Before we even got to Oktoberfest last year, our Munich friends asked if we would want to meet them in Italy for Easter next year.
Daycares in Norway close for the entire week prior to Easter, which means we have to entertain the kids at home or entertain them somewhere fabulous. Not a difficult decision if you ask me.
But the four of us and our combined 4 kids was not enough. We have many other European dwelling friends, exclusively former classmates of Martin at the University of Edinburgh circa 2010, so we cast a wide net recruiting others to join us.
Nine adults got in the fun! Plus 8 kids.
We stayed at an agriturismo, which is a brilliant concept I'd never heard of prior to this trip. It's a working farm that also offers accommodation. A farm stay, if you will.
We had a large house with heaps of bedrooms and even more bathrooms, for 4 adults and 4 kids. All the others (three couples who had between one and three kids, plus one single) had smaller accommodations just footsteps away. Our house had a big outdoor terrace and multiuple indoor living areas so everyone could hang out and come and go as they please. The perfect set up!
Also perfect was the restaurant only a few hundred meters away:
Please don't alert child services to my saying this, but for years I have wanted to "Madeline McCann my kids at a resort in Europe", which is precisely what we did. What I mean by that is leave the kids sleeping in your room while the adults go to the common area to eat, drink and live!
If you know anything about that case you know I am an absolute psychopath for even thinking that, but I know this is a very common practice in Europe and that it works drama-free 99.999% of the time. Thankfully we were not one of the 00.0001%.
This being a working farm there were lots of animals on display: goats, pigs, chickens, geese and rabbits.
There were reports of a donkey who's allowed to roam free, but it was so free that we never did lay eyes on it.
This place is so kid friendly! Multiple areas of playground equipment.
- alcohol
- the desire to entertain and tire out these kids
In an effort to achieve #2 and to get a smidgen of actual travel out of this trip, we took our massive dog and pony show on a road trip for two of the days of our week-long trip.
San Gimigano
I have not one photograph to show you of this place, as it was downpouring too hard to take out my phone and snap a picture. Enjoy this stock photo from Google instead:
Actually that's not true, I did get one photo when we were undercover protected from the rain, soaking our freezing asses off while enjoying what is allegedly the best gelato in the world.
We all had pistachio, my fave, as it was too rainy and hectic to try a wider variety of flavors. If the weather would have been at all tolerable this town would have been dreamy and adorable. All I can really attest to are wet cobble stones and the inside of one restaurant.
Blessedly, of the two days we road tripped Florence had the better weather. I'd definitely rather get a clearer view of Florence (Firenze, as they say in Italian, which I previously hadn't heard) than the tiny San Gimigano. The sun even made an appearance!
I wasn't even expecting a trip into Florence, so did zero research about the place and what to see. Thankfully our travel companions were well informed, so I just followed along and snapped pictures merrily since I missed out on all the photo ops in San Gimigano.
After the Duomo di Firenze cathedral (above) it seems like the biggest sight to see is the Ponte Vecchio bridge...which I do not have a picture of because we were standing on said bridge. However Martin got one of the best pictures ever of the girls while we were on it.
I declared that we should all come back in 15 years and relive this trip without bambinos (at that point the youngest - not mine - will be 16.5). No Madeline McCann'ing needed for a group of empty nesters!
I had it two different times at restaurants with deer meat and pork sausage. Of course it was cooked al dente, and you could really feel that with the thickness of the noodle.
With such a gaggle of kids the adults did a lot of eating at home and our single friend Max was an absolute rock star and cooked for us while the rest of us put the kids down.
Of course we had gallons upon gallons of wine, beer, Prosecco, Aperol and my Italian favorite, limoncello!