The dread starts on Thursday afternoons. At some point J and look at each other and
one of us says “I don’t want to go to tomorrow.” Yet go we must and this week in a cruel twist
of fate we had to make the journey twice.
Since J and I were thrown together by the same workplace we
have shared many a mile on the roads of the Veneto. While there have been fun
adventures in the mountains or to one of the endless picture postcards towns that
Italy seems to specialise in for the most part our road trips have been the
painful Friday ritual. Our trips
to the mineral powder company have become the sort of adventure we would sell
our first born or avoid.
Not that the trip is entirely bad, over the months and many
an hour in the car together we’ve got to know each other pretty well. Previous evening antics and coming weekend
adventures are planned and discussed.
Past experiences and trials of living in Italy are dissected and all
with the passing background of the always the same faceless middle of nowhere
Veneto.
In driving terms after 5 years in Italy J has gone
native. Traffic lights are often more a
guide to road behaviour than law and any kind of bad driving from other road
users is greeted with a stream of invective that is quite unbritish. Not just
swearing but the sort of gestures that leave no driver looking in the rear view
mirror in any doubt about what J thinks of them. Recently I have noticed the creeping
Italianisation in myself – even as a passenger I now react to stupid driving as
if I was moral affront.
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| Coffee or something stronger stop |
Very early into our time we discovered that if we were going
to get through this coffee was going to be an essential. We quickly came upon our regular coffee stop
– Vega Benzina, Scorze – (Vega Benzina is a service station.) At first the
proprietors of this out in the middle of nowhere servo didn’t quite know what
to make of two British women coming in for coffee at 9.30 every Friday but now
we’re regulars. As we sip our cappuccinos (and more than once
plan exactly what we are going to teach for the next three hours) it’s not
unusual to find ourselves surrounded by Italians knocking back a prosecco or
something a little stronger. Am I the
only one to find it bizarre to find a fully stocked bar are a service station
out in the middle of nowhere? Am I the
only one who finds it bizarre to see people enjoying a glass of wine or
something stronger at 9.30 in the morning?
No wonder this place has such a problem with drink driving.
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| Our destination - oh the horror. |
Why do we hate the journey so much? Well in part it’s the fact that for 3 hours
teaching we use an additional hour going there and coming back. The main thing is that our destination has to
be the most depressing and desolate place in the Veneto. I call it the armpit of the Veneto (it’s not
even interesting enough to be the groin.)
The company we teach in has an atmosphere that’s two parts Wernham hogg
and one part button moon and those three
hours are the longest hours of my week.
The drive back is a relief and we both have a set of markers
that mean we’re getting nearer to home – there’s the jogger who come hail or
high water is always on the road, the oversize modal horse outside the riding
shop, the sign that reads “sexy shop” (I can never seem to make Italians
understand why that’s so funny) and finally the porta della pace which means
we’re back and we can forget about Wernham Hogg for a week.


That is one depressing looking building. Very 'Slough' indeed. (sorry to any Sloughians readnig this)
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