When traveling, I often ask to photograph people I meet. With the exception of Trieste, my first stop, I didn't do this as often in northern Italy because the extraordinarily high volume of tourism discourages anything other than commercial interactions.
Trieste
Eighty-two-year old Cosimo, a friendly passenger on a local bus who spoke good English, tipped me off about the best stop to experience Castello di Miramare.
The otherwise very pleasant and informative desk clerk at the Hotel Colombia taught me a lesson: don't expect Italians in the hospitality business to recommend restaurants NOT frequented by tourists, perhaps because very few of those exist anymore.
Luca, who worked at the LET"S Museum gave me a brief lesson on his city's complicated past when I asked him about a sign I had seen earlier in the day: "Welcome to the Free Territory of Trieste." He said he had twice visited New York City, once as a young boy in the 70s, and again in the 90s.
An employee at Castello di San Giusto shooed me out of the door at quitting time.
This peaceful young guy in front of the Monument to the Fallen in the Great War proved to be a knee-saver: when I asked if I could descend San Giusto Hill using a staircase, he pointed out an elevator for that purpose.
Italian Polizia look at tourists with camera phones as skeptically as New York City cops.
| Teenagers, Gulf ot Trieste |
| Passengers, #16 Bus |
| Phone Scroller with Dog, San Spiridione Serbian Orthodox Church |
| Child with Pigeons, Dorsoduro |
A large group of young Italians in the San Polo neighborhood appeared to be celebrating Oktoberfest.
| Sunday Mass, San Michele Cemetery Chapel |
An employee of this bike shop on the Lido reported that unscrupulous hotel managers often don't inform guests arriving on bicycles that they are not permitted in most parts of Venice.
Bologna
Notaries once held positions of significant power. These young people read and scrolled beneath the tomb of Rolandino De’ Passaggeri, who helped students enter the profession after he became one of the local university's most significant figures during the Middle Ages.
This woman managed a bar that welcomed day drinkers on the Taste of Bologna food tour.
Nearly 100,000 students attend the University of Bologna.
Uneven pavement and cobblestones must shorten the life of scooters.
Florence
| Fresh Air Break, Historic Center |
| Costume Jeweler |
| Waiting To Confess, Basilica S.S. Annunziata |
| Souvenir Art Salesman, Historic Center |
| Antiques Restorer, Altrarno |
| Slicing Parma Ham, San Ambrogio Mercato |
| Grain Scooper, San Ambrogio Mercato |
I bought my only souvenirs of the trip from these artists, a pair of small collages adhered to wood, one anchored by Alice in Wonderland, the other by Twiggy. When I told the woman I had saved issues of Vanity Fair for more than four decades to use as resource material for my amateur attempts at collage, she reacted as if I had discovered a gold mine.
| Overloaded Bicycle Delivery Man |
| Piazza Maria Santa Novella |
| Sunday Bicyclists, Bastioni di Porta Venezia |
Did I board a subway car or wander into a moving party? I thought I was tripping.
Dining alone makes me feel extremely self-conscious. The maitre d' at Antica Osteria Cavallini didn't help when he showed up at my table with elaborate dessert prep tray, including a mountain of vanilla gelato.
| Luxury Shopper, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II |
More Northern Italy
Trieste
Venice
Bologna
Florence
Milan
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