Hotel Posta Panoramic
Check rates and availability for this hotel
Find the best prices for Hotel Posta Panoramic from our 5 partners. Show all partners
Travel Blogs from Assisi
Oh, Assisi...
Ok. So, I used a different date for my travel blog, since I'm a loser and waited a week and a half after my trip to Assisi to talk about it. But, my time there was AMAZING! When we arrived, we were unprepared for the breathtaking views or the purity of the air. In fact, I wanted to stay a week, if only to cleanse my lungs from Roman smog. But …
Assisi, the city of St. Francis
The next morning I felt much better and we packed up and headed over to the train station one street away. What a new and interesting world! The station was bustling with people of all races, people with dogs, a dozen or so schoolchildren, and women in spiked heels. As we paused to figure out which train to take, I heard a strange noise. I turned …
Rain, Sleet, Snow, Fog
... therefore) it has all been good. Whether losing the battle with wind and rain (my umbrella did not fare well); being pelted with sleet and snow or socked in by fog, I’ve made a great time of it all. Coming from the desert--and an unusually dry one this fall—I’ve embraced whatever weather the gods have in store for us with aplomb (OK, maybe “reluctantly accepted” is closer to the truth). Let’s just say that I haven’t ...
Leaving Assisi
... least Paul did. Rosanne is far more self restraintful by nature. Rosanne has just told me that she loves living more simply, living a less cluttered life. Maybe that's another impact of Assisi on us. 34 years ago I took some of Assisi back to Tasmania with me and it has never left my heart. I feel that this time the same will happen. We leave with part of Assisi inside us and we leave part of ourselves ...
Last day in Assisi
... missionary journeys all over the world. In true style we failed to fully research the trip and forgot the mandatory middle of the day Italian siesta. Places like museums, churches, banks and tourist information centres stop here from about 12.30 to 2.30 each day. I suspect even the Pope would be lucky to get service during those hours. Because siesta, which entails families eating together, is as natural here as breathing no one thinks to mention ...