Like
the most recent post about joining sports teams in Italy, there is actually a
part two. My friend ended up not wanting
to play with my team because she was too busy.
That is true. And the cost of
joining the team might have been too much.
But I suspect my friend who came to the volleyball practice that one February
evening also didn’t want to play with us because of the bad omen she received
RIGHT before we arrived.
The
gyms that are rented out for training are almost always school gyms. Elementary or Middle school gyms seem to be
the typical choices. The way Rome is situated, apartment buildings shoot
sky-high into the air. Schools, on the
other hand, are usually a fraction of the height of apartment buildings and are
basically tucked in between or behind, fit wherever possible. So the first time I had practice, all I found
was a black gate with the number of the address and a long driveway. Nothing on the front told me it was a
school. That also could have been my
ignorance of the language, but honestly it didn’t seem well signed.
Practices
started at 9:15pm and lasted for an hour and a half. In February, at 9:00pm, that means it is
dark, dark, dark. And where there are
residential areas with schools next to them, there are plenty of people. And their pets.
As we
walked up the middle of the street between all those parked, compact cars, I
stop in my tracks because my friend’s inner-sailor spouted off a series of
curses too extreme for VASGO VIEWERS. The culprit: dog doo.
"Please clean up after me..." |
Indeed,
no one would enjoy having to clean that off their shoes before playing in them
for the next hour and a half. Stepping
in that would ruin anyone’s night.
Yet,
in Rome, it’s awfully common. I also
hear it’s quite typical in Venice also. One
of my biggest pet peeves is people not cleaning up after their animals. Living in Rome, I’ve had to walk down many a
street dancing what I call the “Dog Doo Shuffle”. Side step here, two steps
forward. Side step there, hop, hop, hop. And repeat, more times than I like.
Some
residential neighborhoods have proven themselves to be incompetent at best at
cleaning up their animal’s waste and the Roman police recognize that. One such street, in a fantastic district for
foodies called Testaccio, was the detail for police officers walking around in
street clothes and handing out tickets to those who didn’t pick up the
stuff. When I heard that was happening, I
was the happiest Testaccio resident.
For a
few weeks, it was really successful. Then the police had other things to do. Alas, the stuff was back, but so were my
crazy, good dance moves.
Side
step here.
Two
steps forward.
Side
step there.
Hop,
hop, hop.
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