My four companions for the night, packed into one corner of the claustrophobia-inducing cabin in which we spent about eight hours. It was still manageable when everybody was still awake and sitting upright. Our spatial scarcity was only highlighted when everybody started reclining piecemeal and dropping off into sleep. Things didn't improve when in the middle of the night, an Italian lady of considerable proportions entered the cabin. (From left: Zhen Qiang, Gim Hui, Joanne and Evelyn. I'm the bumblebee if you haven't already realised.)
Piazza San Marco, or St Mark's Square - Venice's most recognisable square. As with every other city squares, one finds in the background the ubiquitous pigeons and the usual pigeon feeders seeking cheap thrills (more here than anywhere else, I discovered).
The Bridge of Sighs. This is the real thing, having seen replications of it in both Cambridge and Oxford.
Gondolas and more gondolas.(Which is the best way to keep in the vomit. It was quite choppy on the lagoon before we entered the canals proper.)
In a city which is eked out from the sea, the canals are the roads. Here we were intrigued to find the usual traffic impedimenta, meant here for gondolas instead of the usual vehicles. They only lacked zebra crossings and traffic lights.
In a city which is eked out from the sea, the canals are the roads. Here we were intrigued to find the usual traffic impedimenta, meant here for gondolas instead of the usual vehicles. They only lacked zebra crossings and traffic lights.There's also an amicable traffic culture there, ostensibly corresponding with the lack of automobiles and the like. As our gondola approached a blind spot, our boatman would slow the craft down and holler something across to alert others of his impending approach. They all handled their vessels with such finesse there didn't seem to be any likelihood of an accident. Now, it would also seem that all land motorists are boars. Yet in the first place, I think I'm not far off the mark when I say all the boatmen in Venice know one another!
















































