Cruise:Venice

September 2, 2000

We weren't scheduled to arrive in Venice until around noon so we slept in bit and then realized we were too late for the breakfast seating in the main dining room (7-9am only) so we were forced to eat breakfast again in the Horizon Court Buffet. It was better than starving. After our breakfast we went up on deck to watch the scenic sail into Venice. It was particularly special for us since we had been there 2 years ago on our honeymoon. We recognized much of Venice. Since the boat is so tall (taller than most buildings of Venice) we had a very long range view. We lucked out on the berth and were able to "park" just 7 bridges down from St. Marks square (very near our honeymoon hotel). The normal berth would have been at the actual industrial port where the other cruise ships were. It would have forced us to take 30 minute tenders to and from the ship. Our close berth was extremely convenient.

Coming into Venice

Venice

Together in Venice again

Great parking spot

The weather was a comfortable 75-80 so we left the ship and headed towards St. Marks Cathedral. We turned off on a side street and walked past Hotel Capiello (our honeymoon hotel) and proceeded on to St. Marks the old way through the back streets along and across the canals. We passed a couple of familiar restaurants and coffee bars. We found a bank machine to get local currency and then headed to find some lunch. We had hoped to find a pizza place that we were fond of on our last trip but after searching for a while with no luck we opted for Trattoria Bora Bora where we had our mandatory "vino rosso de la casa" (red wine of the house). The bruschetta was great but had a ton of olive oil. Jill's lasagna was just okay. Keith's spaghetti de pesce (fish) was great as was the wine. We met four people about our age on Labor Day holiday from a military base in Germany. We had forgotten it was Labor Day!

Feeling loosed up from the wine we walked to the Rialto bridge which is one of only two or three bridges that cross the grand canal. It's lined with shops. We ran into Carol and Norma (dinner mates) on their walking tour and made fun of them with their tour stickers on. We got a good picture of us in front of the Rialto Bridge.

Keith in front of the Rialto Bridge

Jill and two of our dinner companions, Carol and Norma

We did a little bit of shopping which we can't say here since most of what we bought are Christmas presents. We decided it was well worth a repeat tour of St. Marks Basilica and the bell tower to take pictures. Since the next day was Sunday this was our only chance to do it on this trip. We were just in time to see the church and bell tower and the lines were not even long. We were once again awed by St. Marks exquisitely tiled marble floors and intricate gold mosaic ceilings (yes all of them). The view of the magnificent square from the top of the church was well worth the 4,000 Lira tariff.

St. Marks

Part of the mosaic ceilings in St. Marks (this was just the entry way, pictures are prohibited inside)

St. Marks Square (and all those pigeons)

On top of St. Marks

Still on top of St. Marks, looking out to the water

The view from the tower was just as spectacular and we got a couple of great photos of the ship which was parked just 7 bridges away. The ship looked very monstrous and out of place against the background of Venice. With the sightseeing done, we walked toward the Navy Arsenal and through some back streets in an attempt to find the Osteria (wine bar) that we had found on our honeymoon and a restaurant that we had eaten at. We found neither of them but found a suitable substitute Osteria for our daily constitutional and then headed to the ship for a rest.

Venice from the bell tower (wide-angle lens!)

The ship parked in Venice

Jill in the bell tower

Bridge of Sighs (connects courthouse to jail)

We decided to take advantage of our night in Venice so we dressed and headed ashore for dinner. This was the only night that we didn't eat in the main dining room for dinner. We followed our guidebook and found Remiggio which was the restaurant that we couldn't find earlier. As we suspected, they didn't have any reservation slots left so we hurried off in search of an alternative. We ended up at Trattoria Rivetta which we had also remembered from our previous trip. The food was great but Jill had an upset stomach which is no surprise if you've been following along our food/drink intake. We had the antipasto de pesce (seafood starter) which in hindsight we should have just made into a meal. We followed with tagliatelle bolognese (thin noodles with meat sauce), frito misto de mar (mixed fried seafood) and a little vino rosso, of course, and then headed back to the ship with a short detour through St. Marks square for some night pictures and called it a night.

St. Marks at night (long shutter)

St. Marks Square at night

The ship at night

September 3, 2000

We only had the morning in Venice and then a half day at sea. We decided to spend the morning riding on the vaporetti (water bus) up and down the grand canal stopping once to get off for a morning espresso.

Taking a vaporetti ride

We headed back to the ship for lunch in the main dining room and then Jill went to the spa for a haircut. We watched the sail-away from the bow and then moved up above the bridge. The weather was not as hazy as the previous day so the view was much better. The ship cruised up the waterway to the port where other ships were tied up, then did an amazing turn around with the help of a tug, then sailed back out the waterway. We passed St. Marks square each time. One the second time which was on the way out, the ship honked it's loud horn and we watched in amusement as every single pigeon took flight scared by the horn. If you've never been to Venice, St. Marks is full of thousands of pigeons and people keep feeding them for fun.

St. Marks while the pigeons are flying

We finished the afternoon reading with Jill in the sun on a deck chair and Keith in the cool room. This night was the first semi-formal night and it had an Italian theme. The penne arrabiata made by the headwaiter was excellent.

Semi-formal night

September 4, 2000

Our second and last day at sea was relaxing and laid back but almost to the point of being boring. We got up for the dining room breakfast then Jill went to step aerobics while Keith worked on a small load of laundry. We had a very amusing tour of the galley (kitchen) at 10:30am and then lunch at Sabatini's Italian trattoria at noon with Carol. The linguine with clams was amazing. If you haven't figured it out by now, the Grand Princess chefs really have a knack for pasta. We don't eat pasta very much anymore at home but every pasta dish we had on the cruise was truly exceptional.

There was plenty of organized daytime activity, but we just didn't get excited by the boutique shops, bingo, slide shows, movies and TV. The remainder of the day we just laid around by the pool until it was time to dress for the last formal night. By this time it was a pain in the ass since it was the third formal night.