went.  After donning our park supplied, substandard & leaky masks with surprisingly adequate snorkels, we plunged. We saw manta rays & all sorts of colorful fishies. There was a shark tank and one could swim on the other side of the glass.  Because one is focused toward the bottom of the lagoon and maybe slightly ahead, it’s easy to lose track of others.  And there were plenty of others in the Grand Reef with us.  Personally, I have an astounding sense of self-awareness, but my fellow aquanauts, bereft of similar peripheral understanding, occasionally kicked me in the head or the ribs in their efforts to stand on the manta ray or punch a fish.  My wife, graceful as she is lovely, managed to avoid such interactions.

We exited the Grand Reef lagoon to return to the Lazy River with only a slight detour for more Fishbeer Head Dog.  We encountered my brother and niece.  Someone mentioned that there was a pool off the Lazy River where one could enjoy one’s Beerhead Fishdog. The pool is located in the only truly disgusting area of the park.  The idea is sound:  chairs are halfway submerged & one could sit & sip while watching others play & frolic.  There’s even a few ducks waddling about.  But, the water’s unsettling warmth conspired with images of wallowing tourists & the duck shit that covered much of the bare rock & we didn’t stay long.  As this was close to the end of the day, I’m fairly confident that the duck shit on the rocks was only recently placed there.  On the whole the park was well maintained & surprisingly clean.  But, fresh duck shit offers only a little more consolation than old duck shit.  We aimed ourselves toward Marmoset Island.

Marmosets are cute little monkeys.  Apparently, like vampires, they are incapable of crossing open bodies of water.  So they are displayed on their own little island, probably acting out some Marmoset version of Lost, wondering how they got there, who all these strange people and ducks were & whether the island was some metaphor for the afterlife.  The monkeys pretty much just cling to the trees & stare back at you.  Since none of them were riding unicycles or playing instruments, our interest quickly waned.  We moved on.

The otter exhibit was the most repugnant part of the whole experience.  Keep in mind, we’re still moving about in very warm water with all the ugly scenarios that may conjure.  The otters were located in a glass enclosure but I’m pretty sure we all shared the same water.  There was a covering over the spectator section which helped to trap odors & a growing sense of unease.  The otters ran to & fro & frolicked as otters do.  A blue jay landed on a log in the middle of the enclosure.  The otters quickly organized & approached the bird with what I feared might be evil intent.  I didn’t want my niece to experience the circle of life quite that way so I urged a hasty retreat.  The otters lunged.  The bird escaped.  So did we.

We nursed our last beer as we peeled off wetsuits & returned the park’s assets & gathered our belongings.  The park closes at 5:30, when the light is the most beautiful.  No one really wanted to go but Seaworld herds it’s guests toward the exits by way of the gift shops.  The gift shops, by the way, have no fixed closing hours.  They are happy to stay open until you’re done forking over money.  We walked out with a stuffed porpoise, some picture frames with the Seaworld/Discovery Cove logo, a hat, a cd with the day’s photos & a happy buzz.

At the end of the day, Discovery Cove offers an experience.  In my admittedly curmudgeonly opinion, there were substantially more pros than cons but a happy family tends to cancel out most negatives.  The shared experience, the comparison of notes of what we loved & hated about it, the stories we’ll tell our family & friends; those are the best souvenirs.  Discovery Cove is a nice backdrop for that stuff.  You should go.  Take a loved one or three.  Have fun.



Thursday, October 27, 2011

What is this?

Why Scuba Donkey?  

Scuba Donkey was conceived in an Opel Astra in the mountains of Provence. The Opel Astra, if you don't know, is essentially a glorified golf cart that has no business on any road with even the slightest incline.  I didn't know.  I thought I was being frugal by renting the cheapest car with manual transmission to scoot around the back roads in the south of France with my beloved Gwendolyn.

I was not being frugal.  I was being ignorantly suicidal.  The Opel Astra has absolutely no pick-up whatsoever.  Pick-up is something you want when driving through the hilly regions of Provence.

So, to distract ourselves from the certain doom we faced as we hurtled down a particularly curvy & up-and-downy stretch of road, Gwen & I came up with a list of words that were fun to say.  Between screams ("Watch out!" "He's heading straight for us!" & "Oh, my God! This is it!") we determined that the words scuba & donkey, among others, we're actually kind of fun to utter out loud.  You try it.  Do it now.

See?

I like combining accents.  I recommend equal parts Jim Carrey from " The Mask" & Mike Meyers from "Shrek"  to come up with a creepy Scottish vibe.  Let the breath trail off during the last syllable.  

Scuba donkeeeeaahhhhhh!

This isn't really a travel blog, although we'll post our travel stories.  It's more of a commentary on why we like the things we like.   We don't just want to see the world, we want to experience it.  The process of discussing & analyzing the day's events & then trying to record it in an artistic or funny way helps in a huge way to appreciate what we've just been through.  And by sharing our suggestions & warnings with you maybe we can save you some time or angst should you find yourself in the same part of the world.

These, then, are the chronicles of the Scuba Donkey.  A collection of narratives detailing our adventures as we roam the earth seeking out the things we love & identifying those we could live without.  We invite you to participate in the process.

Friday, July 8, 2011

Awake in Barcelona- G

On Sunday June 19th, we set foot in Barcelona for our third and last time of our trip. Our arrivals were twice by plane & once by ferry. Arrival by plane was definitely much preferred. Our ferry trips were creepy at best with the deserted eleven-story Grimaldi Lines ferry being the highlight. It's 50 truck drivers starring at our every move and it's 50 high school kids making out to loud dance music on the chair-less top deck did not disappoint. Mario, myself & the 10 other awe struck tourists looked at our watches frequently over the 23 hour trip and noticeably stayed out in the open on the upper deck drinking caffeinated beverages so as not to require sleep.  Long stretches below amid long empty corridors reminiscent of The Shining and cabins aromatically scented with diesel fuel and starched sheets were not a welcome comfort. We opted for 5-year old hot dogs, rum & coke, and our own game of ipad Yatzee on the top deck to keep the dream alive. I’m an excellent Yatzee player now.
____

Scuba Donkey on The Grimaldi Line


Barcelona was our home base and our break between ferries. We witnessed the beautiful city shift gently from Spring to Summer. Dark colored jackets and scarves gave way to floral prints and brighter wisps of blues and pinks. The H&M stores were packed, those 80's style Original Wayfarer Ray-Ban sunglasses that Madonna loved are back with a vengeance in white, and everyone had on a pair of Birkenstocks.  Men and women alike wore the Gizeh style ones with impeccable flair. The political protests in Plaça de Catalunya grew to a full-blown tent city of thousands noticeably affecting the overall mood of the Catalan paradise & a few tourists began to show signs of sunburn.

I was awake.  I wasn’t tired one bit and for my 34th day straight without the comforts of “home”, I felt more rested than ever. When I looked in the mirror of our beautiful little hotel room at The Hotel Gaudi, I had no dark circles under my eyes and my forehead was void of those ever increasing lines. My breath was calm and deep and every pore of my skin seemed to be fully open as if they were soaking up every last bit of oxygen available. The relaxed safety one is known to feel at home and I always find myself searching for, I felt while traveling. I was satisfied, fulfilled & unbelievably awake.

A beach walk to Barceloneta was the choice for our last day. A naked & tattooed 70 year old man with a penis to his knees strolling the boardwalk, Frank Gehry’s waterfront fish sculpture, amazing sushi & sangria, drumming protesters & coconut gelato all fulfilled our remaining Spanish wishes. We stopped for a few more tapas whenever the fragrances called us in.  We wandered dim rainy side streets until our feet were too sore to walk any further, we slept then returned to the place we now call home.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Indiana Jones & The Most Beautiful Girl in the World- M & G

June 10

Gwendolyn: It was a hike wheeling luggage from the train station through the charming Myrtle Beach meets Pompano town of Civitavecchia, Italy. We were hungry and not sure how long it would take us to locate our ferry line and stand in all of the appropriate queues. Although there was a very suspect looking Subway sandwich sign, we were anxious to continue on and find something better by our ferry port. Barcelona was our destination and we knew that no matter what we encountered,  it wouldn't be but a short 24 hours before we could eat our favorite gazpacho.

All of a sudden, there it was. The port. With it's various display of industrial looking cranes and lifts, large cargo ships, a few cruise ships, and of course a large gate lit in golden hues by the setting evening sun. It was all that separated ourselves from what we knew was the direction we needed to go. There were two rather serious looking Italian guards in front of the gate with large semi trucks approaching them one by one for permission to enter.  I left the luggage with Mario and ran haphazardly between them to reach the guards.

" Through here you are very beautiful 100 yards free shuttle very beautiful come back beautiful" was the line from one of the guards that successfully landed us one step closer to the Grimaldi Ferry Line and our prized gazpacho. Still, however complimentary of my lovely hairstylist that added the hint of blond highlights peaking out from under my floppy hat that Italian men notoriously love so well, there was something a little off about the exchange.  I knew then that something was amiss. We were in store for a new adventure.

The reception and waiting area was something like the arcade corner of an early 80's bowling alley in the suburbs of Midwest Ohio. The ones I became ever so familiar with as a child. Rows of thin wooden seats bolted together provided comfort. An assortment of crazy ball machines and those large glass cages with the giant claw that never successfully captures the fuzzy stuffed bear in the bow tie from the mound below provided entertainment.

I chose to sit and guard the bags while Mario ventured in deeper in search of food.

Mario: The snack bar was well stocked with all sorts of useless & largely inedible crap.  It was patronized by families that seemed to communicate only by screaming at each other regardless of whether they were expressing love or fury.  There were also lots of truckers who congregated here while waiting to accompany their shipments on the next ferry.  I adjusted my Stetson & entered.

A word about the Stetson:  I found it in Antibes, a little French seaport just outside of Nice.  It is made of pre-weathered leather & looked both rustic & stylish.  I tried it on & felt like Clint Eastwood at a fashion show in Milan.  Gwen loved the hat when I held it up but her enthusiasm faded somewhat when I put it on.  My longish hair had become stiff & dry due to the salt air & the absence of hair product. It stuck out like the thatching on a tiki hut from underneath the awesome cowboy chapeau.  But a little strategic smoothing & angling seemed to satisfy any objections & I left the haberdashery with my head held high & my eyes slightly narrowed.  I looked cool!

No one seemed to notice my arrival at the snack bar.  I had somehow failed to cut the striking figure that preceded me in my head.  I perused the selection at the deli counter.  The myriad collection of shrink-wrapped baguettes served only to confuse me.  Every incarnation of pork product was combined with a different kind of cheese.  There was ham & mozzarella, sausage & emmenthal, prosciutto & Parmesan.  Ordinarily, this would be snack Valhalla for me but the contents of each sandwich seemed a little flimsy.

The man at the counter took orders from his customers efficiently & economically.  He was wearing a hat, too, a little paper hat like one does while preparing peppy cuisine.  He looked at me, questioning.  I pointed vaguely into the refrigerated counter & he told me the cost & pointed to the cashier.  I walked over to dutifully pay first.  Then  I returned to hand him my receipt.  While he prepared my meal, I stared into the counter again, doubting my selection & wondering if I should choose for Gwen or let her decide for herself.  I was thus distracted when the man said, "Hey, Indiana Jones!". He wore a  malicious grin as he held out the now pressed & paper-thin baguette.  I smiled sheepishly as I took my dinner from the bald philistine in the paper hat.  I left the snack bar to report back to Gwen.

Gwen: All of the strange & prolonged stares while Mario was away put me a little on edge, but in no time at all my man had returned proudly carrying his odd looking sandwich. I asked, " How was it in there?" and all he provided me was a firm "go see for yourself".

I passed the threshold of the aluminum framed cage with plexiglass windows erected inside a corner of the larger concrete block building as a makeshift convenience store. As I entered all seemed normal for a brief moment. Then, there was silence. All eyes were on me and all I could here in my head as I scanned the room was the music from that Bar in Star Wars.

Growing up in a small fishing town in Midwest Ohio afforded me the opportunity to not only become familiar with bowling alleys, but with a various array of truck stops,  bait shops,  & even the suburbs of Detroit.   I have also been to Gary Indiana a few times and walked the docks of many port towns selling uniforms to yacht crew. None of those experiences prepared me for this.

The sandwich man was at the edge of the counter awaiting my order by the time I walked across the room. He appeared to be about 6 feet tall with a bald head bearing an upside down boat shaped paper sandwich making hat. "Buona sera, one large beer and a ham and cheese sandwich, Grazie", I said.

He stared directly at me as he took the bottle opener to the beer. I kept my eyes mostly on the ceiling. He passed the beer across the counter with my sandwich and in slow motion with a slightly carnival-ish grin and a muddled Italian accent said, "You- are the most beautiful girl in the world." There it was.

'You are the most beautiful girl in the world' is normally a great thing to hear when in you're in your late thirties and the freckles have all smeared together and given way to brown blobs between those "fine lines" they mention in cosmetic ads. Given the present moment circumstances; however, it wasn't so great and he said it a little louder than I would have preferred.

I smiled, said Grazie and turned around.

Have you ever been scuba diving or snorkeling with barracuda? They are odd looking things that hover and stare directly at you. They don't move - they just stare. Well, I turned around to see a whole school of barracuda and a very long cashier line. They welcomed me into the queue and stood very closely- all eyes fixed on me.

I stood there tapping my foot, facing forward & holding my gourmet dinner when the same bald paper hatted sandwich man now unexpectedly 2 feet shorter smiled, held out a plastic bag and said, "for you beautiful, but hold on to your beer."

Several toothless grins from the cashier line encouraged me in Italian to take the bag, but definitely  hold on to the beer. This was somehow very important to them that I hold on very tightly to my beer. I oddly understood this in Italian. I did hold on tightly to my beer &  I smiled at my shrunken sandwich man who obviously served his fare from high atop some kind of raised platform.  As I awkwardly awaited my fate in line, he stood right beside me, shoulder to shoulder, staring up at me until I made it to the front of the line to pay.

My exit was swift. My walk back to Mario was brisk. And, when I returned to him, all he said was "Star Wars bar, right?"

We both hoped the food and crowd would be slightly less frightening on board our 21 hour cruise.
___________________

 INDIANA JONES



G overlooking The Port of Civitavecchia- 5 minutes in....still optimistic!

Friday, June 10, 2011

Can't let your guard down for a moment- M

June 8,

After my run-in with the nefarious umbrella salesman, I became (in my opinion) justifiably paranoid.   They sold everything:  umbrellas, both asian parasols to protect from the sun as well as the crappy ones that fell apart when you needed them most, overpriced drinks & food strategically presented so as to imply more meat & cheese than there actually were & toys.  They sold toys that glowed, spun & flew.  They sold round little balls that you could throw against the wall where they would splat & then ever so slowly reconstitute themselves eerily into their original shape.  For some reason, they all seemed to be of Indian or Pakistani descent. Every street vendor attempting to solicit my business was chased off with scowls & curses.  "No way, man!  I'm not falling for THAT again!"

And Gwen would giggle at the sour negotiations going on.

Today, while breathing in the splendor of the Borghese park with my sweetheart, another fiendish entrepreneur approached the bench we occupied.  I saw him as he spotted us from across the promenade, a bunch of roses in one hand, multi-colored twine in the other.

"Flower?". He held out a rose that seemed to approach middle age.

"No, thank you," I replied civilly but warily.

"But, your girlfriend is so beautiful!"

My spider sense began to tingle.  I raised my internal warning sign to defcon 4.  Shields up!  We were headed into An Unpleasant Encounter.

"Yes, she is.  But, we won't be spending any money right now."

"Where are you from? English?"

Crap!  I thought.  He's engaging us in conversation!  All hands on deck!  Ready torpedo tubes 1 & 2!

"No," chirps the ever-friendly Gwendolyn. "We're from Florida."

"Ahh, how lovely!  Then this is a gift for you!".  He handed her the rose.

Defcon 5!  Prepare to fire torpedoes!  Ready the escape pods!

"No thank you." she says.  "We have nothing for you."

"It's a gift," he says innocently. 

Gwen looked at the recently-passed-it's-prime flower doubtfully.  Then, we both thanked him through compressed lips.  He shoved the roses under an armpit & extracted one of the brightly colored twine.  He knotted it elaborately around Gwendolyn's wrist.

"We have no money for you!" we said in unison. 

"It's a gift," he repeated.  He pointed to the Vatican in the distance.  "It's good luck.". He pulled another piece of twine & offered to tie it around my wrist.

"We really have no money for you!" I insisted less forcefully now.

"It's a gift.  Good luck." he smiled & nodded deferentially toward St. Peter's basilica.  I held my wrist out.  He knotted the twine carefully while my heart filled with shame with the sudden realization that I had unjustly generalized the street vendors.  "Thank you." I said quietly.

"Now, you have gift for me?"

"What?!?!"

"You give me gift.  Five euro."

"We have no money for you!" We were practically singing this now.

 "No change in your pocket? You won't look?"

"No." I said it simply.  My mental trigger finger itched furiously now.  Gwen handed him back the unwanted flower (who could have ever thought of such a thing?).  He took it back with a scowl & walked away.

We tried to remove the twine but it was securely fastened with some Gordian variation. So, we wandered away with the unwanted & unasked for bangles.  But after a little while, the idea of the constant micro-grifting we'd been subject to made the thin little bracelets seem unusually heavy.  We cut them off with butter knives over lunch consisting of Greek salad, eggplant parmesan, bruschetta, tiramisu, strawberries with cream & the perfunctory awesome cappuccino.  All of which we happily overpaid for.

With a credit card, of course. We're lucky the guy didn't operate with credit.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Pudding- M

June 7. Tuesday

Giovanni, the gentleman who prepared my absinthe, told me that part of the problem with Rome, aside from the tourist gouging umbrella salesmen, is that there is so much art, culture & overall beauty that the locals take it for granted. This may be so. We all too often take for granted the place where we live.

Today, we saw oodles (oodles I tell you!) of Carravagios. I stood inches away from a Christ as imagined by Michaelangelo. I snapped away on my camera at my lovely Gwendolyn as she sat in the cathedral & the light hit her just so. I had delicious pasta. And what's the story with the mozzarella here? It's like...

Pudding.

Gwen purchased the blueberriest blueberries I've ever tasted. The man running the fruit stand at the market gave her two bonus cherries which were plump & awesome. We took pictures of flowers & doors & walls.

And as I thought of all these things, I said to Giovanni, "Too much is always better than not enough.". And Giovanni, who is a most excellent fellow, poured me another absinthe.

Did I mention the colors?

Giovanni, Justin, Smart cars & Cigarettes -G

June 7-
Giovanni, Justin, Smart cars & Cigarettes

Today is the seventh of June. It is our last night in Rome.
Rome defies expectation. There is no comparison.

In Rome, there are cigarettes hanging from the lips of old men in suits driving beat up old fiats down narrow cobblestone streets inches away from tourist's feet.

In Rome, there are seventy year old women in high heels, flawlessly tailored dresses, long scarves, large floppy hats and bright red lipstick riding their bicycles past cafes next to 2,000 year old structures with ancient Roman columns.

There are flat black painted racing style 4 door smart cars, red smart cars, green smart cars, white smart cars, blue ones, yellow ones... In Rome, everyone has a smart car- or a fancy Alfa Romeo.

In Rome, if you close your eyes and stand at an intersection of narrow streets ending in a piazza with names like Cinque Lune, Navona, Salvatore In Lauro you will smell truffle oil and garlic. You will hear the ringing of bicycle bells and the sonorous poetry of a language spoken like the most beautiful love song colliding with a passionate fight of lovers. You will feel the humidity on your skin, the heat of the sun and maybe the mist of a few raindrops from a small passing cloud. You will be aware of the pounding of your feet and you will feel the smile on your face.

In Rome, you can fill 4 days of your beautiful life taking in the complete history of the modern world. You can visit the Pope, see The Colosseum, explore the roman forum in the pouring rain where the moss on the ancient stone glows a vibrant green, visit the creations of Michelangelo and Caravaggio and eat food that redefines every morsel that has ever touched your lips.

In Rome you can feel at home in Giovanni's pub with every American sports pendant on the wall and turn a few corners to meet the columns of The Parthenon originally built to honor Pagan Gods.

In Rome, you can meet up for a drink with the son of your good friends from home while on his after college tour of Europe - knowing well that the meeting wasn't like any other. It was a chance to meet in ROME to celebrate travel and the stories, surprises, adventures & uncertainty that comes with it.  When else in life can you discuss Nigerians under the bleachers, potential German wives, Cinque Terre, absinthe bars in Antibes , and the cast of the Jersey Shore all with recent personal reference points?

In Rome, you can grab a cannoli from the pastry shop across from your hotel and eat it in bed while blogging about your day.

I love Rome.
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