Although we arrived in Berzo last Friday, it's taken a while to get to this next post because of internet access issues at the house that took four days to resolve. Needless to say, Telecom Italia is not on my list of favorite utilities. It seems that the automatic payment from our checking account was interrupted in January, so there were outstanding bills to pay. The issue arose when I was first told there were only 2 bills to pay. To do that, we had to go to the tobacco shop where payment could be directly transmitted to Telecom. After waiting the 24 hour period, still no internet. After recontacting them, I was told there were 2 more to pay, so I went back to the tobacco shop to make the second payment. After another 24 hours, still no internet. A third call revealed another 2 unpaid bills and at that point the kind lady at the tobacco shop and I became fast friends. Finally after 4 days, at least 10 phone calls, and 3 trips to the tobacco shop in Trescore (a neighboring community), internet service was restored. It would have been a lot easier and far more efficient to have known that there were 6 bills to pay in the beginning, but I guess that's not how Telecom Italia operates. Every person I spoke with had a different reason for the blocked service as well as a different timeline for restoring it. I never thought AT&T would look so good!
While all the internet woes were going on, Berzo got hit by a fierce thunderstorm on Sunday night that resulted in hours of rain and heavy hail that lasted for over an hour. All of the gardens were destroyed, the grape vines pummelled, and several homes were flooded - thankfully, not ours. The small street in front of the house became a river of mud, hail, and water, and my neighbors underground garage was stacked with over a meter of hail. They spent the next day wheeling out wheelbarrows of hail and their backyard looked like a mogul run of ice and snow. Elsewhere in town, hillsides slid to cover roads and a retaining wall near a creek not too far my cousin Gigi's house collapsed, almost taking with it several cars. The Cherio River which sits in the valley below Berzo overbanked, flooding a number of businesses and homes. Luckily, no one in town was hurt and as my neighbor Mario said "These things only happen to the living". We learned later that Berzo was one of five towns over which the storm was centered, and many of the old-timers were saying that they had never seen anything like this. Below is a picture of the river that ran in front of the house.
We're on our way to Sicily, where the weather is sunny and warm. At home, thunderstorms are projected to continue through the end of the month, and it' already been raining daily since the end of May. Looking forward to some summer weather!
Oh My Elena! What a start to your vacation- one man-made disaster (internet connection and notoriously incompetent utility companies) and one by Mother Nature! At some point even the non-believers will have to admit climate change is upon us! I'm glad your house is OK and have Save travels! All is well at Casa Brookside :-)
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