Tuscany in Spring!! Now this is more like it!
San Gimignano piano man
Courtyard with old frescoes in San Gimignano
Warm and sunny plazas in San Gimignano
We stocked up on Chianti from this lovely Tuscan farm
Sienna sidewalk cafes
Tuscan Coastline
San Gimignano at night with the full moon
Hotel Leon Bianco where we stayed
Italy took great care of us and I can see why so many people are drawn to it. It was my first trip to one of the countries of my ancestry and there was something about it that seemed familiar, even though I had never been there before. My sister pointed out to me a plant that was growing wild all over the hillsides, an oxalis, that from my great grandmother on down to our generation our family has grown in pots in our houses. I'm not sure where she got that first one, in Italy or from someone in the States, but this was the first time I had seen this plant anywhere else outside our family. It is clear to me that I don't belong to Italy; I am American through and through. Nevertheless, my curiosity and some sense of this place as a distant home prevent me from feeling completely foreign.
I wonder, as I often do since I have been here, what made one person stay and another leave here for America? What would life be like for me and what would I be like if it would still be possible for me to exist but my family had never left Europe? Is there some fundamental difference between a nation of people who "left" and the nations of people who "stayed"?
Posted from Munich
1 comment:
oh the photos! I loved them and the clouds are just breath taking. Lovely photogeneralism for sure... You guys definitely got a treat going there. I'd love to go one day...
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