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| Tiberius Bridge, Rimini |
There were two types of cake for the hotel breakfast, a home-made ricotta one and a chocolate one...we must be in Italy!
Today was mostly esplanade walking, watching everyone including the beach clubs getting ready for the start of the holiday season in May. There was painting, paving, sand shovelling and raking, building, unwrapping of play equipment - and a little bit of soaking in the sun.
We saw large groups of children playing beach volley ball, the remains of a German bunker and a statue commemorating Caesar crossing the Rubicon.
We had coffee and piadina breaks before getting into Rimini in time to collect our credentials for the Way of St Francis, which we start on Sunday. We viewed murals, had a visit to the Roman house of the surgeon and a wander over the bridge of Tiberius (AD21) before enjoying another seafood dinner, this time with dessert.
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| 2 cakes for breakfast |
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| Pantani Memorial, Cesenatico |
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| Most of today's walk was along a seaside esplanade |
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| Every now and then there is a free beach among all the private ones |
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| We passed this bust of Julius Caesar at the Rubicon River. Alea Iacta Est. |
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| Remains of a WWII German bunker |
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| Morning tea by the beach |
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| Boats, with a Ferris wheel, Bellaria Agea Marina |
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| Bellaria Agea Marina |
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| The 5 Schools Beach Volley competition started in Rimini today |
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| Walking along an esplanade towards Rimini |
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| Lunch. Piadina again. |
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View of San Marino on Monte Titano.
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| Some attractive murals on the way in to Rimini |
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| Statue of Julius Caesar, Rimini |
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| Impressive remains of Surgeon's House, Rimini |
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| Street scene, Rimini |
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| Mural, Rimini |
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| Dinner. Seafood pasta. |
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| Also dinner. Tiramisu and pannacotta. |
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| Sunset over the Adriatic, Rimini |
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| Some of today's birds |
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| More birds |
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| Day 4 - Map |
Day: 4
Distance: 22.34 km
Walking time: 4 hrs 25 mins
Elevation gain: 33 metres (still flat)
Cumulative distance: 79.28 km
I hadn’t realised that the Rubicon was in that part of Italy. (I’d imagined it was near Gaul). I guess all of Europe is a big history lesson.
ReplyDeleteToday’s birds were a bit more difficult. Eurasian collared dove, hooded crow (these are common in Ireland but more or less absent in other parts of Western Europe), Mediterranean gull (I think… different ages - the adults have black heads and red legs), little egret, common sandpiper, mallard, Egyptian goose goslings (I think, native in Africa but feral in many parts of Europe according to my book)