Susan the Human

Last updated: 12/25/2004; 8:11:13 PM

Susan the Human home
Pesky the Rat
Janet the Snake
Pesky's Store

Who is The Human?
Susan the Human is agent and manager to Pesky the Rat and Janet the Snake. Desperate for an outlet to express her more human-oriented views, she created a web page. Unfortunately, Janet the Snake ate it. So she created another one. This one is snake-proofed.

Originally from the redwood forests of central and Northern California, Susan the Human now lives with various lethal and non-lethal beasts in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Send this page to a friend!
E-mail the author, Susan McNerney : Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.

Photoblogs.org

Road Trip Diary 2004

Go to Part 10: The End of the Grand Tour
Go to Part 9:
Petrified Forest, AZ; Zuni, NM; El Morro & El Malpais Nat'l Parks, NM. 
Go to Part 8: Navajoland & Canyon de Chelly, AZ
Go to Part 7: Silverton-Durango Railroad, CO
Go to Part 6: Mesa Verde, CO
Go to Part 5: San Juan Skyway, CO
Go to Part 4: Pagosa Springs, CO

Go to Part 3: Taos, NM
Go to Part 2: Santa Fe and Las Vegas, NM
Go to Part 1: Albuquerque and Carlsbad, NM

Recent Posts
 12/25/04
 12/16/04
 12/15/04
 12/8/04
 12/6/04
 12/3/04
 12/1/04
 11/30/04
 11/28/04
 11/17/04
 11/16/04
 11/14/04
 11/10/04
 11/9/04
 11/8/04
 11/6/04
 11/3/04
 11/1/04
 10/31/04
 10/27/04
 10/21/04
 9/8/04
 9/7/04
 9/1/04
 8/31/04
 8/30/04
 8/29/04
 8/25/04
 8/24/04
 8/23/04
 8/14/04

Top Posts

bullet_blue (0k image) Susan the Human vs The Condo People
bullet_blue (0k image) Susan the Human searches for a home, gets pointed to death
bullet_blue (0k image) Susan the Human talks to men about the California Recall
Why should I vote for...2004

Favorite non-Salon Blogs
Orcinus
Dailykos.com

Salon Bloggers
Salon Blogs are a group of frequently updated web sites that form a community on the web. Topics include politics, humor, art, science, and the occasional unhealthy obsession.

Recently Updated Blogs
Top Salon Blogs

Life on Earth
David Harris' Science News

Fried Green Al Queadas
Barbaric Yawp
Playing with Your Food
Standing Room Only
The Agora
Baby makes 7
Robert's Virtual Soapbox
The Marprelate Tracts
What happens when you tell a lie?
Emphasis Added
Readme.blog
Miss Feva
Maxine
Radio Free Blogistan
Monster Limo
How to Save the World
Angry Bald Man
Paulapalooza
Homeless Leftists
Rich Pure&Simple
Dr Omed's Tent Show Revival
Rayne Today
Daihatsu Graceland
Perils of Caffeine in the Evening
Synaesthesia
Drug War Rant
Fiona
Hail Dubyus!

Hamster for President
Lord Bonkers' Diary
Carol's Collection

FictionBlogs
BlogDogs
Slat Rat Chronicles

Worms of Endearment




December 2004
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  
Nov   Jan




 
Wednesday, December 08, 2004
A Week in Rome: The Vatican Museum

Previous installments:
Introduction
The Colosseum
Palatine Hill
The Forum
The Pantheon

Everything you've seen on this blog so far concering Rome we saw on our first day, although some pictures were taken on subsequent visits. Rome is very accessable and the sights are concentrated in a walkable area. On day 2, we decided to pay a visit to the Pope, or at least his house. 

We hopped on the Metro and jetted over to Stazione Musei Vaticani, which drops you off just a couple of blocks and a flight of steps from the entrance to the museum.  The entrance takes you through a section of the Roman walls, which still surround much of the city.

Inside, one word is in order: opulence. These Popes spent, er, an awful lot of money on the palaces and religious areas of the Vatican. But one can only gripe about the hypocrisy so long before being forced to snap a few pictures.  How about...golden ceilings! (yes, that's real gold leaf, and no, you shouldn't have asked)

Enormous murals!

Every crevice frescoed or gold-leafed until it positively hurts!

More! We want more! All in the name of Lord Jeeeeezus!

Well, maybe Jesus didn't authorize that particular room...ahem. Let's move on.

If there is one room of which Jesus might have approved, it's this one, the Sistene Chapel:

Now, I have a confession to make. Photography is strictly forbidden in the Sistene Chapel. However, I have two defenses: 1. I did not use flash; and 2. I am Unitarian and therefore am already going to hell.

The inner courtyard and statuary halls are worth a look, if for nothing else the sheer variety. Everybody, it seems, has gifted the Vatican with a statue over the years. Some of them were collected by the church as well. Lord only knows how this fellow snuck in:

At the top of the inner square, there is a giant artichoke.

At the other end of the square, is a giant ball bearing.

Using only these two symbols, intrepid treasure hunters can discover the key to the Great Mystery, which will take them to a secret vault under Nicolas Cage's house containing the treasures of Enron. You have to figure out the riddle yourself; these guys aren't talking:

In a statuary courtyard, frightened tourists huddle to protect themselves from Giant Naked Slabs of Marble.

Not everyone was naked, however. This fellow seemed quite cozy by comparison.

After an exensive period of being lost, during which we circuited the entire museum main floors TWICE, unable to turn back due to the force of the crowd, we finally left the Vatican Museum down a swirly ramp, sort of like being flushed down God's toilet.

Next installment: high at St. Peter's.

6:38:43 AM  


 

 

 

© Copyright 2004 Susan McNerney . Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.
Last update: 12/25/2004; 8:11:13 PM . Privacy Policy

Powered by