A black and red cargo barge is stacked with groceries to re-provision some of the many restaurants, hotels, bars, and grocery stores. Two latter-day Romeos lean on the cargo, staring brazenly at the camera while I take their photograph. They are muscled, and lean, and middle-age handsome, not in the least bit camera-shy.
Scrap dealers aboard the black and white “Morodi Venezia” chug along the waterfront headed away from the busy centre of Venice. Their boat is loaded with the unwanted broken bits and pieces of a modern life – rusty drums, rotting bits of metal, and a collapsed bicycle. Different boats deliver the replacement purchases: a refrigerator, more furniture, and a new red bicycle.
At seven in the morning several boats are moored at the fish market; workers toss wet, dripping boxes onto the wharves. The boxes are full of still-wriggling fish and mysterious sea creatures. A few I recognize such as calamari, eel, sardines, and octopus. Others are unidentified species, things that I couldn't imagine eating.
In contrast to the sweating workers – we watch a finely dressed bride and groom slowly pick their way through the smelly, wet, fish-market. They are headed for a small romantic bridge that seems to be in vogue for wedding photos. This is the third bride that I have seen, dress hem held high, stepping delicately in white satin-covered shoes around the leaking boxes of fresh fish. A compliant groom and photographer trail behind. Whatever the bride wants...
We enjoyed seeing the two sides of Venice; the touristy side and the working side.
Both Lawrie and I are boat-lovers. Watching the crews and the work boats ply the canals of Venice was a great way to spend our last day in this fabled city.