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In Italy with mom, let someone else take photos

How to take your mom to Italy: Slow down and let someone else take the photos

By COURTNEY BONNELL, Associated Press
Published: October 4, 2017, 6:05am
2 Photos
In this May 11, 2017 photo, Associated Press writer Courtney Bonnell, right, and her mother, Cathy Bonnell, pose in front of a view of San Gimignano, Italy. When taking a parent to Tuscany, a private tour helps get visitors to the scenic towns found off winding countryside roads.
In this May 11, 2017 photo, Associated Press writer Courtney Bonnell, right, and her mother, Cathy Bonnell, pose in front of a view of San Gimignano, Italy. When taking a parent to Tuscany, a private tour helps get visitors to the scenic towns found off winding countryside roads. (Courtesy of Courtney Bonnell via AP) Photo Gallery

FLORENCE, Italy — My mom can’t take a good picture. It’s not that she needs time to adjust the lighting or find a better angle. It doesn’t get better after the 10th try.

But her terrible shots didn’t matter on our mother-daughter trip to Italy. Neither did her aversion to stairs, her preference for taxis over public transport or the fact that wine isn’t part of her lifestyle like it is mine and most Italians.

Travel is our passion. So are history, museums and conversation over a good meal Italy the ideal destinations for a trip to celebrate her 70th year.

Here are dos and don’ts if you’re considering a trip with older relatives or anyone who doesn’t know their way around a smartphone camera.

Florence

Do: Find a quality hotel with a patient concierge to handle a barrage of questions about where to go and what to do. Enjoy the change if you’re an active traveler who charges out to discover. Grab a gelato and slow down.

Don’t: Push your non-photo-taker to go to four museums in one day. Even if you fear missing something, it’s too much to hit the Accademia for Michelangelo’s David, San Marco church and museum, the Palazzo Vecchio and the famed Uffizi Gallery in such a short span.

Do: See those landmarks, at a more leisurely pace, including lesser-visited San Marco. Poke your head into a long series of tiny monks’ rooms to glimpse religious frescoes. Note the level of detail in the veins in David’s hands. Ask your hotel to make early morning reservations to get quiet time with the statue before tour groups and artists arrive. The Palazzo Vecchio deserves more time than we had, with its foundation of Roman ruins and palatial rooms, though I did climb its tower for incredible city views.

Don’t: Try to do the Uffizi on your own. The museum is massive. A guide can direct you to the must-sees: Botticelli’s “The Birth of Venus” and Michelangelo’s only surviving painting. Make reservations for other sights, including the Duomo complex, to avoid lines. Luckily, we breezed through many churches, including the Basilica of Santa Croce, where Michelangelo, Galileo and Machiavelli are interred.

Do: Focus on food. That’s easy to do in Italy. Between restaurants, encourage parents to try the Mercato Centrale, packed with food stalls on the first floor and a food court upstairs.

Don’t: Forget to simply enjoy the city. Relax in open-air cafes with an aperol spritz between sightseeing. Most places provide snacks with alcohol, so dig in to those olives and reflect on the beauty you’ve seen. Then take a cab to the Piazza Michelangelo and bask in some of Florence’s best views.

Tuscan countryside

Do: Book a private tour through the famous northern wine region of Chianti and the southern Orcia Valley with its distinctive rolling hills filled with red poppies and medieval villages. It won’t be cheap, but it might be your parents’ favorite part of the trip. Our guide shuttled us to a family-run winery atop a hill in Chianti, the competition-ranked world’s best gelato shop in San Gimignano and tucked-away castles. The next day, we went south to explore the square of Montepulciano and taste wine and cheese in Pienza.

Don’t: Expect to get around easily. You need a car to get to those charming villages and the desire to navigate serpentine roads. We stayed in a villa outside Siena, with a terrace to play cards by the late-setting sun, but we were 20 minutes from the heart of the medieval town and its restaurants and shops.

Do: Explore Siena. It’s worth spending a day or two trudging through the hilly city center. This was a slight problem for my mom, who doesn’t do well walking uphill, but the Piazza del Campo provides a perfect pit stop after exploring the ornate Duomo, with its black-striped pillars and works by Donatello and Michelangelo. The bowl-shaped square splays out downhill, attracting picnickers, tourists and groups of teens. We spent a few hours people-watching from the cafes ringing the square.

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