Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://theromanguy.com/italy-travel-blog/italy-travel-blog/rome/how-to-see-rome-in-a-day/#Rome-in-a-Day-with-Castel-Sant-Angelo
After reviewing these one-day itineraries for Rome (including some tours), I can't tell if they are brilliant or miserable.
Anyone BTDT?
I strongly suggest you do not use the Roman guy. We purchased tickets months ahead with them and they changed them 1 week prior to tour after saying they were sold out. How could they seek out when we had reservation. I later learned they do this often. They overbook to get you to purchase and then give you a lower level tour.
I told the lady where we gathered when we arrived what happened and she assured me that we would get our original tour. That did not happen and out tour guide told me to speak to the lady after the tour only to find she left as tours had ended for the day.
There is no one to speak to via telephone and you will only receive a random text if you’re lucky.
Do not book with them.
Anonymous wrote:https://theromanguy.com/italy-travel-blog/italy-travel-blog/rome/how-to-see-rome-in-a-day/#Rome-in-a-Day-with-Castel-Sant-Angelo
After reviewing these one-day itineraries for Rome (including some tours), I can't tell if they are brilliant or miserable.
Anyone BTDT?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Still no answer on time of year for this trip. Very relevant. If you are going in peak summer, for instance, places will be very crowded (can't just walk up to Colosseum, as others have said), and walking long distances will be absolutely exhausting in the heat.
Understood RE: the heat...which is why we'd prefer to take a low-key approach to the two days: the goal will be to just see some things and have fun. I don't want anyone to be bored or feel like they are being dragged from one scheduled tour to the next.
RE: walking to the Colosseum: I mean walk 15 mins from our hotel and admire it from the outside...wherever the best view might be. I realize there will be tons of people. Perhaps we head there super early? You know how you can admire the Washington Monument without actually touching it or going up to the top? Like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I would say the advance tours would be important for places like the Colosseum and the Vatican. However, below are places/sites we went last summer where we didn’t have to plan ahead, or were able to purchase tickets on arrival:
Pantheon
Capitoline Museum
Trevi Fountain
Spanish Steps
Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore
Circo Massimo
Villa Borghese-we didn’t visit the museum, but the park is beautiful to walk through.
Various Piazzas, Campo dei Fiori, Trastevere
We booked a bike tour of the Roman outskirts the day prior to the tour. That way we got to also visit the aqueducts, Appian Way, Catacombs, etc.
Pantheon requires tickets now. This started sometime after the summer last year. Trevi fountain is a nightmare, Spanish steps is nothing.
Yes that’s right. I’d heard that would be happening. But it looks like you can still purchase at the door, or online shortly ahead of time. It might require a little bit of forethought, but it’s still seems much easier than trying to get into the Vatican or Colosseum at the door.
I agree that Spanish Steps aren’t as interesting as other Roman sites. Trevi fountain is beautiful to see if you can visit at night. Either way, they are both options that don’t require any advance planning, so OP can decide if they’re important or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I would say the advance tours would be important for places like the Colosseum and the Vatican. However, below are places/sites we went last summer where we didn’t have to plan ahead, or were able to purchase tickets on arrival:
Pantheon
Capitoline Museum
Trevi Fountain
Spanish Steps
Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore
Circo Massimo
Villa Borghese-we didn’t visit the museum, but the park is beautiful to walk through.
Various Piazzas, Campo dei Fiori, Trastevere
We booked a bike tour of the Roman outskirts the day prior to the tour. That way we got to also visit the aqueducts, Appian Way, Catacombs, etc.
Pantheon requires tickets now. This started sometime after the summer last year. Trevi fountain is a nightmare, Spanish steps is nothing.
Yes that’s right. I’d heard that would be happening. But it looks like you can still purchase at the door, or online shortly ahead of time. It might require a little bit of forethought, but it’s still seems much easier than trying to get into the Vatican or Colosseum at the door.
I agree that Spanish Steps aren’t as interesting as other Roman sites. Trevi fountain is beautiful to see if you can visit at night. Either way, they are both options that don’t require any advance planning, so OP can decide if they’re important or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I would say the advance tours would be important for places like the Colosseum and the Vatican. However, below are places/sites we went last summer where we didn’t have to plan ahead, or were able to purchase tickets on arrival:
Pantheon
Capitoline Museum
Trevi Fountain
Spanish Steps
Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore
Circo Massimo
Villa Borghese-we didn’t visit the museum, but the park is beautiful to walk through.
Various Piazzas, Campo dei Fiori, Trastevere
We booked a bike tour of the Roman outskirts the day prior to the tour. That way we got to also visit the aqueducts, Appian Way, Catacombs, etc.
Pantheon requires tickets now. This started sometime after the summer last year. Trevi fountain is a nightmare, Spanish steps is nothing.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I would say the advance tours would be important for places like the Colosseum and the Vatican. However, below are places/sites we went last summer where we didn’t have to plan ahead, or were able to purchase tickets on arrival:
Pantheon
Capitoline Museum
Trevi Fountain
Spanish Steps
Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore
Circo Massimo
Villa Borghese-we didn’t visit the museum, but the park is beautiful to walk through.
Various Piazzas, Campo dei Fiori, Trastevere
We booked a bike tour of the Roman outskirts the day prior to the tour. That way we got to also visit the aqueducts, Appian Way, Catacombs, etc.