• JoKing
jul. – sept. 2019

Kirah and Jo’s Grand Adventure

Travelling to bucket list locations and ending with Kirah's final location for the next 12 months - Helsinki for Uni Exchange. Leer más
  • Inicio del viaje
    27 de julio de 2019

    Singapore Changi Airport

    28 de julio de 2019, Singapur ⋅ ☁️ 27 °C

    Just a short stop over on our way to Istanbul. Charging the phones and trying to relax.

  • Turkey Day 1 - ANZAC Cove

    28 de julio de 2019, Turquía ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

    Our tour guide picked us up at the airport at 8:30 am this morning and we drove 5 hours to ANZAC Cove. The trip down itself was quite interesting.

    Fun Facts that I learned about Turkey today:

    1: They grow a lot of sunflowers for oil and the seeds to eat

    2: They drive on the left hand side of the road

    3: The airport is brand new and about 30-40 minutes outside Istanbul and they are building a town around it. Very much like the airport at Kuala Lumpur.

    4: They transport a lot of their goods around Turkey by sea, so there are less trucks on the road and they have very good main roads to travel on

    5: Everything we have seen today showed us a country that is clean and tidy and full of life.

    ANZAC Cove - emotional. I am so glad that we took this time to go, a learning experience for Kirah as well. ANZAC only briefly covered in primary school and while we have spoken to her about it, hearing it from someone else opened her eyes. I have so many more videos which I will add in the next chapter.
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  • Turkey - Day 2 Tour

    29 de julio de 2019, Turquía ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    Just starting the day. We have covered from the jet lag and are heading off to breakfast and then onto our tour of the city.

    We found a place that did great Iced Coffees, going back in the morning.

    Kirah and I managed to work out the tram system, not easy when it's not in English and you have to buy a card from one place and add money to it at a machine before you can ride the tram.

    We managed to tram it and then walk up a hill that almost rivalled the Volcano walk in Bali - well not quite but my legs say differently to the Gelato Tower. This tower reminds me of Game of Thrones Red Keep AND it lights up at night RED. Built by the Genoise and is considered one of the oldest and highest tiers in Istanbul and was built in the 14th Century.

    We then came back to the hotel and we had a sauna, turkish bath, scrub down and massage. Felt like a new person.

    We spent tonight with Barbaros who took us on a night tour and discovered a few things but most of all we had a lot of laughs and fun and Kirah re-learned how to play Backgammon.

    Things I learned about Turkey today:

    1: Friendliest cats we have ever met and while they are not everywhere or over run there are enough to notice and again friendly

    2: The people are also very nice and friendly.

    3: 16 Million people live in Istanbul,.

    4: 60% of the population live on the European side and 40% live on the Asian side.

    5: The Asian side is where the young people go to hang out and have fun and finish the night if drinking with stuffed Mussels or Lamb Intestines, both taste better than they sound.

    6: Oh and they have a great tram system, like Melbourne.

    7: They also have lots and lots of Ferries like Sydney

    8: There is a popular myth about the Galata Tower. If you take your boy/girlfriend up to the top and kiss them then you will stay together forever.

    9: Turkey Maccas DO NOT have hash browns, what the??? Not that we have eaten thete, Our guide didn't know what a hash brown was so we checked. Our guide from yesterd say has never ever eaten sweet corn soup, didn't know what it was.

    That's it for today - see ya tomorrow.
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  • Turkey - Day 3 Tour

    30 de julio de 2019, Turquía ⋅ ⛅ 26 °C

    So we are up and out and had brekky, went to our favourite coffee place. Heading off on another big walking tour to see mosques, museums, & bazaars with Barbados our guide.

    OK so we walked a lot today. We started with cheese lasagne at a cafe, then o to the Spice Bizaar where we sampled so many types of turkish delight which I live but have a new found appreciation for, so many flavours.

    We then climbed up to a Cafe out from the moved onto Suleymaniye Mosque and learned a lot about mosques and Muslim faith over the years. It was so peaceful here.

    From there we had a lunch special of baked beans, home cooked with chilli spice - yum.

    We then walked to the Old Book Bazaar and through the Istanbul University which used to be a palace to the Sultan.

    We then went to the Grand Bazaar where I believe you could buy anything 😁 This place has 66 alleys/streets under 40,000sqm cover 2,486 shops and is considered to be the first shopping mall 😁😁😁. The scene from James Bond SkyFall where James is racing a motor bike across roofs was filmed on this roof. It has 800,000 red roof tiles.

    We then went to the Cistern Basilica, amazing. This was built by Emperor Theodosius II in 428 - 443 AD, so cool underground, it currently hosts art work on small pedestals in the water. Beautiful.

    We then moved onto Hagia Sophia Mosque museum. So humbling. So it was originally built in 400 AD, was burned to the ground, it was rebuilt in 500 AD and again destroyed. It was finally rebuilt in 600 AD and was a Christian church until the Ottoman Empire took over Turkey and turned it into a Mosque.

    When Turkey became a Republic after removing the Sultan from power in October 1923, the new president changed this Mosque to Museum. The church mosaics and art work had been preserved by the outer works put up to covert it to a mosque.

    These have now been restored and you can see both the Church and Mosque features. This church/mosque has had emperors of the Roman and Ottoman empires crowned here. The massive wooden doors that you walk through are called the emperors gates are rumoured to be the wood from Noah's Ark.

    This place has so much history, it was quite humbling to take all this in. We are so young compared to the rest of the world in terms of history.

    Home now, twisted the ankle resting it up. Tomorrow we are heading to the beach for some relaxing before we fly out to Cappridocia tomorrow night.

    We had the best guide - Barbados- thank you for showing us Istanbul. You could live here 19 years and still not see all thete is to this beautiful historic city.
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  • Turkey - Day 4 Tour

    31 de julio de 2019, Turquía ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

    So today with a sore ankle for me and sore stomach for Kirah we decided that the trip to the beach was too ambitious. So decided to take a 3 hour Bosphorus River Cruise which was great.

    Many sights to see and just again impressed both of us with how beautiful Istanbul and the lifestyle is

    Every night people including those with their small children are up and about with friends and family doing things in the city until well after midnight and everything is opened, laughing, dancing, eating.

    Such a different lifestyle to Australia.

    We also found our way back to the Spice Bazaar and did some shopping

    We flew out tonight to Cappridocia after a bit of a stuff around by our driver, but we are here and it's 12 pm and there's people out eating etc here as well.

    Looking forward to a chill day tomorrow and then more adventure.
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  • Turkey - Day 4 Tour - Night

    31 de julio de 2019, Turquía ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

    So Kirah was up last night, her stomach finally rebelled. She is all good today thank goodness. My ankle still swollen, going to get a massage on it after breakfast.

    Has desert first last night - rice pudding, soooo good. We then dinner and a show - see the video's 😁😁Leer más

  • Turkey - Day 5 Tour - Cappadocia

    1 de agosto de 2019, Turquía ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    We flew/drove in to Cappadocia late last night and could not see what was in store for us.

    We are staying at the Guvan Cave Hotel which is made from thick igneous rock blocks and is quaint and gorgeous.

    Opened the curtains earlier to this view ... Check the top right hand corner - I didn't see it when I took the photo ... This going to be fun exploring.

    OK our guide met us at 9 am and we did a 2 km walk through the valleys, So the whole area (approx) 24,000 sq miles used to be a salt lake. About 50 Million years ago under neath the lake had volcanic activity and was continually shooting lava up into the water which formed the chimneys or tuff-coned formations.

    The lake dried up and left these tuff-coned structures. People learned that the outer 10 cm was hardened but once you got through that it carved out more easily, however you had to do this in one go or overnight it hardened as the oxygen got to it.

    In the eighth century Christians were being slaughtered by the Roman empire and they dug caves into these formations to be safe and hide. They built churches into these as well which still remain today full of paintings of Jesus and other religious icons.

    The people that painted them would fast for 30 days and if they had a "dream" they would seek permission to continue to dream down that path. Then they would seek permission to draw thete dream if that was approved then they drew their dream and sought approval to do a painting in the cones churches.

    The paintings first had to have the surface prepared and they used a plant /fine straw and pigeon droppings made into a paste and put it onto the wall/surface in the size they required for their painting.

    The pain was made from natural dies from plants and foods. The trick was to get the painting done while the surface was still wet from the preparation.

    What amazed me wad the sameness of the Christian religion and the Muslim religion. So many similarities when you get down to it.

    We then caught a lift up to the Carpet Factory and they showed us how they are made and even had Kirah doing some knots, then they showed us the range. Beautiful is all I can say. So the quality is dependant upon whether it is made from silk wool or gotten and also how many knots per cm square. The highest recorded is 24 x 24 knots per cm2, these guys have one that is 20x20 per cm2. The detail was exceptional.

    From there we had lunch - yummo and a nap back at the hotel as it was about 38° here and no breeze. After it cooled a bit our guide took us to the open air museum to see the churches and living quarters and learned the above.

    We are booked in to do hot air ballooning first thing early tomorrow, learning how to do pottery and a host of other things tomorrow.

    Had a few beers and dinner down the road and am now all tick up ready to sleep for our early morning.
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  • Turkey - Day 6 Tour - Cappadocia

    2 de agosto de 2019, Turquía ⋅ 🌙 19 °C

    So today we were up at 4 to start our Hot Air Balloon adventure. Kirah's bucket list to ride one in Cappadocia or Kapadokya as it is actually called among the dozens and dozens of other balloons ticked off.

    It was a fantastic ride, We saw the sun rise and floated over the beautiful valley. The balloon pilot landed the balloon and basket right onto the balloon trailer, one set of skills there.

    We came back to the hotel, had brekky and met up with our guide Ozguryag or Ozzie for short. The places we saw today are:

    Derinkuyu Underground city - amazing but not for those with claustrophobia, pretty small tunnels in a couple of sections.

    There are about 600 outside doors to the city, hidden in the courtyards of surface dwellings. The underground city is approximately 85m deep. It contains all the usual rooms found in an underground city (stables, cellars, storage rooms, refectories, churches, wineries etc.) Apart from these, a large room with a barrel vaulted ceiling on the second floor was a missionary school, the rooms to the left being study rooms. 

    It was built so that the air at the bottom was as fresh as the air at the opening and it has a constant temperature of approx 17°. These were built to protect the Christians from being s slaughtered by the Roman Soldiers when Christanity was outlawed for a period of time.

    Pidgeon Valley - The name comes from the thousands of pigeon houses that have been carved into the soft tuff since ancient times.

    Although they can be found throughout Cappadocia, they are especially numerous in this valley. They were carved wherever space allowed, including abandoned cave houses and churches. In Cappadocia, pigeons have long been a source of food and fertilizer.

    The use of chemical fertilizers has reduced the use of pigeon dung. However, some farmers still maintain their lofts because they insist that the reputation of Cappadocian fruits as the sweetest and most succulent in Turkey is entirely due to pigeon dung.

    Evil Eye Tree - Above Pidgeon Valley is a small shop and out the back whete you can feed the pigeons stands the Evil Eye Tree. This tree is covered with gorgeous cobalt blue amulets called Nazar. These are amulets with an eye design on them that ate to prevent evil and promote good luck.

    Ozxy told us that the story goes that if you have a picture taken in front of this tree you will get married within a year 😁😁😁

    From there we went onto the Goreme Onyx Jewellery place where we were shown the Turk Quartz or Turquoise and how it ages and how under different lights the stone shifts colour. Beautiful jewellery.

    Then onto Guray Muse which is an underground cave museum displaying antique & modern Turkish ceramics, pottery & artifacts. The pottery here is all made by the family that own this place. Lovely people and it has been in the family for seven generations.

    We were shown the process of how they make the pottery/ceramics and sculptures, amazing detail and dedication.

    We were then allowed to use the potters wheel and with a bit of help made our own piece of pottery. Loved this place.

    After lunch and a nap we headed back out with Izzy and saw Fairy Chimney Valley, a surreal landscape of carved-out towering rock formations, change color with every sunset.

    The rock formations that emerged due to a geological process that began millions of years ago. Ancient volcanic eruptions blanketed the region in thick ash, which later solidified into a soft rock called ‘tuff’. When the natural forces of wind and water (erosion) did their work, only the harder elements (basalt) were left behind to form the ‘fairy chimneys’ that can be seen today, stretching as far as 130 feet into the sky.

    A really quite and peaceful place.

    We then went onto Imagination Valley where the fairy chimneys look like objects such as a Camel, Mother Mary, upside down wombat, lizard, two devish dancers and a number if others.

    Last but not least we went out to Red Valley to watch the Sunset and drink a glass of wine or two. Stunning is all I can say.

    We finished the night off at our local pub - One Way.
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  • Turkey - Day 7 Tour - Cappadocia

    3 de agosto de 2019, Turquía ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    A free day today. So te-packed our suitcases, organised ourselves and just hanging out today before we fly out to Jordan tonight.

  • Jordan - Day 8 Tour - Free Day

    4 de agosto de 2019, Jordán ⋅ 🌙 22 °C

    Just arrived at our hotel at 5:50 am. The check in person let us into our room early, what a legend. So tired heading to bed for a bit.

    Ventured out on our own and walked to the Roman Theatre. It was hard to appreciate this as it seems to be a meeting place for the locals rather than an historic site. Museum wasn't that crash hot.

    We found a place to eat, food was good even for Kirah being Vegetarian. On our walk back the place had come alive, markets and street vendors selling everything and all the local people out and about with family and friends.
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  • Jordan - Day 9 Tour - Dead Sea & Petra

    5 de agosto de 2019, Jordán ⋅ 🌙 29 °C

    Our tour to the Dead Sea and Petra starts today.

    Taiwan our tour guide took us to the Dead Sea straight off. A unique experience with the floating. Everyone warned me about the drying up of the sea and from where it was 29 years ago it has certainly dropped but it is still a huge sea. It does however through the Jordan River not flowing into it anymore (5%) only the rest into dams plus evaporation due to rising heat will continue to drop.

    We had a swim in the swimming pool after and then lunch.

    From there we went to Mount Nebo and visited the Memorial Church of Moses with the mosaics which were beautiful. Such a peaceful place. Mount Nebo is the mountain whete Moses went to the alone.

    Next was the Mosaic place where they showed us how they make the mosaics and showed us many beautiful products that they made. Would have loved to had a few dollars for this place.

    Then we went to Madaba to see the mosaics in the church - Greek Orthodox Church built on the ruins of the Roman Church. This is also where our guide comes from.

    After about a 4 hour drive we then reached our final destination - PETRA. We have checked in to the La Madison Hotel and wandered out and had dinner. Have to be up at 6 tomorrow to get a move on so we can see the sun rise on The Treasury.

    Jordan is an interesting country. It has a strong currency but it is broke, the people live on about $400 Dinar or $800 PER MONTH but the cost of living is through the roof. The countries debt is as high as it's GDP.

    The country used to export wheat, but the government makes no money off this and in the bad years did not help the farmers out. They incentivised the farmers to sell their land so that houses could be built on this land from which they made a lot of money. So now the soil is quite arid.

    Apparently the land does get green between November to April, but is is really dry at the moment.
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  • Jordan - Day 10 Tour - Petra

    6 de agosto de 2019, Jordán ⋅ 🌙 16 °C

    What can I say but AMAZINGLY AWESOME. I have wanted to see Petra since I first saw Raiders of the Ark. This place has always fascinated me, how did they build this, who built this etc.

    To be hete today is the fulfilment of that life time dream.

    The canyons that you walk through with the light shining down through them, the roads built by the original owners and then the Roman paving, the water pipes and channels built by the Romans all this to just get to the Treasury which is what most people think of when they think Petra.

    This is just the beginning, the tombs, the temples, the city. Words cannot describe the feeling of being here.

    What we see today is 1% of what's there, 99% has not been excavated. WHAAAT. I would love to be apart of the archeological dig that continues to dig these ruins out and learn more about this city.

    Tirred and sore from walking approximately 16 km in scorching heat, but it was so worth it.
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  • Jordan - Day 11 Tour - Petra & Amman

    7 de agosto de 2019, Jordán ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    Leaving Petra this morning and budding it back to Amman.

    Both Kirah and I are very sore from yesterday but we will survive 😁

    Made it back and just crashed for a few hours then managed to find a Hommus and Falafel place to eat.

    BED TIME.
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  • Jordan - Day 12 Tour - Flying to Rome

    8 de agosto de 2019, Jordán ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    Have just landed in Doha, Qatar a peninsula country off Saudi Arabia. Next leg to Rome.

    Got into Roma and to our Hotel about midnight. Have to be up at six in the morning.

    I am becoming acutely aware that ALL airports are starting to look the same- having said that we breezed through the airport tonight, one of the easiest process so far.

    Good night.
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  • Rome - Day 13 Tour - Vatican & Catacombs

    9 de agosto de 2019, Italia ⋅ ⛅ 23 °C

    Up early to get ready to have brekky and meet our guide. First really small room, no room to swing a cat and sharing a bed.

    So a long day again today. We were picked up by a driver to deliver us to a meeting point in the city somewhere 😁😁😁. We were then divided into groups of language and then walked to the Vatican and delivered to our guide - Roberta - loved here, she was my age and has such a passion for this job and life.

    The line up to get into the Vatican was astounding but because we had pre-booked with a guide we were straight in.

    We went first through the museum, then the Cistine Chapel, the St Peter's Basilica, then the Pizza San Pietro or St Peter's Square.

    There were soooooo many people and a lot of it does not get air flow, got a bit claustrophobic at some points 😁😁😁 but the art work, the sculptures, the carpets, the mosaics and the history in indescribable and photos can never do this justice.

    We then had lunch with a couple from Sydney as it turned out as like us they were doing a second tour, Just married and on their honeymoon.

    From there we were organised and put in a taxi to our next meeting point and again organised into an English speaking group and then onto a bus to take us out to the catacombs. There are 600 catacombs on Roma, only 60 are open to the public and this is the largest one. Catacomb of San Callisto was the official cemetery of the Church of Rome in the 3rd century AD. Around half a million Christians were buried here, among them many martyrs and 16 popes.

    From here we then went to Saint John's (Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano) and Saint Mary's (Basilica Papale di Santa Maria Maggiore) churches. Again the art work, sculptures and the history are amazing.

    Finished off with a quiet meal best our hotel which is right near the Trevi Fountain and an early night.
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  • Rome - Day 14 Tour - Picnic & Coloseum

    10 de agosto de 2019, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Up late this morning - sleep in - yeeessss. Had coffee and brekky then went for a walk. Caught a taxi to a shopping centre, not a lot of those in Rome, on the outskirts and did some basic shopping.

    OMG Dogs allowed in the shopping centre, so many wandering around with their owners on leads, so great but so weird to see.

    Back to the hotel, taught the coffee place how to make an Iced Lattes, yummo.

    Waiting until it gets cooler then heading out to the park to play vackgammon and eat cheese and have some Vino.

    We ate booked in for a tour of the Coloseum tonight at 9:30 pm.

    Went out to Villa Not these which 8s the equivalent 9f Centenial Park Sydney and had our Picnic, wine, cheese, bread, took us, cucumber yummo and played Backgammon. Had a good afternoon. Back at the hotel for a spell before our Coloseum tour.
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  • Naples & Pompeii - Day 15 Tour

    11 de agosto de 2019, Italia ⋅ 🌙 24 °C

    About to head off on our Naples and Pompeii tour, soooo early in the morning 😁😁😁

    Long hooot, humid day while in Australia it's snowing every where just about.

    We drive to Naples and did a drive through of the town, the water was beautiful and aspects of the city are the same, but I feel Roma is a nicer city.

    From there we went onto lunch, traditional Italian pizza which was quite nice and caught up with our other tour mates.

    Pompeii, what can I say, so we'll preserved and looked after and huge.

    Back to Roma for a late dinner, a Magnum ice cream with the lot and off to bed. We are catching the train in the morning to Florence.
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  • Florence - Day 16 Tour - Training

    12 de agosto de 2019, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

    Today we are catching the train to Florence from Roma.

    It wasn't too hard, even though it's a 'll in Italian we worked it out and caught the right train.

    Got a taxi to our hotel room. Wasn't time to check in so we wandered off down town to sort our phones and stumbled across the Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore. WOW WOW WOW, so large compared to anything else and so different in colours and a site to behold.

    I really like Florence best so far of Italy.

    We sort of sorted the phone then wandered around taking everything in, did a bit of shopping and headed back.

    On the way we discovered this little cafe that did c.f. the best Iced Latte, Had two each 😁😁😁, then headed back to the hotel to check in.

    So our room and a really nice place and biggest room we have had so far, well it is an apartment really. There is a lively courtyard out the side, big wide open verandah, Just really nice.

    Headed out after a nanna nap and had pizza and cabonara for dinner then home.

    That's it for another day.
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  • Florence - Day 17 Tour - Tuscany

    13 de agosto de 2019, Italia ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

    Heading down town after breakfast to pick up a hire car to drive up to the wineries and small villages to bask in the Tuscan Sun and eat good food and drink wine.

    So we managed to get the car. Everyone said don't drive in Italy it's crazy, but is better than Australia only on the other side of the road.

    We have been watching the traffic enough to have acclimatised to right hand driving. So off we set off to the Chianti Valley and came across the perfect winery and restaurant .

    Picture perfect is how I would describe this place, beautiful with views across the valley of the grape vines, blue sky, rolling hills and the sound of ciccarders in the back ground.

    Perfect food and wine. - fell in love with this place - Castello Vicchiomaggio.
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  • Florence - Day 18 Tour - Rest Day

    14 de agosto de 2019, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    Neither Kirah or I feeling fantastic today, having a rest day today.

    Kirah catching up on her video editing and I'm reading.

    Went out and had Pizza tonight and an Iced Latte and back to the hotel. About all we could manage and still not feeling great.Leer más

  • Florence - Day 19 Tour - To Siena

    15 de agosto de 2019, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 15 °C

    Heading to Siena today by train. Have to drop the car off after breakfast and to the train station.

    So we trained it to Siena and did some shopping and finally fixed the TIM SIM card. Then caught a taxi to the hotel we are staying at.its 22 km from Siena and his a Golf and Spa Resort. Beautiful and a bit posh for us 😁😁😁.

    Settled into our room and then had a look around. We had dinner sitting outside under the Tuscan Sun sipping wine and relaxing.

    Great day.
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  • Siena - Day 20 Tour - Palio di Siena

    16 de agosto de 2019, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    So this morning a bit of a sleep 8n with comfy beds. Kirah went for a walk while I showered and then we got ready for brekky.

    Had a yummy brekky and then back to the room. Kirah had a bit of a snooze as she is not feeling great. We then decided to walk over to the pool and spend a couple of hours working on our fans 😁😁😁 just relaxed and the water was a bit chilly but I liked it.

    Organised our ride into Siena for the race and went back to our room to get ready. Took some Lucy's and then the taxi arrived to pick us up.

    Arrived in Siena and it's crazy, but a good crazy 😁😁😁, the people for each Contrada (district) where out parading the streets with their flags and drummers etc. The out fits were medieval. This is serious business.

    So the race goes like this. The horses and jockeys ate kept separate from everyine so that they cannot be tampered with. Each contrado has a stable that the hirse is kept in once it is pickled. There is no betting on the race, however the jockeys vie with each other and officials to get poll position which is the inside track. The jockey that does the best job will be priced and will be the first puck for each Contrado the next year. The prize money is $700,000 euros and the winner (contrado) has to pay for the whole thing, but the honour and prestige of winning is what it is all about.

    Thete is about 4 hours of parades around the track before the race culminating in a wagon being pulled by four white bulls, the BIGGEST bulls I have ever seen. The police race their horses around the track with swords drawn. A big day.

    The race is set to start at 7 pm, however there is no starting gate and it can take a while to get the horses to line up and be ready. It took so long tonight. Apparently if they can't get them sorted before dark the r save gets held over until the next day.

    Anyway we had balcony seats, no way would I have coped not saw anything in the general admission in the middle of the track.

    The race took three laps and about 30 - 40 seconds and it was done, but what a race. We were sitting right above a corner that was swuate not circular and as they raced around this cirner a rider clipped the fence with his leg asnd cane off but managed to get out of the way, but it crested another rider to cone off his horse and her was run over by a couple of horses. The ambulance peopke raced ourmt obto the track to get him, they got him onto the stretcher abd started to gwt off the track but dropped him, they only just got him to the fence as the horses came around again. It was intense.

    The first rider that came off, his horse went on to win the race as once started they can finish without their rider. CRAZY.

    We said our good byes to our host a and had dinner and back to the hotel. An early start in the morning, heading for Cinque Terre in the morning by three trains 😁😁😁

    Crazy day that I would not have missed for the world.
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  • Cinque Terre - Day 21 Tour

    17 de agosto de 2019, Italia ⋅ ⛅ 26 °C

    Up early and three trains later and we are in Cinque Terre or Five Towns right on the wster in amongst massive hills/mountains which come right down to the water.

    We checked in, Had a nanna nap and then went out for a walk along the water front, found somewhere to eat and had a chat with a lovely Texan.

    Went for another stroll and now back to the hotel, but of a relax day after lugging the bags across three trains and three stations.

    Hitting the beach in the morning.
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  • Cinque Terre - Day 22 Tour

    18 de agosto de 2019, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

    Went to the beach this morning, cost $28 euro to reserve the LAST lounges and we were there before opening time.

    The water was beautiful, so refreshing, Kirah and I swam out to an out cropping of rocks for Kirah to film herself jumping off.

    Got a bit more sun and then left for lunch. We caught the train through to Manarola and wandered along the cliffs and the village.

    Had gelato and an Iced Coffee and then wandered yp to Nessun Roma for drinks and snacks for the afternoon.

    Caught the train back home.
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