I was really impressed with Italy's public transportation system. Like,
really impressed.
So impressed, in fact, that my mood flew the whole gamut while on vacation in Italy: frustration, annoyance, quiet resignation, maniacal cursing at the transportation gods, profuse sweating combined with nervous, high-pitched laughter, and eventually a dazed admiration that a transportation system could be so unreliable that one could actually
rely upon it... for being late or delayed!
Perhaps I've been overly spoiled with my previous experiences of transportation in other countries. Flights have been delayed, but never canceled. Trains have been five or seven minutes late, but never more so. Buses have been mildly odorous, but never rank. And I've yet to suffer through the nightmare of traveling during a strike. (I know, I know; I've probably jinxed myself with these last five sentences.) Beyond a few obnoxious advances from a pimp in the DC Metro ("Hey ladies! I'm an entrepreneur!") to the usual pieces of gum stuck under a train table in Germany, I've never had any major complaints.
But Italy was different. We landed in Naples and after gathering our luggage and purchasing tickets for the bus station shuttle, we made our way out into the streets to locate the bus stop. Unlike the tour bus services and other city bus stops, which were conveniently in front of the airport entrance, the stop for the Napoli Garibaldi shuttle bus was several hundred meters away, located around the corner and in front of a McDonald's. We finally figured this out (after Danny asked a random van driver idling on the side of the road if he was the transport service; undoubtedly his thoughts were,
Turisti stupidi...) and got on the bus with no other incidents.
The ride through Naples was eye-opening. Traffic laws,
schmaffic laws. The laws of the jungle would be more appropriate. Bigger vehicles take the right of way, whether it's legally theirs or not, and Vespas zip through red lights with hardly a by-your-leave. As
Rick Steves remarks in his guidebooks, red lights are "discretionary" in the opinion of most Italians. Chaos rules. Sidewalks end at busy intersections with no marked pedestrian crosswalks; simply stare boldly at the face of impending
death, er, drivers and high-step it across the street. Be quick, though, as drivers will be right on your heels.
The shuttle dropped us off at the Piazza Giuseppe Garibaldi, which was nothing more than a glorified concrete island in the middle of where several busy roads intersect. When asked which way to the train station, the bus driver pointed some 600 meters away down a busy street lined not with sidewalks, but with jersey barriers, leaving a scant 6 inches of shoulder space to walk along with the traffic. Hearts sinking, we prepared to run the gauntlet.
Let's just say that you feel very much
alive after power-walking down the road with mere centimeters between you and espresso-fueled crazy Italian drivers.
Once in the cool underbelly of the Napoli Centrale station, though, we experienced even more of what Italy's public transportation had to offer: the cattle-train enterprise cleverly disguised and advertised as the Circumvesuviana train line. Imagine what a sardine feels like when packed into a tin can -- only make the outside temperature 100'F and don't expect any air conditioning! Granted, we arrived in the middle of the afternoon commute, but I certainly didn't anticipate that my first impression of Italy would involve the fascinatingly curly and sweaty arm-pit hair of the Italian gentleman crammed beside me on a train.
Buona sera,
Signore.
I could say that we had a more pleasant experience on the Circumvesuviana two days later when we went from
Pompeii to
Sorrento, but that would be a lie. The train schedule alleged that it would take thirty minutes, but we should've known better than to trust anything even in print! We spent an hour enduring the boisterous yells, catcalls, and hoots of some rowdy Italian youths en route to the beach. With no air conditioning. But thankfully the return trip was quieter and, well, almost enjoyable. My bet is that all those youths were too drunk to return to Naples. Or maybe they drowned. At any rate, we actually got to
sit down on the train!
And don't even get me started on the
transportation fiasco with our Mt Vesuvius excursion... granted, it wasn't public transportation, but when you're spending 22€ a person, you expect that the transportation would have the decency to be punctual.
To add insult to injury, all the fretting over tardy transportation back from Vesuvius ended up being a waste of energy since the train from Naples to Rome
ended up being over an hour late in leaving. As in, we sat on the train for an hour with no explanation as to why we weren't moving. The train conductor better have had a serious case of the runs to justify such tardiness.
Admittedly, there were a few bright spots in Italy's transportation system. Maneuvering the metro system in Rome was a breeze (minus the scam artists who hang around the ticket machines), and the trains were more or less on time. Most of the cars were new, and we rarely had to stand or feel like we needed to sanitize ourselves from head-to-toe after exiting. And there was a really friendly fellow on the Circumvesuviano train who helped me hoist my luggage onto the car. If you're reading this,
Signore, I'm sorry I thought you were a scam artist at first. My bad.
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The most reliable form of transport! :) |
The train from Rome's Termini station to Fiumicino Airport was also on time. But Italy's public transportation system couldn't end our trip on a good note: our plane to Stuttgart was delayed for almost an hour. Oh, well. It's the Italian way!
Have you been to Italy? What was your experience with their transportation?
(This was a rather tongue-in-cheek account of our experience with Italy's public transportation. If you can't find humor, no matter how sarcastic, in the mishaps and obstacles, then you might as well give up traveling altogether! That being said, I hope you don't interpret this post as my condemnation of traveling in Italy as a whole. The public transportation flaws certainly didn't make our trip, but it didn't break it either! Be sure to check out my posts on Pompeii, Sorrento, and Mt Vesuvius for positive highlights, and stay tuned for my future (glowing) reviews about Rome!)
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