And so our journey across the South Pacific has resumed. Moorea, where we spent our Sunday, was the last land we will see until we reach New Zealand mid-morning on Saturday.
We sailed some 2,500 miles from Hawaii to French Polynesia on a body of water that at times reached a depth of 14,500-feet. We have nearly the same distance to travel to reach New Zealand. Then another two days at sea to reach Sydney, Australia.
Although we knew the Pacific Ocean is the world’s largest, covering some 46% of the earth’s surface, we had no idea just how immensity of this body of water. There has been no other marine traffic along our route. A bird or two flew past as we neared Tahiti, we saw another some 400 miles from Moorea.
We saw a fishing boat some distance from Tahiti but no others before or after that lone ship. Television and internet signals sometimes weak, other times none existent.
The weather patterns have changed daily. During the early part of our journey we were buffeted by gusty winds (the Captain called them ‘moderate’ but they blew sandals away from lounge chairs when sunning on the deck). Yesterday, a sunny warm day, brought the calmest seas we’ve experienced and today the heavy clouds and strong winds have returned. We lean into the wind to walk on the deck in the photo above.
Our 122,000-ton Celebrity Solstice ship at times lurches and groans against the wind and waves. (For those of you who think you have a distain for large ships, let me tell you that in the midst of the Pacific and up against the forces of nature, they don’t seem so large at all.)
Perhaps Somerset Maugham, said it best in his “Moon and Sixpence” novel based on the life of Paul Gauguin, when he wrote,
“The Pacific is more desolate than other seas; its spaces seem more vast, and the most ordinary journey upon it has the feeling of adventure.”
“The air you breathe is an elixir which prepares you for the unexpected.”
That’s it for Travel Photo Thursday this week!
Showing posts with label Celebrity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Celebrity. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Monday, October 14, 2013
The Day That Never Was – October 15, 2013
Sailing east or west pretty much means you’ll cross a time zone or two. For instance we moved our clocks back an hour last night and are now four hours behind the Pacific Northwest.
This cruise is offering a whole new time change experience~ we are losing tomorrow. So our usual "Travel Tuesday" post is replaced by this one: We won’t have an October 15th, plain and simple. The events of the world on Tuesday will happen outside our sphere of existence. Some 8 – 10 people on board are celebrating birthdays on the day that won’t happen.
The International Dateline is an imaginary line that separates two consecutive calendar days. It isn’t perfectly straight and has been moved slightly over the decades to accommodate the varied countries in the Pacific Ocean.
Somehow crossing such time zones in an airplane isn’t as strange as going to bed one day and waking two days later. Have a great Tuesday! We'll be enjoying Wednesday. . .
This cruise is offering a whole new time change experience~ we are losing tomorrow. So our usual "Travel Tuesday" post is replaced by this one: We won’t have an October 15th, plain and simple. The events of the world on Tuesday will happen outside our sphere of existence. Some 8 – 10 people on board are celebrating birthdays on the day that won’t happen.
We cross the International Dateline tonight, sometime about 2 a.m. That means the sun sets on Monday and comes up on Wednesday.
Somehow crossing such time zones in an airplane isn’t as strange as going to bed one day and waking two days later. Have a great Tuesday! We'll be enjoying Wednesday. . .
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Living A Celebrity Life
Our floating home has carried us several thousand miles from the port in Honolulu, Hawaii to French Polynesia – Tahiti, Bora Bora and Moorea.
We are sailing the same waters charted by those brave navigators centuries before us; James Cook and Ferdinand Magellan, among them. I dare say our ship, the Celebrity Solstice, pictured above, is far more luxurious than the ships they sailed. And much larger -- it would take almost 10 of Cook’s ships to stretch the length of ours.
Our ship has 15 floors stretching from the lower floor 2 where we board the tenders that take us to shore in many ports, (photo above from a tender) all the way up to the very tip-top Sunset Deck from where we wile away hours watching the clouds and sea.
Our room we describe as being on one of the ship’s bulges – we are on the 8th floor – quite in the middle of the ship. The circle to the left of the “X” above highlights the area in which our cabin is located.
By being on the bulge our balcony is slightly larger than those on the narrow part of the ship. Note the flat screen television - (we watched our Husky football team play last week and today we are watching Sunday NFL football following our return to the ship.
I am writing at the desk to the right of the television and when I turn my head to the right, and look out at our deck, this is my view. We are currently anchored at Moorea. A tropical paradise? You had better believe it – photos don’t do it justice!
We are sailing the same waters charted by those brave navigators centuries before us; James Cook and Ferdinand Magellan, among them. I dare say our ship, the Celebrity Solstice, pictured above, is far more luxurious than the ships they sailed. And much larger -- it would take almost 10 of Cook’s ships to stretch the length of ours.
And now that we’ve been on this vast stretch of ocean for five days, passing no other ships, seeing no other forms of life, we are even more impressed with the courage of those early day explorers. We leave tonight for another four days at sea to reach New Zealand.
Our ship has 15 floors stretching from the lower floor 2 where we board the tenders that take us to shore in many ports, (photo above from a tender) all the way up to the very tip-top Sunset Deck from where we wile away hours watching the clouds and sea.
Our room we describe as being on one of the ship’s bulges – we are on the 8th floor – quite in the middle of the ship. The circle to the left of the “X” above highlights the area in which our cabin is located.
By being on the bulge our balcony is slightly larger than those on the narrow part of the ship. Note the flat screen television - (we watched our Husky football team play last week and today we are watching Sunday NFL football following our return to the ship.
I am writing at the desk to the right of the television and when I turn my head to the right, and look out at our deck, this is my view. We are currently anchored at Moorea. A tropical paradise? You had better believe it – photos don’t do it justice!
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Sailing the South Pacific – It’s Official!
With much fanfare, fal-dee-rah and zany festivities we crossed the Equator about 2 p.m Tuesday Honolulu time and 5 p.m. West Coast U.S. time.
Tuesday afternoon’s crossing from the Northern to Southern Hemisphere was marked by three blasts of our ship’s horn: one for the sea, one for the sky and one for the Equator. The photo above is our Captain Neptune (whose voice was much like that of our Cruise Director) who led the silly festivities marking our passage.
You can tell from this photo that it was a standing room only crowd of our fellow passengers who marked the occasion under near 80-degree sunny skies.
I’ll write more about the Celebrity Solstice, our floating home, in our next update. Just wanted to check in with you all who are kind enough to be following along.
(And thanks to my blogger buddies who’ve written such nice comments on our recent posts – I have limited internet out here so will be back to your sites after we reach land – but want you to know it is nice to hear from you in Greece, Provence and Australia today!)
We passed the half way point in our journey to Tahiti on Tuesday morning; just beyond 1,100 miles from Hawaii and 1,100 miles from Tahiti.
Tuesday afternoon’s crossing from the Northern to Southern Hemisphere was marked by three blasts of our ship’s horn: one for the sea, one for the sky and one for the Equator. The photo above is our Captain Neptune (whose voice was much like that of our Cruise Director) who led the silly festivities marking our passage.
You can tell from this photo that it was a standing room only crowd of our fellow passengers who marked the occasion under near 80-degree sunny skies.
We’ve not seen land since we left Lahaina, Maui Saturday evening. We love these days at sea (and again they are going too rapidly!)
(And thanks to my blogger buddies who’ve written such nice comments on our recent posts – I have limited internet out here so will be back to your sites after we reach land – but want you to know it is nice to hear from you in Greece, Provence and Australia today!)
Friday, October 4, 2013
Dateline: Honolulu
We left a drizzly Seattle Tuesday evening and arrived in a drizzly Honolulu some five and a half hours later. And then we had an irritatingly long wait for our shuttle and an hour-long ride to our hotel in a van called “Speedy Shuttle”. Love that irony?
It wasn’t until Wednesday morning that I started thinking ‘tropical paradise’. . . the view from our deck over Waikiki Beach was a good reminder that we, were indeed, in a tropical paradise. We stayed at the Marriott Waikiki Beach Resort. The photo below was taken from our deck. (If you have ever questioned the worth of those loyalty programs, let this be an example of what earning points/stays/other can do. We were upgraded to this ocean view room because of our participation in the Marriott loyalty program.)
And from that same deck on Thursday morning we watched our soon to be floating-home-away-from-home, the Celebrity Solstice, arrive.
Later today we will be boarding this ship and then just before midnight we will set sail for Australia. And then the adventure really begins. . .
I've been worried that my little Fuji point-and-shoot might give out while we were crossing the Pacific. And because no shutterbug in her right mind would consider being without a camera, I bought a new camera-- another Fuji point-and-shoot but with a few more bells and whistles to be conquered. It arrived four days before our departure. I am still building a relationship with the new side kick, so bear with me. . . (yes, I know you should never do that, but sometimes you just have to live on the wild side, right?)
We hope you’ll come along with us the next few weeks as we head out South, by Southwest. . .we depart at one minute before midnight tonight: first stop, Lahaina, Maui.
We'll touch base with you again as internet connections allow. Aloha!
It wasn’t until Wednesday morning that I started thinking ‘tropical paradise’. . . the view from our deck over Waikiki Beach was a good reminder that we, were indeed, in a tropical paradise. We stayed at the Marriott Waikiki Beach Resort. The photo below was taken from our deck. (If you have ever questioned the worth of those loyalty programs, let this be an example of what earning points/stays/other can do. We were upgraded to this ocean view room because of our participation in the Marriott loyalty program.)
And from that same deck on Thursday morning we watched our soon to be floating-home-away-from-home, the Celebrity Solstice, arrive.
Later today we will be boarding this ship and then just before midnight we will set sail for Australia. And then the adventure really begins. . .
We hope you’ll come along with us the next few weeks as we head out South, by Southwest. . .we depart at one minute before midnight tonight: first stop, Lahaina, Maui.
We'll touch base with you again as internet connections allow. Aloha!
Monday, September 30, 2013
Ready! Set! Aloha!
By the time most of you read this post we’ll be winging our way to Honolulu, Hawaii, the first stop on our island-hopping route across the Pacific Ocean to Sydney, Australia.
We were at our timeshare home in Hawaii last January when The Scout found this deal of a cruise while surfing his favorite cruise travel sites. Sydney and/or greater Australia for years has bounced up on down on our travel bucket list and finally this cruise, its price and our schedule aligned.
One of our favorite ways to travel is to mix a bit of the old familiar with new experiences. We are doing that on this trip, with a couple days in our old-favorite, Honolulu, prior to boarding our ship, the Celebrity Solstice. The Solstice is also an old-favorite as it was the first Celebrity ship we ever sailed. What a fabulous introduction she provided to that cruise line.
The Solstice will be our floating home-away-from-home for 19 nights, as we travel to French Polynesia, to New Zealand and then on to Sydney.
We’ll have a dozen heavenly days ‘at sea’ – one of our favorite parts of these ‘repositioning cruises’ that move ships from summer to winter routes.
For those of you wondering how we pass the time on sea days, I’ve included the photos above which were taken aboard the Solstice as she transported us from Florida to Europe two years ago.
I’ll be posting updates here about our South Pacific adventure as internet connections permit. We hope you’ll come along with us as we island-hop our way to Sydney.
Next update will be from Waikiki. . .until then,
We were at our timeshare home in Hawaii last January when The Scout found this deal of a cruise while surfing his favorite cruise travel sites. Sydney and/or greater Australia for years has bounced up on down on our travel bucket list and finally this cruise, its price and our schedule aligned.
One of our favorite ways to travel is to mix a bit of the old familiar with new experiences. We are doing that on this trip, with a couple days in our old-favorite, Honolulu, prior to boarding our ship, the Celebrity Solstice. The Solstice is also an old-favorite as it was the first Celebrity ship we ever sailed. What a fabulous introduction she provided to that cruise line.
The Solstice will be our floating home-away-from-home for 19 nights, as we travel to French Polynesia, to New Zealand and then on to Sydney.
We’ll have a dozen heavenly days ‘at sea’ – one of our favorite parts of these ‘repositioning cruises’ that move ships from summer to winter routes.
For those of you wondering how we pass the time on sea days, I’ve included the photos above which were taken aboard the Solstice as she transported us from Florida to Europe two years ago.
I’ll be posting updates here about our South Pacific adventure as internet connections permit. We hope you’ll come along with us as we island-hop our way to Sydney.
Next update will be from Waikiki. . .until then,
“Aloha!”
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Travel Tip Tuesday: That Little Black Dress
With the turn of the calendar page a couple days ago and pouring rain this morning, we realized that our 'travel season' is just around the corner.
That means ‘packing the suitcases’ – those small roll-aboard-sized bags with which we travel in the air or on land and sea -- is also just around the corner.
We have used the same Travel Pro roll-aboard bags for years.We find these small bags are much easier to haul up and down and over uneven European sidewalks and subways (some with long flights of stairs). And they are much easier to get into the narrow rail car doorways and over the grated ramps of Greek ferries. And they must be packed light enough that I can carry my share of the load.
These, now battered, accessories have seen us through our month-long overland sojourns and cruises of varying lengths.
In the photo to the left, I posed as ‘bag woman’ with those trusty travel companions as we set off for Greece last spring: our two roll-ons, my Baggallini purse and tote; and a Travel Pro shoulder tote.
We will be taking the same gear on our 19-day Celebrity Solstice cruise from Honolulu to Sydney this fall. This will be the longest cruise we've been on and 12 of the days will be 'sea days' -- those wonderfully relaxing days spent on the ship.
Cruise ship ‘formal nights’ and our ‘small suitcases’ are not a match made in travel heaven. But we’ve met the challenge. Here’s how:
The Scout packs a suit, dress shirt, tie and shoes and is set.
((Tie and belt are rolled and tucked inside the dress shoes to save space.)
And I have ‘the little black dress’ that I purchased at Chico’s, (a U.S. women’s apparel chain) a couple years ago:
I tuck in a few scarves, necklaces and tops and I am set for those formal affairs without ever wearing the same thing twice.
The scarf/shawl (pictured above and to the side) is a sequined affair that I bought at at Italian street market (8-euro) and the glass necklace was a souvenir from Rhodes, Greece.
(Scarves and necklaces are my preferred choice of souvenirs these days. They take up little space and can be used both while traveling and back home.)
That same little black dress on another formal night – this time another Chico’s top and a necklace purchased in Madrid -- turn it into a kaleidoscope of color.
Another Chico’s top (I am what they call a 'Chico's Chick')– a poncho of vibrant primary colors (it folds up as small as a scarf) is how I accessorized that little black dress on a Mexican cruise.
And for those other ‘country club casual’ dress code times on board, I’ve relied on the basic black or white pants and accessorized it with a few tops – the kind that can work with either.
One example is this top I found at Kirkland’s 1 Best Kept Secret, a designer label sample shop (with fantastically low prices). I can wear it with those black and white pants:
An afternoon cocktail party last fall aboard Celebrity’s Silhouette was a casual affair: those white pants worked well in the Adriatic Sea and a hand-washable top finished off the outfit.
On another evening, a black shawl replaced the black jacket that I use on shore excursions and ‘dressed up’ a bit, the black pants:
Speaking of shore excursions, when in Europe we’ve usually worn those black or dark colors for which Europeans are known.
Again, by using a few scarves, I can wear the same basic black outfit and it always looks a bit different – and scarves take up much less room than do tops and blouses. On our upcoming trip we'll be heading into Australia's spring/summer so I plan to wear the whites more often than the dark colors:
That’s it for this Travel Tip Tuesday – sorry you had to see so many photos of us, but I couldn’t think of another way to illustrate this post. I promise I’ll stay behind the camera in future posts.
Other posts related to packing tips can be found at:
Bagless Lady
Pickpocket Prevention
Tuck these in your suitcase
Note: We are often asked for our packing tips and that's what prompted this post. We were not paid or otherwise compensated for the brand name references – we buy, we use, and IF we like something, then we recommend it.
Now it’s your turn. What are some of your travel fashion packing tips? Please tell us in the comment section below or send us an email. Hope to see you here again soon ~
That means ‘packing the suitcases’ – those small roll-aboard-sized bags with which we travel in the air or on land and sea -- is also just around the corner.
We have used the same Travel Pro roll-aboard bags for years.We find these small bags are much easier to haul up and down and over uneven European sidewalks and subways (some with long flights of stairs). And they are much easier to get into the narrow rail car doorways and over the grated ramps of Greek ferries. And they must be packed light enough that I can carry my share of the load.
These, now battered, accessories have seen us through our month-long overland sojourns and cruises of varying lengths.
In the photo to the left, I posed as ‘bag woman’ with those trusty travel companions as we set off for Greece last spring: our two roll-ons, my Baggallini purse and tote; and a Travel Pro shoulder tote.
We will be taking the same gear on our 19-day Celebrity Solstice cruise from Honolulu to Sydney this fall. This will be the longest cruise we've been on and 12 of the days will be 'sea days' -- those wonderfully relaxing days spent on the ship.
Cruise ship ‘formal nights’ and our ‘small suitcases’ are not a match made in travel heaven. But we’ve met the challenge. Here’s how:
The Scout packs a suit, dress shirt, tie and shoes and is set.
((Tie and belt are rolled and tucked inside the dress shoes to save space.)
And I have ‘the little black dress’ that I purchased at Chico’s, (a U.S. women’s apparel chain) a couple years ago:
I tuck in a few scarves, necklaces and tops and I am set for those formal affairs without ever wearing the same thing twice.
The scarf/shawl (pictured above and to the side) is a sequined affair that I bought at at Italian street market (8-euro) and the glass necklace was a souvenir from Rhodes, Greece.
(Scarves and necklaces are my preferred choice of souvenirs these days. They take up little space and can be used both while traveling and back home.)
That same little black dress on another formal night – this time another Chico’s top and a necklace purchased in Madrid -- turn it into a kaleidoscope of color.
Another Chico’s top (I am what they call a 'Chico's Chick')– a poncho of vibrant primary colors (it folds up as small as a scarf) is how I accessorized that little black dress on a Mexican cruise.
And for those other ‘country club casual’ dress code times on board, I’ve relied on the basic black or white pants and accessorized it with a few tops – the kind that can work with either.
One example is this top I found at Kirkland’s 1 Best Kept Secret, a designer label sample shop (with fantastically low prices). I can wear it with those black and white pants:
An afternoon cocktail party last fall aboard Celebrity’s Silhouette was a casual affair: those white pants worked well in the Adriatic Sea and a hand-washable top finished off the outfit.
On another evening, a black shawl replaced the black jacket that I use on shore excursions and ‘dressed up’ a bit, the black pants:
Speaking of shore excursions, when in Europe we’ve usually worn those black or dark colors for which Europeans are known.
Again, by using a few scarves, I can wear the same basic black outfit and it always looks a bit different – and scarves take up much less room than do tops and blouses. On our upcoming trip we'll be heading into Australia's spring/summer so I plan to wear the whites more often than the dark colors:
That’s it for this Travel Tip Tuesday – sorry you had to see so many photos of us, but I couldn’t think of another way to illustrate this post. I promise I’ll stay behind the camera in future posts.
Other posts related to packing tips can be found at:
Bagless Lady
Pickpocket Prevention
Tuck these in your suitcase
Note: We are often asked for our packing tips and that's what prompted this post. We were not paid or otherwise compensated for the brand name references – we buy, we use, and IF we like something, then we recommend it.
Now it’s your turn. What are some of your travel fashion packing tips? Please tell us in the comment section below or send us an email. Hope to see you here again soon ~
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
That autumn day in Dubrovnik. . .
“Those who seek paradise
should come to Dubrovnik. . .”
said George Bernard Shaw, who is also credited with labeling this city as being “the pearl of the Adriatic”.
We would heartily agree with Shaw on both counts and we’ve just scratched the city’s surface!
But, thanks to the wonders of cruising, we’ve visited this town ---on the other side of the world -- twice in the last decade; our most recent visit a day trip last fall. As with most day-trippers, on each visit we headed directly to the old Walled City:
And much like our first visit, we went straight to the stairway that led to the top of the wall (this time, however, there was a ticket booth and entry fee). The wall at 4 – 6 meters wide and 2 kilometer (1.24 mile) long envelops the old city in a continuing protective embrace that has lasted through the decades.
But the wall wasn’t enough to protect the old town from the destruction caused by a late 20th Century conflict -- a part of the seven-month siege that began in Oct. 1991 after Croatia and Slovenia (once a part of Yugoslavia) – declared their independence. One of the worst battles resulted in 19 deaths and 60 injuries.
More than 56% of the buildings were damaged during the conflict and there were some 650 artillery hits within the old walled city. On our first visit here the new roofs were a striking contrast to the old; this last visit, thanks to weather and time, the new roofs had become less visible.
The views, the history and the beauty from atop that old wall will forever be stored among our special travel memories:
Have you been to Dubrovnik? What is your special memory of this ‘pearl’?
That’s it for this week’s Travel Photo Thursday. Check out Budget Travelers Sandbox for more armchair travels. We appreciate the time you spend with us and hope to see you again. . .real soon!
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Sunday Morning In Ravenna, Italy
Our footsteps echoed across the cobbled streets as we strolled through the town on that early Sunday morning ~
~ just the two of us touring Ravenna, Italy on our introductory visit. You know the kind. Strolling with no real destination in mind just content to be together, surrounded by such history and beauty.
As the late autumn sun rose higher in the sky, the streets began filling with people – travelers and locals alike – in this capital city of the Province of Ravenna in Italy’s Emilia-Romagna region.
Ravenna is an inland city connected to the Adriatic Sea by the Candiano Canal (pictured above). It was one of the last ‘ports of call for the Celebrity Silhouette; the ship we’d sailed from Rome through the Mediterranean and Adriatic seas last October. A steady stream of buses transported cruisers like us from the ship to the city on a route that followed the canal.
From 402 – 476 Ravenna was the seat of the Western Roman Empire. . .then the capital of the Ostrogothic kingdom. . . that gave way to the Byzantine Empire. . .and then the Kingdom of the Lombards. And the list continues. . .
For those of us who love reading and writing as much as travel one of it is notable attractions is the resting place of Italian poet and philosopher, Dante Alighieri, author of “The Inferno” (the city is mentioned in Canto V).
What we will likely remember the longest though about our visit to this city steeped in history was the stop at the Basilica of Saint Vitale, which is considered one of the most representative examples of Byzantine architecture in the world today.
(By this point in the trip we had seen a number of mighty impressive cathedrals but this one was simply jaw-dropping both for its size and its décor.)
So many mosaics cover the walls, floors and ceilings that it would take weeks of repeated visits to absorb the story each tells; their various themes from the Hebrew Bible or what Christians call the Old Testament. Some mosaics highlight Emperor Justinian I with his court and his Empress Theodora with her attendants.
The mosaics were commissioned by Archbishop Maximian 546/556 A.D.
The church had been closed earlier in the morning for services but when the doors opened, camera-snapping visitors filled its every nook . Yet there still remained a collective hush not unlike those moments before a church service starts as we absorbed the grand interior. If felt almost as if we, too, were attending a service. Maybe we had been ~ each of us in his or her own way?
That’s it for this Travel Photo Thursday. Head over to Budget Travelers Sandbox for more photos. And we send our best wishes to all of you who are celebrating Easter this weekend!
And If You Go:
Hours and entry fees for the Basilica can be found at: www.ravennamosaici.it
Ravenna annually hosts the Ravenna Festival – one of Italy’s premier classical music gatherings. Opera performances are held at the city’s Teatro Alighieri and concerts take place at the Palazzo Mauro de André as well as other locations like the Basilica of San Vitale.
~ just the two of us touring Ravenna, Italy on our introductory visit. You know the kind. Strolling with no real destination in mind just content to be together, surrounded by such history and beauty.
As the late autumn sun rose higher in the sky, the streets began filling with people – travelers and locals alike – in this capital city of the Province of Ravenna in Italy’s Emilia-Romagna region.
Ravenna is an inland city connected to the Adriatic Sea by the Candiano Canal (pictured above). It was one of the last ‘ports of call for the Celebrity Silhouette; the ship we’d sailed from Rome through the Mediterranean and Adriatic seas last October. A steady stream of buses transported cruisers like us from the ship to the city on a route that followed the canal.
From 402 – 476 Ravenna was the seat of the Western Roman Empire. . .then the capital of the Ostrogothic kingdom. . . that gave way to the Byzantine Empire. . .and then the Kingdom of the Lombards. And the list continues. . .
For those of us who love reading and writing as much as travel one of it is notable attractions is the resting place of Italian poet and philosopher, Dante Alighieri, author of “The Inferno” (the city is mentioned in Canto V).
What we will likely remember the longest though about our visit to this city steeped in history was the stop at the Basilica of Saint Vitale, which is considered one of the most representative examples of Byzantine architecture in the world today.
(By this point in the trip we had seen a number of mighty impressive cathedrals but this one was simply jaw-dropping both for its size and its décor.)
The mosaics were commissioned by Archbishop Maximian 546/556 A.D.
The church had been closed earlier in the morning for services but when the doors opened, camera-snapping visitors filled its every nook . Yet there still remained a collective hush not unlike those moments before a church service starts as we absorbed the grand interior. If felt almost as if we, too, were attending a service. Maybe we had been ~ each of us in his or her own way?
That’s it for this Travel Photo Thursday. Head over to Budget Travelers Sandbox for more photos. And we send our best wishes to all of you who are celebrating Easter this weekend!
And If You Go:
Hours and entry fees for the Basilica can be found at: www.ravennamosaici.it
Ravenna annually hosts the Ravenna Festival – one of Italy’s premier classical music gatherings. Opera performances are held at the city’s Teatro Alighieri and concerts take place at the Palazzo Mauro de André as well as other locations like the Basilica of San Vitale.
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