Wendy Caplin
After having emergency root
canal on Wednesday for a tooth that had been
dogging me for a few weeks, I somehow managed to
get ready to leave on Friday for a trip to
Italy. (Very sore of mouth because in keeping
with my luck, one of the roots had calcified and
become impenetrable but they were still drilling
into it until they gave up and announced I will
probably need surgery later.)My first time in
Europe in almost 40 years. Harlow had a gig in
Milan and we were flying out with the whole band
on Fri. afternoon. Naturally, one of the
singers,Frankie Vasquez, called Harlow on
Thursday and said he could not find his passport
(we found out that he had been unable to find it
as far back as 2 weeks ago and had told several
people who gave him everything he needed to get
an emergency passport, but he never acted on it
and never told Harlow till it was too late). So
we started off with one fiasco. He was supposed
to come to the airport but never showed.
Everyone else made it in great time and we flew
KLM for the first 6 hour leg of our journey. I
have to give KLM kudos for making coach travel
actually appealing. Each seat had a TV with
movies and television shows and games. Seats
were comfortable. If we hadn’t had the flight
attendant from hell (every little request met
w/attitude and annoyance) it would have been
amazing. I even got an hour of sleep. Then we
arrived in Amsterdam at around 6 AM. What an
amazing airport it is. It has a museum!!! And at
that ungodly hour stores and restaurants were
all open. We had a fairly long wait and got to
explore a little. Even though it was still
midnight for us and we were all pretty wrecked.
Then a short flight at 8:30 on a really cramped
and crowded plane to Milano where we were met
and taken to our hotel and left for a few hours
for some blissful sleep.
At 4:30 everyone was taken to
the venue. A seasonal Latin festival outdoors.
Lots of pavilions with food from Brazil, Mexico,
Colombia, Dominican Republic. You name it. And
vendors selling clothes and jewelry. And of
course, gelato and espresso.
The sound check was hot and
tempers were short. But we got back in time to
shower and change and then we were given dinner
in Brazil Resturant which was a great first
meal. The buffet was astounding. Cold salads
including my favorite Russian Salad, shrimp and
hearts of palm, tabouli , different grains and
greens and cold fish dishes. Fried chicken and
meat dishes. And then the churasco, Mmmmm,
Chicken and cuts of beef. And a little time to
walk around. I was particularly impressed by the
paella that was about 5 feet in diameter and
brimming with seafood and meats from the
Caribbean Resturant. 2 next to each other that
looked like they could each feed 100.
The concert was great. We had
been warned in advance about the mosquitoes and
happily one of the sponsors was "Off"
so we were provided with spray bottles. They
interviewed Harlow from inside the lounge which
was shown onstage along with a very nicely
edited piece on the sound check. A nice rush
job. There were local dancers who opened the
show and others who danced during the show. The
band looked great and sounded awesome. The
audience was in heaven. And the video crew did
one of the best directed shoot I have ever seen.
The images on the huge screen behind the band
were gorgeous and we were all quite impressed.
And our funny bones tickled at the sight of
Richie madly spraying insect spray onto the back
of Chembo’s neck during his solo. A great
night for all. And a long one. And the poor band
had to be up at 3:30 AM to catch their ride back
to the airport to repeat the grueling commute
back to the USA. Harlow and I got to sleep in
and we did. Though we woke every hour.
Morning was a little grey and
I hit the health club and tried to figure out
what a kilometer was on the treadmill. Harlow
had breakfast and then we met with Magali, who
had arranged the gig. She took us to the car
rental placeat Malpaso airport and held our
hands as we tried to reach someone who could
help us w/the special cell phone that Harlow had
rented for the trip which had never been
activated. Of course, the first instruction was
to call a toll free number. "On what?"
we had to ask. Somehow the his credit card
company and the phone company had never
communicated and we were phone free until that
evening. And so began our adventure. First we
got lost trying to find our way to the
autostrada.
And
we discovered the miraculous GPSin our beautiful
Mercedes Deisel, which spoke a very strange
Slavic language we have yet to figure out.
Leaving and entering Milan rank up with some of
the most complex and unfathomable challenges in
the modern world. But when we got on A-12 it was
a straight shoot to Genoa and when we got close
the phone was working and I called the hotel for
directions and was treated to the first of many
"Eets sooo Eeeeesy" declarations which
translated each time as "you will be so
disoriented and confused your head will spin
before you figure it out". Harlow had found
an extraordinary place, Romantik Hotel Villa
Pagoda (you can check the website for great
pix).It was built at the beginning of the 19th
century as a private home for a rich merchant.
It was gorgeous and inside and out. Beautiful
gardens on many levels. A lovely little pool.
The room was funky and full of character with
great views of gardens. We were starving and
ordered a snack by the pool. "Toasts"
of grilled cheese for me and ham & cheese
for Harlow. Then I walked around the property
which was lovely. Layers of gardens and
paths
and even a hidden stairway to a door which
seemed to lead to a beach but was barred up. We
took a swim and then Harlow took a nap and I
walked around town. It was Sunday and it was
locked up tight. I did get to the sea which was
very pebbly and the beach was full of kids and
teenagers. I found a few parks and a great
looking museum that was also closed. Then back
to the room to rest and change for dinner.
This was one of the most
extraordinary meals of our trip. It was served
outdoors, under white tents. They poured
us
glasses of prosecco and we ordered a seafood
stuffed calamari to split as an appetizer.
Harlow ordered a sort of stuffed envelopes of
pasta which was sauced with fresh tomatoes and
crabmeat.It was awesome.
But
first was an amuse bouche (or whatever it’s
called in Italian) of a circlet of fried
calamari
that was layered with seafood. I ordered an entrée
of red tuna rolls over shaved fennel. We had a
really lovely bottle of Vermentino. And for
dessert the waiter recommended what was called a
chocolate pudding but was more like an intense
soufflé and was scrumptious. We walked around a
little after. The grounds were on many levels.
We took pictures of the beautiful (and strange)
interiors.
The
massive chandelier and levels of marble stairs
and halls.
And then we collapsed into a stuffed and jet
lagged stupor and slept till morning when Harlow
grabbed breakfast and I packed up the room and
we embarked on our next adventure: "Finding
the Aquarium" in Genoa.
But first a word about
transporting oneself around Italy. Not easy. For
one, all the street and road signs are posted
really low tow to the ground. They also pop up
really close to the turnoffs and always have
tons of names and option to choose from. And
always there will be a truck ahead of you which
totally obscures the whole thing. So you are
either swerving at the last minute or missing
roads entirely. And then there are the lack of
signs when you need them. And so it took us over
an hour to get even close to the aquarium (which
we were laughingly told was only 15 – 20
minutes away) and then we parked and walked a
half a mile to discover parking right there. But
the place was great. Gorgeous ecosystems.
Wonderful tanks of extraordinary marine
creatures. And we had even learned to identify
the harbor seals from a nature show we’d seen
in the airplane. We watched dolphins being
trained and jellyfish being hatched and there
were even petting areas for stingrays. It was a
wonderful place and we walked around with our
mouths open. You get to see most of the exhibits
straight on and from above. And then we found
our first (and only) internet café where for a
mere fortune I was able to connect for a few
minutes but Harlow wasn’t and after bugging me
for 10 minutes I logged off to try to help him
and then neither of us could get on. Harlow
finally found his Italia, soccer jersey from a
street vendor.
We got some water and headed
to the Ligurian Sea where we were going to spend
the next 2 days. This was probably the easiest
navigating we had. The weather was gorgeous and
sunny and not too hot. We got off the highway
early so we could scope out the neighborhood. A
beautiful beach community right on the sea. Our
hotel was a tiny bit farther out than we had
wanted. But we ended up much happier with the
Versilia Palace Hotel in Pietrasanta. We checked
in and were brought to our room which was
another charming funky room with character.
Mismatched furniture and a HUGE sunny terrace
overlooking the pool. The AC was just barely
adequate (fine with me) and there were enough
closets and bureaus for 4. We quickly unpacked
and changed and headed for the beach. We were
starving to we found a seafood restaurant that
was still serving (at 3:00 it can be difficult
to get lunch in Italy). We sat at a shaded
outdoor table and ordered a seafood salad and a
mixed grill. The salad was an enormous mound of
perfectly poached shrimp and calamari rings and
octopus. Harlow’s grill was a wonderful
assortment of seafood. But first the salads were
served two carafes of olive oil and vinegar with
little domed tops. We turned them over but they
didn’t pour. We twisted and shook them and
they sort of leaked and the Harlow discovered
that they were supposed to be popped off and
underneath were pouring spouts. At that point
the oil was leaking all over the table and our
arms. And the owner of the restaurant was
choking back laughter. The breadsticks and bread
were delicious and every bite was wonderful as
was the cappuccino afterwards. And then we had
our first run in with food charge lunacy. There
were all these extra charges that we didn’t
recognize. Turns out that one is charged for
bread and for linens. And sometimes there is a
cover charge. And sometimes a service charge.
And sometimes you are supposed to tip and
sometimes you aren’t. And even by the end of
the trip we hadn’t made any sense of it and
probably overpaid our way through Italy.
We hit the beach after lunch
and were surprised to find that the beach
wasn’t too crowded. The entire stretch (miles
long) was a continuous row of beach clubs
distinguished from each other only by the colors
of the umbrellas and lounge chairs in each one.
Very family oriented. The sand was fine and dark
and the water super clear and refreshingly cool.
And like South Beach, extremely shallow for a
long way out. We splashed around for a long time
and lay out to dry. And we also noticed that
when we looked away from the water, there were
beautiful snow capped mountains in the distance
all along the way. We later found out that the
white ‘snow’ was actually white marble. And
that despite the extensive marble mining in the
Carrara area which we were right next to, there
was still more to be had up in those mountains.
Harlow went back for a nap and I took a really
long and luxurious beach walk. Then met Harlow
at the swimming pool which was large and so
heated that it felt like a sauna. Deena, you
would have been in heaven!!! We met a cute, just
married couple from upper New York State who had
been around a few days and recommended the hotel
restaurant for dinner.
We showered in our very roomy
bathroom and then took a drive to get some sodas
for the minibar and saw some cute side streets
and found a great gourmet store and then we
decided to try to find the piazza which we’d
seen pictures of. After getting lost a few times
and almost killing each other, we gave up.
Harlow rested and I walked around a little.
Found a gaggle of extremely pudgy geese under a
bridge nearby. And then met Harlow at 8 in the
dining room. We both ordered the buffet
antipasto. It was one of the most awesome
spreads I had ever seen and I actually regretted
even ordering an entrée. There was prosciutto
and melon, herring and fresh anchovies, grilled
zucchini strips and melting slices of grilled
eggplant. Fried puffs full of seafood and
vegetables, hearts of palm and shrimp salad w/sundried
tomatoes. Yellow and red peppers. Tiny oval
tartlets filling with either salmon or pesto or
tomatoes. Salad greens and dressings. And more.
Each prettier and more delicious than the next.
We split a bottle of Pinot Grigio (fabulous) and
it was accompanied by delicious breads. Then we
split a seafood risotto (no great shakes) and a
grilled sole in lemon butter that was expertly
boned and filleted for us. And some lovely
greasy potato rounds.
Desserts didn’t really
excite us so we opted for gelato later. Took a
walk to the stand we had found earlier and each
had 2 flavors. Yum. And we walked across the
street and stood at the large outdoor roller
skating ring where kids and teens were whirling
around to music and smoke machines. Truly
bizarre and unexpected and entertaining. And
then just made it back in time to crash. It was
also nice knowing that we would be spending 2
nights in one place.
Tuesday morning I took a long
walk while Harlow napped on the beach and here
is the scenario I devised. It was almost
exclusively young mothers and children and
grandparents. No young men and just a sprinkling
of middle aged dads altogether. Everyone on the
beach was in great shape. All ages. All the
women seemed to have the same slender long
legged body. Even the grandmothers were wearing
bikinis and looking better than I ever did in my
20s. Kids were beautiful and all lean. All the
little girls had the same haircut with 2 little
barrettes. So I figured the Dads were all at
work and probably came down to the shore over
the weekend.
And the grandparents were babysitting.
Then we jumped into the car
and headed for Lucca, a city surrounded by
Renaissance walls and moats. And once again
managed to get there during the siesta. We
parked the car in a space that we weren’t sure
was going to be legal. And it took a lot of
twisting and turning to figure out where we
could actually enter the old city.



But Harlow managed to find a
German bank that gave us the only decent rate of
exchange. I was trying to find some restaurants
that were recommended by Lonely Planet but was
absolutely unable to find the streets and we
finally sat down tired and ravenous at a pizza
place in a really ugly piazza that was home to a
huge music stage (big festival of acts like
Santana) and had our first pizzas. Quattro
stagiones for Harlow and funghi for me. Not bad.
Then we twisted our way back stopped at a
beautiful church that was full of amazing art
and statuary and a really bizarre glass box
enclosing the shrouded body of (I’m guessing)
a saint. Really strange. Then praying all the
way we headed to the car which had not been
towed and back to our hotel. One more useless
attempt to find the piazza and back to our room.
I had intended to hit the beach for a swim but
was suddenly exhausted and lay down for a while
and hit the pool for maybe a lap and then
dressed for dinner. I took a quick walk to take
some pictures of the funky and whimsical
carousel around the corner.


And dragged my tired butt
back to the hotel where we got explicit
directions (so eeesssieee) to the piazza which
involved parking at the bus station and going
through a tunnel and then through this arch and
there we were in this totally amazing square.
Tons of galleries. Modern art and little
churches full of antiquities, side by side. A
gargantuan sculpture of a pigeon. Wild murals on
building walls. It was like a beautiful fantasy.
We ate at a restaurant recommended by our
concierge (we noted that most concierges were
young women w/long dark frizzy hair and black
rimmed glasses, go figure) Inoteca Harlucci (or
something like that) a seriously hip place with
a large outside seating area and inside was long
and dark and narrow with long dark narrow tables
and lined on either side by thousands of bottles
of wine. A room off the seating had wood burning
ovens and chefs madly working. And then another
room at the back.
Every
place setting had an antique toy that you could
actually play with. It was marginally cooler
inside and I had started to feel a little queasy
that evening so we opted for inside. I had a
fish carpaccio with 5 peppers that tasted like
prosciutto. Harlow had a plate heaped with
prosciutto (which didn’t taste like fish). And
he ordered bacala (salt cod) that came nicely
charred but soft and white inside. It sent him
into ecstasies. I was not really hungry and had
a tomato salad w/aged balsamic. We split a
bottle of Vermentino and a fabulous fig cake
dessert that was a special and that we tore
through in record time. And then walked back to
the car. The square was even more appealing in
the dark but I was feeling seriously under the
weather and wanted to get back to the hotel.
I
was disappointed because once I saw that piazza
I knew it would have been a hoot to explore it
for hours.
The next morning I was still
feeling distinctly bad. Nauseous and tired. I
packed while Harlow had breakfast and then took
a quick beach walk which made me feel a little
better. Then into the car and on our way to
Rapallo. I was starting to think that maybe I
was car sick. So I was not the greatest company
for Harlow who was desperately trying to
entertain me while I was desperately trying not
to give in to the queasiness. We regaled
ourselves once again with the Slavic male in the
GPS and found the beautiful little port city
fairly easily but then went bananas trying to
find our hotel, Eurotel, which turned out to be
up a twisty hill that we hadn’t known about.
Even though it was siesta time the area looked
amazing. A lot like the French Riviera (Nice in
particular). We checked in – and here a word
about Italian hotels. There were no bellhops in
most of the places we stayed. And very few
services, which was actually charming The only
problem was that there were always these lovely
marble stair to negotiate up with all the
suitcases.. The elevators were miniscule. Barely
big enough to hold us and our bags. Our room was
a funny one with a spectacular view of the
water. Harlow figured out that maybe it was
actually a condo that was rented out as a hotel
room. There was a locked area that was screened
off that might have been a kitchen. And some
locked doors that might have held belongings.
And the bed was actually a Murphy bed. With big
sharp corners that we kept pulverizing our shins
on. I was feeling kind of out of it but we went
down to the beautiful strip of restaurants
strung out by the water and found a nice simple
place where Harlow ordered pasta with seafood
and I ordered an appetizer called "fantasia
de fruites de mare" (translation
"fantasy of sea fruits". Still makes
me laugh). They forgot mine somehow until Harlow
had practically finished. But they had an
incredible bread that looked a little like
semolina and tasted a little like sourdough so I
had no complaints. Then we drove to Portofino.
The views along the way were spectacular.
Gorgeous little towns and blue water and large
yachts and cliffs with incredible mansions
perched on them. But the town itself was a
disappointment. Pretty as a picture with
cobblestone streets. But teaming with tourists
taking pictures and souvenirs and not much else.
So we drove back to Rapallo which we agreed was
a much cooler town.
Harlow went up to the hotel
pool and I walked around the town a little. Some
of the stores were just starting to open. I saw
some of the most beautiful fabrics ever. And a
house ware place that had me drooling. And I
managed to haul my sorry self up the hill to our
hotel. Harlow was by the pool so I changed and
got some towels and we sat out a little and then
I was toast and had to actually take a nap.
Harlow must have thought he’d died and gone to
heaven. Usually I like to race around and see
everything when he naps. But this time I felt so
bad that I almost didn’t want to get up for
dinner. But I felt bad for him and we drove down
the hill and were looking for parking and we
find a little pizzeria that had wonderful
sprightly service (unlike lunch) and I ordered a
pizza which was the only thing I craved. And
Harlow had his steak and spinach and was equally
happy. And got some of my pizza. We ordered
profiteroles and were tickled to receive 2
little logs of puff pastry filled with cream and
slathered in a mousselike chocolate covering and
drizzles of dark chocolate. I even attacked them
con brio. But despite my determination to walk
around the town and see the lights etc, I needed
to get back to bed.
We had wanted to take a cable
car ride in the morning but I wasn’t feeling
great. There was also a famous clothing market
on Thursdays but we figured it was best to hit
the road. We had to get to Milan by afternoon
but had scheduled a stop at a Seravalle Scrivia,
an outlet that had been recommended to us. But
we had been told that it was in Alexandria so we
drove there and then ended up driving in a HUGE
circle and back around where we came from.
Getting stupidly lost. But much better about
asking for directions. And another sidebar:
Italians will always give you directions. Even
if they have no idea where you are going. Seems
they would rather make something up than admit
they didn’t know. So with the combination of
the bad signage and the worse directions we were
detouring quite a bit. But we found the mall and
it was large and civilized and spotless and
there were cafes and gelaterias and bathrooms
and phones everywhere. Harlow wanted to look at
shoes and I started trying a few on and the
retail therapy actually made me feel a little
better. Harlow found 4 pairs of shoes in 10
minutes. I found 2 pairs which he treated me to.
Then we drove to the next sections which was
more spread out. He found a jacket and 5 shirts
and underwear. I kept thinking there were more
stores and I wanted to make sure Harlow was
occupied. But I did not do nearly as well as he
did. We stopped for lunch and got panninis and
cappuccino. Mine was delightful and eating made
me feel a little better. And then we found a
huge and gorgeous supermarket and bought a few
little things and then we were on our last leg
of the journey. Back to Milano. We managed to
find the city but finding our hotel (Grand Duomo)
was another thing entirely. Every time we asked
directions we got closer as we got nowhere.
Harlow managed to find the center of town and La
Scala opera house,which was a real
accomplishment.
But
the directions to the hotel were tortured and
useless. Finally I called the hotel and was told
to flag a cab and follow it. After a few more
stabs we did just that. And even the taxi
driver, a tough old broad, had to ask
directions. But we got there (It took over an
hour) and then our room had almost no air
conditioning and a broken phone (it was fixed)
and a broken lamp (it was not). We got dressed
and went to walk around for a few minutes and
try to find a restaurant that would serve dinner
early. We found one that looked promising
Ristorante da Bruno, and walked a little more
and decided to eat there. After we were seated,
people started to roll in. 4 American girls were
seated next to us.
It
turns out that this restaurant had been
recommended by Rick Staves and they had made a
special effort to eat there. We were thrilled. I
ordered a mixed grill and Harlow ordered
linguine with white clams and we had a split of
wine. They gave us plates of brushcetta. It was
delicious. The food was divine and perfect. We
split a tiramisu for dessert. Words can’t
describe. It was awesome and what a great last
taste of Milano. And I was feeling much better.
We trudged back to our steamy
room and got packed and tried to catch a few
hours sleep before we got our 3:30 AM wake up
call. Naturally, the concierge had not made us
the map to the airport that he had promised us.
And the one on duty was sweet but clueless. So
in the wee dark hours we were driving around in
circles and getting different directions from
various night owls. And after probably going a
long way in the long direction we got on the
autostrada and found the direction to the
airport and drove for an hour and then thought
we were lost again one we got close but Harlow
found the drop off for the car and we dragged
our bags into the terminal and checked in and
boarded the first flight. Another small cramped
airplane. They gave us coffee and some very
decent sandwiches. But no time to doze. Then
enough time to get through the gorgeous airport
in Amsterdam and board our next flight. 7 hours
on KLM. It was a long flight. We were beat. But
sleep was not really happening. We watched
movies and ate everything they served us and I
was rejoicing at not feeling queasy. We landed
in Newark and got our bags. Only one was
missing. A big soft case full of our dirty
laundry. But we were really fond of everything
in the bag. Including every one of my bathing
suits. We got home by 2 PM. Were greeted by 2
adorable kitties whose coats seemed to have
grown prodigiously since we left (they had had
their lion cuts in June). Sasha was purring at
the top of her kitty lungs and Sophie was trying
to pretend she wasn’t thrilled to see us. We
unpacked and I put away the suitcases and Harlow
had over 1600 emails to field. I had almost 700.
And, lucky us, they were all coming in double.
We tried to stay up till evening. Kept getting a
second or third wind and then just crashing. And
the nausea descended on me again. Big time.
Saturday was a washout for
me. Sick all day. Harlow spent hours on the
phone trying to get through to KLM. Finally he
got a person and they located our missing
luggage still in Italy (so much for phoning us
as soon as they had info). Sunday, no nausea!!!
Yay!! Back went out. Boooo! We saw my niece and
nephew for brunch. Jonathan is a pleasure. He is
working as a sports agent. He is a delightful
and very impressive young man. Stephanie is a
gorgeous and super talented
dancer/actress/singer. We’re hoping to see a
lot more of them in the future. I gimped around
like a lame cowboy for a few days. On Monday
morning at 6 AM our luggage showed up.
Fortunately we’ve been keeping jetlag hours
and going to bed early and getting up at ungodly
hours. So finally reunited w/our missing clothes
we had 50 pounds of laundry. I started to feel
better. Harlow was getting all my symptoms. I
spent the day at the dentist and saved a fortune
by not needing a crown. And then had jury duty.
But we are happily home. Though now I am kicking
myself for not buying any Italian ingredients.
Especially olive oil. Next time, no diseases,
all shopping. Sophie and Sasha are all over us.
Cuter than ever (if that’s possible). And
we’ll be back after our next trip.