There are so many ways to visit Rome: by bus, by segway or walking: John Moloskie proposes to run through the city early in the morning (a 6 km jogging) and Claudio Forlini organizes bike tours in the gardens of the Villa Borghese or in other great parks.
At the Circus Maximus (the great chariot-racing stadium) Charlotte Dufour proposes to stay among these historical monuments and to practice yoga.
There is also the night fitness organized by Gianluca (Street Workout): young Roman and tourists with their headphones listen to zumba and makes aerobics crossing the famous squares of the town.
One very interesting place is the flea market of Porta Portese: every Sunday about 1.000 junk dealers offer antiques: Maurizio Cavalieri is the first junk dealer who arrives at the flea market (at midnight ): Chiara Ugolini , the blogger (Markets of Rome) enjoys to speak with him because he is the memory of this flea market.
There a lot of scooters and motorbikes in Rome: Mihai Boiu manages an Ape 50 pedicab por his deliveries: Andrea Fruscella is collecting Piaggio pedicabs and Manuel Renzi has transformed his pedicab into a food truck: this Sinday there is a meeting of food trucks in the village and te priests are blessing these pedicap.
Near Rome there is the little town of Nemi: there Laura Borgognoni and her children are looking for wild strawberries in the forests and she produce marmalade.
In Zagarolo the speciality is the Tordo Matto , a piece of horse meat seasoned with coriander and grilled on a barbecue.
The visitors may also go to Torvaianica, at the seaside : there Giovanni Conte is fishing the wedge clams (in Italian telline) that he sells in an auction and keep some of these clams for eating them with his family.
Then we listen to the story of the cats: there are about 400.000 cats in Rome: the rich Roman families had cats as domestic animals: Silvia Zerenghi manages a shelter for abandoned cats; the writer Lili Garonne explains that in the past the cats were not used for hunting mice, they were only pets. Besides the archaeologist Anna de Santis explains that they have found bones of cats in the baths of Diocletian.
I enjoyed the encounters of Jérôme with Capucine Camplong-Odin, with the father Dominique-Marie David, with Sandro Bernardini (the horseback riding), with Paolo Zilli and the Roman gladiators, with Stéphanie Ovide (villa Medici), with Giuseppina Gallo (the mother-in-law of Capucine) and the family, with Raniero Mancinelli, with Roberto Ribera, with Federico Constantini (a great moment in Cinecitta) and with Patrizia Daffinà at the Bau beach: nice encounters with kind Italian men and women.