RFI: Italy

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is there a bottega veneta outlet store?

phil-two (phil-two), Friday, 31 March 2006 19:22 (nineteen years ago)

in Florence apparently:

http://www.outlet-firenze.com/bottega_veneta_outlet.htm

Porkpie (porkpie), Friday, 31 March 2006 21:14 (nineteen years ago)

oh man then i'm going to italy when i have like $6K to drop. (ie never) (but i'll probably go anyway)

joseph (joseph), Saturday, 1 April 2006 04:53 (nineteen years ago)

yeah il latini was really good. there were a couple other places in florence we liked a lot but i can't remember names (one of them translated as "13 goblins," i think, but i don't know what the italian is for that.)

in rome, there's a really good place just down the street from the pantheon, called due colonne. we had a good lunch there.

we spent two weeks in florence, siena and rome, and never had any problem with not speaking italian. sometimes we had to use hand gestures, and having good guidebooks is a big help, but in the cities especially english is usually enough to get by. (i heard an italian giving directions to german tourists in english, because it was the only language they all understood.)

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Saturday, 1 April 2006 06:29 (nineteen years ago)

In the Cinque Terre, there is a seafood restaurant in the older part of Monterosso called Ristorante Belvedere.


http://www.ristorante-belvedere.it/

Chris K (Chris K), Saturday, 1 April 2006 19:52 (nineteen years ago)

Cripe. The computer went haywire. Sorry.

The Restorante Belvedere is on the beach and the fishing boats pull right up to it. They have an English version of the menu available, which they kindly offered to me. When I choose the Italian one, they were very patient with me when I butchered their language. There were a few tables full of tourists, but lots of locals as well. The food was wonderful and set me back about 30 euros for a three course meal with wine.

Chris K (Chris K), Saturday, 1 April 2006 20:06 (nineteen years ago)

five months pass...
REVIVE!

I'm going to Italy in January. No real destination other than Rome because that's where I'm flying into, but I'm going to try to grab a train up to Venice and back through Florence/Siena. This will be my second trip to Italy - the first time I was in Lake Como, Milan, and Trieste.

I'll consider the trip a success even if I just hang out in Rome and drink coffee all day, but recent reports encouraged.

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Thursday, 14 September 2006 22:24 (eighteen years ago)

go to pyramide clubs

and what (ooo), Thursday, 14 September 2006 22:29 (eighteen years ago)

Do the Venice thing, please! Also remember how cold it is in Italy in January (ave temp maybe 35 degrees).

=== temporary username === (Mark C), Thursday, 14 September 2006 22:31 (eighteen years ago)

i am going there on saturday

cousin larry bundgee (bundgee), Thursday, 14 September 2006 22:31 (eighteen years ago)

Also remember how cold it is in Italy in January (ave temp maybe 35 degrees)

Well aware of that. It keeps the fair-weathered tourists away.

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Thursday, 14 September 2006 22:39 (eighteen years ago)

Best time of the year. I love it in venice there. I notice on the other thread that you are flying via zurich in which case you could get the train from Venice or Milan to Zurich rather than go back to rome to get the plane. Its a really pretty train ride, winding up through the alps.

A good itinerary would be Rome-Perugia-Siena-Arezzo-Firenze-Venice- Zurich

Ed (dali), Friday, 15 September 2006 05:58 (eighteen years ago)

There's only one thing to see in Arezzo, the perugino frescos but they are well worth it and it would make a good 2 hour stop over on the way between Siena and Firenze.

Siena has the truly excellent Palazzo delle Papesse modern art gallery.

Ed (dali), Friday, 15 September 2006 06:01 (eighteen years ago)

one year passes...

Going in June - probably Rome, Venice and Milan. So - revive. And anything important/recent to know?

Mordy, Sunday, 18 May 2008 02:04 (seventeen years ago)

drive around - dont fly around. also, visit assisi if you get the chance.

sunny successor, Sunday, 18 May 2008 04:32 (seventeen years ago)

Don't drive or fly around, take the train, it is cheap and you will meet people.

Ed, Sunday, 18 May 2008 08:25 (seventeen years ago)

I wouldn't spend too much time in Milan. Take a look at stopping in Siena, Perugia, Assisi and or Ravenna on your way up to Venice.

Ed, Sunday, 18 May 2008 08:28 (seventeen years ago)

Not to denigrate Milan, but given a limited amount of time on a first trip to Italy, it wouldn't be top of my list.

Ed, Sunday, 18 May 2008 08:29 (seventeen years ago)

I was waiting for Ed to appear and talk about trains, which are very cool in Italy. Try to arrive in Venice when it's dark because you'll be even more blown away when you wake up to it in the morning.

Milan is no good unless you have fashion business but I've heard good things about 10 Corso Como, which is expensive or trendy shopping.

suzy, Sunday, 18 May 2008 09:06 (seventeen years ago)

The Duomo in Milan is very impressive (on the outside) and you can go up onto the roof, but as others have said I wouldn't bother spending more than a day there at most.

Nasty, Brutish & Short, Sunday, 18 May 2008 10:56 (seventeen years ago)

('there' = Milan, not the cathedral roof)

Nasty, Brutish & Short, Sunday, 18 May 2008 16:41 (seventeen years ago)

milan kinda blows for tourists.. and for fashion too unless you like shiny italian suits. though 10 corso como is pretty fly. if you got $$$

phil-two, Sunday, 18 May 2008 23:33 (seventeen years ago)

I'm in Venice v briefly (roughly 24 hours) on June 16th/17th, flying to Rome for three days and then Florence for a couple more after that. No trains for me tho alas.

blueski, Sunday, 18 May 2008 23:39 (seventeen years ago)

Hey, we'll be in Italy at the same time. I'm leaving June 15th and coming back the 29th.

Mordy, Monday, 19 May 2008 00:57 (seventeen years ago)

yeah, take the train if you want to meet other tourists, i guess

sunny successor, Monday, 19 May 2008 14:31 (seventeen years ago)

i'll be getting into milan on june 18th/19th and playing music in some small towns for a week, then in southern switzerland for a couple of weeks.

Jordan, Monday, 19 May 2008 14:34 (seventeen years ago)

?
Take the train if you want to meet Italians.

Also flying in Italy this summer will suck. Alitalia is going to go bust or be strike ridden and that will have knock on effects with the other carriers. Besides, FFS, it is only 700km between Rome and Venice with lots of beautiful countryside in between.

Ed, Monday, 19 May 2008 14:34 (seventeen years ago)

xpost
the question mark was a expression of bemusement at Surmounter's post.

Ed, Monday, 19 May 2008 14:44 (seventeen years ago)

Ed is right, the train's the best thing to travel on in Italy.

REMEMBER TO STAMP YOUR TICKET AT THE SMALL MACHINE BEFORE GETTING ON! This is not made clear enough to foreigners. Also slow train from Florence means that you pass near Siena and things.

Assisi is a must. Cannot emphasize it enough!

hyggeligt, Monday, 19 May 2008 15:00 (seventeen years ago)

i assume you mean me, ed?

you both didnt meet any italians driving through italy?

sunny successor, Monday, 19 May 2008 15:01 (seventeen years ago)

I'm flying because I would only have one night in Venice otherwise - schedule is tight. Also it was revoltingly cheap (£15 RyanAir).

blueski, Monday, 19 May 2008 15:14 (seventeen years ago)

Why do you want to meet Italians on a train? What makes you think Italians get on trains thinking "oh, I hope some tourist bothers me today"?

But thirded, the trains aren't bad. Personally I'd rather have a car for freedom and stuff but the trains are probably cheaper.

Mark C, Monday, 19 May 2008 15:27 (seventeen years ago)

I never bother anyone on the train, but plenty have struck up conversations with me. (including one who took pity on me as I was living in turin at the time)

Ed, Monday, 19 May 2008 15:29 (seventeen years ago)

three weeks pass...

What's the WIFI situation in Italy right now? Is it hard to get a free connection in Rome? Are there hotspots?

Mordy, Friday, 13 June 2008 18:33 (seventeen years ago)

three years pass...

We're heading to a campsite by Lake Garda this summer. I've just received the 'parc guide' and am a bit alarmed by these two bits:
Swimming caps must be worn in the pool
and
In order to use the pool facilities, many require their male guests to wear fitted lycra swimming shorts, and not the 'boxer' or 'surf' style. Please check with the parc for their restrictions on this.

I lived in Italy for three years, but I never went to a swimming pool in that time. The thing about swimming caps does ring a bell, though - I'm pretty sure a female (British) colleague of mine was moaning about it. Would they seriously expect me to wear one? (I am a man with hair shaved to just a few millimetres length). What about my three-year-old daughter?

As for the trunks thing, this just seems mental. From experience, I know hypochondria is par for the course in Italy - the terror of the 'colpo d'aria' which is unknown in the rest of the world, for example, or the number of people I met who genuinely feared a shower soon after eating could cause them serious harm - and in this context the hair / swimming cap thing makes some sense on a hygiene level. But I can't even begin to see what the thinking is behind the clamping down on 'boxer/surf' style swimming costumes. It doesn't seem to make sense on any level: I can't see any health issue (real or imagined) and if the issue was one of, er, 'modesty' then surely the speedos would be outlawed and the baggy trunks encouraged?

Food Processors Are Grebt (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Monday, 20 June 2011 21:16 (fourteen years ago)

Caps are definitely a hygiene thing and they are required in almost every Italian swimming pool.
As for the shorts, this is completely news for me too - never heard about any "restriction" about it and its patently a crazy idea.

Marco Damiani, Tuesday, 21 June 2011 07:25 (fourteen years ago)

a lot of american pools forbid cut-offs, t-shirts and other "non-standard" forms of swimwear. perhaps an absurdly uptight extension of the same idea?

And the piano, it sounds like a carnivore (contenderizer), Tuesday, 21 June 2011 07:50 (fourteen years ago)

i guess "a lot" there really = "some." i really mean that it's not unheard of.

And the piano, it sounds like a carnivore (contenderizer), Tuesday, 21 June 2011 07:50 (fourteen years ago)

I don't even get the hygiene thing with swimming caps? Is it something to do with hair, because of the several Italians I know, the majority are pretty hairy all over.

i can't, i won't (Ned Trifle II), Tuesday, 21 June 2011 08:34 (fourteen years ago)

What all sensible Italians are wearing to the pool this year...
http://racked.com/uploads/2011-04-Nigella-Lawson-Burkini.jpg

i can't, i won't (Ned Trifle II), Tuesday, 21 June 2011 08:36 (fourteen years ago)

Thanks, Marco. I've scanned the campsite's website and there are several photos of people in and around the pool with their brazenly uncovered heads and their outrageously non-skintight swimwear, so hopefully this is just an overzealous tip for travellers that bears little relation to reality.

Ned - yeah this was puzzling me, too. For the sake of consistency you'd think they would have to insist that bearded men wore special beard covers and that anyone with a remotely hairy body would have to wrap themselves in cling film.

Food Processors Are Grebt (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Tuesday, 21 June 2011 10:42 (fourteen years ago)

Ah, the colpo d'aria thing made me laugh hard - blame hyperprotective Italian moms!

Marco Damiani, Tuesday, 21 June 2011 14:01 (fourteen years ago)

seven years pass...

Re...vive?

Milan, Venice, Sicily (mainly Palermo and Catania) and Rome.

Really keen on getting the train from Venice to Sicily but it's a hell of a long ride so thinking Florence and Naples on the way.

Would recommendations on bars, venues, and how to find gigs. Non-obvious tourist stuff? The sort of stuff that should be really easy now compared to fifteen years ago, but sorta isn't?

S-, Tuesday, 4 December 2018 04:56 (six years ago)

I thought this was going to be about the anti-vaxxer health minister firing all the scientists from the board that supervises health policy in Italy.

My advice. Go in the autumn. There’s a lot more between Venice and Sicily and if you want gigs places like Bologna and Verona get a lot of touring acts.

American Fear of Pranksterism (Ed), Tuesday, 4 December 2018 11:35 (six years ago)

more antipasto less anti-vaxxers ffs. As if you didn't already need more proof that the 5 star lot are complete scum of the earth morons.

calzino, Tuesday, 4 December 2018 11:45 (six years ago)

Fuck Florence if you want non touristy things - it's possible but it's so bloody crowded. It's a shame because obviously it's awesome in many ways. My sister in law is there now and seems to be enjoying it but it's still busy (obviously).Avoid the summer.

I've been to Naples in October/November and had good weather and the streets are a bit quieter. I don't find Naples terribly touristy, a lot of people en route to Capri, etc in the summer/autumn, but I loved the place, they've done a lot of pedestrianising over the last ten years which has improved yr ability to walk around without being run over.

Ned Trifle X, Tuesday, 4 December 2018 11:48 (six years ago)

Already vaccinated, already going midway through December until February.

Ed you had an impressive list upthread, anything you'd add/remove/change?

S-, Tuesday, 4 December 2018 11:51 (six years ago)

Florence is great in the winter / out of season. Even some of the big attractions are fine if you go at the right time (Palazzo Pitti first thing in the morning,etc).

I’m completely out of the loop on bars / venues but Nottingham Forest in Milan is great for cocktails.

Trains are superb. I think I did Milan-Napoli earlier this year and it’s painless.

ShariVari, Tuesday, 4 December 2018 11:53 (six years ago)

napoli is an excellent city for walking about, lots of spectacular views. we stumbled upon a rad little bar/bookshop/record shop called perditempo which offered some agreeably experimental/eclectic DJing as we sipped our beers

ogmor, Tuesday, 4 December 2018 12:09 (six years ago)

Thanks ShariVari. Been to Florence before, beautiful place. Although can't remember if I did Palazzo Pitti. Spent a day at the Uffizi and alsop the Duomo. Also had the best panino in my life.

The trains are indeed excellent, last time I went Venice - Bolzano - Florence. Though I hear it gets progressively less excellent the further south you go?

Will check out Nottingham Forest. Enjoying the owners' salty replies to reviews on google.

Added Perditempo, thanks ogmor.

So far

Milan 18-24 December, then Venice. Seems like some good suggestions here?

https://www.modalitademode.com/rubrica-milano-en/36-hours-in-milan-not-ordinary-itinerary/

S-, Monday, 10 December 2018 01:03 (six years ago)

Botinero a seriously slept on restaurant in Milan, football themed (because it's owned by Javier Zanetti) Argentinian steak restaurant. Weirdly though in addition to the memorabilia it has screens everywhere showing Sky Sports News so is like a stupidly high end sports bar.

Overtoun House windows (aldo), Wednesday, 19 March 2025 21:49 (three months ago)

if you were in milan for a work trip but had only maybe one or two hours of personal time max what would you do???

― 龜, 19 March 2025 21:05 (two hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

san siro tour, the other cathedral

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Wednesday, 19 March 2025 23:47 (three months ago)

oh yeah, get it while you still can

nashwan, Wednesday, 19 March 2025 23:48 (three months ago)

one month passes...

Driving in Italy: pretty fun if you're a confident and assertive driver, almost like a video game. The roundabouts or junctions where people enter from both directions and leave in both directions with no lane markings whatsoever are wild. Merging on to motorways is pretty dicey, luckily I never had to do it on to a really busy one. My favourite terrible road design was where the authorised signposted route is to drive from a small side road through a gap in a crash barrier, over a pavement and down a small kerb, straight on to a dual carriageway.

constant gravy (ledge), Thursday, 24 April 2025 12:48 (two months ago)

tangentially reminds me to recommend the Gardens of Ninfa, outside Rome. the experience really is like walking around some sort of enchanted land - v much the original intention of course. i assume despite the gloomy augury at the end of the article that they are still thriving...

(tangent was we got public transport out of rome to the gardens, and on departing found there were no more buses. the wife of the owner of the local bar said she wouldn't hear of anything else other than giving us a lift back herself - the drive itself was uneventful however, and contained nothing like ledge's comedy diversion...)

Fizzles, Sunday, 27 April 2025 09:58 (two months ago)

I remember visiting the monster park in Bomarzo a few years ago - 2018, more than a few years ago. That involved a train ride and then a bus ride from Rome. My enduring memory is of seeing someone standing in this balcony using a basket on a pulley to lift their shopping from street level. It was a peaceful place, out of the way, slightly odd because it's on a hill and the houses all appear to made of bare stone. The estate agent boards were melancholic. I could literally buy a flat in Bomarzo with cash right now. But what for. What would I do with it. Could I catch enough rainwater and shoot down enough birds to not need money? I would use solar power. But without internet access, what am I.

The same is true of Barga, which is also really awkward to reach. The station is, as the crow flies, only around half a kilometre from the edge of town, but the only road is a fast uphill switchback with no pavement, so you have to take a train and then a very short bus ride. I saw a red telephone box that had books in it. The town is apparently full of Scottish people.

In both cases I went to the best restaurants in town. Imagine the kind of restaurant you would visit, but slightly better. I spoke with the head chef and the proprietor in Italian. I gave them some tips on cooking and they clapped me on the shoulder and said "what a guy".

Ashley Pomeroy, Sunday, 27 April 2025 21:38 (two months ago)


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