I have taken many an adventure with my wonderful wife Ursula, but the
last one was to Rome and Vatican City. It was magical, the sights and
attending mass at St Peter’s was a highlight of my life and while
we were there the Pope spoke to the crowd and said a blessing for us
all.
We walked all over
Rome and took the train and cabs to all our destinations. I must say
that we never felt unsafe at all. The price of the trains were very
reasonable compared to other places where we have been.
We went to all the
sights we had time for. The Coliseum built in AD 72 to AD 80, the
Forum and the ruins at the Palatine Hill, the Castle St. Angelo and
the Trevi Fountain. Yes, we threw a coin in the fountain so we will
return to Rome.
The thing that made
it magical had more to do with a chance encounter with a road that
had a sign in Italian that said rough road, as we went to a
restaurant that Ursula’s father had a picture taken at the end of
the Second World War. The road that I am speaking of, as I said had a
sign in Italian that I could not read and it was only blocking half
the road, so like any good American tourist I went around it and, as
Shirley Temple used to say, “oh my goodness”! It was, first of
all, in the middle of nowhere and I must say if there is a middle of
nowhere it was that road in Italy.
Back to the road now, the
conditions of the road were really rough at first and, like any thing
that I do, it was destined to get even rougher. The sides of the road
had collapsed in places and the bridges also looked as if chunks had
fallen out of them. I kept moving forward as my poor wife Ursula
melted into a nervous pool of Jell-O. We finally got up to the very
top of this mountain road and it didn’t look any more pleasing to
the eye than the rest of the road had before. There were at least
1000 foot drops or more on the right side of the car which made
Ursula’s nerves of Jell-O at this point even more shaky. I,
however, had all the confidence in the world that we were going to be
safe “after they pulled our mangled bodies from the Fiat we had
rented”. At least then you wouldn’t have to be listening to this
story. Yes, I was starting to get a little bit worried, “yeah like
I was already sweating bullets”, the road actually seemed just a
little bit better, “but you had to drive around the big huge holes
in the road for it to be better by the way”. We finally got to the
end of our rough road and came to what we would’ve called an
expressway that also seemed to be closed. Luckily, we saw a couple
workers on a part of the expressway that was closest to us, so we
asked them in our very best interpretation of an American tourist
trying to make someone understand what they are asking that doesn’t
understand English. Somehow he understood us and pointed to go back
down the road and take the right but before the closed sign. We were
to turn across the medium and turn left and it would take us to our
destination. Luckily for us it did and no mishaps or rough roads on
the rest of our trip to the town of Bornio in Rovigo and the
restaurant called Trattoria al Ponte.