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Dubrovnik Part 2

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People, if you haven't been, this needs to be at the top of your list. Save your pennies, buy your travel book and go. We are loving Croatia. The first thing we noticed was all of the welcome signs and friendliness of the locals (in spite of the thousands of tourists that arrive everyday- many for just a few hours off the cruise ships). Three important historical things to know about Dubrovnik. #1 They were an independant republic for centuries, they abolished slavery in the 1400s and their motto has been Libertas (freedom) for centuries. #2 there was a massive earthquake in 1667 that destroyed most of the old town and remains prominent in their historical memory #3 in 1991 they were under seige for three months, with no electricity, running water, or telephone. They withstood the seige partially because they had access to water from ancient fountains and aquaduct system. We filled our water bottles daily from the water source that kept them alive for three months....

Dubrovnik

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There are a ton of stray cats in Dubrovnik. At first Beth was worried that they might be hungry....

The palazzo

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Matthew and Liz bought this house six years ago. They think it was once the bishop's house but was pretty run down when the got it. They have worked really hard over the years fixing it up and discovering more of it's history. There are parts of the house that were once part of the old city walls. Matthew has restored some of original arches that had been filled in. While we were there he was using old tiles and stones dug up from the pool area to built a new terrace floor. We really appreciated being hosted by family in the middle of our trip.

Cousin's Palazzo

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We had a welcome break of five days at Katherine's cousin's summer home in the Marche region of Italy. Our very first night we were hosted by an Italian family who also have a family home in this little village of San Pietro Castel. A bit of English, a bit of Italian, two dictionaries and an 11year old who was studying english at school (plus a lot of sign language) meant we could amost understand each other. Well, a little. The food was amazing. antipasto, lasagna with tomato, lasagna with pesto. veal stuffed with ham and mushroom, vegetable ragu, potatoe with rosemary. Fruit course. Dessert (cake and ice cream... it was Nono's 81st birthday). coffee and two kinds of liquour......none of these courses were optional. The two kids showed up the next day to bake with cousin Liz, there was way more eating of batter then baking. Seriously these kids were eating already formed, uncooked cookies from the tray! 5 min in, Liz was called away to the phone, which left...

You Asked About the Food in Italy......

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A Table With a View... Ponte Vecche

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Holidays in Italy

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To continue with the theme of transportation. Yesterday was our big day trip out of Florence and into Siena. We chose a sunny day, made sure the museums were not closed on Mondays. Figured out the bus schedule, and headed south (in our front row seats on the coach). We are starting to worry.....is it us? While we were sitting on the side of the road in our broken down bus, we flipped to the Sienna section of our Guide Book only to read the boldly highlighted box feature on "Palio". Every August 16th for hundreds of years, Sienna has had a horse race in the central square. Each of the horses represent one of 10 neighbourhoods and they race for glory (in true medieval fashion). Thousands of people (locals, tourists, curious and party goers) flock to Siena for this event... thousands. Everything closed down early, we managed to sneak into one museum just before closing. We are sure Siena is lovely, we didn't see any of it...... did we mention thousands of people? On to Assis...