Venice — Woot!

Our train trundles slowly across the open sea, stucco buildings threading the skyline, waters lapping at their base. “Look!” I exclaim, quite childishly excited. “It’s Venice.”

“Yeah,” says the boy, with frankly limited enthusiasm. After ferrying from London to the Netherlands – “Look, son! Windmills!” — and wandering the canals of Amsterdam, I’m beginning to wonder whether he’s hit his threshold for beautiful European cities already. Which would be a shame, given we’re in Italy for a while.

Through the train goes, and into the bowels of an ugly, provincial railway station, its fascist architecture shrouded in scaffolding, the usual scungy station shops scattered about, ticket booths, postcard stores, mass brand advertising and tired-looking tourists.

We disembark from the train, fend off a token porter, and wind our way up an ugly grey ramp into an ugly faux-granite passageway. And then… we’re out.

And a few paces ahead of us is the Grand Canal, water taxis whizzing by, sunlight sparkling off the water, the oxidised dome of San Simeone glistening across the water, a network of bridges winding away to either side, stucco palazzos lining the waterfront, and the boy emits an eminently satisfying “Wow.”

Venice, I think, is going to work. It’s going to work absolutely fine. And, unlike when I was last there, over 20 years ago, there’s not even a whiff of drain from the canals.

If your approach to the city is to knock off Saint Mark’s, the Doge’s Palace, the Rialto and the Accademia in a single day before hopping onto your next flight, you’ll likely spend a miserable day of queues and crowds, relieved only by insanely expensive gelatos and espressos.

I’m constantly irritated when people list Venice (as, for that matter, when people list Bali) as one of the world’s worst tourist traps.

Sure, Venice is busy. Even when Henry James swung through, over a century ago, the notion of a holiday in Venice was very far from original.

And if your approach to the city is to knock off Saint Mark’s, the Doge’s Palace, the Rialto and the Accademia in a single day before hopping onto your next flight onwards, you’ll likely spend a miserable day of queues and crowds, relieved only by insanely expensive gelatos and espressos.

But you don’t need to go far off the main drags to find deserted alleyways, tiny canals with motorboats parked like the family car, crumbling palazzos, minuscule bridges leading to a single house, old ladies gossiping on quiet squares, and quirky stores.

Not that, on our first afternoon here, we’ll be doing any of that.

We’re staying out of the old city, in what’s almost certainly the cheapest accommodation in Venice, so our main priority is to grab a bite to eat, soak up the canals, and find out whether my bargain booking is a genius wheeze that spares us tonnes of cash for food or a recipe for utter misery.

We drag our suitcases up and over bridge, after bridge, after bridge, bumping them up the stairs, and bumping them down again, handles torquing and flexing, cases slewing wildly from side to side in a rattle of wheels.

For this jaunt around Europe, we’ve traded down from our customary backpacks to a pair of wheelie suitcases which have been gathering dust in my loving parents’ attic since we left the UK in 2010.

This is primarily because both of us feel like twats lugging backpacks around Western Europe – I remember, as a resident, how very annoying it was to have someone’s backpack in your face on the Tube — but also because we’ll be taking bucketshop flights and these suitcases were bought to fit the hand baggage allowance precisely.

However, as we drag our suitcases up and over bridge, after bridge, after bridge, bumping them up the stairs, and bumping them down again, handles torquing and flexing, cases slewing wildly from side to side in a rattle of wheels, this feels, to be frank, like something of a miscalculation.

I’m simultaneously pleased and embarrassed to note how very many guys take pity on Zac’s invisible musculature and physically take his suitcase from him and lug it up the stairs.

Priority number one, however? Food.

He cuts a neat slice of tomato, splits a mozzarella ball exactly in half, spears the pair, and pops it in his mouth. And then he reaches for the cruet, and drizzles his plate neatly with olive oil.

Just by Piazzale Roma, where all the out-of-town buses disgorge and pick up, and where the Peoplemover monorail system carries folk from the islands to the mainland, we find a pretty, canalside bar that looks like it’s not going to break the bank (it’s Grecia & Oriente, if you care).

I order a Spritz, the national drink of Venice – Campari (or Aperol, if you wish) and Prosecco with ice and perhaps a splash of soda – and a tagliere. Zac goes for an insalata caprese, limpid mozzarella and ripe, juicy tomatoes scattered with a little dried oregano.

He cuts a neat slice of tomato, splits a mozzarella ball exactly in half, spears the pair precisely, and pops it in his mouth. And then he reaches for the cruet, and drizzles his plate neatly with olive oil.

“No balsamic?!” I ask. (Zac’s obsessed with balsamic and, left to himself, has been known to dress salads using balsamic and salt alone.)

“No,” he says. “I think it would spoil the flavour of the tomatoes.”

My god, I think. He’s learning! He’s already learning!

13 Responses

  1. Yvette says:

    Yeah, I don’t trust people who say stuff like Venice isn’t worth it because it’s “gotten so touristy.” It’s still VENICE! There will never be another one!

    Was there for a day passing through last year (we also went twice as kids, when you could still feed the pigeons), honestly I think Amsterdam is different enough that the two didn’t really remind me of each other. Must get back for a weekend this spring to confirm. 🙂

    • Theodora says:

      The colour palette’s completely different between Venice and Amsterdam — and, I think you’re right, they *are* extremely different in the way they do their canals (and everything else).

      And — amen. THERE WILL NEVER BE ANOTHER VENICE!!!

  2. Mish says:

    Brilliant as always! And I’d love to know whether your bargain booking ended up being a genius wheeze or not.

    Everyone I know loves to moan about the price of a cocking cappuccino in St Mark’s, and I have to admit that I’d never really bothered to look into it further – I just assumed that visiting Venice would be financial madness.

    I need to stop being so easily persuaded!

    • Theodora says:

      I’m going to do a post devoted entirely to my bargain booking, because I think they’re really a steal — in fact, I might even do a how to do Venice without haemhorraging money type piece. We did not eat or drink anything on St. Mark’s.

  3. Crystal says:

    The weather looks glorious. I’m so glad you’ve been spared the horrific weather battering the uk. x

    • Theodora says:

      Hahahaha — sadly, no, I’m just SO FAR BEHIND on my life that we’re still in August. Going to really have to whizz through some stuff….

  4. Theodora, you have trained the lad well. 🙂 I like to think I could spend time in the outer reaches of Venice, slipping in and out of the canals, lazy trips through the more open waterways, and eat locally caught seafood the rest of the way …

  5. Nonplussed says:

    Prosecco and Campari; a pink drink! Marvellous.
    Venice is always lovely. One of the few places I’ve actually wept at the beauty of on arrival, and there’s that lovely film with Katherine Hepburn and Rossano Brazzi, where she falls into the canal. “Wow” indeed.

    • Theodora says:

      It is the BEST pink drink besides the Negroni, and a lot more quaffable. I even enjoyed the Aperol Spritz, although I do prefer the CAmpari one…

  6. Venice has the best entrance known to man. We flew from the US but took a water taxi from the airport. I’ll never forget all of us pressed against the front gasping as the night lights of Venice came into view. The driver had fun speeding like mad through the back canals while the kids cheered. It was glorious!

    • Theodora says:

      OOH — a water taxi from the airport is a great alternative. I’m, obviously, far too tight for that, but what a fabulous idea — and I still remember taking a water taxi with my parents when I was in my teens.

  7. Jill says:

    Kind of late to the comments here, but of my two trips to Venice, in 1983 and 1987, what really stands out now are the every day things we did–the vaporetti trips a couple of evenings to one of the islands where we found THE best nocciola gelato, cut in inch thick bricks, served in large paper cups, at a family restaurant, lunching in a not expensive restaurant near a guy and his very self possessed five year old daughter eating calarmari, watching the workmen (painters, maybe) in their white uniforms come in for the mid day aperitif (or two or three). That second trip was in March, with lots of rain that almost flooded our ground floor room, but lovely sun too most days. It was cheaper then of course but a little more pricey than other parts of Italy.

    • Theodora says:

      I think Venice has always been more expensive than the rest of Italy — but, boy, I bet the vaporetti were cheaper in those days…. Though, yes, Italian children still have phenomenal composure and manners.