We are a day behind in our blogs. Yipes! Forgive us!
Yesterday we were in Dubrovnik, Croatia. You would think with all the history
and beauty of France and Italy, Croatia would be anticlimactic, but wow, what a
beautiful place. The city itself is quite lovely. It is another Mediterranean
place where the mountains meet the sea. The coastline is gorgeous with blue,
blue water and pretty houses. Dubrovnik is actually a city inside a city. The
old town is intact. It is a walled city that was built toward the end of the 13th
century. The modern part of Dubrovnik is also quite pretty. The houses are
similar looking with white sides and red
ceramic roofs.. The modern city is built into the hillside.
We started our day with a guided tour outside of the city
walls. In fact it was a guided tour that included a cable car ride. The cable
car was able to hold 30 people and took us up to the highest peak in Dubrovnik.
From the top we could actually see three countries at once. We could see the
mountains of Croatia, the mountains of Montenegro and very close by we could
see Bosnia as well. We also could see places where the city was shelled in the
early 90s during the war in that area.
After our cable car tour we walked down into the old city.
We crossed over a real drawbridge, which used to be pulled up every night long
ago and through large doors that used to be locked to keep the city safe.
It was really a great day. Mike ordered fried fish based on
a recommendation from our waiter. I think he expected something breaded and
deep fried. Instead he got all these little teeny, tiny fish that still had
their little teeny tiny eyes and fins and scales and brains etc, etc. It looked
like someone just took a scoop to their home fish tank, fried it all up and
called it a meal. All those teeny tiny eyes were glaring at Mike from his
plate. Mike is a trooper and an adventurous eater. When we asked him if he
liked it he said “yes!” Asked if he would order again, he gave a clear “no!”.
We did more than just eat in Dubrovnik. We wandered around
and took in as many sights as possible. The city had been hit by many
earthquakes over the years. The worst one was in the 1700s, so while the wall
was still intact and some buildings were as well, much of the city had been
rebuilt in the 1700s giving it a more “modern” feeling. It cracks us up to say
that architecture from the 1700s and 1800s is “modern,” given that we are
Americans, but here in Europe that really is modern.
When we were in Italy, I always remembered to carry a
sweater and leggings so that I could cover bare shoulders and legs when in the
churches. However, we never actually made it inside any Italian churches,
though we admired the outside of several. In Croatia, however, we wandered into
a nice church and were admiring the different frescos and statues when someone
came over to me and told me to cover my shoulders. I did not have anything with
me, so we had to leave the church. Kicked out of church. Awesome.
Dubrovnik was just so beautiful though, I feel like I am not
doing it justice. Once I get home I will link my photos to this blog. Dubrovnik
has a smaller version of the Spanish Steps. I can’t wait to compare pictures
from Rome to see how similar they are. Max and Madison, the animal lovers that
they are, managed to make friends with a few stray cats. There were several
lounging around and though they were trying to snooze, they never balked at a
belly rub.
Croatia is also the only place we visited that isn’t using
the Euro as currency. We got some kunas to spend. It was a challenge trying to
convert in our heads kunas to US dollars. One kuna is worth about $5.50 and a
little over $7.50 euros. Math, math, math!
Well, my computer battery is about to run out. We were at
sea today and will be again tomorrow. I will combine those two days into
tomorrow’s blog. See you then!
EEEP! What an awesome vacation, Aimee! And huge props to Mike for eating that fish. Blech. Blech. Blech.
ReplyDeleteDid I say blech?
Blech.
<3