I was a tour escort for the Eternal Rome tour.
The longest tour that we run, 10.5 hours. The ride into town took around 1.5 hours.
We stopped on the way in at a cafe, for a snack/restroom break. I got a really good espresso, to give me some energy for the day ahead.
Our first stop was the Colosseum.
One good thing about being in a tour group is that they have all the
reservations to where we are going. So we can skip the lines and go right in. This is
especially good as it is the busiest season.
I was last in the
Colosseum in 2001, when I was on my high school Italy trip, which was also the
pre digital camera days. Just like how the Colosseum
didn't change much in the last few
thousand years or so after it was no longer used by the Romans, it
hasn't changed much in the last 7 since I was there last. Still amazing.
A cool thing that most tour groups seem to have these days are radio headsets that allow the tour guide to speak into a
microphone and have it
transmit to all the others on the tour. this allows everyone else to wander around a bit and still hear everything that is said. Very
useful in a place like
Italy where there is tons of tour guides all talking in
different languages.
After the
Colosseum we went for lunch at a place near the Vatican. It was a good lunch with a pasta course, a meat course, and a dessert, with wine, and coffee.
Next it was off to the Vatican Museum. The Vatican is a place that an
entire day can be spent there and till not see all of it, so the short amount of time we had
didn't allow us to see all that much of the exhibits.
But the one thing that everyone was there to see did not
disappoint. The
Sistine Chapel, home to the great works of
Michelangelo. The
ceiling, and the less well known, but in my opinion the greater, wall painting of the last judgement.
inside the
Sistine Chapel there is a constant battle between the tourists trying to sneak a picture and the employees trying in vain to stop people from taking them. Many people
don't bother with being sneaky about taking the
pictures, but it
doesn't matter much because its so packed with people that the
Vatican employees
don't have a chance to enforce to no picture rules. It must kind of suck for it to be you job to constantly say "No photos" all day long, all the while looking at hundreds of cameras pointing at the
ceiling.
After the Museum we left through the exit that connects to St. Peters
Basilica. The largest church in the world never
disappoints. With its dome designed my
Michelangelo, sculptures by many greats, and the throne of st peter.The front of the
basilica has a large
obelisk the came from
Nero's palace. And two long arms of
columns that form the border of the square of st peters.
I
didn't get a chance to climb to the top of the dome, something that give a commanding view of the city, but its on the list for next time.
Then after that we had to head back to the bus, and back to the Ship. Not bad for a blitz of Rome, but it still leaves a good amount of stuff to see, and do next time.