Saturday
7 September 2013
(Warning: I had a hard time with picture taking the first couple of days because everything was so crowded and busy and I was not in the best of moods. The pictures get better though!)
After taking a bus ride from our meeting place in London, we
got to a hotel near the Stansted airport to prepare for our early flight to
Rome. By this point it was past midnight London time and I was pretty tired. Our
group booked two flights to Rome, one leaving at 4am the following morning and
the other leaving at 6am. I was of course was on the 4am flight.
A mere two hours after settling into the hotel I had to get
up and take a shuttle to the airport. The Stansted airport is very small and
was very crowded even though it was so early. We were on a 3-hour Ryanair
flight straight to Rome. In case you aren’t familiar with European airlines,
Ryanair is a super cheap airline that has mastered the art of swindling people
out of loads of money by the allure of mildly inexpensive tickets. We were only
allowed one bag that had to be within strict dimensions and weight limitations.
If it was off by a centimeter, they enforced a £60 charge (which would be somewhere
around 100 US dollars. They made me stick my bag in one of those measured cages
and I knew it shouldn’t have fit, but by some miracle I was able to force it
in, thank goodness).
Security was ridiculous to get through (and not like normal
TSA security that I’ve experienced in other airports), and by the end of it a
group of us were practically running to get to the gate on time. The whole
flight the stewardesses tried to sell us food and jewelry and lottery tickets
and I was not having it. To top it all off we had to sit on the floor of the
teeny Roman airport for two long, laborious hours until the next group of
students landed. Then we had to wait another hour for our bus to the hotel. And
then we had to transfer from the bus to the Metro station riddled with
pickpockets. And then we had to walk uphill from the Metro to our apartments.
Where we had to wait for the owner to check all of our passports. Somewhere
during all of this I said to myself, “Why am I doing this,” and also, “When can
I go home,” and also, “Rome smells weird.”
Things did start to look better though. The apartment
complex we were in was especially for students and had decent beds, bathrooms,
and Wi-Fi. After we settled into our apartments we took a walking tour of some
of the famous sights in Rome. We saw the Piazza del Popolo
(which I didn’t get a good picture of), the Spanish Steps, the Trevi Fountain, the Pantheon, and the
Piaza Navona.
| The Spanish Steps. SO crowded here hence the random person's head in my picture. It was the best one I had. |
| A building near the Trevi (I think). |
| The Pantheon. And one of my professors. And some of my classmates. There are more Pantheon pictures to come. |
| A recognizable fountain at the Piazza Navona. Another thing that was hard to get a picture of. |
After all this, I got my first Italian gelato and ate it on the steps of the Pantheon. Although I had only had about 4 hours total sleep from Thursday to Saturday night, and was frustrated with travelling, and seeing the sights, eating gelato on the Pantheon steps definitely made my outlook much, much better.
It's amazing to see you there!
ReplyDeleteThe photo of the fountain framed by the two people taking photos of the fountain is so perfect -- it pretty much sums up the tourist experience.
ReplyDeleteSuch good writing, so funny! Did you know that RyanAir has actually proposed strapping people to slightly inclined upright boards instead of giving them seats, so that on short haul flights (like, say, from London to Dublin) they could cram two or three times the number of travelers into a plane? RyanAir is run by the Devil, I think...