Naples to Venice 

This will be the last installment of our Mediterranean cruise.  When I got back from Rome, I was exhausted and Heather wasn’t feeling much better.  We went to the onboard medical center and got some medication for Heather and instructions to isolate for a day.

Which was fine by me.  It also meant that when we pulled into Naples, we stayed onboard and ordered from room service.  The rest was welcomed.  Likely we missed something interesting in Naples, but one thing we did learn on this cruise is that you can’t do everything and likely we should have scheduled fewer tours.  There’s plenty to do on the ship and in most ports you can get a shuttle from the ship into the local city for a short walk around town.

The ship’s doctor called us in the afternoon and since we were doing better said it was fine to leave our cabin.  We went up for afternoon tea in the ship’s “Winter Garden,” for their version of English tea – a pot of tea, little sandwiches, biscuits, chocolates and a scone.  The only disappoint was the scone.  I make better scones than they served, but everything else more than made up for that.

They had a guitar player doing the entertainment for us.  That was okay, but she wasn’t the best.  Still it was nice to have some live entertainment.

Actually, most of the entertainment onboard was good, some excellent.  One of our favorite places to hang out on the ship was the atrium.  There were comfy chairs, places to read, a jigsaw puzzle for guests to work on and an area for board games.  In the afternoons and evenings they had a piano player who did mostly classical music — she was just wonderful to listen to.  They also had what the called, “The Classical Duo,” a piano player and a violinist.  They were just outstanding and we would often check the schedule to see when they were playing.

The ship had one theater with a number of entertainers and from time to time they’d bring on an act from one of the ports.  In Barcelona they brought on a Rumba band with dancers which was a fun energetic show.  They did a country music night, and for matinees they’d do solo shows with one of the singers from the onboard entertainers.  We went to a couple of these.  One was very good and the other a nice afternoon music show.

There was also a pool, a bar and grill near the pool, the forward facing “Explorer’s Lounge” that seem to have hyperactive air-conditioning that we froze in for five minutes before leaving.  There was an area they called the living room where you could get a fancy coffee made.  Our only disappointment with this area is that we didn’t discover it until the last day on the ship.

sigh …

By cruise ship standards ours was a small ship, but still for people who’d never been on an ocean cruise before it seemed large and lots to do.

After leaving Naples, the ship sailed through the strait of Messina.  I’d been looking forward to this.  I’ve studied a lot about WWII and the Italian campaign so it was nice to see something in real life that I’d read about.  After passing Messina, we passed the toe of Italy and spent the day sailing the Ionian Sea arriving in Corfu the next morning.

Corfu is a Greek island on the northwestern frontier of Greece.  There we took a tour of a local monastery and had sometime in the town of Corfu where we had lunch and did a little shopping.  Heather was interested in seeing Corfu as she watched the PBS Masterpiece Theater show, The Durrells in Corfu, and wanted to see where it had been filmed.  We found out that only a few parts of the show were filmed where we were with most of the production being on the coast further north from the town.

After Corfu it was on to Croatia and the ports of Dubrovnik and Split.  Both stops looked the same and a lot like California.  We learned from our tour guides that they have relatives in California and apparently California is a common place Croatians emigrate to.  The areas we visited were also the filming locations for “Game of Thrones,” and most tour stops including a guide saying something like, “This is were they filmed …” and some reference to the show.  I’ve never see Game of Thrones so that was mostly lost on me.  I didn’t buy any of the teeshirts.

Our last stop was Venice. Well, sort of.  Actually the ship docked at the port city of Chioggia.  Cruise ships aren’t allowed to sail into the Lagoon of Venice and have to dock near the entrance to the lagoon.  To get into Venice you have to transfer to a smaller boat and take an hour and a half boat ride into the city proper.

The tour we signed up for was a short walking tour of the city followed by a large block of free time before we had to get our boat back to the ship.  Our guide walked us from the landing dock through some back streets until we got to Saint Mark’s Square.  When we arrived at the Square we found that some military ceremony was just ending and the crowds were very large.

We then did what most travel writers say you should do in Venice, and just wandered and got lost.  We just walked around, went into shops and finally found a place for coffee.  We took pictures and just were there.  I wish we had done this at other ports of call.  Then it was back to the dock to get our boat and the 1.5 hour ride back to the ship.

The next morning we left the ship and were taken to the airport where we got a flight to London where we caught a train to visit Heather’s family for a few days before returning home to Reno.  I always enjoy my trips to England and visits to Heather’s hometown, but this time we didn’t have much time to do anything other than just visit family and enjoy a walk on the Malvern Hills.

Our last day of travel was a 24 hour travel marathon that left us just plain exhausted.  It took us a few days to get over jet lag and regain our strength.

We haven’t decided on our next adventure, but we’re thinking of something closer to home next time.  There’s the cruise to Alaska, one to Mexico, or maybe exploring the east coast around Boston.  Not sure what we’ll plan, but it will be something.

For now though, winter is settling in here in the high desert and if it starts snowing, just getting to the grocery store could turn into an adventure.

Here’s a few pictures from our trip: 

On Corfu looking out to sea
Gate into the old town of Dubrovnik
Tour out of Dubrovnik to a local botanical garden
Picture from our stateroom looking at the boat that would take us to Venice
Saint Mark’s Square
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About Andrew Reynolds

Born in California Did the school thing studying electronics, computers, release engineering and literary criticism. I worked in the high tech world doing software release engineering and am now retired. Then I got prostate cancer. Now I am a blogger and work in my wood shop doing scroll saw work and marquetry.
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23 Responses to Naples to Venice 

  1. Gee, I’ve been gone for 3 days, so many posts to catch up on. Glad I didn’t miss this one. A wonderful trip!

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  2. Phew, time to put your feet up and have a coffee.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. I finally got to catch up with your travels. I thoroughly enjoyed your tales of your trip. It sounds like quite a lot in a short amount of time. No wonder you were exhausted when you returned home. Thank you for taking the time to share things with us. For myself, I don’t see a lot of traveling in the future. I am a homebody at heart, but I enjoy seeing and hearing of my friends’ adventures. It is awesome to see. 🙂

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  4. Dave's avatar Dave says:

    It’s a great point about not “over-excursion-ing”, Andrew. Both cruises we’ve taken had one day built into the itinerary where you stayed on the ship. On our Viking cruise, that day was spent lounging on the top deck and looking at the castles on-shore as we passed by them slowly. On our Oceania cruise, that day included an on-board cooking class, which was a blast. And like your “Winter Garden”, Oceania had daily afternoon tea with a string quartet, timed about 30 minutes after all excursions wrapped up. It was a wonderful way to decompress and meet new people.

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  5. I enjoyed your travel adventures Andrew

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  6. Whew, what a trip! I have to admit that even though I generally enjoy travelling myself, I often prefer “travelling” via someone else’s photos and narrative. All the interesting facts and photos; and my own bed at the end of the day! 🙂

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    • I often tell people that I like visiting new places, but don’t like traveling to them. We got to see a lot, but next time I think we’ll pick one spot and just stay there for a week.

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  7. David Foyle's avatar David Foyle says:

    Glad you were able to enjoy Venice – it’s easy to just think and experience it as a tourist trap. We did 3 nights staying in Venice in 2007 and wanted to go back or a more relaxed visit. We did 5 nights in 2012. One highlight of that trip was to go to Saturday night mass at St Marks. We had done the tour previously, but for mass all the bright lights are on, and the organ and bells resonated. Not sure what the fellow at the front was saying, but I caught a few words!

    Good to be home, right?!

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    • Mass at St. Mark’s sounds like something we’d like. The rapid pace of the cruise didn’t really let us see things other than the tourist trap spots. If we ever got back to any of these places, it will be for a five night stay. I guessing that the city is less crowded after the cruise ship people leave.

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  8. Just like some of the other people who commented, just reading your posts exhausted me. 😉 I’m suggesting the Alaska cruise — you go, then you can tell us all about it, and then I’ll decide if we want to take it. (We’ve never been on a cruise other than day-long ones and I can’t drum up enough enthusiasm about taking one.)

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  9. I don’t know how you do it. I’m exhausted and all I had was visitors!

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  10. PiedType's avatar SusanR says:

    Yep, I’m exhausted just reading about it. But those sound like good ideas for future trips. My parents did the Inland Passage cruise up the west coast and thought Vancouver was the most beautiful place they’d ever seen.

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  11. jfwknifton's avatar jfwknifton says:

    It’s got to be Alaska next……Bigfoot, UFOs, all kinds of monsters………the home of Satellite TV.

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  12. Milena Alien's avatar Milena Alien says:

    That sounds pretty epic, Andrew. So glad for you guys and happy to go there vicariously through your travel writing

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