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Riding the Trains in Italy
Author: Katy Hyslop
Arriving in Ventimiglia, our first real stop over the border
from France, (Monaco was also along the way) into Italy I
was pleased to see a distinct difference between the Italian
locals and the French ones I’d left behind. Admittedly there
is a real sense of the Mediterranean life all the way along
the Cote D’Azur, with fairly laid back individuals, all
there to soak up sun and wine, but these locals appeared
even more so. The Carabinieri on the platform as we pulled
up were looking so relaxed as to almost appear asleep, even
the sniffer dog didn’t look at all bothered that 15 sweaty
backpackers had just arrived. Nobody moved, no passports
were checked, just a few cheery ‘ciaos’ and a ‘benvenuti’.
After leaving our bags with the guide to mind we set off to
explore for an hour before catching the next train. Having
already spent the better half of the previous hour
practising how to order a cappuccino in Italian I was eager
to try it out. We found a kerbside café and sat down. To my
amazement the waiter understood my request on the first go
and duly brought me the coffee. I was still grinning when we
got back on the train.
The journey to Cinque Terre takes you through countless
tunnels, carved into the cliffs hanging out over jagged
rocks and pebbly beaches. Each time we hit the darkness, the
curtains flapping dementedly in the open windows, I could
still see the blue water imprinted on the inside of my
eyelids. Nowhere else have I experienced that effect.
The locals and us were all chatting amongst ourselves until
one guy asks me where we are all going in Italian. I answer
Rio Maggiore. Then he asks me where we are all from. I
explain that I am a tour guide and my group are all from all
over the world. He is going to Calabria to see his mother
and he is from Milan. He works in a factory there making
cars. Another lady opens her travelling cool box to share
some iced coffee in tiny plastic espresso cups with the 2
Korean girls in my group, and another one pulls out some
‘dolce’, sweet pastries to share with the Canadian girls.
Of all my train journeys in Europe I have found the Italians
to be the most generous to backpackers, in terms of
communication and sharing the contents of their cooler bags.
Especially on the train going to Calabria from the north.
I once spent the leg between Pisa and Rome stuck in a
corridor with an old guy of 60, a phrase book and a lot of
sign language. He was very keen to tell me his family
history and was most impressed that a kiwi from ‘lontano’
was trying to speak Italian. He even gave me grammar lessons
and corrected my pronunciation. That never happened on a
French train.
More recently on the train to Florence from Pisa I sat next
to a girl from Romania getting an entire itinerary of what
to see and do in Florence from the guy opposite her in
Italian. The interesting bit was she only spoke a few words
but seemed to grasp most of what he was saying. It was great
to see the passion for which he was talking about what was
obviously his home town.
On one trip I managed to fulfil the desires of one rather
shy Chinese girl who had a thing for men in uniform. She was
trying to collect as many photos of them as possible from
all over Europe. Some Italian Navy boys had got on at La
Spezia, obviously from the Naval base there, heading to Rome
along with a couple of Air Force boys. They were filling the
corridor outside the dining car, laughing and yelling, all
only too willing to pose for a couple of photos with my now
tomato-red-in-the-face passenger. We thought we hit the
jackpot when some army boys were spotted on the platform at
Ostiense in Rome, but they were waiting for another train.
She got a photo through the window instead.
The most frustrating time on the trains can be Florence
S.M.N. The letters could easily stand for ‘so many new
platforms’ instead of Santa Maria Novella as they have an
annoying pastime of switching tracks on you. You have to
listen to the announcements very carefully. They do them in
both English and Italian but as soon as one train is late
arriving they start shuffling the rest of the platforms like
a deck of cards. With a group of 12 individuals one day we
were waiting an extra 45 minutes for the train to Venice,
supposedly arriving on track 11, then it was track 9, then
it was back to track 11 at the very last minute. We broke
the rules and ended up hurling packs across the train tracks
onto the end carriage as the guard blew his whistle for the
departure and we had some stragglers who hadn’t heard the
change walking back from the sandwich bar. Everybody made it
with a sprint finish.
On the contrary, in Venice the train guard was very
accommodating when I had lost an American passenger between
the baggage depot and the train in the short space of about
10 minutes. I explained she was late and he smiled, said ok,
and waited an extra 5 minutes with me. Eventually he tapped
his watch and we had to abandon her. This was the last train
out of Italy to Austria that day so I wasn’t sure when I’d
see her again. When I eventually did she had an awesome
adventure to tell, but that’s entirely another story.
For point to point travel you can’t beat the Italian trains
for good value, not just in the price because with a train
ticket you get so much more than just a seat. Sometimes you
don’t even always get a seat, especially if it’s in the
middle of August, but you get a fantastic opportunity to
experience the local culture that just can’t be had from a
guide book or the inside of a bus.
About the Author:
Katy Hyslop is a women of action keeping
Plus Villages and their
staff under control. Her experience as teacher, backpacker
and tour guide in Europe for the past six years enables her
to have a unique view on the world of travel.
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