My first trip to Europe was as an 18-year-old in 1980 on a church youth trip to England to attend the International Christian Youth Conference and tour sites related to John Wesley. I had not been back to Europe until 2010 when Keith and I went to England and France. The highlight of that trip was getting engaged in the Eiffel Tower in Paris.
That trip was followed by a trip to Spain, Italy (Venice,
Verona, and Milan), and one night in Paris (flights home were better from
Paris) in 2012. Then in 2014, we attended the World Science Fiction Convention
in London and toured Ireland before the convention.
Keith really enjoys international travel and while it wasn’t
something I had done a lot of, I enjoy it, especially with someone else doing
all of the planning (Keith loves travel planning).
With my cancer and CDH1 diagnoses and double mastectomy in
2015, then evaluating next steps and finally having a total gastrectomy in
2017, our main trips during that time were to northern Michigan (where Keith is
from) and Houston (where I had my surgery). We were just getting ready to
consider traveling more when COVID hit. The last couple of years, we had done
Hawaii, an Alaskan cruise, Canada, and Mexico, now we were ready for a European
adventure. I was excited and a little nervous. I’ve handled snacks traveling in
the US and North America, but how would I do on a 9-hour plane ride and in a
foreign country where I don’t know the food and can’t read the labels?
We left home about 8:15 Wednesday morning for a 10:48 am
flight from Kansas City to Chicago. We had a few hours to kill in O’Hare before
our 4:55 pm flight to Rome. They served us supper on the plane around 6:30 and
then I tried to go to sleep, but I’m horrible at sleeping on planes. About 9:30
(Chicago time), my body told me it was time to have a snack, so I had a snack
in the middle of the time I should have been sleeping. They then served us
breakfast about 8 am Rome time (1 am Chicago time) and we landed at 9 am. We
took a taxi to our hotel, arriving about 10:30, and were pleasantly surprised
our room was ready. We resisted the temptation to take a nap and went about
exploring Rome after freshening up. Operating on basically no sleep, I went to
bed about 9:00 and slept well.
I was still tired the next day but kept myself going, made
an early night of it again, and by the third day was rested enough, pretty much
shifted my schedule to my normal get up/go to bed time.
At home, I usually have a light breakfast around 9 am, lunch
around noon, 2 or 3 snacks in the afternoon, supper around 6:00, and a snack in
the evening around 9:00. In general terms, Europeans eat later. Although we
didn’t totally adjust to their schedule, for various reasons we found ourselves
often not eating lunch until 1 or 2 and eating dinner after 7, maybe as late as
8. At this point, I’m pretty good about being able to adjust my meal schedule
by just adding a snack time. A few days into the trip, I found I was often
needing to do a snack in the morning between breakfast and lunch, the same
number of snacks as normal between lunch and supper, but then often forgoing
the evening snack as by the time it was snack time, I was going to bed. It
wasn’t really more snacks, just a shift in the time of them which made a
difference in the type of snacks I wanted as my typical evening snack is not
what I want as a morning snack.
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A few of the protein bars I purchased in Europe. |
I’ve shared before that my go-to drink is unsweet iced tea.
That’s a problem in Europe since as much as they enjoy their hot tea, they
don’t do cold tea and they don’t do ice. I did find readily available bottles
of “ice tea” but they were lemon and peach flavored and were sweetened. Many of
them were “zero sugar” but that still meant they were sweetened, which I don’t
enjoy the taste of. It’s simple to make iced tea by making hot tea and pouring
it over ice (and usually adding additional water) but that requires having ice.
The hotel in Rome had a very small ice machine. Every time I asked for ice,
they didn’t have any and it took about 20 minutes. I think they only made it on
demand, so I mostly got by without. I had no problem getting ice at the two
hotels we stayed at in Greece. I still had to ask for it, but both hotels had a
bar, which had ice, and they were both generous in giving me a bucket of ice
(although much smaller than those you would find in the US). I never felt it
was an imposition. So, while in Greece, I often made hot tea in the room,
pouring it over a cup full of ice to make iced tea, which I immensely enjoyed.
I brought a YETI cup and an empty tea bottle with me, so a few days I even made
it the night before, poured into the bottle and put in the refrigerator, and
then got ice in my cup the next day to carry it with me. Back in Italy, we were
at a small hotel/guest house again, so I didn’t even bother asking if they had
ice. In restaurants, if the still water was served cold, I made myself drink it
without ice to somewhat accept the culture. If it wasn’t cold, I would usually
ask for ice. The amounts served in restaurants varied quite a bit, but I was
usually able to get some.
I did pretty well with most meals and didn’t feel like I was
wasting too much food. Sometimes I chose to just get an appetizer or we shared
plates, but usually I got my own entrée, mostly pasta, chicken, or fish.
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| Menu for the 10-course meal. On this day, the Guineafowl was replaced with Pigeon. |
Our flight from Rome to Chicago departed at 10 am on
Thursday (two weeks after we arrived). We got an email from the airline the day
before stating that due to the new Entry/Exit System launched the day after we
arrived for non-EU nationals, they were encouraging customers to arrive 3.5
hours prior to departure. With a 45-minute taxi ride to the airport, that meant
getting up early to depart the hotel at 5:45 am. Tuesday night, I had been
extremely tired and went to bed about 8:30 and slept nearly 12 hours. The rest
did me good as getting up early on Thursday wasn’t as difficult as it would
have otherwise been. With the airport not very busy at 6:30 am, we breezed
through everything in less than an hour and had plenty of time to eat breakfast
in the airport.
Originally scheduled as a 10.5-hour flight, they had reduced
the time by 20 minutes. Then we got in nearly 20 minutes earlier than that.
Both reductions in time were appreciated, as our original schedule had us with only
about 2 hours and 10 minutes to go through immigration, customs, recheck
baggage, transfer terminals, and reenter security. We used most all of the
extra time as we arrived at the gate about 40 minutes before our boarding time
for Kansas City. Success!
I had purchased 3 bags of beef jerky in the Athens airport.
They were small bags and ended up being a little less than a normal sized
snack, but they were still fine as something different. Being so near the end
of the trip, I only ate one during the rest of the time in Italy and then ate
one on the plane from Rome to Chicago. That left me one in what I was bringing into
the US and I didn’t realize it was prohibited as a meat, so ended up
surrendering it in Chicago. That snafu may have added a little to our
transition time in Chicago, but fortunately not much.
Eating during our 22-hour day was a little challenging, but
I just kept eating snacks every couple of hours. They fed us a hot lunch on the
plane and then a beef handheld pie type thing about supper time (based on time
in Rome). There were also pretzels in the morning and ice cream mid-afternoon,
but I had plenty of snacks with me to supplement. I started with just drinking
water, but then decided to ask for two cups of ice and a hot tea to make my own
iced tea in my YETI cup on the plane.
We got into Kansas City at 5:30 pm (12:30 am Friday Rome
time). I could have gotten by with just more snacks, but my husband wanted
dinner, so we stopped at one of our favorite Kansas City BBQ restaurants on the
way home from the airport. After relaxing for a little while at home, I went to
bed about 8:30 pm. A long day! A great trip!
I’ll share more itinerary and pictures from the trip in a
second blog post.

