Day 2: Firenze Innevata part II

I woke to a brilliantly clear sky and the whole city covered in six or eight inches of snow. I checked out of Hotel Enza and wandered to the Piazza del Duomo for coffee and to see what it looked like covered in snow. Every street and sidewalk was thick with it.

Firenze innevata

The Duomo itself was crowned white, a lovely compliment to the Christmas decorations all around it.

Piazza del Duomo

Incidentally, coffee. COFFEE. Espresso here is so delicious that it is beyond all possible comprehension. A shot of straight espresso goes down like water; a cappuccino is positively ambrosial. I don’t know how I’ll ever drink coffee in America ever again.

Today (December 18th) is my birthday, so I thought I’d walk to Ponte Vecchio and have a little picnic. I didn’t bother with my map and just headed south to the river.

Arno

The Arno is the principal river in Tuscany and one of the largest in Italy, after the Tiber. About two thirds of Florence lies north of the Arno, where the major tourist areas are.

Arno

There are many, many bridges across it, but Ponte Vecchio is easy to spot; I just walked upstream (east) until I reached it.

Ponte Vecchio

Ponte Vecchio (lit. “Old Bridge”) is one of the few Florentine bridges not destroyed by the Germans during their retreat in WW2.

Ponte Vecchio

I bought a pizza margherita at a corner shop and walked around the neighborhood south of the bridge, looking in shop windows and watching other people, even locals, as enchanted by the snow as I was, take photos and throw snowballs.

Later, I ate a delicious ossobuco for lunch, followed by a big piece of tiramisu. I went to the station to validate my rail pass and head south to Siena, but the line was long and I missed the train by a few seconds (it pulled away literally as I was running to it). I waited around for the next one, but minutes before it would have arrived, the sign said it had been canceled – along with almost all of the other departures for the next hour! Not wanting to gamble on yet another, even later, train, I went in search of a hostel for the night. I’ll try my luck with Siena tomorrow.

Day 1: Firenze Innevata

I was jetlagged after the long trip, and when I arrived at my hotel around two on the 16th, I did my best to stay awake until a reasonable bedtime. I drank the best espresso of my life at a rough-edged bar near the hotel, and then took a long walk through the city, counting on the exercise and the cold to keep me awake.

Florence is beautiful. I am not kidding. It is also quite small–the streets are narrow, and the buildings jam together like a well-played game of Tetris. It’s possible to walk by a great number of famous, historical sites in a matter of minutes, though that assumes you don’t stop to look. There are churches everywhere, as well as restaurants, bars and caffeterie, shops full of clothing and accessories, newsstands, hotels.

A cultural note: the “bar” in Italy is not primarily a liquor-based establishment, though all have rows of bottles of all kinds of alcohol on display. You are as likely to go to a bar for your morning cappuccino as you are for a drink in the afternoon.

I collapsed into bed at around 19:00, slept deeply until about 1:00, and then fitfully again until about 6:00 the next morning. It was cold. My journal entry after my morning walk consisted entirely of: “IT IS FUCKING COLD, WHAT IS THIS I DON’T EVEN”. Fortunately it warmed up by a few degrees when I went out in the afternoon to bring my luggage to my school, but that was when the snow really started to come down.

Firenze: Snow

Firenze

The dark green shutters on beige or saffron walls are a motif throughout the city. When I first arrived at my hotel, I thought, “oh, that’s a very distinctive style – it’ll be easy to find my way back to this place.” I was wrong. Almost every building in Florence has these shutters.

Precipitation was halfhearted throughout the early part of the afternoon, but when I reached Piazza della Santissima Annunziata, the snow began in earnest. In minutes, the streets and sidewalks were white and slippery.

Piazza della SS Annunziata

Scooters and Snow

Scooters and motorbikes are ubiquitous. Streets are lined with parked bikes, and packs of them go buzzing with suicidal velocity down every road, cars (and pedestrians) be damned.

Technical Difficulties

I have encountered some minor technical difficulties, namely that the plug adapter I bought (For “Europe”) does not work here. I will work on finding a correct one and until then, will keep taking photos.

Florence is so beautiful that I could cry – everything is astounding, and I am surrounded by delicious food and decadent shops.

People say that there are no traffic laws in Italy: that is not true. In fact, there are two and they are easily codified. They are:

1. Show no fear.
2. Show no mercy.

It is terribly cold today, but I must get to my school to pay the last of my bills and drop off some luggage.

Ciao!