Welcome, Guest.
Please login or register.
Search Results - Recent posts as of less than a minute ago
Search Results - Recent posts as of less than a minute ago
11 Pages 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ... »
Showing 1 - 30 (301 results found)

Re: Wind mobile internet? Posted by: TheDiggers
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 7:44pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Using a dongle near Bisenti and have HSPA most of the time, was €10/mth for unlimited (actually 10GB), but now €20/mth (suspect there is a new deal for 10/mth). Only checked a few other places, but know that over near Atri way and further towards the sea their cover is not so good....

Re: Ordering from the forestale Posted by: Levissima
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 7:33pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Here is one thread but there might be more

http://www.abruzzolutely.com/forum/Blah.pl?m-1264243570/s-6/highlight-forestale/#num6

Ordering from the forestale Posted by: coinsky
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 6:30pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
I'm sure I saw a thread somewhere about how to order trees from the forestale and think it was around October that you had to order by?

Does anyone know if you can order what you like or if you tell them where you live and they decide what you plant? Also. is it possible to order wildflower seeds from them too?

Thank you!  

Re: Living on holiday Posted by: Levissima
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 5:26pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
First day of our excursions today. We took the dogs up to Campo Imperiatore.

As you can see they had a fine time and we caught a picture of a hither to unknown volcano in the Appenine mountain range.

On our way up it didn’t look too promising weather wise but it appears the clouds were hugging the eastern slopes because once up in the mountains it was beautifully sunny.

I don’t know if it is just time of year but there were lots more animals than we are used to seeing, apart from big flocks of sheep, there were mixed herds of cows and horses wandering around. The cows/bulls are enormous, so we kept well clear with the dogs.

We stopped for a coffee at the cable car station on our way back and encountered a coach load of college students with their learned professor. We were glad to see the coach had finally found a watering hole for the kids because we had seen it going one way, then the other, then back again and the coach driver looked completely lost.

We had a look at Roca Fina Dama and Rigo Piano on the way and saw lots of wood being collected from the forests. One chap had a rather mice log pile in the road, I hope he moves it before dark or it could give some unsuspecting motorist a nasty shock.

Well we are all knackered now but it certainly  beats doing the cleaning and it is a privilege to live in such a beautiful place !

Re: What's with Pescara? Posted by: Magari
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 5:06pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Quoted from Nick
We've got ID cards,Health /codice fiscale cards. Whats the point of yet another card. One sponsered by Visa?

They couldn't have made this work with the current collection of ID that we all carry?


Completely agree - main effect seems to be the crowds at the games have reduced even more.

Wind mobile internet? Posted by: Nick
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 5:04pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Anybody using it? At the moment Wind has the fastest network locally. I've been using TIM and it's fairly reliable. Slow at Edge speeds but works most of the time. My fear is Wind might be faster but less stable.

So how does Wind work for you?

Re: Storm Posted by: Lola
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 4:39pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Have you checked that you still have TWO cats?

Re: What's with Pescara? Posted by: Nick
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 4:31pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
We've got ID cards,Health /codice fiscale cards. Whats the point of yet another card. One sponsered by Visa?

They couldn't have made this work with the current collection of ID that we all carry?

Re: Storm Posted by: Prissy
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 2:36pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
We heard the lightning strike our house and there was an acrid smell of electrics burning ..... but we couldn't see any damage!!! ???  

Phew!

Bit scary though!!

Re: Storm Posted by: AllanMason
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 12:53pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Quoted from coinsky
Thanks Al, the plumber told me to switch off the boiler when it was thundering (which i do) and I also unplug the laptop. I don't have anything else electrical other than fridge/freezer but guessing I should leave them on?

Yes I can often hear thunder on the mountain when it isn't raining (can often see rain over on Campo Imperatore when it's still ok here)  I love how dramatic it is though after drizzly England!  

Your fridge/freezer should be okay. Lights and things with electric motors aren't all that sensitive and so the voltage spikes on power lines caused by nearby lightning strikes shouldn't bother them. However, all bets are off if you should be unfortunate enough to have, for example, a direct hit on a power pole near your house, on an aerial on your roof or even on your guttering. That can cause major damage and do all sorts of quirky (but not in a funny way) things once it gets inside your house.

From the pictures of your place on your blog, I don't think it's something you should worry about greatly, but common sense says it's not too wise to be out walking around when there's an electrical storm overhead.

The weather here can indeed be very dramatic and extreme compared to the sometimes boring monotony of British weather.

Al

Re: What's with Pescara? Posted by: AllanMason
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 12:43pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Quoted from Magari
A rather less genial protest was mounted by the Atalanta ultras, who invaded a political rally to first debate with and then attack the interior minister Roberto Maroni (the champion of the Tessera scheme) with smoke and fire flares, before torching a police car and engaging officers in a running street battle.


Quoted from Magari
...This kind of reaction to a few football songs may go some way to explaining why the media would be reluctant to go after the Tessera as powerfully as it should.

Or just maybe the media is "reluctant to go after the Tessera" because the behaviour of a significant number of football fans means that the Tessera makes a lot of sense?
Quoted from Magari
... persecuting every person who wishes to watch football in Italy will not curb the violence of the minority intent on carrying it out.

Oh, yes, requiring football fans to show an ID card before entry to a stadium is exactly equivalent to what happend to the Christains in ancient Rome, to the Jews under Hitler and to the Bahá'ís in Iran.

Diddums.

Al

A thing for forum members to talk about Posted by: Sancho the Fat
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 12:02pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
What do you think ? Have you got any amusing anecdotes to contribute ?  

Quoted Text
Italian coffee culture: a guide

If you don't want to be taken for a tourist in Italy, you should drink coffee as and when the locals do.


By Lee Marshall
Published: 11:30AM BST 30 Sep 2009


I once met an Italian who didn't drink coffee. He made light of the fact, but you could see that he was tired of having to explain his disability every time some new acquaintance uttered the standard Italian greeting: "Prendiamo un caffè?" ("Fancy a coffee?"). His breezy but faintly passive-aggressive manner concealed, I suspect, deep pools of self-doubt and underground lakes of wounded masculine pride. Vegetarians develop the same nonchalant yet haunted look when travelling in places like Mongolia, where meat comes with a side-dish of meat. But this Italian guy wasn't a visitor, he was local. He was the Mongolian vegetarian.

Coffee is so much a part of Italian culture that the idea of not drinking it is as foreign as the idea of having to explain its rituals. These rituals are set in stone and not always easy for outsiders to understand.

In fact, as in any self-respecting cult, they are made deliberately hard to comprehend, so that the initiated can recognise each other over the bar counter without the need for a curious handshake (which would only lead to stubborn cappuccino stains).

Some might object that the Italian coffee cult is now a worldwide church with branches in London, Dubai and Bora Bora. But although the Arabica coffee blend is often perfect, the cups just the right size and shape, the machines as Made in Italy as they come, Italian coffee bars outside Italy almost always adapt to the host culture – just like the vast majority of Chinese restaurants outside China. If you take your cue from your local high street espresso purveyor, you risk straying from the True Path on arrival in Italy.

Here, then, for those who fancy going native in true Lorenzo of Arabica style, are the Ten Commandments of Il Culto del Caffè.

1. Thou shalt only drink cappuccino, caffé latte, latte macchiato or any milky form of coffee in the morning, and never after a meal. Italians cringe at the thought of all that hot milk hitting a full stomach. An American friend of mine who has lived in Rome for many years continues, knowingly, to break this rule. But she has learnt, at least, to apologise to the barman.

2. Thou shalt not muck around with coffee. Requesting a mint frappuccino in Italy is like asking for a single malt whisky and lemonade with a swizzle stick in a Glasgow pub. There are but one or two regional exceptions to this rule that have met with the blessing of the general coffee synod. In Naples, thou mayst order un caffè alla nocciola – a frothy espresso with hazelnut cream. In Milan thou can impress the locals by asking for un marocchino, a sort of upside-down cappuccino, served in a small glass which is first sprinkled with cocoa powder, then hit with a blob of frothed milk, then spiked with a shot of espresso.

3. Which reminds me, thou shalt not use the word espresso. This a technical term in Italian, not an everyday one. As espresso is the default setting and single the default dose, a single espresso is simply known as un caffè.

4. Thou can order un caffè doppio (a double espresso) if thou likest, but be aware that this is not an Italian habit. Italians do drink a lot of coffee, but they do so in small, steady doses.

5. Thou shalt head confidently for the bar, call out thine order even if the barista has his back to you, and pay afterwards at the till.

6. If it's an airport or station bar or a tourist place where the barista screams "ticket" at thee, thou shalt, if thou can bear the ignominy, pay before thou consumest.

7. Thou shalt not sit down unless thou hast a very good reason. Coffee is a pleasurable drug, but a drug nevertheless, and should be downed in one, standing. Would thou sit down at a pavement table to take thy daily Viagra?

8. Thou shouldst expect thy coffee to arrive at a temperature at which it can be downed immediately as per the previous commandment. If thou preferest burning thy lips and tongue or blowing the froth off thy cappuccino in a vain attempt to cool it down thou shouldst ask for un caffè bollente.

9. Thou shall be allowed the following variations, and these only, from the Holy Trinity of caffè, cappuccino and caffé latte: caffè macchiato or latte macchiato – an espresso with a dash of milk or a hot milk with a dash of coffee (remember, mornings only); caffè corretto: the Italian builder's early morning pick-me-up, an espresso "corrected" with a slug of brandy or grappa; and caffè freddo or cappuccino freddo (iced espresso or cappuccino) – but beware, this usually comes pre-sugared. Thou mayst also ask for un caffè lungo or un caffè ristretto if thou desirest more or less water in thine espresso.

10. Anything else you may have heard is heresy.



http://www.telegraph.co.uk/tra.....culture-a-guide.html


Re: What's with Pescara? Posted by: Sancho the Fat
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 11:21am
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Quoted from Magari
The sad and disturbing postscript to this game is that L’Aquila (along with Cremonese, Pergocrema and Pavia the same weekend) were subsequently fined €5,000 (£4,200) because their supporters sung a few songs that were “offensive to the interior minister”.


I'm sure it would have been far worse in the UK.


Re: pescara parking Posted by: Mirabello
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 9:34am
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Hi, A little late for the reply but, I have a friend that has space in his lock up yard 5 minutes away from the airport, he collects us from the airport with our car and visa versa on return, He mentioned to me that he has more space available. If any one needs parking facilities send me a PM and I will pass on his email details. I have to say it is very handy and we don't have to worry about leaving the car on a side street for months on end.
M

Re: What's with Pescara? Posted by: Magari
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 9:26am
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Interesting article in 'When Saturday Comes' about the new fan ID cards:-

'Italian fan ID card gets off to a bad start

This the debut season of Italian football's Tessera del Tifoso, or fans’ ID card scheme. There have been protests about the card ever since it was first mooted and plenty more have been made in the last few weeks. During the season opener at the Stadio Olimpico, a large group of Roma’s ultras remained outside the stadium, leaving an entire block of the usually chock-full Curva Sud glaringly empty. At the Serie B game between Empoli and Pescara I saw a number of the home side’s ultras choosing not to enter the ground, but instead setting up a Subbuteo table outside.

A rather less genial protest was mounted by the Atalanta ultras, who invaded a political rally to first debate with and then attack the interior minister Roberto Maroni (the champion of the Tessera scheme) with smoke and fire flares, before torching a police car and engaging officers in a running street battle.

Clearly the actions of the Bergamese are not in any way helpful – the more incidents of this nature there are, the more the pro-Tessera factions will say that the scheme is necessary. The counter-argument to this, of course, is that persecuting every person who wishes to watch football in Italy will not curb the violence of the minority intent on carrying it out.

Complete lockouts of away fans are becoming more and more common. At the above-mentioned Empoli v Pescara game the away end was closed. When I asked a steward why, she replied that they didn’t get on too well and there might have been trouble if Pescara tifosi had been allowed to come.

Tessera-related lockouts were also prevalent over the same weekend, often for reasons of poor organisation as much as anything else. I had also wanted to go to the Lega Pro Prima Divisione (third tier) game between Viareggio and Siracusa, but didn’t travel after hearing that nobody without a Tessera would be allowed in (including all away fans and any non-residents of Tuscany) due to the new access security systems not being ready yet. The attendance of 841 included only 313 non-season ticket holders.

Further inland the same day, there were no away fans present at what should have been an exciting early-season showpiece between Fiorentina and Napoli. The reason was that the Neopolitans’ Tessere had not been produced in time. To many this would seem an absolute outrage worthy of extensive media coverage. However the only protests after the game involved calls for the introduction of video technology after Napoli’s lucky break with a gol fantasma when the referee and his assistant pointed to the centre-spot despite Edison Cavani’s header clearly not crossing the line. Either nobody is surprised by such administrative incompetence, or the media are scared to take on the Tessera.

Instead of going to Florence I saw the Lega Pro Seconda Divisione (fourth tier) game between AC Prato and L’Aquila. Even at such a level, I had to buy my ticket more than two hours in advance, showing my passport to get all my particulars noted. The police presence for a match watched by 434 would not have been out of place at a feisty higher-division game in England; at least three sets of security gates had to be passed in the street before even arriving at the stadium.

This was compounded by there being only one entrance for everyone. Inside the only segregation between L’Aquila’s small but passionate travelling support and the home fans was a straggled line of a few bored-looking stewards. Even that level of security was clearly unnecessary as both sets of fans were quite happily mingling at the shared catering and toilet facilities.

The sad and disturbing postscript to this game is that L’Aquila (along with Cremonese, Pergocrema and Pavia the same weekend) were subsequently fined €5,000 (£4,200) because their supporters sung a few songs that were “offensive to the interior minister”.

This kind of reaction to a few football songs may go some way to explaining why the media would be reluctant to go after the Tessera as powerfully as it should. But then maybe it also says a little about the changing attitudes of the audience for football in Italy. With Sky as omnipresent here as they are in England, debates over whether a ball crossed a line in Florence may seem to be more important than going along to support your team in person. Joe Haining'

Re: September Events Posted by: contadini inglesi
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 8:42am
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
This Saturday and Sunday 11th &12th September there is the yearly Cheese Festa at Gessopalena (CH).
See http://www.buongustoabruzzo.it/ for more info (in italian). For those of you who enjoy the wide variety of cheeses from Abruzzo, this is a must. FREE TASTINGS everywhere. There is usually some salami too and wine (but yet to see any free tasting). Also some local beer maker sells his beer too - see http://www.birrificiomaiella.com/

Re: Storm Posted by: Grimsby Ranger
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 7:54am
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Quoted from coinsky

Yes I can often hear thunder on the mountain when it isn't raining (can often see rain over on Campo Imperatore when it's still ok here)  I love how dramatic it is though after drizzly England!  


A few years ago now we'd had rumblings every day from Campo Imperatore way on for nearly a week, each afternoon very dark clouds just slightly popped over the top of Monte Bertona (the hill we're sat on coinsky) though retreated back. I went out with a family member who was visiting, we were above Rigopiano when the clouds from Campo spilled over dramatically and we were caught in a horrendous hailstone storm. The hailstones were the size of golf balls and within minutes the road was many inches thick in ice and slush (this being mid July and very hot!). In very difficult driving conditions we slowly made our way down, when we got to Farindola the place was getting hammered, just past Farindola we came out of the storm. We arrived back at Montebello to be met by the (still sunbathing) women who just looked at us gone out with our storm story and damaged hire car! It certainly can be dramatic and unpredictable at times in the mountains.

"Should world landmarks be sponsored?" Posted by: Levissima
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 7:29am
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)

The Italian government is inviting private companies to sponsor the Colosseum in Rome to help fund repairs. Is this the best way to preserve world monuments?

Companies will be asked to offer at least $25 million for restoration in return for being allowed to use the Colosseum for advertising.
However, some critics fear the building could be covered in advertising hoardings in a clash between culture and commercialism.
Do you agree with the Italian government's plans? Are you based in Italy? Could commerce be a corrupting force for heritage? What other world landmarks would you like to see sponsored?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/haveyoursay/2010/09/should_world_landmarks_be_spon.html

Re: Storm Posted by: coinsky
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 7:11am
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Thanks Al, the plumber told me to switch off the boiler when it was thundering (which i do) and I also unplug the laptop. I don't have anything else electrical other than fridge/freezer but guessing I should leave them on?



Yes I can often hear thunder on the mountain when it isn't raining (can often see rain over on Campo Imperatore when it's still ok here)  I love how dramatic it is though after drizzly England!  

Re: September Events Posted by: Levissima
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 7:05am
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Festeggiamente in onore di B.V.M.Delle Grazie

Villa Bozza(TE)

11-12-13 Settembre

Festeggiamente in onore di Santa Croce

Appignano(TE)

12-13-14-settembre

I haven't been to the one in Villa Bozza but the one in Appignano involves carrying the statue through the streets and back to the church. It is an opportunity to ask for blessings and after the religious stuff, it is another opportunity to eat. drink and be merry.

Re: Storm Posted by: AllanMason
Date Posted: September 7, 2010, 6:15am
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Quoted from coinsky
...it seems to thunder almost every time it rains here!!...

Since you're living quite close to the mountains (as we are), it's likely you'll often hear quite loud and persistent thunder even if you don't get rain. There have been periods when there have been thunderstorms up in the mountains every afternoon for a couple of weeks running. My experience is that this is normally worst in August-September, but this year has been relatively quiet. I assume this has something to do with temperatures being much lower than they can be at this time of year.

My recollection is that we did have a period of daily thunderstorms last Spring, though.

It's possible my memories are faulty on this, though. Like the rattle of gunfire from the hills all around during hunting season, the incessant roaring clank of catterpillar tractors grinding slowly up and down the hills during ploughing season and the constant barking of dogs from all around, thunder is something I've just got used to during my four years here.

While thunderstorms are much more frequent here than they are in Britain, you'll find that it's definitely not the case that it always thunders when it rains. Cloudbursts can be quite spectacular, but the heaviest and most prolonged rain we've seen wasn't associated with a thunderstorm.

I'm not sure what electronic equipment you have in your new house (my impression is not much), but you should be aware that lightning strikes at some distance from you can create 'spikes' on your electrical supply and phone lines that can fry electronics in an instant. If you can hear thunder, it's always wisest to unplug computers, TVs and audio equipment.

Al

Re: Storm Posted by: Levissima
Date Posted: September 6, 2010, 10:17pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Its not going to be doing a lot of good to either the grapes or the olives.

Re: Storm Posted by: coinsky
Date Posted: September 6, 2010, 8:28pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
We had torrential rain and a very vivid lightening storm too! Bit more tonight, it seems to thunder almost every time it rains here!!

My last dog was scared of even a distant rumble and would have had a nervous breakdown in Italy but thankfully my dogs now don't seem to care. Phew!

Re: skiing where do i start? Posted by: Grimsby Ranger
Date Posted: September 6, 2010, 7:16pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Hi Postmac

You'll find Roccaraso, Ovindoli etc. fine to learn at. The resorts are small so you won't get the 'total' holiday experience like you would in a larger Alpine resort but if it's just to learn to ski and get a taste of it then they're OK. Beats an indoor man-made fridge with a bit of a slope that most in the UK have on their doorstep  . I suppose one thing that would help with Malci's recommendations is that you'd be there for a week and skiing every day. It'd be hard trying to pick it up if you just had a 'go' locally or went very occasionally. Malci does make very good points and he's right but you'll also see people skiing in Abruzzo who have never ventured to the Alps and are proficient and enjoying their skiing. It's not easy to start and like any sport takes time and practice, it's also not cheap.

As Tartuffa says I'd beg and borrow the ski jackets and salopettes for starters and if possible have someone with experience of one of the resorts go with you. If there's anyone you know who can recommend a decent instructor then that'd help as well, you'll need lessons, an English speaking instructor would be needed if your Italian wasn't up to it. Passo Lanciano sounds like the place where a lot of beginners go but I haven't been so can't comment. You can all have a lesson together no problem, in fact one of the great benefits of skiing that I've found is that you can all do it as a family with adults and kids having just as much fun. I guess if the children are very young then that will be more difficult.

It's not for everyone but if you do like it you can quickly become hooked. I love it so I'm biased but would echo the comments about it being worth the faff and expense. It might be worth dropping linsead oil a PM when the season starts and popping to see them if you don't know anyone? Don't expect to learn it all in 3 hours though  

Re: Storm Posted by: phyllis
Date Posted: September 6, 2010, 7:04pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
And again tonight, although the thunder isn't quite so loud and the lightening is less severe, but the rain ...!!!!!!
where is it all coming from - and after a beautiful sunny day on the beach as well.

Re: What do forum members think ? Posted by: Dog
Date Posted: September 6, 2010, 6:28pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
There is a rumour about that they are short of pilots and many existing ones applying to other airlines for jobs.

  Re: SYMPATHY CARDS Posted by: Victor Meldew
Date Posted: September 6, 2010, 6:19pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Many thanks Sancho V.M

Re: Selling Up Posted by: acp010701
Date Posted: September 6, 2010, 4:28pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
Hi Pilch, have sent you a pm re items we would like.
Best of luck when you move back to the UK, just sorry not to have met you! You have certainly helped us when we were moving out, couldn't have done without the advice in fact!
All the best xx
Anna and Ken

Re: Storm Posted by: Happychick
Date Posted: September 6, 2010, 4:05pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
At the Val di Sangro all we got was a little rain. We could see the lightning and hear thunder, but that was all. It really is a matter of where you are here. Nothing spectatular at all for us.

Re: skiing where do i start? Posted by: sheilamarsco
Date Posted: September 6, 2010, 3:06pm
Word-Hits
1 (100.00%)
has anyone tried nordic skiing on campo imperatore. it looks like a great place and i think i'd like to try but have no experience.

11 Pages 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ... »
Showing 1 - 30 (301 results found)