oh my goodness. i
could not believe my eyes as i disembarked from the train in Vernazza Italy.
a little background first.
we had traveled from Venice, on the west coast of Italy, in the Adriatic
Sea, by train to Florence, a 2+ hour
trip. then we changed trains to go to La
Specia on the west coast, the Ligurian Sea side of Italy, a 2.5+ hour
trip. but, we were not finished
yet. our final destination was Vernazza,
one of the five seaside towns that make up Cinque Terre. the last train took only 17 minutes, but most
of that was in darkness as it traversed several mountains and hills as it
hugged the dramatic coast line of Northwest Italy.
a long trip, but we are looking forward to three nights in
Cinque Terre, which is noteworthy for the fact that there are no cathedrals to
visit, no museums to peruse. all there
is to do in Cinque Terre is hike, maybe swim and hang out.
the other critical ingredient to making Cinque Terre so
wonderful is its quaintness. its small
scale.
for example, Vernazza, where we are staying has only 500
year round residents. it swells to
1,500 in the summer.
with all this as background, you can imagine the shock to us
when we got off the train in Vernazza to find up to a thousand people swarming
the main street of the tiny seaside community.
what was this? where could they
have possibly come from?
they were destroying the ambiance of this town. they were in every shop. they occupied every outdoor table at all the
restaurants. they were lined up ten deep
to get their gelato. they made it almost
impossible to walk down the main street, there were so many of them.
where did they come from?
the answer is cruise ships!
how is that possible?
they anchor their cruise ship in a community that is not in Cinque
Terre, some 10-15 miles away, but then take day trips by train to the 5 towns in
Cinque Terre. they usually arrive by 11
and leave by 5 to get back to their cruise ship.
in the process they DESTROY the very essence of the
communities they are traveling to.
as Rick Steves says, cruise ships and Cinque Terre do not
mix.
I have traveled on several cruise ships, and I realize the benefits
of cruising. the ability to unpack your
suitcase just once. the lack of hassle
of having to make arrangements for transportation, lodging and meals at every
stop on your itinerary. always good food
that you don't have to worry about. a
great way to relax.
having said that, cruise ships do not contribute anything to
the locations they stop at. thousands
get off the ship, buy some souvenirs, and get back on the ship. what do they contribute to the real local economy,
to its culture, to anything?
in fact, they cause considerable environmental damage by
imposing thousands of people on small, isolated, out of the way locations. they reinforce the old 60 year old image of
the ugly American. they do not in any
way try to spend time, get to know the people, understand the culture of where
they are going to be for up to 6 hours in a day.
there has to be some balance here. why should cruise ship operators and owners
and their patrons get to decide where they can alight for six hours every day
without taking into consideration the desires of the local citizenry?
why shouldn't the local citizenry have as much say as the
cruise ships corporations in who gets to visit and how they visit their
locations?
I can assure you that the citizens of Vernazza, with the
exception of a few souvenir and eating establishment owners, do not want this
daily INVASION of cruise ship passengers.
as one local resident said to us, "they (the cruise
ships) make life for us a living hell."
for the sake of the special places in the world, that are
difficult to get to, let's agree that their wishes are just as important, in
fact, more important, than the desires of the cruise line corporations and
their passengers.
no more cruise ships in Cinque Terre!!!!!!!!
I do not know how people can travel on those disgusting huge cruse ships. I would get many calls from the cruise lines offering me free trips. I would say no. Then I received a free ticket for a cruise to the Bahamas with a check for money to use on the trip. I cannot imagine anything more horrible than traveling on one of those huge white cruise ships. Taste is gone.
ReplyDeleteNeil - Nice to get your itinerary and comments. We were in Venice in November and loved it. We stayed in a hotel on a back alley where the rising waters of the Grand Canal didn't effect activities on the ground floor. Water taxis in Venice are a great means of transportation. One other comment: when in Rome, watch out for the pickpocketers - they were very good at what they do. Don't wear packpacks and keep valuable in front pockets.
ReplyDeleteAbove all,m enjoy!