...Formia, to be exact, and the surrounding area. My family is from there and I have a lot of distant relatives (mostly cousins) that still live in the area and I spent a week hanging out with them and their families.
I left the States Sunday afternoon and after an 8 hour plane ride, we landed in Rome Monday morning and a few of my relatives were there waiting for us.
The car of the week? A Citroen C4 minivan.
I slept most of the way to Formia, which is about an hour and a half south of Rome on the coast, so I missed the sights and sounds of the Appian Way, but I really don't think I missed too much. Italy is a first world country with a third would twang. Cleaning up the trash on the side of the street isn't exactly on their priority list.
This is Formia.
Formia is a huge beach community that is a narrow town between a mountain range and the Tyrrhenian Sea.
The view from the top floor of my cousin's house.
All the houses there are multi-family, rarely do you see a single family home near the coast. Mostly the families that live there are all related, in the case of my relatives, after World War II, a construction company approached them to pay them to build homes on their land and my family would get houses for themselves. My family agreed, so there are now about 9 multi-family houses on the property that the construction company now owns and my family was given 3 houses and storefront property.
After lunch and whatnot (5 course meal for lunch) and went to my hotel room.
This was my view.
It was pretty awesome to just sit out on the balcony in the downtime and do nothing. I really had never been so relaxed in all of my life.
I caught some Z's and later that night my family and I headed into Sperlonga, a town north of Formia on the coast, because they wanted to show me how the city had turned the archaic and medieval downtown area into a modern tourist area.
The beach of Sperlonga at night.
This was the central courtyard of the old city, turned into a modern day bistro.
Yes, people live in those houses. We sat around for a bit, ate some ice cream, shot the shit even thought they didn't speak English and I don't speak Italian but a couple of words. I was able to understand some of what they were saying, but luckily my grandparents were there to translate.
Day 2: Ponza and Ventotene
Early the next morning we jumped on a ferry and visited two of the Islands in the Tyrrhenian sea, Ponza and Ventotene.
Ponza:
The main port on the Island of Ponza, Porto di Ponza.
When I was walking around Ponza, I noticed in the parking lot what looked to be a Jeep. I thought it was a built YJ at first, then walked around the front and was like "Oh, it's a CJ", but then I got a closer look, turned out to be a Ssangyong.
I took a picture anyway.
After a few hours on Ponza, we got back on the ferry and headed over to Ventotene which was about an hour away by boat.
The beaches on Ventotene looked awesome. Right at the base of the cliffs around the island, there was enough volcanic ash and sand for people to throw down umbrellas and have a good time. What was really cool was the rocks in the small bay, people swam out to them, climbed up and either sunbathed or jumped off them into the water.
The other island is a former jail and if I ever wanted to build an Island Fortress, I'd look into buying that island.
The rest of the day was spent on the beach and walking through the town on Ventotene. I thought when I left America, I was leaving all that shitty music behind, but boy I was wrong. They have this unabated fascination with American Culture and pop music, so I found myself walking around this small island off the coast of Italy, and the music I head was what sounded to be white boy rap, like a mix of Eminem and Everlast. Luckily that was only in the market area...I heard 'Call Me Maybe' plenty of times though.
I'll post more pictures and chapters later on.
I left the States Sunday afternoon and after an 8 hour plane ride, we landed in Rome Monday morning and a few of my relatives were there waiting for us.
The car of the week? A Citroen C4 minivan.
I slept most of the way to Formia, which is about an hour and a half south of Rome on the coast, so I missed the sights and sounds of the Appian Way, but I really don't think I missed too much. Italy is a first world country with a third would twang. Cleaning up the trash on the side of the street isn't exactly on their priority list.
This is Formia.
Formia is a huge beach community that is a narrow town between a mountain range and the Tyrrhenian Sea.
The view from the top floor of my cousin's house.
All the houses there are multi-family, rarely do you see a single family home near the coast. Mostly the families that live there are all related, in the case of my relatives, after World War II, a construction company approached them to pay them to build homes on their land and my family would get houses for themselves. My family agreed, so there are now about 9 multi-family houses on the property that the construction company now owns and my family was given 3 houses and storefront property.
After lunch and whatnot (5 course meal for lunch) and went to my hotel room.
This was my view.
It was pretty awesome to just sit out on the balcony in the downtime and do nothing. I really had never been so relaxed in all of my life.
I caught some Z's and later that night my family and I headed into Sperlonga, a town north of Formia on the coast, because they wanted to show me how the city had turned the archaic and medieval downtown area into a modern tourist area.
The beach of Sperlonga at night.
This was the central courtyard of the old city, turned into a modern day bistro.
Yes, people live in those houses. We sat around for a bit, ate some ice cream, shot the shit even thought they didn't speak English and I don't speak Italian but a couple of words. I was able to understand some of what they were saying, but luckily my grandparents were there to translate.
Day 2: Ponza and Ventotene
Early the next morning we jumped on a ferry and visited two of the Islands in the Tyrrhenian sea, Ponza and Ventotene.
Ponza:
The main port on the Island of Ponza, Porto di Ponza.
When I was walking around Ponza, I noticed in the parking lot what looked to be a Jeep. I thought it was a built YJ at first, then walked around the front and was like "Oh, it's a CJ", but then I got a closer look, turned out to be a Ssangyong.
I took a picture anyway.
After a few hours on Ponza, we got back on the ferry and headed over to Ventotene which was about an hour away by boat.
The beaches on Ventotene looked awesome. Right at the base of the cliffs around the island, there was enough volcanic ash and sand for people to throw down umbrellas and have a good time. What was really cool was the rocks in the small bay, people swam out to them, climbed up and either sunbathed or jumped off them into the water.
The other island is a former jail and if I ever wanted to build an Island Fortress, I'd look into buying that island.
The rest of the day was spent on the beach and walking through the town on Ventotene. I thought when I left America, I was leaving all that shitty music behind, but boy I was wrong. They have this unabated fascination with American Culture and pop music, so I found myself walking around this small island off the coast of Italy, and the music I head was what sounded to be white boy rap, like a mix of Eminem and Everlast. Luckily that was only in the market area...I heard 'Call Me Maybe' plenty of times though.
I'll post more pictures and chapters later on.
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