Summary
Took an early ferry to Tremezzo, across the Como Arm of the lake, to Villa Carlotta and its famous gardens. ChatGPT really steered us wrong when we were planning this trip in terms of when the rhododendrons would be in bloom and we (again) missed most of them. Very disappointing! We had a really nice leisurely lunch at the lakeside terrace of a fancy-schmancy hotel then ferried back to Bellagio. “French” dinner at home – foie gras, Camembert, olives, nuts, a few crudités and a delicious chilled rosé.
Details
We wake and the room’s still 74°. The temp outside is 66° but the best the A/C can do is 74°. I open the windows and the temperature doesn’t drop much. Good thermal inertia, for better or worse.
Since we have a full kitchen we do breakfast in the room. Nice! There’s an Italian stovetop coffee maker but that’s going to require some studying before we try that bad boy. I have to steel my nerves for that.
Cleaned and fed, we head out the door, down to the ferry ticket office. There’s a dozen or more people in front of us already. Thankfully that’s just four groups (purchases) so before long we’ve bought our tickets to cross over to Tremezzo.
While we await our ferry, one of the “fast ferry boats” glides into port. With the front and rear curved blades upon which it rides, the vessel is like three times the width of the main boat hull. The blades allow the boat to hydrofoil? to really move quickly. It’s a fast trip but not a “lap of luxury” trip from what I can see. Also, since the blades are below the water when the boat is stopped or going slowly they’ve added structures reaching out from the boat so you can know how wide the boat really is, and so people can board and get off the boat. All very interesting.
Our ferry’s fine. It’s one of the old school boats that just pushes the water out of the way using brute force. We don’t go terribly fast but the lake’s narrow here so we’re across in no time. We quickly walk the 20 minute walk to Villa Carlotta and buy our tickets. At this garden, again, we’re very much on the late end of the bloom spectrum. Most bushes are well past, but now and again we see a bush that’s in full bloom or one that’s half blooming with loads of more buds waiting for the right time to open up. The rhododendrons are mostly well past but it’s fun seeing their big trunks, knowing that they’re trees, but they’re rhododendrons.
We do walk the entirety of the gardens and we feel it. Towards the end we’re really ready for lunch and so head for the exit. Karen, bless her heart, thinks we can get out without having to go through the gift shop. Ah, the innocence of youth. (No such luck).
Where we do get lucky is passing by the lakeside restaurant of a nearby hotel. “Why don’t we eat here?” Karen asks. I have no good reason not to, so we do. It’s a nice hotel (you can get a very decent room for $8,000 a night). That being the case the people watching was fabulous. Looking at the menu I see some things that list 170 and 240. I’m thinking these are the calories. No, this is the price. Per kilo for lobster and whole fish. And our lunch, while pricy, is one of the best of our trip. We just have a Caesar salad (with grilled chicken) and a Caprese salad, but they’re both exquisitely executed. Every table has an attached ice bucket holder, and an ice bucket full of ice and two bottles of water (naturale and frizzante). Very classy.
Waiting for our ferry back to Bellagio we strike up a chat with the middle-aged couple next to us. Not retired from Columbus, Ohio. They are staying in this city, on the west side of the lake from Bellagio. They tried to get on the earlier ferry but it filled up before they were aboard. And it’s like 90 minutes between ferries! We plan our coordinated moves to be sure all four of us get on this one! Whew! The breeze in our faces and the sun and the views makes the ride over enjoyable.
In our apartment we change into gym shorts and tee shirts so we can haul all of our “good clothes” to the launderette. We’d stumbled across this nearby self-serve laundry earlier and were headed there now. We know approximately where it is, but this time, when we again find it, we realize it’s attached (physically) to where we’re staying. I’m sure they also own the laundry. It feels good to have all clean clothes again. We’ll be heading home in six days so this is, for sure, our last tango at the washateria.
We laze around the rest of the afternoon. I do a bit more grocery shopping and we’re set for dinner at home. Karen prepares a delicious spread with veggie crudités, blueberries and strawberries, buffalo cheese with truffle, foie gras, crackers and of course pink wine. Yum and cost effective. We have a bunch left over and say we’d be more than happy to do this again for dinner tomorrow!
Photos