Are you going to travel to Italy, precisely to Tuscany, for your first time? If you are not well prepared in Italian geography...maybe you'd better read this post first!
Today we have the pleasure to share with you the (hilarious) reflection of an authoritative Italy's blogger and expat! Krista Ricchi on her blog "Alla Fiorentina" says she moved from Southern California to Florence, in Tuscany, after falling in love with an italian. And thanks to her own experience, she can now teach you what's the most important thing you need to know before visiting Tuscany...
Krista's preface:
Krista's preface:
[Italian friends please skip this part]
What I need to admit before stepping up onto my soap box is that
when I first flipped through a study-abroad brochure and picked out Florence
because of the pretty pictures of the Ponte Vecchio and happy students eating
gelato, I honestly did not know that Florence is actually called
Firenze in Italian. I blame American Exceptionalism, and the fact that I’m
pretty sure they didn’t mention it in the European History text-book in high
school. What I’m basically saying is that I started from the ground up with
this “moving to another country” thing.
I’m about to explain a very
simple fact, and it’s hard to explain something that should have been obvious
without sounding like a pretentious jerk. Now that I’ve revealed my humble
beginnings I hope you can read this snarky PSA and giggle instead of just
thinking that I’m an asshole.
[Ok Italians you can start reading here]
The Only Thing You Need to
Know:
There’s really only one
thing you absolutely must know before traveling to Tuscany. Even if
you step off the plane never having touched a guide-book, confused about
whether ciao means hello or goodbye, and ready to order
Spaghetti Alfredo at every restaurant, all can be forgiven if you just learn this
one thing.
It’s best expressed as an
SAT-style analogy:
Tuscany : Florence = California : Los Angeles
Assuming it’s been a few
years since you studied for the SATs, that means that Tuscany is to Florence as
California is to Los Angeles. Tuscany is a region, like a state or
province, and within it are cities such as Florence.
Almost every single tourist
that I’ve met has not understood this. The conversation is always a variation
of the following:
Me: “What do you have
planned for today?”
Well-meaning Tourist: “We’re
going to Tuscany”
Me: (dying a little bit
inside) “Oh, nice”
Florence, Capital of Tuscany |
I think the problem is
partly because of how successfully Tuscany has been marketed as a destination,
so much so that it seems to be its own special entity that is greater than the
sum of its parts. By all means, when you go home tell everyone that you went to
Florence AND Tuscany because it sounds awesome.
Just while you’re in
Tuscany, remember that you’re already here. If you’re leaving the city, you can
say you’re going to the countryside, or to Chianti, Lucca, etc. the specific name of
the quaint little town you happen to be headed to.
Unless it’s San Gimignano. Best not to try to pronounce that one!
Thanks a lot to Krista for sharing her post with Gadders! You can read her original article on her blog here!
And now that you know it, you can go ahead with your trip to Tuscany!
PS. If you want to check out flights or hotel prices you can click here or use the tool below!
After reading this nice post, get ready for a trip to Tuscany and travellers would definitely enjoy this tour. Thanks!
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