Before that, we’d gone through the Aqua Claudia aquaduct, though. THAT was really cool.
Yeah, in an aquaduct, no big deal.
Our field trips at that time were mostly within the city of
This was cool because it meant we got to go somewhere special that regular tourists do not have access. This will be a theme. The Forum of Augustus, like most of the fora, is today cut up by the “Road of the Imperial Fora” which Moussolini set up back in the day. It was awesome nonetheless to be in the place I’d read so much about. We were also let into Caesar’s Forum before that.
Just hanging out in Caesar's forum
We also visited Augustus’ home on the
After that (still on the 30th of October) we went to the
so after giving my presentation (which was fine, although at the end of the day, so I don’t blame Vinny for falling asleep) and seeing Emily G’s, we cruised around once and went home. The museum has a full reconstruction of Livia’s wall-painted dining room, though. Sweet. And a mummy child in the basement. And some original bronzes from
At the feet of the master
The next week, we went to see the Ara Pacis and Mausoleum of Augustus in the rain. The Ara was closed and the Mausoleum is kind of decrepit by now. But it was a short day.
We went to
This is how we have class in Ostia
But, there was an underground tunnel in the baths, and we discovered bats inside it. That was really sweet. We followed the sounds of bats until we found a whole bunch of them, the disturbed them with camera flashes and flashlight beams until they swooped around us. One narrowly missed my head. I could only think “I wish I had Achilles with me.” Achilles was the name of my MagLite this summer.
Bats! Bats bats bats! Bats bats bats! Bats bats baaaats...
We did see a lot of cool stuff, and
TUBULAE!!!
The teachers were feeling it too, by the end. We got to the “
Friday immediately following this (that week we had two all-day field trips, of which Ostia was the second, Thursday.. we always have them on Tuesday) I hadn’t had enough field-tripping for one week, so I went along on the art history field trip to some churches. We went to St. John Lateran and Santa Maria Maggiore, and also St. Nicholas in Chains, where they have the Moses carved by Michelangelo.
Moses.
All of the churches were amazing and impressive and just awe-inspiring. I love looking at the marblework for some reason, I just think it’s so pretty. I had lunch with Captain Cook outside of the Lateran (which is the head of the churches in
And, since that obviously wasn’t enough yet, I joined up for the optional Saturday morning field trip to the Horologium of Augustus. The gnomon of this sundial is a big obelisk that now stands in a public square (my dad and I found it at night while they were here), but the actual ground part which charts the passing shadow is all underground. So we went into the basement of some shop that had some Greek writing down under the floor under a few inches of water. Yeeeaah. It was really, really awesome.
This is the line between Virgo and Taurus
Total hours spent on field trips that week: 32. Yeah, buddy; add that to the hours spent in class and doing homework and don’t ask me how I got sick shortly thereafter. G-Unit had a cold. There are only a couple of ways for me to get sick: short myself on sleep, spend copious amounts of time with someone who is sick, or stress out and try to do way too much stuff in a small amount of time. I did all three.
1 comment:
I'm sorry, but you listed THREE ways you could get sick. Three is NOT "a couple". God. And people think you're such a smarty-pants! I'm onto your game, missy!
.
.
.
(I love you! ::runs::)
^_^
Post a Comment