In the evening we took Elliott back to the meadow so he could enjoy it too!
Lena and I also found a playground, where Lena learned how hard it is to climb a rope ladder:
In the evening we took Elliott back to the meadow so he could enjoy it too!
Lena and I also found a playground, where Lena learned how hard it is to climb a rope ladder:
In the evening we took Elliott back to the meadow so he could enjoy it too!
Lena and I also found a playground, where Lena learned how hard it is to climb a rope ladder:
There is also no way that any camera can capture the magnificence of that region of the world through a car window from a highway. I tried, wanting to have a piece of that place to savor down the road.
We passed through so many tunnels that day (one of them over 5 miles long!) and sped past hundreds of vineyards. We also admired unusual sights along the way, like old-school luggage strapped into convertibles and random castles along the roadside.
A photo of Innsbruck right after we crossed the border into Austria:
For lunch that day we slipped off the highway and into a region called Appiana sulla Strada del Vino, roughly translated “the Wine Road South of the Alps.” It was as idyllic as it sounds, with pretty little lakes to hike around and lovely hotels and homes surrounded by lush green vineyards.
A mama coot and her 5 little babies:
We found a little trattoria nearby for a lunch of bread, cheese, sliced meats, and house wine. This is where we realized that we were barely in Italy anymore, because the woman serving us lunch spoke about as much Italian as we did. She was blond-haired and blue-eyed and spoke German, even though we were still 50 miles inside the Italian border! I’m sorry to say that the meal was also not very Italian, for the bread was old and dry, the meal was served with a pickle, and the wine lacked the robust flavor of house wines that we’re used to. Maybe we should have order the schnitzel and pretzels instead? Oh well, at least it looked tasty!
There is also no way that any camera can capture the magnificence of that region of the world through a car window from a highway. I tried, wanting to have a piece of that place to savor down the road.
We passed through so many tunnels that day (one of them over 5 miles long!) and sped past hundreds of vineyards. We also admired unusual sights along the way, like old-school luggage strapped into convertibles and random castles along the roadside.
A photo of Innsbruck right after we crossed the border into Austria:
For lunch that day we slipped off the highway and into a region called Appiana sulla Strada del Vino, roughly translated “the Wine Road South of the Alps.” It was as idyllic as it sounds, with pretty little lakes to hike around and lovely hotels and homes surrounded by lush green vineyards.
A mama coot and her 5 little babies:
We found a little trattoria nearby for a lunch of bread, cheese, sliced meats, and house wine. This is where we realized that we were barely in Italy anymore, because the woman serving us lunch spoke about as much Italian as we did. She was blond-haired and blue-eyed and spoke German, even though we were still 50 miles inside the Italian border! I’m sorry to say that the meal was also not very Italian, for the bread was old and dry, the meal was served with a pickle, and the wine lacked the robust flavor of house wines that we’re used to. Maybe we should have order the schnitzel and pretzels instead? Oh well, at least it looked tasty!
Weird thing to see on the beach in the morning: bodybuilding couple flexing their muscles for endless photographs. Yikes.
Lena met a crab:
When Lena was sufficiently tired out and ready to sleep in the car, we hit the highway towards Verona. I had hoped to stop along the way in Emilia Romagna, a province of Italy renown for its food (spaghetti alla Bolognese, balsamic vinegar, and tortellini, to name a few). Unfortunately my sweet baby slept through both Bologna and Modena, leaving us with no choice but to leave Emilia Romagna behind and hope for lunch sometime around 4pm upon arrival in Verona. Oh baby!
But “lunch” sure was good when we finally got it. We stopped in some grass by Verona’s ancient city walls to savor and enjoy.
In Verona’s central piazza we found a Mother’s Day fair in full swing, complete with live music, a ceramic pot-painting station (pictured below), and an obstacle course set up by the police to teach little kids out to bike safely.
We visited the beautiful old castle (literally “Castello Vecchio,” the old castle) in the heart of Verona. The setting sun cast a lovely light on the river and surrounding buildings. Easy to see why Shakespeare set Romeo and Juliet here!
Biking is huge in Verona. They even have their own bike share program, just like Capital Bikeshare in D.C.!
We finished our day with pizza and drinks in a quiet piazza. Ahhh travel… in retrospect, we do love thee!
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