So LiamC asked in the F@H thread how I liked my trip. So some info here.
I had previously traveled to New Zealand for business.
That was my first trip outside the US.
The plane trip to italy wasn't nearly as long timewise. We stopped in Frankfurt germany and then onto Bologna. Then a 2-3 hour drive 'home' to Rimini.
I was traveling with my family which of course includes my 3 year old Liam and 10 month old Alex. They behaved well on the plane both going there and coming back so that was a great thing. Actually you have no idea how great that was. Normally Liam has so much energy we have to let him outside just to use some of it so we get some sanity. Having him couped up in a plane for 8+ hours had us very nervous.
We stayed with my sister. She married a real italian and moved there and had a kid, Josh. He just turned 3. Liam will turn 4 in september. So they played together a lot. Part of the purpose of the trip was to help Josh learn english from Liam. After they visited the US last time, his english went up significantly after exposure to Liam.
We rented a car well what they call a minivan, emphasis on mini. It seated 7 but we had at times 9 people in it (My parents came too). When you are used to a Toyota Sienna this was really tiny but all the cars over there are tiny. Sometimes you'll see a full-size car even a hummer and I spotted a general lee but definitely smaller cars and more bikes especially motor bikes. Crazy drivers and circles galore. I was glad I didn't have to drive. What I did like was the rule about trucks on the highway. The trucks could only go certain speeds on the highway and be in the right lane. And the speeds were based on the truck, not the posted highway speed. This was much safer than some crazy semi drivers in the US. We really should adopt this law.
We took daytrips to Venice, San Marino & Florence. Unfortunately getting that many people ready and the 3 hour drive meant we didn't get to stay long in the cities. This was the most disappointing part. Next time I would like to stay in each city at least 2 days. We also didn't make it to Rome (kids got sick), so that was a real downer. But a day trip to Rome would just not do it justice I think. We were very much tourists doing the site seeing and obligatory shopping for useless junk.
We also drove up into the hills around Rimini and ate at some of the places there. One place had the best pasta ever. We had a three course meal and everything was delicious beyond compare. I definitely like the northern italian pasta that has light sauce not heavy like many italian american dishes have. I find myself scrapping off sauce here at home and not liking the sauces to begin with that much. Their pizza wasn't bad, always thin crust and personal pizzas. I tried not to eat it too much as I wanted to try other dishes. We also ate these pita bread things a lot that my parents really liked but I could really pass on. But my wife liked them so she bought one of the pans to make them, basically a completely flat frying pan. It proves useful to make pancakes and such. I don't drink so I can't comment on the wine but we did bring back a bottle. Overall the food was good, with a few places having great food. But there is bad food in italy just like the US.
Some of the views up in the hills were great. I took lots of pictures. Maybe I'll post some to google web albums and share them with you all. I already showed them to family. Florence wasn't as impressive as I'd thought but the churches are big and impressive, same in venice. We took a gondola ride in venice but it is not that romantic as there are gondola traffic jams and the water is not so clean.
We also went to the beaches as Rimini is a beach town on the north east side of Italy under Bologna. The beaches are great. They are owned by the state but given to private companies to run. And each little section of the beach is run by a different company. So you have beach 15 and 16 and so on. They provide lounge chairs and umbrellas, kid toys to play on, bathrooms, lockers, etc all for a yearly membership. They clean the beaches. They are nice. Much easier to go to the beach everyday and that is pretty much what my sister does.
Can't forget the ice cream or gelato from the gelaterias. Some places had GREAT ice cream. We ate it up almost every night. Some not so great. But all better than breyers (blah!). I prefer turkey hill ice cream or wawa sometimes. If you head to the New Jersey shore for vacation you probably want to know how it compares to Springer's ice cream. Hard to say but I liked some of the stuff in Italy better, even the stuff in the mall, and we all love springers.
That is another weird thing, I kind of didn't expect them to have malls and blockbusters and mcdonalds and burger king. But like New Zealand, it is all there in Italy too. You get sucky fries in McDonald's compared to what you get from the restaurants though. They were good too.
All in all it was an interesting and world expanding trip but somewhat disappointing in that we didn't get to see everything we wanted to. We were very glad to be home though. The trip was tough on the family. We enjoy the frills of living in america. Big cars and big food stores and lots of other stuff.
Would I go again, sure... but it isn't high on my list... at least till I can ditch the kids and get a real travel itinerary and stay in a hotels instead of with family.
Incidentally, as soon as we got back we heard about all these people that recently went or are going this year. It was weird. I'm sure it is like the effect you get when you buy a certain car and then notice all of them on the road. But my Boss just got back, my former coworker was there at the same time I was practically in the same cities at the same time (I checked my pictures and he isn't in any). My son's teacher just got back and my neighbor's parents are still there. And that is what I can remember off the top of my head. My parents go about once a year.
The next trip is disneyworld in January. Hopefully the kids will like that better.