Category Archives: Uncategorized

Weekly Photo Challenge: Street Life

Lovely!

CadyLuck Leedy's avatarThe Travel Lady In Her Shoes

Since we have been touring Italy here are some street life scenes I thought you might enjoy!

And here is the video of the Festa del Corpus Domini, that takes place the end of May in Orvieto, Italy. Enjoy! And the blog post!  http://cadyluckleedy.com/2013/08/09/festa-del-corp…omini-may-2013/

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The cat with a corkscrew tail

Yvonne's avatarHello World

With an acqua alta of 140cm forecast, my landlord was worried the water would enter the apartment I was renting. He needed to raise the furniture off the floor, to prevent damage. This meant he had to get rid of me relocate me for at least one night. So, as I told a couple of friends, I had a little vacation within my big vacation. The temporary apartment was only a few minutes away, and very near to the bar where they make the best darn spritz in Venice! 

Although the forecast high tide didn’t eventuate, and the apartment was thankfully not affected, the one night turned into 3, as this happened at the weekend, and the apartment would need a good scrub when the cleaner came to work on Monday. 

The move gave me the opportunity to meet this charming little cat, with a tightly coiled tail. He/she was most friendly, and…

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A Night At The Opera

ceiling at the opera

What an experience!   The wife researched and found a place called Musica Palazzo before our recent trip, and I’m so glad she did–Musica Palazzo offers a very intimate opera experience where, for a reasonable fee, you see a three act opera performed right in front of you in a palazzo on Venice’s storied Grand Canal (it’s known as Palazzo Barbarigo and is just blocks from San Marco). The palazzo is part of the attraction, as it’s dark, mysterious, and elegant in the way only a baroque Venice mansion that’s decaying beautifully can be.

You’re led upstairs and seated in the middle of the “piano nobile” (noble’s floor), where the handful of performers and the four piece orchestra appear and deliver a two hour version of a Verdi classic like La Traviata or Il Rigoletto. Having professional opera performers belting out classics only a few feet from you in the confines of a Venetian plaza on a spring evening in Venice? Remarkable. Even if you’re not a huge fan of or familiar with opera, rest assured you’ll enjoy the heck out of it. Dramatic, emotional, and moving.

You realize quickly what a talent it is these folks have, and how important it is here in the home of opera itself for this old tradition to be preserved. For a night, you get to pretend you’re a 17th century Venetian patrician and think about what life in Venice’s heyday would have felt like in the most intimate way imaginable; the three acts (we saw La Traviata) are each performed in a different room of the palazzo, and prosecco and red wine are served during the intermission.  An elegant, luxurious experience.

You really do feel like the show is unfolding right in front of you, and if you have the good fortune to spend a few nights in Venice, you really should include this as part of your itinerary.

(You weren’t allowed to take photos of the performance, but I did sneak a shot of the wife and myself and the ceiling of the palazzo.  Don’t tell anyone, hehe…though I doubt they’ll mind).

Santa Maria Formosa Captured At Night

Santa Maria Formosa Captured At Night

One of the more magical spots in a magical city. Saying it exudes mystery and romance is almost redundant.

Light and Dark

Light and Dark

We stopped to reflect for a moment on the mysterious nature of things as the light of this rather fabulous hotel’s canalside entrance faded off into the distance over this narrow waterway, quite near Basilica di San Giovanni e Paolo.

Quiet Calle, Backstreet Beauty: Venice at Dusk

Quiet Calle, Backstreet Beauty:  Venice at Dusk

Standing on a bridge at night in a quiet corner of Venice is almost indescribable. It’s all-consuming for every sense you have.

Back To Work!

Back To Work!

After a week of cooking classes, meetings, discussions, adventures, forging new relationships, and strengthening existing ones, it’s good to be back home to blog about what we learned. We discovered some great additions for our Veneto tours (new wine and cooking classes, lagoon excursions to exclusive areas of the Venetian waterways, etc) that aren’t found elsewhere, and it was a very productive trip. Lots more to be posted in the coming days!

Fake Italian olive oil removed from Harrods

Good. Protect the real thing!

Marco Casagrande's avatarItalian Insight

The Inspector General’s Department of the Italian Ministry of Agriculture announced today that the world famous Harrods department store in London had removed from its shelves a lot of olive oil which falsely claimed to be made in Italy.

The swift cross-border action was allowed by EU rules in force.

Frauds related to the fake attribution of Italian origin to products are widespread all over the world, and their contrast is understandably a priority for any Italian Government.

Even in Italy itself, you can find fake domestic products. Checks over food and beverages, however, are between the strictest in the world. A specially dedicated branch of the police even exists for this purpose.

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