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annoyances ____________ ____________ |
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If
you're only holidaying in Rome for a couple of weeks, then hopefully you
won't have much need for this section of Romebuddy, but if you're here
for longer or are trying to build a home here, or get stuff repaired,
this is the page where we discuss how to get things in fixed in Rome,
or Italy in general. Do it Yourself:You
may be an accomplished DIY'er at home, but here in Italy the problem you're
gonna find is the lack of an extensive technical vocabulary in order to
find what you want to buy. For example, what's the word for 'nail' in
Italian? How do you say 'chainsaw'? In
addition, some things are just completely different in the way Italians
make stuff. In England for instance, we're used to choosing from a huge
colour range of household paints. English paint doesn't cost much because
Brits regularly repaint their house interiors in different colour schemes.
- Here in Italy though, many DIY stores only stock a paint range of about
ten colours - Most Italians only paint their walls or woodwork white,
beige or brown, and when they do it, they do it to last so the paint is
top quality and therefore appears unnecessarily expensive to us Brits.
Stuff like this can be frustrating if you were thinking of going for a
soft semi-satin eggshell cornflower blue emulsion Laura Ashley look in
your new Trastevere loft. The
really good news is that IKEA has now arrived in Italy - They've had a
store open in Rome for a couple of years now. The Italians have found
IKEA absolutely mind-blowing; being able to wander freely among thousands
of household decor items, touching and comparing products has absolutely
knocked them for six, the store is absolutely packed with customers from
dawn till dusk. For do-it-yourself, we can recommend 'Bricofer' (pronounced Bree-coh-fair), as perhaps the closest thing you'll find to a British or American-style DIY store. They have branches all over the suburbs - Check your phone book. Keep watching this space for a list of tourist-friendly, bilingual repair centres and DIY stores and suppliers. If your camera breaks while you're on holiday here, and you need it repairing, we advise you not to entrust a local Italian repairer with it. It will probably not be fixed in time before you have to fly home again (in spite of promises to the contrary), and the language barrier means that the repair guy will probably fix what wasn't broke and ignore what was, or he may also use the language misunderstanding as an excuse to do more maintenance work than necessary and overcharge you, figuring you for a rich American tourist sucker who can afford it anyway. I've lived here five years, and here are my conclusions on this subject: 1. Never give an Italian tradesman the benefit of the doubt. Does that sound racist? No, not at all. I'm just a consumer trying to get by in a country that has no concept of customer service, and I'm warning you, fellow countryman, so that you don't have to fall into the same traps of poor, tardy or just plain dishonest service that I have so often suffered during my time in Italy. Something like Jesus, I've been burned already, so that you don't have to be. Heed Romebuddy's advice, and you will live to fight another day. Ignore this advice at your peril. So it's best to wait and have a repair agent back at home fix your camera, and try to get by with a disposable until then. For this reason, on vacation here, try to get all your serious photography of key sights done in the first day or two, leaving the remainder of your trip free for casual street-wandering without having the pressure of needing to get the shots you should have got before your camera broke, or was stolen. Make sense? If living here though, for camera repairs, try asking Fotoforniture Guido Sabatini on Via Germanico, 168/a, 00192 Roma, probably the biggest, professional-supplying photography equipment dealers in Rome. If they can't do it, they ought to know someone who will.
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& Adam Nixon ©1997 & ©2002 except where otherwise stated.
Email info@romebuddy.com
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