Archive | travel

Cinque Terre :: Riomaggiore

Day Three in Cinque Terre dawned rainy and gray.  
This is an unfortunate state of affairs if you are in a small apartment with four children under six years old.  We waited for the rain to abate somewhat and then, hungry and stir-crazy, we headed out into our little town of Riomaggiore.  Below is the view of the heart of town and the boat slip.  Looks a little different on a rainy day than it does in the sparkling summertime!

At the top of the town, the sun came out!  As we looked towards the back of town and the rising hills, low-hanging clouds lingered, but if we looked out to sea there was only sunshine.

For all lovers of Naomi of Rockstar Diaries, we missed each other by one day in Riomaggiore.  She took this same photo a day before I did.  I also have a sneaking suspicion we might have even stayed in the same apartment, but do not yet have proof….

Our apartment included the top floor of the narrow rose-colored house on the far left.  Below is the view from the balcony at the very top.

And then we were home after another fun day of exploring.  Time to cook dinner, read a few stories (this one‘s her current favorite… thank you, Jo and Will!), and snuggle down into bed.
7 :: in Cinque Terre, friends, Italy, travel

Cinque Terre :: Vernazza

Beautiful Vernazza, the most famous of the Cinque Terre villages, was our lunch stop (and last stop) that first day.  We had wanted to stay in this town because it was famously lovely, but in the end I actually liked Riomaggiore more.  Nevertheless, Vernazza (ver-NATZ-ah) had a gorgeous coastline and lovely little harbor… and some yummy eats.

All the beached rowboats reminded us that we were visiting in the off-season.  Oh to come again in the height of summer when every captain is plying his oars across the sparkling blue sea!

We found a great little restaurant called Bar del Capitano in the main square and settled down for some traditional fare.  I ordered the trofie al pesto this time, which is pesto pasta that is cooked with sticky homemade noodles.  Delicious.

                                                                                                                                        ^ Waiting for the train! 

At home I carefully set up my camera on the balcony railing to take a photo of Riomaggiore by night.  So beautiful!  Later we played games of “This Little Piggy” before dinner.

After our babes were a-bed, the adults played Settlers of Catan… and I won!  For like the second time in my life?

6 :: in Cinque Terre, friends, Italy, travel

Cinque Terre :: Manarola

Christmas card photo, maybe?
We had been planning our trip to Cinque Terre with the Arthur family since… August, I think?  In fact, we bought our plane tickets even before we went to the Amalfi Coast, which is some planning ahead for you!  Elliott spent a lot of time on AirBnB, our favorite website for home away rentals.  We finally settled on this apartment and extra room in Riomaggiore, one of the five (in Italian, cinque) towns of Cinque Terre.  I recommend the apartment if you want a prime location for a great price.
We arrived in Riomaggiore on Friday afternoon, found the apartment with some difficulty, and went out for a delicious meal in town that night at La Lampara, which our trusty friend Rick Steves recommended (although Trip Advisor apparently does not).

Seafood spaghetti wrapped in foil (a local specialty) for me and stuffed mussels for Elliott.  Below, Miss Becca with two little munchkins.

The next morning, refreshed and excited, we took off exploring.  Our plan was to see whatever we could before the kids called it a day.  Thankfully, they were troopers, and we were able to enjoy three of the five Cinque Terre towns: some of Riomaggiore, a lot of Manarola, and a bit of Vernazza (which I’ll share tomorrow).

Our plan was to walk the beautiful coastline trail called Via dell’Amore (Way of Love) between Riomaggiore and Manarola.  The hiking trails between the towns are a major tourist attraction of Cinque Terre.  Sadly, however, due to recent rain and mudslides, the trail was chiusa (closed).  Le sigh.

We decided to take the train instead.  Unlike the Amalfi Coast, where you must drive or take buses everywhere, Cinque Terre has an amazing train system.  We paid 4 euro per adult for a ticket that would take us as far as we wanted to go in Cinque Terre for 6 hours.

Beautiful Manarola, the second town in the coastal necklace of Cinque Terre:

We popped into the cozy wooden “bar” (Italian for coffee shop) behind Lena for a mid-morning pick-me-up.  Ahh cappuccino… how I love thee.

Lena and Lucas were having so much fun in this little hideaway.  (The boards and barriers in front of doors are supposed to help with flooding.)  Later, Lena got a smooch from Caleb.  Already so popular with the fellas!

We found a beautiful vineyard hiking trail and followed that from the rear of Manarola back out to the coast.  Along the way we could admire the carefully built dry stone walls (no cement), terraced vineyards and orchards, and spectacular views.

Prettiest location for a town cemetery… ever?   And behind it was a fantastic playground!

To be continued tomorrow morning!
9 :: in Cinque Terre, friends, holiday, Italy, travel

in the States!

boarding a military flight in Sicily

Yep, I’m back in Virginia… again.  For the fourth time this summer!  (Find photos of other trips home here in May, here in June, and here in July.)  We were all planning to come back in October for Elliott’s brother’s wedding, but Elliott has to travel a lot for work for the rest of September.  We decided that Lena and I should go home early so I could spend more time with my family.  As this will be my last trip home until next summer (when we have another babe in arms), and because we are all deeply grieving the recent loss of my little sister, we thought these three weeks would be a valuable time for me to be at home with my family.

exploring airports along the way home 
& fun times in Auntie Em’s room once we got back to Virginia 

I took a bit of an unorthodox route home: a military flight.  Are you imagining cavernous cargo planes and Lena strapped into a jump seat?  I did too, but then I actually tried space available military transport, and it is so different than I expected!

First of all, you ride on a normal commercial airline, complete with regular flight attendants, hot meals, and movies.  The military contracts North American Airlines* to fly these “rotator” flights for them, and so every two weeks a regular Boeing 767 will start in Norfolk and fly through Rota (Spain), Sigonella (Italy), Bahrain, and Djibouti, picking up and dropping off passengers along the way.  On its way back this time, the plane picked us up in Sigonella; took us to Rota; dropped all of us off in the terminal on base for about 2 hours while it refueled, stocked up hot meals, and took on new passengers; and then flew all of us across the Atlantic to land in Norfolk around 3:30am on Friday morning, where my sweet parents were waiting to drive us all home to Fairfax (3 hours away).  It was a long, long day for everyone!

*(Have you ever heard of North American Airlines?  No, me either.  For all I knew, it could have been a fake airline.  Wouldn’t that be a perfect setting for a horror film?  “Everything seemed safe and secure for Captain Ghenty and his family… until they boarded a chartered flight home on an unknown airline… and somewhere over the Atlantic, everything changed….”)

Thankfully, the trip was uneventful for Lena and me.  We paid only $60 to get home (“taxes… sorry, ma’am”) instead of close to $1,000 as on commercial airlines.  We could have been stranded in Rota if there wasn’t room for us on the plane, but we weren’t… this time.  Lena and I will repeat the adventure again in October to get home and we’ll see if all goes as smoothly next time.  I’ve heard tragic tales of unaccompanied dependents (ie. wives and babies traveling without their high-priority active duty husbands) getting stranded for a week at a time along the way while full planes leave daily without them and I’ve heard of them eventually buying one-way commercial airline tickets just to finally get home.  I hope I don’t have to write my own horror story on the way back!

***
Check back later today for some fun photos of a festival I went to in D.C. on Saturday.  It’s good to be back in the U.S. of A!
4 :: in Army, military life, travel, Virginia

in the States!

boarding a military flight in Sicily

Yep, I’m back in Virginia… again.  For the fourth time this summer!  (Find photos of other trips home here in May, here in June, and here in July.)  We were all planning to come back in October for Elliott’s brother’s wedding, but Elliott has to travel a lot for work for the rest of September.  We decided that Lena and I should go home early so I could spend more time with my family.  As this will be my last trip home until next summer (when we have another babe in arms), and because we are all deeply grieving the recent loss of my little sister, we thought these three weeks would be a valuable time for me to be at home with my family.

exploring airports along the way home 
& fun times in Auntie Em’s room once we got back to Virginia 

I took a bit of an unorthodox route home: a military flight.  Are you imagining cavernous cargo planes and Lena strapped into a jump seat?  I did too, but then I actually tried space available military transport, and it is so different than I expected!

First of all, you ride on a normal commercial airline, complete with regular flight attendants, hot meals, and movies.  The military contracts North American Airlines* to fly these “rotator” flights for them, and so every two weeks a regular Boeing 767 will start in Norfolk and fly through Rota (Spain), Sigonella (Italy), Bahrain, and Djibouti, picking up and dropping off passengers along the way.  On its way back this time, the plane picked us up in Sigonella; took us to Rota; dropped all of us off in the terminal on base for about 2 hours while it refueled, stocked up hot meals, and took on new passengers; and then flew all of us across the Atlantic to land in Norfolk around 3:30am on Friday morning, where my sweet parents were waiting to drive us all home to Fairfax (3 hours away).  It was a long, long day for everyone!

*(Have you ever heard of North American Airlines?  No, me either.  For all I knew, it could have been a fake airline.  Wouldn’t that be a perfect setting for a horror film?  “Everything seemed safe and secure for Captain Ghenty and his family… until they boarded a chartered flight home on an unknown airline… and somewhere over the Atlantic, everything changed….”)

Thankfully, the trip was uneventful for Lena and me.  We paid only $60 to get home (“taxes… sorry, ma’am”) instead of close to $1,000 as on commercial airlines.  We could have been stranded in Rota if there wasn’t room for us on the plane, but we weren’t… this time.  Lena and I will repeat the adventure again in October to get home and we’ll see if all goes as smoothly next time.  I’ve heard tragic tales of unaccompanied dependents (ie. wives and babies traveling without their high-priority active duty husbands) getting stranded for a week at a time along the way while full planes leave daily without them and I’ve heard of them eventually buying one-way commercial airline tickets just to finally get home.  I hope I don’t have to write my own horror story on the way back!

***
Check back later today for some fun photos of a festival I went to in D.C. on Saturday.  It’s good to be back in the U.S. of A!
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4 :: in Army, military life, travel, Virginia

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