Sunday, November 10, 2019

Italy Day 5: Church, Mt. Vesuvius & Herculaneum

We found a local Italian church and made our way through super narrow alleys and crazy roads to make it to the meeting in time.  Luckily we are pro drivers in narrow craziness with all our practice in Korea.  There were some missionaries there that had translation devices, and they translated the meeting for us into English.  We didn't have enough devices for everyone, so we took turns every other talk.  We left after the first meeting and made our way to Mt. Vesuvius. 



I was really looking forward to this day and our adventure up Mt.Vesuvius.  I enjoyed hiking the volcano in Bali, and was excited to hike Vesuvius with my whole family.  We brought Monster's hiking backpack and loaded him on Kevin's back.  We started by driving as close to the hike as we possibly could go, we found a parking area, which provided a shuttle to get even closer to the base of the volcano.  With as many kids as we had, we wanted to cut out as much walking as possible.



We started the hike about half way up the volcano.  There were the usually side street salesmen trying to convince our kids to buy small model volcanos and rocks and other things.  We steered the kids away and started our ascend up.  



The hike at the beginning was a lot of loose dirt and small rocks.  Little A kept dragging her feet and kicking up dirt.  The cloud cover was extremely low, we kept talking about how we were walking through the clouds.  To keep Monster and Little A preoccupied we took turns making up stories about how all the clouds and fog came to cover us.  Little A had unicorns and horses as the main characters in her stories.



The weather called for rain, but we were super lucky that we never got rained on.  We did have mist from the dense fog, but luckily the rain never came down.  The paths got super slick the higher we got and the fog kept getting thicker too. Monster was beginning to really start getting irritated and he was crazy bad for about 5 minutes, and then he crashed.  He slept the rest of the way up and down.



When we made it to the top, the kids are a little disappointed because the clouds were so thick we couldn't even see inside the volcano, but Heavenly Father smiled on us, because after a few minutes the clouds parted just enough to see inside the volcano and to see a little of the city below.



We stayed at the top and explored a little.  We went all the way to the end of the path and didn't find anything except a little shop, so we enjoyed the view one last time and started our descend down.



It took us a little over two hours to complete our Mt. Vesuvius hike, and all the kids did really great, it helps so much to have friends to distract them and to keep them going.  I was really disappointed we were not able to get a really good view from the top of the volcano, but I am so glad we were able to hike it.  It was crazy to see where the volcano originally was before it blew and destroyed Pompeii and Herculaneum.  We were showed the line where the original volcano was, and over half the top was blown away when it erupted.  We had just enough time to hurry to Herculaneum to catch it before they closed, so we hurried to the cars and made our way to Herculaneum.


As we walked down the Cardo III Inferiore, it was neat to see the same raised sidewalk as we saw in Pompeii.  The streets were were much more narrower though and would only have allowed one house and carriage to be on the road at a time.  It seemed that the sidewalks were significantly higher here.


The House of the Beautiful Courtyard was my favourite house in Herculaneum.  This house still had not only the stairs still intact and a second floor, but it had the most amazing painting on the the wall and details could be seen.  It is suspected that the house was transferred from a private residence into a school.  I was in awe and could not believe that this house still stands after 2000 years.


House of the Black Hall was a really neat house with second stories and awesome columns.  There was a large garden in the middle and a pretty neat wall. The house was situated so the garden could be seen from the rooms.  It wasn't in very good shape inside, but everything outside was pretty amazing.


As were were waking down the road we walked down a shop area where the streets were lined with shops.  They were small square rooms all in a line, it was fun imagining each small shop filled with merchandise that the Romans would have wanted to purchase.


The House of Deers was a rather impressive house.  The visual colors on the outside of the house was so neat to see, since it has been around since before 79 AD.  There were some neat paintings on the wall and many rooms inside.  The room was super impressive along with the garden, which is where the house gets its name.  The garden had states of deers being attacked by dogs, and a few other statues.


The House of Relief of Telephus was the next stop, and is the second largest house in Herculaneum. These columns held the second story rooms, not a roof.  It was neat seeing two story houses here because all the second floors in Pompeii were ruined.


There were a few thermopolium throughout Herculaneum, and they were so impressive to see.  These establishments were basically Roman fast food joints.  They would prepare and serve hot food for ht locals here.  The counter has sunken jars made into them which would hold the food.


We ended at the Barrel Arches where about 300 human remains were found.  We learned that this is where the sea came straight up into the city and these were port warehouses and boat storages. These people ran here trying to get across the ocean, a boat was also found in the area.  Unfortunately, they were killed by the high temperatures caused by the clouds and ash from the volcano.  The material from the eruption added a 400 meter strip of land.


We just barely got to see everything before they started to close everything and ask all visitors to leave.  We only spent about an hour here, but it is significantly smaller than Pompeii.  It's mostly smaller because it has not been able to be excavated anymore due to the city being completely hurried under apartments and residences.  We left and treated ourselves to gelato since everyone did a stellar job hiking the volcano and exploring Herculaneum.  I really liked how the houses were preserved way better then Pompeii, and how the second stories were still intact.  It was also humbling to see all the bodies in the boat storage area.  I'm so glad we got to see and hike the volcano that froze Pompeii and Herculaneum in time.  It was like nothing I have ever seen before.  And it was even more amazing to see those cities frozen in time by Vesuvius.

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