Wednesday (January 1st) we decided to go to the colosseum first to beat the rush, but it was
closed because of the holiday (1 of 3 days in the whole year it's closed!). So
we ended up walking around a bunch of the ruins of the old Roman Forums, to the
Pantheon, getting more gelato, and seeing the Trevi Fountain. As the day went on.
the crowds got thicker and thicker. We never experienced crowds like that
anywhere else in our entire 5 months in Europe. It was like the density of
walking out of a Jazz game everywhere we went. If it were the beginning of our
travels I think we would have tried to endure, but after 3+ weeks of
touristing, our patience had run thin. So we went back to our hotel to make
dinner and watch Roman Holiday and eat our New Years cake that had been in every grocery store in Italy for the holidays.
Thursday, we woke up, ate our Cheerios, and went straight to the
Colosseum to find a HUGE line. We decided to revamp our plan and got on the
Metro to the Vatican City instead. We got to the Vatican with about 20,000
other people (but really, that's how many people visit per day during high
season) and decided to start with the Vatican Museums which include the Sistine
Chapel. On our way there, a lady started telling us about a guided tour which
would get us straight into the museums with a tour guide, then would get us
straight into St. Peters Basilica without waiting in the line, which was a 3
hour wait according to her. We were sold. We both agree it was worth it, our
tour guide pointed out lots of things we wouldn't have noticed or appreciated
and gave us a lot of background info about the Sistine Chapel. The Sistine
Chapel was amazing to see and was definitely a highlight of the day. Pictures
aren't really allowed but we did snap a crappy selfie (see below).After the Sistine Chapel, our tour guide led us straight to St. Peters where the tour itself ended but skipped the line. We spent an hour or two wandering around the MASSIVE church (I think I read it's the 2nd biggest in the world). The detail and extravagance of the place was unbelievable. Every inch is covered in some form of carving, painting, or monument. There's one part of the chapel where the say Peter himself is buried, which I didn't know before. One other crazy part of the Vatican was St. Peter's Square. That place is huge! When you see picture of all the people gathered together there, that is a LOT of people.
St Peter's Square |
St Peter's Basillica |
After the Vatican, we walked to the Spanish Steps. I'm not
really sure why they're so famous, they just are. It's the place Audrey Hepburn
sits and eats gelato in Roman Holiday if you've seen that (we’d just watched
it, so it made them a little more interesting.) We took pictures with the steps, then found a place
to eat. We had a roman roasted artichoke, then Spencer had another pasta and I
had veal with roasted potatoes, which was really good right up until Spencer
told me what veal was (poor lambs :(). My food was slow to cook so they brought
us another appetizer while we waited, bonus! We also made our way back to the
Trevi Fountain to throw our coins in and take a few more pictures. On our way
to the Trevi Fountain we got conned into buying a rose from a street vendor.
Friday we got up, packed, checked out of our hotel, and went back to the Colosseum (for the 4th time!). Don't worry, we were more successful this time. The line was actually far worse that day than it had been the day before. Luckily, I read a trick online: The ticket for the Colosseum is good for the interior of the Colosseum as well as Palatine Hill and the Roman Forums. I read the best option is to buy your tickets at the Forum and do that first, and then you can pretty much walk into the Colosseum. So we did that, we still had to wait in line for about an hour, but I know the other one would've been much longer. The forums were cool, they're essentially just thousands of years of Roman rubble with a few things standing here and there. If you've seen pictures from Rome of some lone pillars, this is the spot. It was the main governmental area as well as the home of the emperors during the peak of the Roman Empire.
After a couple hours we went into the Colosseum, and I must say, it was pretty satisfying to walk past the hundreds (maybe even thousands, they say 13-16,000 people come in per day) of people still in line and walk straight in. We decided to do an audio guide, which was fun and helped us understand the Colosseum a lot more. It's actually a really gruesome place if you think about it, so it was sad but fascinating to learn about. After that, we walked to pick up our bags from our hotel, bought some yucky pizza for dinner, and went to the train station to head to Naples.