Hostel Pink Floyd
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Travel Blogs from Rome
Wherever I may Rome
We arrived in Rome around 2:30 the next day and didn't have a problem finding Hostel Pink Floyd. Though the bathroom was awful and disgusting, we really didn't have a problem finding it. We realized we only had about two hours of daylight left, and decided to hit the city. We ended up getting lost though (surprised?!) and hit the coliseum …
Thankful
... to Egypt or Israel but who cares about that. I care about the fact that innocent people are dying, regardless of the agenda both sides are at fault in one way or another.... All I can say is, I hope that my family, my friends, and everyone in Israel stay safe. It is so hard to say that now, especially with the bombs reaching Tel Aviv.
Each person I know has so much to be thankful for, their health, happiness, the abundance we experience each day.... But ...
Last full day in Rome
... big. The artwork amazing and plentiful. I probably should have known better and worn something a little more appropriate and because I didn't I got turned away twice! I had to go buy a couple of scarves to tie around my waist so my knees were not showing. No one policed you once you were in but to get in was worse than the airport security! I remembered to not dance on the way through this one....
We also discovered a big park at the top of ...
The Amazing race begins
... hour sprint through the city. Hot footing it out of the train station, we managed to find the Galleria Dell Accademia promptly (Home of the actually Michelangelo’s David). Unfortunately the line was huge and it seemed like we weren’t going to make it in. The avid problem solver that I am, I quickly deduced from the massive sign above the entrance that if I ran around the corner to the Museum of Archaeology and paid an extra 4 euro ...
Cats, Campo dei Fiori, and the Jewish Ghetto
... Fiori we went, stopping briefly for gelato on the way (chocolate and Nutella for Tara, raspberry and passionfruit for me).
Campo dei Fiori got its name from the fields of flowers that were once here, but it has also been used as a site for executions during the Inquisition. There is a statue of Giordano Bruno presiding over the bustling market - he was a philosopher who was burnt at the stake during the Inquisition, charged with black magic. The market today includes ...