
moar funny pictures
I'm currently iced in to my apartment. I awoke to a temperature of 19 degrees(unheard of in this part of texas) and the precipitation during the last few days settled into ice. YAY! I'm going to work a little later. Last night I tried to clean my bathroom with baking powder+ water, sponges and a toothbrush on the grout. I'm pretty good at getting the rest of the house sparkling, and I'm OK at getting the bathroom clean, but I have this fear about chemical interactions in the bathroom. I don't know what to use to clean, and the stuff I do use doesn't seem to work. Plus I've got a giant garden tub so it's hard to scrub and rinse.












Upon arrival, we took the Metro to a stop beside Milan's Duomo near our hotel. I loved Milan way more than I thought I would. By this point, we had become accustomed to navigating around confusing cities, but Milan's layout and public transit were so metropolitan. You could compare it to Paris, London, NYC, etc. It was very easy to figure out--a nice change from the eccentric Italian transit systems. :-)
Image captured, the next thing on the agenda was FOOD. I hadn't eaten much at all all day, so I was famished. We saw a advertisement for Chinese food with an arrow pointing down a street, so we decided to go there. As much as I love Italian(it's my favorite cuisine by far) I'd had quite a lot of it by then, and I welcomed the thought of something different. The city is laid out nicely, but advertisements were not, and we wandered around for a long time looking for that restaurant before collapsing into an Irish publike restaurant. Sadly, I ordered spaghetti again. However, Zach ordered this sausage meal that looks just like--- well, you judge for yourself.
The next day we got up really early to try to see "The Last Supper" painting. We weren't sure when we'd be able to go, if at all, so we didn't take our guidebook's advice and book a viewing months in advance. We'd gotten in to the Accademia Museum in Florence without too much of a wait, so we figured we'd try anyway. Thanks to The Da Vinci Code movie, the church where it was located--Santa Maria delle Grazie--had mandatory reservation requirements. There was one ticket available, but there were 4 of us so we passed. I did like the fence around the church!
We set out for a sight I really wanted to see: a replica of Leonardo Da Vinci's horse. It was near the Milan soccer stadium, so I was able to easily convince everyone to go. :-) We took a trolley(so fun :-)) and stopped by the stadium. The futbol boys wanted a photo.



And finally we arrived at the horse, after much direction-asking by myself to police officers and passers-by. I asked in Italian, but even then, I didn't understand their answers and this exhibit was really obscure. If you ask me, there should have been signs EVERYWHERE, but maybe I just got a little excited about it. :-)



The inside was awesome, like I expected. This is the fourth-largest church in Europe. Love the ceilings. I'm going to confess I think I love this style because i was wayy influenced by the Disney movie Beauty and the Beast. Just sayin! But at the same time, I could also compare it to Lord of the Rings because it was so massive and it had tree-like columns throughout.
After perusing the HUGE interior, we stopped by a nearby trendy restaurant/bookstore/electronics store to eat some lunch. It was just to the right of the Duomo in the Piazza del Duomo. Then we walked around the exterior of the amazing church and looked at the hundreds of statues embedded in the pink marble facade of the church. Next, we ascended to the top of the church and it was glorious! You could walk among the forest of spires and see all of Milan. I'd broken my point and shoot camera and my 30D camera battery began to die so I was sad, but I still managed to get some great images. This was another one of the highlights of my entire trip.
We didn't stay up there too long because it was boiling hot, but it was beautiful. We headed to the left side of the piazza to the famous Galleria Vittorio Emmanuelle--a shopping arcade built in 1870, the first building in Milan to have electric lights. We perused the expensive shopping areas for a while, but we made purchases at affordable H&M. I love the H&M clothing in Milan--more than any of the other branches! They had other stores I loved too--like Promod.
On the floor in the Galleria, there are symbols in the mosaic representing Italy as an independent country-- all the regions as one-which was what Vittorio Emmanuelle did during his reign. In this photo I'm standing on the symbol representing Torino, a bull. Lots of people did this and it looked really funny. I'm standing where the bulls "balls" are with my heel. You are supposed to turn around on your heel for good luck. :-) It's worn down cause so many people have done it!


