My Camino train travel(part 2)

in #travel12 days ago

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The trip started with a fairly quiet period. From the time I waited in Innsbruck for the transfer to Bolzano, I barely spoke a few words for more than a week. Specifically, apart from the greetings and the necessary accommodation communication, I didn't talk to anyone. I don't speak Italian, but it would have been possible to converse in German. I liked the "silence", the nothingness. Of course, I heard people talking around me, but I didn't understand Italian. I was "just myself".
South Tyrol is a wonderful place. Mixing of Italian and Austrian culture. In addition to sightseeing, I spent my days here hiking. I plan a route for each day, I tried to increase the distance every day and it went pretty well. I chose accommodations that gave me a Bolzano card, so I didn't have to pay in museums and on the county's means of transport. This also came in handy for sightseeing, trips to Merano and Ritten. Everywhere things were written in two languages, Italian and German. A lot of people rode bicycles, but there were no electric scooters. Everyone was walking calmly with their backpacks on their backs, and there were a noticeable number of people in hiking boots on the street. You could choose between longer and shorter well-marked hiking trails. Nice place. The landscape, the mountains, the forests are beautiful. I would love to go back here again.