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Day #5: Monaco

We arrived in Monaco after a pleasant night’s sail from Livorno. After breakfast, we departed the ship and hiked up the hill to Monaco-Ville. Rick Steves suggests taking a bus up the hill, but we found it a pleasant hike with great views of the Port of Monaco.

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At the top of the hill, we strolled amongst colorful gardens while winding our way around to the cathedral of Monaco, as well as the royal palace (sadly the State Apartments are closed this time of year). In the distance, we had seen bad weather approaching, and it started raining by the time we were ready to leave the palace. Fortunately, we’d anticipated wet weather and brought our rain gear.

Our next planned stop was the indoor Oceanographic Museum (which is really part museum and part aquarium). We spent a couple of hours exploring this facility, which is housed in a marvelous structure. I probably wouldn’t recommend it to folks without kids (unless you love natural history / marine life), but it’s a “must do” with kids.

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After the museum, we found a little cafe and had a light lunch. Libby enjoyed a traditional ham and cheese sandwich, and Mom and I had Nutella crepes (yum!). Emerson ate a cheese pizza.

After lunch, we caught a bus down to the port (mostly to avoid the rain), and we returned to the ship around 2pm. This gave me time to get caught up on email and make a few calls via Skype. Had the weather been better, we would have stayed out much longer in Monaco, as it’s a great place to visit.

Libby’s parent took an afternoon driving tour of Monaco, Nice, and points in between, which they also enjoyed.

We ate dinner in the Grand Pacific Dining Room. It’s been a number of cruises since we tried dinner in one of NCL’s main dining rooms, and we were thoroughly unimpressed by both the service and good quality. I don’t think we’ll be back again this cruise. I’d rather pay a little more and enjoy ourselves more thoroughly — I just view paying for specialty restaurants as “deferred cruise fare” (especially since NCL is usually lower-priced than many other lines for comparable cruises).

Speaking of other lackluster things, we saw a performance of “Shout” last night in the theatre. Emerson seemed to enjoy it well enough (though some of the content wasn’t really suitable for her age). In contrast, Libby and I hated it. In fact, I think it was the worst performance I’ve ever seen on a cruise ship. It was uninspired: the cast lacked talent and/or enthusiasm, the song selections were mostly lackluster, and it lacked a compelling plot. The members of the audience kept coming and going too, which pissed me off and distracted from a show that was already struggling to keep my attention. All in all: epic failure!

Oh well, at least Monaco was great, which is what matters.

Today’s box score: +1 country (Monaco).

We docked early this morning in Livorno, which is the port closest to many of Tuscany’s heavy hitters (like Florence). However, although in theory you have 12 hours in port, best case scenario one has maybe seven hours in Firenze and likely less due to travel time and a fudge factor to avoid missed connections. For us, this makes Florence not really worth the day trip, and those that think they can pack in Florence and Pisa… well, they’re just nuts. Instead, we opted to just visit Pisa.

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Since our last visit, the transfer to the train station has been greatly improved: $12/pp. gets you from the port to Livorno Centrale. Of course, $12 in total took us the rest of the way to Pisa on the train. From there, it’s a pleasant one mile walk to the Field of Miracles, home to the famous leaning (and crooked) tower of Pisa. While the Tower is most iconic, we especially enjoyed the Camposanto Cemetery on this trip, which is lined with ancient Roman sarcophagi and otherwise filled with fascinating tomb markers.

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We had an excellent and affordable lunch at a local, hole-in-the-wall pizza place on Via delle Colonne. After lunch, we strolled back through town to the train station. Transfers were once again easy, and we were back aboard Jade by 3:30. It was a great day!

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While we were out on our own, Libby’s parents did the “Taste of Tuscany” tour. This also took them to Pisa and then off to an estate for wine and various antipasti deep in the winery’s cellar.

For dinner, we had a delicious Italian meal at La Cucina while we set sail for Monaco.

After an enjoyable (though sleepless for me) flight, we landed in Rome about forty minutes early. Since we’d had different travel itineraries originally, we split up with Mom and Dad again, as they had pre-arranged transfers with NCL. I’d debated taking public transport, but it’s a bit of a hassle from the airport to cruise port, involving train transfers and having to schlep somehow from the station in Civitavecchia to the makeshift cruise terminal. So, in the end, I bit the bullet and paid for a private transfer, which was both comfortable and convenient, if a bit spendy.

After a pleasant hour-long drive through the countryside surrounding Rome, we arrived at the port about an hour before check-in time, which began at 10:30. As we were starting to board, Libby’s parents arrived at the terminal, which enabled us to plan to meet up for lunch.

We ate our “welcome aboard” lunch in the elegant Grand Pacific dining room, enjoying the same menu we had aboard Dawn a couple of months ago. After lunch, we took a nap for a little over two hours before heading to the muster drill at 4:00pm. Despite my total lack of sleep, I was the first one up and faced the task of rousing Libby and Emerson. Thankfully, I was able to stop just short of blasting the ship’ horn into our cabin. :-)

After the muster drill, Libby and my mother went to the “port and tour” talk. Meanwhile, Emerson played happily in the cabin while I unpacked. She also made friends with the next door neighbors by chatting them up during the sail away from Roma. Afterwards, the four of us met up for dinner at Jasmine Garden (the ship’s pan-Asian specialty restaurant). Emerson ordered pizza off the regular kid’s menu, and the rest of us dined family-style on a variety of dim sum and entrees. Delicious!

It’s good to be back aboard Jade (which played host to our “best cruise ever” back in 2008). She feels the same… like slipping back into a comfortable pair of favorite shoes.

Day #2: To Rome

After a relatively short night’s sleep, we drove about 45 minutes to Miami International Airport. Check-in, security, etc. were all a relative breeze, and we departed on time for Atlanta.

We’d originally been scheduled to fly to Rome via New York on Alitalia. However, flight schedules changed making the connection too precarious. As a result, Delta agreed to re-route us through Atlanta. This created the happy accident of being on the same overseas flight as Libby’s parents, who we met up with in Atlanta.

A spending a couple of leisurely hours, we boarded our 4:30 flight and took off for Rome. As usual, Emerson sat with me and began to enjoy her “sleepover” on the airplane. On our way…

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Day #1: To Miami

Our flight schedule is a bit unusual. To make best use of our SkyMiles, we’re flying not from Tampa but from Miami. So, we had to start our journey to Europe by driving four hours to Miami International Airport.

The day was rather hectic for Libby and me with our work obligations, as well as my finishing up packing. To save time, I dropped Libby off in the morning, and we all picked her up twelve hours later at 6:30. Dinner was in the car… McDonald’s.

Aside from some light rain, the drive was pleasant and uneventful. We checked into our hotel in Weston around 10:30 and promptly went to sleep.

Tomorrow we fly to Atlanta and then on to Rome!

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