- Our Partners -


Camogli, one of Liguria’s most enchanting and romantic coastal towns, is a typical seaside resort with tall houses painted in bright eye-dazzling colours. This romantic and magnificent natural setting has long enchanted visitors from all over the world seeking relaxation, culture, sea, and good food. Initially dedicated to maritime and commercial activities, the town has evolved over time to include some distinctive craft activities such as spinning, weaving, and fabric dyeing.
Trompe l’oeil art
The typical painted facades, in trompe l'oeil , depict architectural elements such as cornices, balconies, flowers, and closed shutters and are unique to this area and Liguria. In Camogli there are numerous churches worth visiting, like the Minor Basilica of Santa Maria Assunta, which overlooks the marina, built in the 12th century and with a double Ionic façade.

Visiting churches and historic sites
Then Camogli has the Sanctuary of Nostra Signora del Boschetto, which was built on the site where legend has it, the Madonna appeared in 1500. The characteristic millennial church, dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and dating back to the 13th century, is also worth seeing, as is the parish church of San Rocco in the hamlet of San Rocco di Camogli, which has a panoramic view of the Golfo Paradiso. The small Dragonara Catle, built in medieval times to protect the village and the entire region, is a find example of civil architecture and the distinctive Punta Chiappa Battery, built between the 1930s and 1940s and used during WWII, is well worth a visit.
A martime museum
For lovers of the sea and history, we recommend a visit to Camogli's Maritime Museum with its many sea paintings and curious ships in bottles. Among the latter is a bottle that depicts the houses of Camogli, as well as sailing ships and the port. There is also a section for models and ships as well as part of the German torpedo that sank the English steamship Washington during World War I.
Trails and caves for hiking lovers
Trekking enthusiasts can take one of the many scenic trails that connect Camogli to the hamlet of Ruta and on to Punta Chiappa, a typical seaside village named after a pointed rock jutting out into the sea. The magnificent 12th century Romanesque church of San Nicola di Capodimonte is on one of these trails. Divers should not miss the many caves, in particular the Prawns Cave at Punta Chiappa, which gets its name from the presence of many very small prawns that completely cover the walls. Small lobsters, crabs, and corals can also be found inside.
Movida and an underwater statue
Around the port and along Camogli’s promenade there are many small clubs, restaurants, and shops where you can spend the afternoons and evenings. It is worth visiting San Fruttuoso Bay which is accessible up a steep path or by boat. The little village is built around the monumental complex of the abbey of San Fruttuoso di Capodimonte. Divers must not miss the chance to see the famous Christ of the Abyss, a work by Guido Galletti that was placed on the seabed in San Fruttuoso Bay in 1954
Exploring the province of Ferrara by bike and boat, following the Rings of the Po river. This new tourist product is along itineraries that blend navigation with pedals in the beautiful natural scenery of the Po Delta Park to discover two Delizie Estensi ancient residences, both of which are UNESCO World Heritage sites.
River tourism and sustainable mobility
Visit Ferrara has developed four ring routes for bicycle excursions with scheduled departures from Ferrara. These are a way to experience the Renaissance arts, beautiful naturalistic areas, and the great foods and wines of the area in the name of river tourism and sustainable mobility.
Cycling the Renaissance Ring
Up to 30 October 2022 you can cycle the Renaissance Ring (28 August and 25 September) up to the ancient d’Este residences of Belriguardo and Verginese, then board the Volano in the afternoon for Sabbioncello San Vittore and return to Ferrara by boat. The itinerary along the Ring of the Po di Volano, on 3 July and 23 October, consists of a two-wheeled itinerary on the Destra Po cycle path, with a visit to the San Venanzio Charterhouse near Copparo, a stop in Copparo to visit its beautiful castle, and at Villa Mensa, before embarking at Sabbioncello San Vittore and sailing back to Ferrara.
Visiting the ancient d’Este residences
The Ring of the Great River departs from Este on 4 September and 30 October, continuing along the Burana cycle path to Bondeno, where you can visit the Rocca di Stellata and then take the boat back to Ferrara on the Po river in the afternoon. The Ring of Delights (9 October) is a journey through d’Este residences, beginning with a bike ride to Villa Mensa and continuing to the Delizia di Copparo and the Pieve di San Venanzio, as well as navigation from Ro Ferrarese to Ferrara.
Half-day tours are also available
Daily excursions, including guided tours, bike assistance, and boat navigation on the Po Rings, can be booked directly on www.visitferrara.eu, with the option of selecting tour packages that include the bike and boat experience and overnight accommodation. On some of these dates a half-day tour will be available. These will include river navigation from the Darsena di Ferrara, arrival in Baura, a guided tour of the drain pump by the Reclamation Consortium, and the return to Ferrara by bike.
Florence’s Baroque Bardini Gardens and Villa on the Arno river are on four hectares of parkland between the left bank of the Arno river, the Monte Montecuccoli hill and Florence’s Medieval walls city. In the 18th-century Giulio Mozzi, who was an enthusiast gardner, enhanced the property with a fountain with multi-material mosaic backdrops. Then in the mid-19th century the Baroque Garden was enlarged with the acquisition of the neighbouring Anglo-Chinese Garden of Villa Manadora, which had been created by Luigi Le Blanc in the early 19th century.
A five-year restoration project
Unfortunately in 1913 the antiquarian Stefano Bardini, who acquired the complex, built an avenue to get into the villa by car, destroying the gardens, and reuniting the two existing buildings, Then in 2000, the Cassa di Risparmio di Firenze Foundation began the restoration of the complex, taking almost five years and giving it a whole new lease of life.
Fruit trees, wisteria, roses and camellias
In the park which has traditional Tuscan fruit trees, you can walk through a wisteria tunnel, and admire many varieties of hydrangeas. Bourbon roses and irises flank the baroque staircase, and in the English wood, which was part of the Anglo-Chinese Garden, there is now a meadow of azaleas, ferns, viburnums, camellias and a collection of citrus trees. 
Views of Florence’s monuments
From Via de 'Bardi along the route you can see many of the monuments of Florence, and once you reach the villa, walking along the Costa San Giorgio in a few minutes you come to the Boboli Gardens from which you can descend towards the city. The Bardini complex can be visited throughout the year:
The Villa is open on Tuesdays to Sundays 10.00 - 19.00
It is closed every Monday and on 1st January and 25th December
The Garden is open every day between:
8.15 - 16.30 (in the months of November, December, January, February)
8.15 - 17.30 (in the month of March)
8.15 - 18.30 (in the months of April, May, September, October)
8.15 - 19.30 (in the months of June, July, August)
It is closed on the first and last Monday of each month and on 1st January and 25th December
Palermo’s Cruise Terminal, designed by architect Salvatore Caronia Roberti and built on the skeleton of an ancient maritime station from 1950, has been inaugurated. It is the result of a €40 million refurbishment that has kept its external appearance largely unchanged while radically intervening on the reconfiguration of the interior spaces in terms of consistency, functions, architecture, and connections.
In 2017 the new administration, under Pasqualino Monti, inherited a neglected maritime station: a dilapidated structure on a quay that had been seized in 2015 by the Palermo Public Prosecutor for stability issues, as well as there being a dispute with the company that was carrying out the work. Overcoming a thousand difficulties, not least those caused by the pandemic, the redevelopment plan went ahead and by the end of 2018 the construction site had been reopened, the quay had been made safe, and the new terminal completely rebuilt.
A more efficient and people-friendly terminal
The project is part of a larger waterfront redesign, part of a desirable and increasingly modern and mature relationship between the city and its port, capable of making the cruise terminal not only more efficient but also more livable and enjoyable for citizens.
Microclimatic control and energy saving
The use of steel and glass gives it a modern appearance, while the space dedicated to greenery is now an essential feature. Environmental microclimatic control and highly sustainable energy savings were given special consideration. There is a bar on the top floor (and another on the ground floor), and a large restaurant on the roof. Aside from the quay the entire surrounding area has been completely redesigned, with specific locations assigned to the various services for disembarking passengers.
Passing through ancient villages
The Via Occidentale western way starts in Piantedo, one of the first villages to welcome tourists as they enter the Valtellina. From there you travel through ancient villages that tell the story of this valley, natural landscapes of incredible beauty - most notably the terraced vineyards - and, last but not least, get to enjoy typical dishes that celebrate the region's culinary traditions. This authentic path perfectly combines nature and culture, and along the way the official logo signs point pilgrims in the right direction.
A five-stage trek
The Via Occidentale should ideally be completed in five stages. From the Sanctuary of Santa Maria delle Grazie and Suffragio in Valpozzo di Piantedo, the starting point, to the Beata Vergine Assunta of Berbenno di Valtellina, there are numerous Marian devotional sites worth visiting in the province of Sondrio.
A pilgrim’s passport
The Marian Way of the Alps also has a passport, which each pilgrim can download from the official website with six stamps, one for each sanctuary of arrival, certifying the completion of the trail. When the pilgrims arrive at their final destination, they will be given the Testimonium, or pilgrimage certification, by the Rector of the Sanctuary of the Madonna di Tirano. This itinerary has been available from June1 and, with the exception of the coldest winter months, will be available all year.
“We are proud of this project”
“We are very proud of this important project,” says Roberto Galli, the president of Valtellina Turismo. "We are sure that the Marian Way of the Alps will satisfy visitors who choose Valtellina as a place to regenerate and discover our authentic nature as well as our sporting and outdoor activities."
For more information:
https://camminomarianodellealpi.it/
https://www.valtellina.it/cammino-mariano-delle-alpi
This year’s Macerata Opera Festival will feature three open-air operas and concerts in July and August in the great open-air arena of the Sferisterio. A novelty will be the symphonic concerts with leading performers like Mehta, Chung and Lisiecki conducting the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino and the Accademia di Santa Cecilia orchestras.
Twenty-two evenings of open-air music
The 2022 programme is the first under the new artistic direction of Paolo Pinamonti, who comes to the Sferisterio with an important curriculum, having been artistic director of the Teatro La Fenice in Venice and the Teatro di San Carlo in Naples among others. The new artistic team has combined opera with a series of high-level symphonic concerts, and is also giving space to the cinema and its relationship with music. In total, from 19 July to 21 August, there will be twenty-two evenings at the Sferisterio and two at the Lauro Rossi Theatre.
Mixing opera and the silver screen
"The world of cinema - underlines Pinamonti - will unite the Macerata Opera Festival 2022 playbill on several levels.” In fact the new production of Tosca (22, 24, 29 and 31 July) by director Valentina Carrasco will be set in a 1950s film set. Carmen Giannattasio, Antonio Poli and Claudio Sgura will sing the leading roles, with Donato Renzetti on the podium.
I Pagliacci and The Barber of Seville
The 2015 production of Leoncavallo's Pagliacci by Alessandro Talevi will be presented again on 5, 7 and 11 August, preceded by the screening of one of Charlie Chaplin's masterpieces, The Circus which will be accompanied by a live performance of the original soundtrack restored by Timothy Brock who will also conduct Pagliacci, with Rebeka Lokar, Fabio Sartori and George Petean in the leading roles. The third opera will be Il Barbiere di Siviglia (12, 14, 19 and 21 August), which returns to the Sferisterio after an absence of almost twenty years, in a new staging that sets the opera on a television, rather than a film, set. The cast includes Alessandro Luongo, Serena Malfi, Ruzil Gatin, Andrea Concetti and Roberto De Candia, with young emerging talent Alessandro Bonato conducting. 
Great orchestras, famous conductors and Toquinho
The lineup of great orchestras and famous conductors will open the festival on 19 July with the orchestra and chorus of the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino and Zubin Mehta in Beethoven's Symphony No. 9. This will be followed on 21 July by the orchestra of the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia conducted by Myung-Whun Chung performing Beethoven's Symphony No. 6 Pastorale and Symphony No. 7. And then Beethoven’s five piano concertos performed by the Canadian Jan Lisiecki, a young piano star, who will also conduct the orchestra on 4 and 6 August. The Sferisterio Arena will also be the setting for an evening dedicated to Brazilian music with the great singer and guitarist Toquinho performing on 13 August.
Italy is gearing up for a bumper summer, with its art cities and seaside resorts close to sold out, and with a new variable - value - fast gaining traction. Because more and more travellers are looking for destinations that offer the best value, basing their choice on how much they will spend, rather than being too picky about what they can see or do.
Rome recently placed second, just behind Prague, for the best budget-friendly summer getaways in Europe. But the DiscoverCars.com survey put the Eternal City top of the pile for the number of budget hotels: 797 against Athens with 94, and Marbella with only 11. Rome also soared higher than the other top ten cities surveyed when it came to affordable restaurants at 2,951, against Prague’s 1,201 and Vienna’s 689.
For popular attractions it is no surprise that Rome was first past the post at 5,920, with Istanbul second at 4,294 and Prague third at 3,993. And with entrance to the Eternal City’s biggest attraction, The Pantheon, costing €0 (like Ljubliana and Marbella’s old towns) compared to Vienna’s Schönbrunn Palace which costs a whacking €30,50 (imagine being a family of four!) well, the numbers speak for themselves.
See you all in Rome this summer for great value holidays!
Pamela McCourt Francescone
Executive Editor
Of course this is nothing new. Bureaucracy has been slowing down the evolution of the Italian system for decades. But perhaps now it’s time to get cracking on a radical change.
The National Recovery and Resilience Plan is calling for faster decision-making, more streamlined procedures and more certain results. On the other hand, during the disastrous Covid crisis some administrations did emerge as small examples of efficiency. It’s time for that exception to become the rule.
Giuseppe Aloe
Editor in Chief
Hidden rooftop terraces with panoramic views
Orient Express Venice is scheduled to open in the first quarter of 2024 with 45 rooms and suites, all with views of the city's gardens and canals. The main floor of the building will also house a bar in the former ballroom and a restaurant, at the helm of which there will be an internationally renowned chef. There is also a series of hidden terraces on the rooftops with panoramic views over Venice.
Just ten minutes from the Santa Lucia railway station
Located only ten minutes from Venice's Santa Lucia railway station and near the shopping district of Cannareggio, Palazzo Donà Giovannelli was built in 1400 by architect Filippo Calendario, known for the city's famous Doge's Palace. The former residence of the Duke of Urbino, a patron of the arts, it has been renovated twice, most notably in 1800 by architect Gian Battista Meduna. Once a picture gallery, it later became the property of the Donà and Giovannelli families. When the hotel opens, passengers on the future Orient Express La Dolce Vita train will be able to disembark directly at the station and either walk or take a boat to the hotel.
Planning courses of action
Make Iat will also allow the profiles of tourists visiting Tuscany to be traced in real time, and will analyse arrivals flows and even interests by single areas, providing precious data and a significant advantage. Make Iat will be particularly useful for agencies like the Tuscany Region which, together with the Toscana Promozione Turistica agency and the various municipalities, can then plan courses of action based on the actual needs identified.
“Tourism will be increasingly experiential”
Tuscany’s councillor for tourism Leonardo Marras explains:
“This speed of detection and detail was previously impossible, and it will help us plan targeted promotion policies. Tourism will be different after the pandemic and we must be ready. Tourism will be increasingly experiential with places not just to visit but to experience, and with visitors getting involved in Tuscany which is what the trade calls crowd storytelling.”
Training courses for operators
Make Iat is already available to tourist information offices scattered throughout Tuscany, and training courses for operators, municipal employees and administrators have started, organized by Anci Toscana, the Tuscany Region, Toscana Promotion of Tourism and the Fondazione Sistema Toscana.

Castellabate is a charming hilltop town located in southern …
299
Castellabate is a charming hilltop town located in southern …
299
