Saturday, October 3, 2015

October 2 - Burano or Bust


We awoke to another cloudy and cool day.  After a great breakfast up in the rooftop restaurant we headed out for a vaporetto ride to Burano.  We decided to avoid going to the other island of Murano, famed for its glassblowers, because each time we’ve been there we’ve wound up buying something and we really don’t need any more glass sculptures.

So after getting a map from the front desk with a nice blue line showing the way to the vaporetto step at Fondamento Nuove, we set out and I promptly got us lost.  I will use as excuses that there are no straight streets in Venice and streets do change names along the way.  (Maybe I was a little to blame too.)  After asking for directions from a few Venetians, we finally made it to the right place, bought our 24 hour vaporetto passes (one of the best buys for a visitor here) and caught a boat to Burano.  It was packed!  There’s only one line that goes to that island and we had half the Chinese visitors to Venice on board with us, packed in like sardines.

A nice local lady was sitting in the seat next to us and after the boat had stopped in Murano first she told us something , in Italian of course, which we thought meant that we wanted the second stop in Burano.  So we sat and watched the throng of people get off and sailed away.  The boat made another stop at some other place called Torcello and then began its trip back to Venice.  We stopped again in Burano where hordes of people were waiting to board,.  The skies looked like they were ready to open.  We made the decision that the best course of action was to be round-trippers.  We could see the famed multi-colored houses along the little canal and the very leaning church tower.  The upshot is we sort of saw Burano.
Maybe a little hard to see, but the tower has a distinct angle
What an assortment of colors on the houses! Imagine the way it would look on a sunny day.


Back in Venice proper we switched to a different vaporetto line, our goal being to get to a restaurant we’ve enjoyed in years past for lunch.  It turned out our boat didn’t go where we wanted so we got off near San Marco and walked.  Along the way we passed the Bridge of Sighs near the Doge’s Palace and I gave a little sigh because my feet are feeling the miles we’ve walked in the last few days.

We found our restaurant, a little place called the Osteria del Barababao.  The food and the wine were as good as we remembered.   The last time we went to this restaurant our waiter told Al that he had a twin living in Venice. Apparently he knew a professor who was Al’s double. 
A little house wine at the Osteria del Barababao (the Devil's Inn)


After a nice lunch we wandered our way back to our hotel in a pretty good rain shower.  Venice in the rain is not for the faint-hearted because of the umbrellas.  The little streets are so narrow that you have to keep a sharp eye out for menacing umbrella tips which might come your way.  On the plus side though where else can you walk along and see shops which sell nothing but gloves or yarn?  It’s absolutely fascinating and charming and each time we have visited here we’ve seen something new. 
A yarn shop. Interestingly, one store window was yarn and the other was ladies' underwear
A glove shop. I wish I needed some.


Tonight we’re trying the hotel’s restaurant.  They have a lovely enclosed terrace with patio heaters to take off the chill right on the Grand Canal looking across at Santa Maria Salute.

Tomorrow it’s off to the Odyssey.  Hopefully the weather gods will be kinder in the upcoming days.



1 comment:

Wanda said...

Ann...you disappoint me. Since when do you 'need' gloves to buy them. I can see from the picture that they were Sermonetta gloves...oh my you missed an amazing opportunity. But then you can think of this as a reason to go back to Venice.