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"To travel is to live "|"Voyager c'est vivre"|"Viajar é viver"

Venice



Flight

I found a €30 round flight to Venice, my friend told me. Naturally the first thing I did after was go to the Easyjet website and look for a flight from the nearest airport from where I live now, the Euroairport at Basel. I found a €50 round flight, quite the bargain also. I couldn’t think of a reason not to go, so we both booked our flights. Oh the heaven of low-cost companies!

Accomodation
After our bargain flights we were confident we could we could make our Venetian trip a supercheap one. Next: plan accommodation. We went through the usual websites, Booking.com, Trivago.fr etc… but the truth was daunting, no room under €100 a night. What are we supposed to do now? I suggested sleeping on the canals which I believe Samuel considered for a split of a second. And may I add that the €100 rooms were located in the shadiest buildings and with no private toilet. So after a giving up my ideal Venetian canal hotel we decided that we would be located in the next town, Mestre. It’s a short bus ride that costs €1.5 and will get you to the Stazione di Venezia Santa Lucia, the main train station in 15 minutes. From there you can wander through the streets, canals and cute bridges. The buses run all day until midnight and then they run hourly. We paid €25 a night for a private room with shared bathroom and stayed at the Il Glicine. A house owned by an Italian couple who speak almost no English but are super nice, it was the best decision we could’ve made in terms of accommodation.

The rest 



When you’re in Venice everything is an “attraction”. Yeah there’s the Rialto Bridge and the St. Mark Square… but the beauty of the city is everywhere. Every little street, the gorgeous buildings and obviously, hei! that’s why we went, the innumerous canals! I can’t get enough of them. They all look the same, but they are all so different. With small boats “parked”, flowers on the windows, the occasional gondola passing by. Yep we feel like we are in heaven, another world, almost like the city itself was made as amusement for travelers. You are never bored, you can just go discover the streets and get frustrated when you think that you’ve found a shorter way to St. Marcus Square but after all it was just another dead end street that ends in a canal.


I’d done some research about Venice and discovered the Murano and Burano islands. As we only had two days in Venice we couldn’t visit both. So we decided to visit Murano which is a 30min boat ride from the train station. On the 13th century the glass manufacturers moved to Murano for the reason that Venice was made mostly by wooden buildings and there was a fire hazard. Years went by and the glass of Murano became known worldwide. Now it’s a little agglomeration of tiny islands, colorful streets and innumerous glass factories you can visit. We spent the morning in Murano and decided to have lunch there as the restaurants are cheaper than in Venice.  We had a three course meal with entrée, salad, plate and a glass of wine all for €13.
Murano 



During our stay we visited the mandatory St. Mark Square and Basilica, the Torre dell’Orologio, the Doge’s Palace… and I finally catered to my seafood urges and ate nothing but fish and seafood, with some gelato in between! I am happy. Really happy. You go to Italy and you can be sure of two things. The first one you’re going to spend a lot of money on food. Restaurants are expensive and most of them add an extra “seating charge” and a fee of 10 to 15% to the bill so be sure to ask before you seat, exactly what you’re going to pay, so you don’t have any unpleasant surprises. Second, you’re going to eat well, between pizza, pastas, gelato and for me in this trip, seafood and fish, you’re going to feed not only your humanly needs but you will feed your soul. It’s the stuff happiness is made from.

 We wanted to take a ride on a gondola but they asked around €80. On our last day we discovered some “gondolas taxi” that allow to cross the Grand Canal for €2, but unfortunately we got there too late so didn’t have the chance to do it. Too bad, it seems like I have an excuse to return to Venice in the future. J

St, Mark Basilica at St.Mark Square

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