Here you can browse through my blog posts prior to February 2022. Currently I'm sharing my travel experiences, candid opinions, and what's on my mind solely on my Facebook page. — Rick

Casinos and Small Change in Venice

 

Checking in on local guides recommended in my Venice guidebook, I meet my friend Alessandro and his tour. Nearly every night, he meets a gang of my readers at the top of the Rialto Bridge for a pub-crawl dinner. Eating ugly things on toothpicks in a series of characteristic bars, all seemed to be having a blast.

I’m in Venice doing a few days of research for my guidebook and preparing for our TV shoot. I’ll be meeting my crew soon to make two new shows on Venice. I shaved the beard and got a haircut, and am excited to switch from guidebook-research mode into TV-production mode.

Venice feels wonderful. The city’s packed, there’s very little scaffolding to frustrate our filming, and I’m learning lots from great local guides.

Enjoying a walk, I decided that when you pass over a bridge, you should look both ways — as you may be hit with a lovely view. At a restaurant, I was offered wine sparkling or flat and water with or without bubbles. I like my water with bubbles and my wine without. It’s fun watching people in a restaurant carefully look like they are not enjoying the music when a wandering accordionist plays for tips.

Things are changing in Venice. I passed a characteristic old man with a cane…whistling “Yellow Submarine.”There were once four McDonald’s in town, but now there’s only one. Most of the glass trinkets that are sold are Chinese, and it’s undercutting the economy of the local glassmakers to the degree that there’s a strong push to encourage people to buy genuine Venetian glass with the Murano seal. The population continues to drop. An electric readerboard in a pharmacy window ticks down with each person who moves out or dies. Today’s population: 58,756. Yesterday, it was 58,759. Immigrants are taking the places of those moving out. Sometimes it seems that restaurants and market stalls are run by as many Sri Lankans and Chinese as Italians. There’s a huge increase in Russian tourists, and when a menu appears in several languages, one of them is often Russian. If you see a wedding party posing in front of a famous sight, it’s most likely a big shot from Eastern Europe or China, not a Venetian.

Enjoying a six-hour tour with Michael Broderick (Venicescapes) on Venice’s Age of Decadence, I learned that the notion of “Exceptionalism” is not unique to Tea Party Americans. Venetians believed that God led their forefathers across the lagoon to found a “New Jerusalem”. Unlike any other great Italian city, Venice was Christian from the start. When the Enlightenment challenged the whole notion of Christianity, it undermined the Venetians’ self-image, and the ever-conservative government wanted nothing to do with it. With the establishment of trade routes outside the Mediterranean and the ideas and spirit of the Enlightenment bringing on the modern world, Venice chose denial, and — like the string quartet on the Titanic (or climate change deniers today) — they just kept playing.
I also learned that every big shot with a palace needed a den of iniquity in the town center — a “little house,” literally a casino. That term originated here, although gambling was among the tamest of the activities that took place in many of those original casinos. Husbands and wives generally each had their own. Men did the business-networking thing. Women hosted entertainers, writers, and artists. While there were about a hundred casinos in Venice in the 18th century, almost none survive.

As nearly everyone (tourists and locals alike) has a cell phone these days, public phone booths — which used to be a much-appreciated blessing — are now a worthless eyesore.

Tour guide Michael Broderick took me to the best-preserved casino in Venice...but there was nothing going on.

The World’s Most Appreciated Breast (in Verona)

Locals in Verona marvel at how about half of the people who come to their town are here for Juliet. Each year, about 1,600 Japanese tour groups break their Venice-Milan ride for an hour-long stop in Verona just to visit this courtyard, with its famous balcony. And all day long, a steady stream of visitors line up to polish Juliet’s bronze breast in hopes of good fortune in love.

Did Juliet even exist? According to the local information box, “While no documentation has been discovered to prove the truth of the legend, no documentation has disproved it either.”

I enjoy standing in the corner and just observing the spectacle, which was started by a tour guide back in the early 1970s. Sensing cynicism on my part, a local guide challenged me to find the positive in this ritual. So I tried:

Perhaps there’s a hunger for a Juliet in our world. Watching the mobs clamor to polish her breast for a moment or to blow kisses from her balcony, I try to appreciate what she means and to psychoanalyze what she provides as a role model. With Juliet, love will prevail. You can lose and also be a winner. Juliet is brave, tragic, honest, outspoken, timeless, and passionate — a mover and a shaker, a dreamer and a fighter. In a way, this is a pagan temple where the spirit of Juliet gives people something to believe in.

Or…maybe it’s just a simpleminded mob excited about a pile of baloney.

What do you think?

If you can’t see the video below, watch it on YouTube.

Hit the Ground Running in Verona

A fundamental skill for travelers is simply getting around efficiently and economically using public transit. Here are a few train and city bus tips grabbed in a stream-of-consciousness way while zipping from the train station in Verona out to the street to catch my bus to the center (and my hotel).

Time and money are both limited resources. As you’ll see here, you’ll save time by getting adept at using automated ticket machines, and you’ll save money (while losing very little time) by hopping on the bus rather than catching a cab upon arrival. While you won’t always connect this quickly with a bus, you’ll find most cities coordinate their train and bus systems pretty efficiently for those who make the effort to figure it out.

If you can’t see the video below, watch it on YouTube.

It’s Police Yearbook Season in Italy

In many Italian small towns, each spring a policeman drops by your place of business and asks you, Girl Scout–cookie style, if you want to support them by buying their yearbook. But the consequences of not supporting your local police force is much more severe than blowing off that Girl Scout. If you look, most bars, cafes, and shops display the town police yearbook — they even come equipped with little loops for easy display. Locals say no one ever read one. You could say it’s just good for business.

 

 

 

Vernazza’s Permitted Pastels

Italian towns don’t look so cute by accident. These days you can’t just paint your house without dropping by the City Hall and seeing which pastel colors are allowed. Here in Vernazza, the choices are clear…and limited.

If you can’t see the video below, watch it on YouTube.