28 February 2014

Friends, lend me your eyeballs

Memorial Complesso del Vittoriano
It's the school holidays at the moment. Easyjet flies cheap to Rome and Naples, so that's where we're going. We're in Rome for 2 more days. We got here Wednesday night, thanks to Google directions.

Day 1, we walked out the front door, past some market, the Area Sacra Argentina and it's multitude of super friendly cats, Piazza Venezia, Forum and Colliseum. Then got the metro the wrong way.

Lone cyclist at Piazza Venezia


We then tried a bus, read the list of stops, and caught the right one. But it seems, it had already passed where we wanted to go, so it ended up taking us further the wrong way. We gave up for a bit, and gave the kids a break, at a great kids playground with a flying fox. We chatted with the locals. Not sure what they were saying.


We tried catching the train the right way this time. But now the ticket stopped working. We were within the 100 minute limit. The ticket said it's for one trip only. So bought another lot. After getting home, we realised this leg was also the long way. We've still got no idea about the buses around here.


When in Rome...
Day 2, we got a transport/museum pass so getting lost is no more expensive than going the right way. We walked the streets where there are no footpaths or skinny ones, but acres of parking. The EUR area is a traffic toilet. The Rome Civilisation museum is listed as one of the great places you can go with the Roma Pass. When we finally find it, there is a small sign on the door saying the museum is closed. The nearby prehistoric one is not bad, even if the kids made us belt through it super quick.

The 30 bus goes near us, but the destination says Laurentina. So we crossed the road and caught a 30 going the other way. Sadly, this was actually going to Laurentina, so once again we got a 15 minute ride the wrong way. Lesson no. 2 of Rome buses; the destination on the front is not necessarily the destination.

Trevi Fountain in the rain... and loads of it!
We're getting closer to working it out. Though the huge number of different routes, having no idea of the places and no bus map, means that after 2 days of bus use, it's still impossible to get from A to B, unless you're extremely lucky, or have an Italian internet connection. Despite entitling the user to all buses, the Roma Pass map has no bus information whatsoever.

It's been raining all day today and cold. In the afternoon, we walked pass the Spanish Steps, some expensive clothing stores, and the beautiful Trevi fountain.

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