Italie
Sorrento

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    • Jour 24

      Weiterreise nach Sorrent

      27 mai 2023, Italie ⋅ ⛅ 24 °C

      Wer fährt schon zu Pfingsten nach Sorrent und an die Amalfiküste, das hätten wir uns so auch nicht vorgestellt. Die letzten 5 km haben uns rund 1 Stunde Zeit gekostet.
      Bei der Ankunft wurden wir dann allerdings mit schönen Ausblicken und Sonnenschein belohnt. Schön war auch, dass Ingrid und Erik sich entschlossen haben bei ihrer Weiterfahrt noch einen Zwischenstopp in Sorrent einzulegen, insofern haben wir vielleicht die Chance noch einige schöne Tage mit Ihnen zu teilen.En savoir plus

    • Jour 23

      Pompeii

      4 octobre 2023, Italie ⋅ ☀️ 75 °F

      We had a short visit to Sorrento and we all wished we had one more night to look around but that was not possible. Today we took the so-called express train to Pompeii and got royally ripped off on the tickets. The price was 105 euros and the return was less than 20 euros on a slow train. We did a bit of walking today. We had a quick lunch not far from the ruins. Our tour of Pompeii was excellent. Our tour guide Italo was hilarious and just added that as part of the tour. He gave some very interesting information about the ruins and its excavation. I only wished we could stay longer. I missed seeing the people they found in their death form but I would probably get more out of a documentary. It is funny how I stood by a church and overlooked Pompeii's ruins. You're looking at a big city that is below that level and also how far the sea has retreated from its port. A good 15-minute walk away. The area and land formation have changed in so many ways. I guess too that I will never complain about a hard bed again considering the people slept on rocks, and bricks, and had stone pillows. This was seen throughout the bordellos of the times. They also had fresco paintings on the walls to communicate sexual activities and who you wanted to have sex with, male, female, or young boy. Penis phallic symbols are all over the place. Pompeii is just a very interesting place. It was considerably hot today but thank god for a nice breeze every once in a while. Once the tour ended we proceeded to our next adventure, getting to the island of Capri and Anacapri. We picked up our bags at the storage locker and walked to the port. We caught the ferry for 1630 or so and it was not filled with many people going over. We arrived at Capri which was a hustle and bustle of tourists.En savoir plus

    • Jour 20

      Last night in Sant’Agata

      15 octobre 2023, Italie ⋅ ☀️ 70 °F

      Drove into Sorrento for mass. Beautiful service with organ music. Walked around a bit in town. John was on a mission for shopping, but just couldn’t find what he was looking for. Came back and laid by the pool till we lost the sun. Came back to our room and made some packing changes. Headed up to have dinner with Mimmo & Dora and their dad & mom Filomena and Paolo. Another great dinner and the entertainment tonight was the musician and the four tables + filled with Australians traveling on a tour, and guess what they sing. What a wonderful evening and we got to meet so many of them. Filomena wanted us to come back domani ❤️ . We will head out tomorrow to our next destination. ❤️🍋❤️🍋❤️En savoir plus

    • Jour 6

      Tour an der Amalfiküste

      1 avril, Italie ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

      Zum Abschluss des Urlaubs buchten wir noch eine Tour an der Amalfiküste. Giuseppe, unser Reiseführer, und Pasquale, der Busfahrer, machten ihren Job sehr gut. Zu Beginn waren wir in einer Schmuckmanufaktur (Muscheln und Korallen) und einer Limoncellofabrik, bevor wir nach Sorrento kamen.En savoir plus

    • Jour 70

      Sorrento, Italy

      30 octobre 2022, Italie ⋅ ☀️ 72 °F

      From Verona, we took a high speed train to Bologna, where we changed to another one that took us to Naples. The first train was almost entirely in tunnels. That was probably about 90 miles of tunnels, the longest train tunnels I've been in. Both were very fast and at one point, we were cruising at 248 KPH, or over 150 miles per hour. When we got out of the train in Naples at lunch time, it was like we landed on another planet.

      For 8 1/2 weeks we've been in North and Central Europe, where everything works and people are chill. Stepping outside, it was pure chaos. It was dirty and smelly and loud. But at least there was no garbage strike, and Naples is infamous for those. People honked to be heard over others honking. Ambulances were stuck in traffic and the siren just kept on going. Nobody noticed except us. Bike food delivery drivers screamed at each other on the sidewalk as we walked by. But the sun was shining.

      We needed a bus to get to the ferry to get to Sorrento and you need to buy bus tickets at a tobaccanist shop and not on the buses. We walked quite a bit to find one and got bad info from Google maps and we never did find one. There was no place at the station to buy bus tickets either, so we went back to take a Metro to the ferry port. The lines to buy Metro tickets were long. Either there is no app, or locals don't use it because it wasn't just tourists standing in line. Long story short, there was no option to buy the Metro line 1 ticket on these machines. Finally, I went to a random store and asked to buy bus tickets and luckily the guy sold them. He was very nice about it. An hour after starting our search, we got on a bus that took us near the ferry. If we had taken the train, we would have been in Sorrento by then. E la vita.

      I found a restaurant by the port with good reviews and it was amazing. We sat in the street which looked like an alley. It was a Saturday at noonish and families were out for lunch. Kids screamed at each other at the table behind us. Our waiters were good and fast and the bacalo (cod) meals we got were amazing. A bottle of Pinot Grigio settled us in.

      From there, it was just a short walk to the ferry. Too bad we couldn't sit outside to get better views, but the ones we saw of the Gulf of Naples were pretty good. We hugged the coast until we got to the port of Sorrento.

      Once there we hopped on a shuttle bus to take us to our apartment, at the top of the cliff and next to the train station. We REALLY wanted that boat trip. It would have been so much easier to take the train.

      It's a steep city and there was no way we were walking with luggage. The bus only left when full, like in SE Asia or Turkey. We met our host at the apartment we rented for 3 days. Wow. It's definitely the biggest apartment we have stayed in on the trip, and probably the best. It's a 2 BR unit with a humongous balcony we have it to ourselves. It boasts great views of Mt. Vesuvius and the city and bay below.

      The famous island of Capri is just a short ferry ride away, but this balcony is heaven. Who would come all this way and not go to Capri? Us. After 9 weeks of travel, we need to chill out in the sun instead of walking down another charming street. Capri will always be there, but eating breakfast, drinking wine, and reading on our sunny balcony is just what the doctor ordered.

      We did get out and see the sights. We walked back to the port to buy ferry tickets to go to Amalfi and Positano. And we ate lunch at a restaurant. But this is the most touristy city we've been to on the whole trip. It sure looks like cruise ships dumped a lot of people here during the day. That's not our scene. So we went to the grocery store and bought food and wine for meals and enjoyed the balcony for the next few days.

      More photos and videos are here.
      https://photos.app.goo.gl/v2BmdffvosSrKthR9
      En savoir plus

    • Jour 8

      Sorrent - ein Traum für WoMo-Fahrer 😅

      21 avril 2023, Italie ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

      Ankunft in Sorrent. Wir beziehen unseren Stellplatz für die nächsten Tage und holen ein etwas praktisches Fahrzeug zur Erkundung der Amalfiküste ab. Beim Smart-fahren entdeckt Nina ihre italienischen Wurzeln. Verkehrsregeln: optional 🤪En savoir plus

    • Jour 4

      Sorrento

      17 octobre 2023, Italie ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

      The final stop of a day of Amalfi exploration, I was more taken by Sant'agnello di Sorrento than Sorrento itself, for it's serene and retreat like feel. The Grand Hotel Cocumella certainly ranked amongst my favourite hotels in Campania, if not of those I've seen over my entire first year of travelling with work. Sorrento itself was nonetheless brilliant and I recognised the streets from my last visit.En savoir plus

    • Jour 26

      Bootstour Positano & Amalfi

      29 mai 2023, Italie ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

      Am Pfingstmontag haben wir einen Bootsausflug nach Positano und Amalfi unternommen. Nachdem wir Capri passiert hatten gehörte der Blick ganz allein der wunderschönen Amalfi Küste. Einerseits ist Positano wunderschön anzusehen, andererseits haben wir in der Vorsaison nicht mit derartigen Menschenmassen gerechnet. Nach unzähligen Stufen erreichten wir die enge Durchgangsstraße auch Amalfitana genannt, auf der in einem konzertierten Chaos Kfz aller Art mit den Fußgängern um die Vorherrschaft bei der Fortbewegung ringen. Nachdem wir dieses Tumult einige Zeit genossen haben, retteten wir uns auf ein Kaltgetränk in die Strandbar. Nach 2 Stunden ging es weiter nach Amalfi, dort besuchten wir den Dom, um anschließend das illustre Treiben aus einer Eisdiele heraus beobachten zu dürfen.En savoir plus

    • Jour 25

      Sorrento, Italy

      30 août 2023, Italie ⋅ ☀️ 73 °F

      What we did:
      - Early 5am wake up to meet our first visitors! Taxi to Milan airport and bus from Naples to Sorrento - bit of a battle against motion sickness on all the windy roads but we prevailed
      - Trent and Steph checked in first with Helen and Brian arriving soon after following their flight from Malta and tour of Pompeii. Once there, everyone enjoyed catching up on the balcony over Italian wine and Maltese chocolates!
      - The group wandered through the streets of Sorrento on the way to dinner. Pitstop along the way for Aperol Spritz overlooking the marina! Living the good life
      - Fun few hours of Italian dinner and wines down at the Marina as the moon came up over the ocean.
      - Buzzed up by a few hours of drinks we ended up in absolute candy/booze onslaught in this Lemoncello shop (Limono Fabbrica) recommended by Sara. The store girls kept producing an array of free Lemoncello shots with various forms of lemon candy as chasers and “No” was simply not an option. After 15 minutes and 5+ shots each we bought a bottle and stumbled our way out of the store. Absolutely delicious, but man our heads paid for it in the morning.

      What we ate:
      - Breakfast bars and stale Naples airport baggage claim sandwhiches
      - Great dinner at Bagni Delfino! Right on the marina edge, enjoyed two bottles of local white wine, Caprese/Calimari apps, and seafood risotos/seafood platters for dinner. Thank you Brian/Helen!!

      Fun facts:
      - Ryan air does indeed stink. Just treat you like flying cattle with surcharges for in flight-oxygen
      - Sorrento is the birthplace of Limoncello. Original family recipes date back to 1900, with an international commerciallizarion of the “lemoncello” name not formalized until 1990. Made of a simple recipe of lemon peels, sugar, alcohol and water, this stuff is sacred in the area. Endless rows of similar shops deal their own take on the recipe throughtout the area.
      En savoir plus

    • Jour 5

      Sorrent (1)

      30 septembre 2023, Italie ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

      Sorrent mit seinen ca. 17.000 Einwohner*innen zählt zu den schönsten Ferienorten Italiens. Wunderschöne Gärten mit exotischer Vegetation umgeben die auf einer steilen Felsterrasse gelegene Stadt. Sorrent ist vor allem für seine prächtigen Zitronen bekannt, aber auch als Geburtsstadt von Torquato Tasso (1544-1594).En savoir plus

    Vous pouvez également connaitre ce lieu sous les noms suivants:

    Sorrento, Sorrent, Sorrente, סורנטו, सोरेन्टो, RRO, ソレント, Surriento, Сорренто

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