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Travel Discussion
Reply to "Tell me what to do for two days in Rome"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Rome is not condensed enough to walk around and see sights. They are spread out from one another. You could walk by the colleseum but won’t see what people go to see. Same with vatican, st Peters basicila, Sistine chapel, the forum. You have to go inside with ticket. I guess you could walk by Trevi fountain if you can get up to it with the hordes of tourists and Spanish steps which is meh. But you can’t walk from one site to another throughout the whole city. [/quote] I studied abroad in Rome and disagree with this unless someone in your party is disabled and out of shape. I walked all around Rome all the time and barely ever took public transport and saw everything. First, skip the vatican. That frees up a lot of time. You absolutely can just walk around Rome and see a ton. Walk by the Colisseum - you see a lot of it just from the street if you can't get tickets. You can walk by Trevi Fountain. You can walk up the stairs to overlook the Roman Forum. You can walk by the Wedding Cake and the Spanish Steps. Sit outside at cafes and eat pizza. I really like the Villa Borghese. It's worth getting tickets for, IMO. Calm and pretty and quiet and a nice respite from Rome. I did a report on the Church de San Clemente's underground and really liked it - not sure if it's still off the beaten path. Go out in Trastevere, etc. You absoultely can just spend a couple days walking around Rome and soak up the scenery and vibes without standing in lines and going into museums. And if you are fit you can walk nearly everywhere. [/quote] +1 I found the historic center to be decently condensed so as to be easy to walk from different sites (Colosseum, Palatine Hill, Forum, Campo dei Fiori, Pantheon, etc), and this was also in 90 degree temps. This would obviously depend on your own fitness level, and we didn’t have our kids with us either. Otherwise, we just cabbed occasionally (Vatican City, Trastevere), but walked the vast majority of time. [/quote]
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