Monday 16 October 2023 – Pisa.
I've not been to Italy since 1986, sort of. I spent 48 hours on a bus from Bari to London, after getting off a ferry from Athens in 1987, but I don't recall anything more than getting off the ferry and taking a seat in on the bus. It was a long journey a long time ago. I've never been to Pisa, Florence or anywhere else in Tuscany. Weirdly Tuscany and its famous towns haven't been very high on my 'must visit' list until recently, and I lay that positive change squarely at the feet of the actor Stanley Tucci and his fabulous recent Netflix series on Italy through the lens of Italian food. Surely, Pisa's famous leaning tower should have been on my list of wonders of the world/monumental architecture that I must visit, but it wasn't. That was rather stupid.
Eleanor hasn't been to Florence or Pisa either so it was the ideal location for a week way, cunningly planned by me to be at the end of the main tourist season, but the week before most schools have their mid-term break. It was so cunning that there were still thousands of people there, but not tens of thousands. I took too many photos and we had too good a time to try and fit things into a single post so this one will just cover the first day, or rather, night we spent in Pisa. I suspect the holiday will take a few days to write up and the photos even longer to edit. I'm happy to say it was a wonderful week away; other than the torrential rain on the last day.
I've been finding it difficult to book holidays these last couple of years, I'm wanting to be more eco-friendly and use trains were I can, I'm not worried about the slower journey, but Christ, going anywhere by train from the UK is expensive. Flights have gotten expensive as well, so it took an age to find something that suited our budget and timing, and my desire to never fly Ry*n Air or E*syJ*t again. We flew BA out of Heathrow on a very convenient mid-afternoon flight, arriving in Pisa just after dark. It's much less stressful travelling later in the day.
We had a lovely room in a B and B a ten minute walk from the tower so set off soon after dropping our bags to get a quick glimpse before the tour we've booked for 9:15 tomorrow. We stopped for food and a drink on the way at a small osteria (a local wine bar serving simple food, usually without a menu). They only served one thing, a massive plate of cheese, preserved meat, olives and the local pomodoro, something I've never had before; a mix of tomato, garlic, olive oil and bread mashed into a gooey paste and spread on bread. With a glass of local red wine it was a perfect introduction to Tuscan eating.
After eating we headed off to find the tower, before discovering that my sense of direction was 180 degrees out of whack and we were going the wrong way. We realised this as we arrived at the River Arno, 10 minutes in the wrong direction. The good thing about walking around these ancient towns is no walking is wasted, every narrow, cobbled street is unique to my day to day existence. I felt like I can walk here forever and there will always be something new to see.
I never really recovered my sense of direction after that early blow. However, we did get back on track and eventually hit upon the right path, following a noisy group of 'jocks' that really didn't lift my feelings about Americans overseas, though, admittedly they had better map reading skills than me. We'd just passed the 'jocks' along a fairly typical Pisan narrow, gully-like street when we popped out into a square and 'boom' there it was, the Leaning Tower of Pisa, gloriously lit and looming imperiously above the buildings surrounding the square. It was a proper OMFG moment. I was unexpectedly and massively excited to see it. It's magnificent, but not as tall as I expected.
It was only a couple of minutes more to the area around the cathedral and tower. Surprisingly, there were hardly any other people there and we got to wander about and take photos pretty much as we pleased.
We went for a walk around the old town, not getting too misplaced too often now I knew my usually reliable sense of direction wasn't working. I really like it here, it has a decent vibe and I'm loving the old architecture. At night it had the feel of an ex-European old town somewhere in SE Asia, a little bit crumbly, mouldy and close, and there was a slight smell of sulphur and drain to add to the illusion of being somewhere ancient and barely discovered. I'm very much looking forward to tomorrow when we can explore in the daylight.
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