It is admittedly a narrow canal, and not the only narrow one in the city. But places to keep your boat are almost impossible to find, so one has to Make Do. But that doesn’t always Make Happy.
If you are close enough to read this, then this person may well be talking to you.
Let me explain about the executioner. “Boia,” depending somewhat on intonation, is one of the baddest of the bad words you can use in relation to people, things, phenomena, events, microbes, anything. To invoke the boia in any expression kicks it up numerous notches. Do not use it unless you mean it.
To draw a person’s deceased relatives into the situation is also an expert level insult. Putting them together means that this person is beside himself. Of course, you yourself can’t be offended by this because you are innocent. You have never damaged his boat when trying to squeeze past in your boat, you have never even gone down that canal. And if you did, as they say here, you were sleeping.
Gorgeous photographs assembled to tell a funny yet practical story. The inscription on the first bumper reminds me of a sign I once saw on a pickup truck. Revised and translated, it might be serviceable in your neighborhood: “Wonder if there is an afterlife? Touch my truck and find out.”
Hi Erla, it is a joy to hear your eloquent descriptions of Venice. Great illustrative photos!!
Threatening one’s dead relatives take the power of the F word to a new level.
How talented you are at translating!!
Please keep these charming stories coming.
Of course both of those two will have been the first to moor and therefore completely innocent…. What beats me is how on earth they then got to dry land. Up the drainpipe?
I have never thought of this problem before at least in the context of being a Venetian boat owner. Your photographs and commentary help clartify the matter. When it comes to boat manoeuvres and the available space in which to put them to effect, I suspect that many owners are too focussed on getting where they want as quickly as possible. The last photograph shows a ridiculously unthought-through situation which reveals selfishness or complete lack of thought,
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These photos, and your words, make all the more ‘sense’ having just visited Venice.
Gorgeous photographs assembled to tell a funny yet practical story. The inscription on the first bumper reminds me of a sign I once saw on a pickup truck. Revised and translated, it might be serviceable in your neighborhood: “Wonder if there is an afterlife? Touch my truck and find out.”
You always find the most unusual and interesting tid-bits of Venetian life.
We are most grateful to you!
Hi Erla, it is a joy to hear your eloquent descriptions of Venice. Great illustrative photos!!
Threatening one’s dead relatives take the power of the F word to a new level.
How talented you are at translating!!
Please keep these charming stories coming.
Love, Your Pal
Of course both of those two will have been the first to moor and therefore completely innocent…. What beats me is how on earth they then got to dry land. Up the drainpipe?
This is a great article, so engaging!
I have never thought of this problem before at least in the context of being a Venetian boat owner. Your photographs and commentary help clartify the matter. When it comes to boat manoeuvres and the available space in which to put them to effect, I suspect that many owners are too focussed on getting where they want as quickly as possible. The last photograph shows a ridiculously unthought-through situation which reveals selfishness or complete lack of thought,