The Vatican Museum has so many fantastic things to see - ancient Egyptian statues, ancient Greek and Roman statues, 100m hallways lined with maps and tapestries, then onto the rooms covered in frescoes by Raphael, then room after room of modern art, then the Sistine Chapel. It was a bit overwhelming when we first walked in - so much to see, and so many people - but we took our time and listened to the audioguide and of course Michael read all about it in his book. It truly is a magnificent work of art.
We left the Vatican museum and jumped on a 81 bus heading towards the Pantheon -
one more 'must see' before we leave Rome. We were hungry by now, and the restaurant just opposite the Pantheon was offering a lunch menu of tomato brushetta, pizza or pasta, wine or soft drink and coffee for 12 euros - an offer too good to refuse. So we sat down and had a leisurely lunch watching the passing parade in the piazza and looking at the Pantheon (the oldest surviving church in Rome - built in AD 120!). We were fascinated by the huge granite columns - which the Romans had bought over from an even older Egyptian temple. Although the marble was badly weathered these columns were in great shape and were obviously still holding the whole thing up after 2000 years - incredible!
Michael was ready to call it a day - and a holiday, but I wanted to wander around a little more - which I did and bought myself a dress! Then back to the apartment to meet up with Mary and Dick for one last dinner (at the same place near our apartment). We had several toasts to success of the holiday - it had all gone better than any of us had hoped - and we were all sad to be finishing up and heading home. Then it was back to the apartment to pack for the last time.
We had a taxi booked for 5.00am, which arrived about 10 past - just as we were starting to get worried it wouldn't arrive. We got to the airport, and flew to London - Gatwick Airport and had a rather stressful time making the journey to Heathrow - having to collect our luggage, get through immigration, buy a bus ticket and find one bus to Heathrow, then another to Terminal 4, then check in, go through security, immigration and get to the gate - with only 10 minutes to spare - too tight timing for our liking!!! We had 3 hours transit time between flights, but we ended up literally running down platforms and just catching buses. Be warned anyone making that transit - give yourself at least 3 hours (the bus trip between airports is 60 minutes on its own). The rest of the trip was a fairly unpleasant but uneventful long haul - the movies were the redeeming feature - 'Beautiful Kate' was probably both our favourite.
Both Nicole and David were at the airport to greet us, and it was great to see them again. They had coped well in our absence - but seemed happy enough to see us again. So here we are, settling back into Melbourne life. Michael has already flown interstate for work, and I'm back at the hospital tomorrow.
Any last thoughts?
Was it worth it? Yes!
Would you recommend it? Yes!
Do you wish you'd done anything differently? Not really. I can't imagine what I'd leave out. Everything was great.
Would you do it again? Not the same trip, not straight away. Give me a few days and I'll probably change that answer to "Yes please. I'm ready to go again!"



