Berlusconi To Italians : Vacation In Venice

Berlusconi To Italians: Vacation In Venice!
Italian Prime Minister and billionaire Silvio Berlusconi has always been a pretty good salesman. Now he’s trying to sell Italy – to Italians.
Berlusconi has voiced over a 30-second commercial that will be running in the coming days. Over lovely scenes of Porto Fino and Florence, the Prime Minister encourages his countrymen to vacation at home.
“”What you see is your Italy, a unique country of sky, sun, and sea, but also history, culture and art,” he says in the commercial. “Use your vacations to get to know Italy better, your magic Italy.”

As you can see from the ad, Italy is often magic and enchanting. But it was ironic the Ministry of Tourism presented the commercial on the same day some 5,000 protesters from the city of L’Aquila were in Rome. The last several months have not been exactly magic for them following a devastating earthquake in L’Aquila.

Protesters clashed with police as they tried to get close to Berlusconi’s Rome residence. They’re complaining about the slow pace of reconstruction in the city after the quake, and asking for further tax breaks and loans.

The commercial is not just about national pride, and a country feeling good about itself. In a time of crisis, the government is trying to encourage Italians to hit the beach in Calabria rather than in Kenya to keep those vacation dollars at home.

The Bank of Italy estimates that in 2009 Italians spent more than 17 billion dollars traveling abroad; Berlusconi’s government would just like to keep a bit of that money at home.

Greg Burke by liveshots.blogs.foxnews.com

VIVA Italy

giorgia_boscoloViva Italia!

We can’t get enough of all things Italian– especially when it comes to food and wine
When it comes to Italy, I am a woman obsessed. The language, food, wine, film, fashion–I love it all. Give me half a million dollars (I’ll settle for less), and I’d probably find a way to buy a place there–if I could only decide what corner of paradise I’d want to settle in. Tuscany? Rome? Umbria? Venice? So many beautiful places to choose from.

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I’m not alone. Google the word “Italophile”–someone who greatly admires the Italian language, culture and people–and you’ll find at least 132,000 references.

Our wine shops are loaded with Italian wines; our bookstores are filled with Italian cookbooks. (At least five lovely new ones have landed on my desk this fall.)

Across North America, thousands of people are dreaming of La Dolce Vita. For many of us, the good life, it seems, will always be defined by Italy.

But why?Why has this one tiny, crowded country (population 58 million, spread over 301,230 square kilometres–less than half the size of Alberta) captivated so many Canadians?

Much of it has to do with food and drink, say Calgarians who share my passion.

“It’s about family and shared experiences,” says Allan Shewchuk, a Calgary lawyer.

“That’s what I love about Italians. Go there, and you can make an instant friend just by asking what the local specialty is. You’ll have an hour-long conversation about the Parmesan cheese or the prosciutto or the asparagus or whatever.”

Ah, right. The food. It always comes back to the food.

Shewchuk isn’t Italian, but he has definitely built a reputation as a local Italophile. Not only has he been to Italy more than 20 times, he has been teaching Italian cooking classes at the Cookbook Co. Cooks for the past 14 years.

This year, he skipped a trip to Italy, and instead went to Ethiopia. What did he find? Everywhere, reminders of Italy: excellent coffee (grown in Ethiopia, but made Italian-style), pasta and more. (Italian companies have done trade with Ethiopia since the 1870s, and Italy occupied the country from 1935 to 1941, hence the lasting cultural influences.)

“They serve spaghetti on top of their injera, (the) flatbread they eat in Ethiopia,” he says.

“I talked to a cooking class in Addis Ababa (Ethiopia’s capital city); they went wild for my bruschetta . . . and the main shopping district in Addis is called Piazza.”

Shewchuk’s next trip? Sicily, in February. “It’s my 50th birthday. I have to be on Italian soil.”

We’re not saying Calgary’s a lousy place to be. Not at all. Just ask Dario Berloni, the owner of Teatro and the newly opened Vendome cafe in Sunnyside. Born in Italy, he moved to Canada in 1982, and now splits his time between Calgary and Italy.

And he loves them both –Italy, because of “the sea, the hills, the countryside, the people, the lifestyle, all those things,” he says.

And Calgary, because people are friendly, kind and polite, he says.

“Calgary means a lot to me, and I love the place and the friends I have and the things I do here.”

Of course, no discussion of Italy’s contribution to Calgary–and, for that matter, the world–is complete without mentioning the wine. Franca Bellusci, who is of Italian heritage and married to an Italian, opened a wine store that specializes in Italian wines in Bridgeland in 1999. Earlier this year, she moved the shop to a big, bright new location in Aspen Estates, one of the city’s newest neighbourhoods.

Despite the move and the economy, business is still booming, she says, partly because of the calibre of Italian products, and the care that goes into making them.

“I truly believe that we still love Italian food, wine, fashion, whatever it is, because they deliver quality,” says Bellusci. “What they make is from the heart.”

Quality. Accessibility. A relaxed pace and a variety of great tastes. Works for me.

I know I’ll be cooking Italian-inspired dishes at least one night, probably more, this week–a lovely way to end a day that I’ve likely started with a cappuccino. And on the way home from work, I’ll be listening to my Italian language CDs in the car.

True, I don’t have any return trips planned–yet.

But, like Berloni, I hope I will. Soon.

“What is there not to love about Italy?” Berloni says with a laugh. “If you visit Italy, then you are captivated for the rest of your life.”

sboettcher@theherald. canwest.com

November in Europe an intelligent trip

Q&A: Best European Destination in November?

By David G. Allan

Q.My husband and I are planning a quick five-day trip from New York to Europe in mid-November. Considering the weather and any exciting events that may be occurring at that time of the year, where would you suggest we go? We have been to London, Brussels and Paris on previous vacations during the summer.

A.The farther south you go, the better chance you have of avoiding bad weather in Europe in November. Consider southern Spain, Greece or Italy, but don’t count on it being warm (unless you’re lucky), just more temperate. In November I have worn a bathing suit in Tarifa, Spain, but froze in a sweatshirt in Venice. Mid-November is also not the best time for big festivals and events, maybe because of the weather.

Venice_SaluteIn Italy, you might find more hospitable temperatures in Sicily or even Rome, but if you’re looking for festivals, you may need to set your sights farther north. The San Miniato Truffle Fair in Tuscany, featuring craft stands, entertainment and dining focused on the local white truffles, is on the second, third and fourth weekends of the month.

Venice’s La Salute on Nov. 21 is a religious festival that focuses on the beautiful Basilica Santa Maria della Salute, illuminated with candles from the devout, but on the streets stalls are erected selling pastries and toys. Perhaps more compelling is the Venice Biennale (www.labiennale.org/en/biennale/index.html) running through Nov. 22. The Biennale exhibition is described as “the art world’s Oscars,” by Julia Chaplin in “An Artsy Spin on the Grand Tour” (May 27, 2007).

If you’re less concerned about the weather, consider Germany. Düsseldorf’s St. Martin Festival on Nov. 10 features a children-led lantern-illuminated procession through the city. The next day, Nov. 11, is the country’s official start of carnival season, with merriment and drinking in cities throughout Germany, including Düsseldorf, above, but it is perhaps most enthusiastically and well attended in Cologne, which made the Travel section’s list of “The 44 Places to Go in 2009”.

from IN TRANSIT

Visiting Venice with kayak

Kayaking in Venice: who needs a gondola?Forget water taxis and tourist rides, if you want a fresh perspective on La Serenissima, jump in a kayak and paddle up to St Mark’s Square

kayaking-in-veniceIt’s rush hour and there’s a traffic jam on the Grand Canal. Popping out into the canal from one of the narrower waterways is a trio of gondolas; hurtling towards them is the number-one vaporetto (water bus) loaded with its summer cargo. So far so familiar, but in the midst of this waterborne whirl of gondolas, buses, taxis, pleasure and motorboats there’s me, in a kayak, with a honking, crane-bearing delivery boat up my backside.

Spying what I thought was an available gap I’d sneaked into it so I could take some photos – but I’d parked in front of a restaurant and there was a Coke fridge to deliver. Under the watchful eye of the deliveryman, and scores of tourists peering down at us from the Rialto bridge, I began to manoeuvre out, using my paddle as a rudder to sharpen the turn. As I started the home run towards René, my kayak guide waiting for me on the other side of the bridge, my biceps felt like they’d done three rounds on a cheese grater. But I did it, without crashing or crying, and even got a wink of approval from the deliveryman – high praise indeed in Venice.

Unlikely though Venice by kayak sounds, it really is possible. My fellow kayaker Brian, the most diminutive and softly spoken Texan one could hope to meet – and who had never set foot in a kayak before – was living proof that a sense of adventure and an affinity with water counts far more than bulging biceps (although you might have them by the time you’ve finished). But don’t just rock up with an inflatable, as some fools have done. Go with someone who knows and respects the city, understands the vagaries of its weather and tides and, most importantly, obeys the waterways’ unwritten rules.

With his Venetian colleague Marco, René Seindal, a strapping Dane who has made Venice his home by marrying his passion for rowing with a canny business venture, offers day trips and night paddles, lagoon tours and week-long tailored trips. Their base is at Camping San Nicolò, a pretty, well-run campsite at the western end of the Lido, and an eight-minute bus ride from the island’s vaporetto terminal. The Lido is a good springboard into the rest of the lagoon, while Venice itself is only a half-hour paddle away.

René reads Venice’s maps by its canals. “I get lost on the streets but not down here,” he told me, reassuringly. I’m with him. Having spent weeks veneziacombing its tangle of streets like a blind, spatially challenged beetle I found meandering along Venice’s canals in a kayak serene in the extreme. The price tag for the equivalent number of hours in a gondola would run into thousands – captain of your kayak, €100 per day; 40 minutes on a gondola, €80 – but the freedom to linger by this bridge, or that moss-slicked palazzo, is priceless.

Things rarely got as hairy as my Rialto three-point turn – unless you count the incident when, after butting a moored gondola just in front of the Bridge of Sighs and ricocheting into the wall (sorry, Unesco) I sat trapped in a strong current like a lemon, until a kindly gondolier gave me a shove with his oar.

We shared the canals with police boats, fire engines, funeral hearses, ambulances, taxis and, early one morning, the bin men (tanned and Ray-Ban Aviator-chic) – the workaday Venetians that keep the city ticking over. Roaming the rii (smaller canals), we paddled with gondoliers who didn’t mind us – we shared the same foe: moto ondoso, or the wake caused by motorcraft – and started to recognise Venice for what it is: an archipelago of tiny islands linked by bridges.

One afternoon we paddled right into San Marco and bobbed about in a “safe zone” near the Doge’s Palace, grinning at the cheek of it. Between paddling there were the obligatory gelato stops, lazy lunches and conversations with Brian about why he has never heard of JR or Dallas.

Besides the obvious appeal of kayaking the canals of Venice, there’s the entire lagoon to paddle in. A refreshing contrast to the constraints of the city, the lagoon’s wide-open shallows also offer a fresh perspective on Venice itself – one small if significant piece of an aquatic jigsaw.

venice_gondola“Most people visit Venice and think they’ve seen the city but there’s a thousand years of history right here,” said René, running the gloopy silt of the lagoon floor though his fingers as we paddled out from the kayak base on the Lido one morning. “This is the mud Venice was built on.”

Part lake, part estuary, part sea, the lagoon is fed by the Adriatic via three inlets and comprises thousands of acres of mud flats and salt marshes speckled with islands – some inhabited; others deserted and littered with curious military installations, forgotten island monasteries, isolation hospitals and lunatic asylums. Tricky to reach as a tourist, the islands are blissfully accessible by kayak. On spooky Madonna del Monte, we scrambled through brambles and undergrowth to reach the sprawling shell of a monastery being slowly reclaimed by nature.

At the other extreme, on tiny, tranquil San Francesco del Deserto, we wandered through a manicured oasis of cypresses to reach a medieval monastery in far better nick. After being guided round by a Fransiscan brother – the order that has inhabited the island since the 12th century – we sat in its gardens eating peaches.

The Venetian lagoon is one of the world’s most famous under threat eco-systems, being transformed by erosion, high waters and wave motion. Yet it is home to egrets, wading birds, butterflies, frogs and even the occasional hidden beach. Out here, in its endless shallows, you can recline on your kayak in silence, and pick out the runway at Marco Polo airport (flanked on a clear day by the shadowy hulk of the Dolomites) or Venice herself, identifiable by her comically crooked campanile piercing the sky.

Venice’s legendary weather fronts added an extra dimension, and although bent on outsmarting the forecasters, René’s scientific gadgets cut us little slack in the occasional thunderstorm that threw us off course. Paddling furiously under the brooding skies of an approaching storm towards a horizon fired by lightening was matched only by the surprise on Brian’s face on being slapped round the chops by a fish that jumped our kayaks one sultry afternoon.

One evening we paddled to the market-garden island of Vignole for squid-ink spaghetti and a side order of sunset at Trattoria Alle Vignole (              +39 041 5289707         +39 041 5289707) before heading into Venice for a night tour of the city. The canals were practically ours, and as I peered into windows and down cramped canyons I snatched glimpses of another Venice: a man in underpants brushing his teeth, an illuminated ceiling fresco, a cassocked friar dribbling a football. Just after midnight we were back on the Grand Canal. The gondolas, vaporettos and all of Venice was sleeping and for the half hour or so that it took us to paddle down it we were kings of the canal, commanding the stage in the greatest show on Earth.

Becoming part of the show is a curious flipside of kayaking around Venice. Locals stared, tourists took photos and strangers shouted “Where can we rent the kayaks?” As we left San Marco via the Bridge of Sighs after our thrilling 20-minute bob, I was distracted by a small hand poking venice-5through one of the stone grills, to wave at me. The enclosed bridge gave prisoners their last tantalising glimpse of Venice before being led to their cells in the Doge’s Palace. Craning my neck in search of a face I waved back – and crashed into a gondola.

The Venetian lagoon is one of the world’s most famous under threat eco-systems, being transformed by erosion, high waters and wave motion. Yet it is home to egrets, wading birds, butterflies, frogs and even the occasional hidden beach. Out here, in its endless shallows, you can recline on your kayak in silence, and pick out the runway at Marco Polo airport (flanked on a clear day by the shadowy hulk of the Dolomites) or Venice herself, identifiable by her comically crooked campanile piercing the sky.

Venice’s legendary weather fronts added an extra dimension, and although bent on outsmarting the forecasters, René’s scientific gadgets cut us little slack in the occasional thunderstorm that threw us off course. Paddling furiously under the brooding skies of an approaching storm towards a horizon fired by lightening was matched only by the surprise on Brian’s face on being slapped round the chops by a fish that jumped our kayaks one sultry afternoon.

Venice for a night tour of the city. The canals were practically ours, and as I peered into windows and down cramped canyons I snatched glimpses of another Venice: a man in underpants brushing his teeth, an illuminated ceiling fresco, a cassocked friar dribbling a football. Just after midnight we were back on the Grand Canal. The gondolas, vaporettos and all of Venice was sleeping and for the half hour or so that it took us to paddle down it we were kings of the canal, commanding the stage in the greatest show on Earth.

Becoming part of the show is a curious flipside of kayaking around Venice. Locals stared, tourists took photos and strangers shouted “Where can we rent the kayaks?” As we left San Marco via the Bridge of Sighs after our thrilling 20-minute bob, I was distracted by a small hand poking through one of the stone grills, to wave at me. The enclosed bridge gave prisoners their last tantalising glimpse of Venice before being led to their cells in the Doge’s Palace. Craning my neck in search of a face I waved back – and crashed into a gondola.

from THE GUARDIAN