Category: 2022

  • Day 6: Florence — Renaissance to Rail 🇮🇹

    Day 6: Florence — Renaissance to Rail 🇮🇹

    Morning sunlight spilled over Florence’s terracotta rooftops, the air already carrying the scent of espresso and warm bread. The city has a pulse all its own — part museum, part masterpiece — where even a short walk feels like moving through centuries of genius. Florence was the heart of the Renaissance, and it’s easy to…

  • Day 5: Venice to Florence — Palaces, Bridges, and Renaissance Trains 🇮🇹

    Day 5: Venice to Florence — Palaces, Bridges, and Renaissance Trains 🇮🇹

    Our final morning in Venice began with the distant toll of church bells echoing through the mist. The canals were calm, the air cool, and the sound of footsteps on stone seemed to replace the bustle of boats that would soon fill the waterways. We left our luggage at the station lockers near Santa Lucia,…

  • Day 4: Burano & Murano — Islands of Color and Craft 🇮🇹

    Day 4: Burano & Murano — Islands of Color and Craft 🇮🇹

    The lagoon was hushed that morning as we boarded Line 12 from Fondamente Nove, bundled against the cool November air. Venice had a misty glow — the kind of soft light that makes the canals look like silver glass. Our ferry sliced across the lagoon toward Burano, the most colorful island in Italy and our…

  • Day 3: Verona & Venice — From Shakespeare to the Sea 🇮🇹

    Day 3: Verona & Venice — From Shakespeare to the Sea 🇮🇹

    Leaving Milan behind, we boarded a late-morning train bound for Verona, watching the Lombardy countryside unfold outside our window — clusters of vineyards, small villages, and church spires catching the November light. Verona felt like a breath of calm after the pace of Milan: intimate, elegant, and full of stories. Our first stop was the…

  • Day 2: Milan — Masters, Music, and the Duomo at Sunset 🇮🇹

    Day 2: Milan — Masters, Music, and the Duomo at Sunset 🇮🇹

    Our first full day in Milan began with excitement — and cappuccinos. After breakfast near the Sheraton Diana Majestic, we joined the morning bustle of Italy’s fashion capital. Elegant Milanese locals zipped by on scooters, businesspeople balanced espresso cups at bar counters, and even the pigeons in the piazza seemed to strut with confidence. But…

  • Day 1: Bergamo to Milan — Italy Begins 🇮🇹

    Day 1: Bergamo to Milan — Italy Begins 🇮🇹

    At the Città Alta, cobblestone lanes wound through cafés, markets, and medieval towers. We stored our luggage near the station and spent the morning wandering narrow streets lined with artisan shops before grabbing our first Italian espresso (and the kids’ first gelato, of course). From its ancient Venetian walls to its panoramic views of the…

  • A Family’s First Adventure in Italy 🇮🇹

    A Family’s First Adventure in Italy 🇮🇹

    In November 2021, our family of four set out on our very first trip to Italy — a journey that would take us from the foothills of the Alps to the ruins of Rome. With ten days, rail passes, and a shared sense of curiosity, we experienced the country’s incredible range: the quiet elegance of…

  • Columbus, Halloween, and Home 🇪🇸

    Columbus, Halloween, and Home 🇪🇸

    Our last morning began fittingly at the Columbus Monument—on Columbus Day. The 60-meter column, built in 1888, honors Christopher Columbus’s return from the New World, which he reported to Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand in Barcelona. The monument points toward the sea, symbolizing Spain’s historic spirit of exploration and connection across the Atlantic—an interesting link…

  • Beaches and Barça 🇪🇸

    Beaches and Barça 🇪🇸

    Sunday was for slowing down. We spent the morning at Platja del Llevant, one of Barcelona’s newer beaches, where families gathered to swim and play in the soft autumn sun. Even in October, the Mediterranean was inviting, and the city’s skyline gleamed beyond the waves. That night, we joined nearly 80,000 fans at Camp Nou…

  • Art in the Park and Faith in Stone 🇪🇸

    Art in the Park and Faith in Stone 🇪🇸

    We started our morning at Park Güell, another of Gaudí’s masterpieces. Originally planned as a private garden city, it became a whimsical public park filled with colorful mosaics, curving benches, and sweeping views of Barcelona. The kids loved the lizard fountain at the entrance—El Drac, one of the most photographed symbols of the city. In…