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Not all disabilities are obvious. Health problems like autism, speech and sight impairments, diabetes and chronic pain can all be invisible. Many people with difficulties like these wear a green lanyard with a sunflower symbol which is the globally recognized sign for invisible disabilities and a simple and elegant way to make travel easier for them.
So when you see a bright yellow sunflower, remember it means the person traveling alone may need your support and understanding. Like giving them a helping hand or more time when they are shopping, drinking a cup of coffee, or getting on or off a plane or a bus.
While wheelchair-users do not fall into the above category, they face problems getting wheelchairs on and off planes and other vehicles. Now a company called Revolve Air has developed a wheelchair that folds away so neatly it can be placed in a plane’s overhead bin, taking up no more space than a backpack. With the first models expected to launch next year for around $2,500, they will be a godsend for travellers with mobility issues.
Pamela McCourt Francescone
Executive Editor
Tesla charging stations and a helicopter pad
The new Aethos Monterosa has 30 duplex suites with floor-to-ceiling windows and terraces. The complex also includes a bar, two restaurants, a large spa, an indoor climbing wall, an underground car park with Tesla charging stations and a helicopter landing pad. The Aethos Monterosa will be open for the winter season from 1 December.
“The Italian hotel property market… remains highly fragmented”
The new acquisition follows those of Aethos Saragano in Umbria and Aethos Milano, as well as four other projects in Southern Europe.
"The downward real estate valuations are now colliding with a strong recovery in luxury hospitality - underlines Benjamin Habbel, managing partner and co-founder of Limestone Capital -. We continue to see great untapped potential in the Italian hotel property market, which remains highly fragmented.”
Limestone develops high-yield lifestyle hotels
The acquisition is part of Limestone's strategy, engaged in medium-sized operations that are halfway between large global investment companies and local entrepreneurs. The enhancement of undervalued hotel properties, combined with a pragmatic approach to operations, allows Limestone to reposition assets in high-yield lifestyle hotels.
A Spa and a Fitness Centre
Rosewood Milanol will also have a bar and restaurant with a courtyard and garden, as well as the Asaya Spa, which will have three treatment rooms, an indoor pool, and a Fitness Centre. The project will be managed by Ko Studio, which plans to create an eclectic, colourful, and timeless environment with classic details and modern touches.
“Milan is a perfect Rosewood urban location”
"We are excited about this opening as it confirms our growth strategy in Europe, particularly in Italy," says Rosewood’s CEO Sonia Cheng. “Our company is expanding into strategic locations. Milan, with its own culture and dynamism, meets all the requirements of a Rosewood urban location and complements our collection of luxury hotels and resorts in the international fashion capitals where we are present, including our New York properties."
Ca’ di Dio, Venice
The new five-star Ca’ di Dio hotel, overlooking the iconic lagoon, is just a short distance from Piazza San Marco and one of Venice’s most exciting recent additions. Set in a building with a fascinating history, the rooms, with polished stone floors, exposed beams, upholstered paneling and Murano-glass lamps, are a contemporary take on a traditional Venetian home, and the two Altana Suites have stairs up to private roof terraces. Next to Venice’s Contemporary Art District the setting for the iconic Biennale, access to the hotel is by direct docking for arrivals in style! The Alchemia Bar and Essentia Restaurant are in the two internal courtyards and in the indoor-outdoor Vero Restaurant looking onto the lagoon, the cuisine is inspired by typical Venetian dishes, revisited with a modern touch. Ca’ di Dio offers rooms from €460 per night on a B&B basis, based on two people sharing.
Hotel Vannucci, Città della Pieve
Restored and renovated since its completion in 1907, the 30-room boutique hotel overlooks the beautiful medieval town of Città della Pieve. Etruscans and Romans settled here along with Renaissance artist Pietro Vannucci, better known as Il Perugino, whose most famous paintings are hung throughout the town. Just 45 minutes from Perugia, Hotel Vannucci is equidistant from Rome and Florence and an easy drive from some of the region’s gems. In the Zafferano Restaurant, called for the saffron which is harvested by hand from the crocus blossoms, Umbria’s famous truffles, porcini mushrooms, handmade pastas, and cured meats feature on the menu. Hotel Vannucci offers rooms from €126 per night, based on two adults sharing on a B&B basis. 
Grand Hotel Excelsior Vittoria, Sorrento
This 188-year-old hotel is just an hour’s drive from Naples and sits on the clifftops of the Amalfi coastline. Popular with VIPs – Richard Wagner and Oscar Wilde both stayed here - the hotel has a Michelin-starred restaurant with breath-taking views over the Bay of Naples and Vesuvius, a gorgeous boutique spa and a fascinating history. The rooms and public areas have frescoed ceilings and antiques. Sorrento’s central Corso Italia is lined with caffes, restaurants and shops, but the entire historic centre has sights and eateries tucked away on little side streets. Grand Hotel Excelsior Vittoria offers rooms starting from €637 per night on a B&B basis, based on two people sharing a garden view room.“The largest deposit of Etruscan and Roman statues in Italy”
The discovery in San Casciano dei Bagni, a small hilltop town near Siena in Tuscany known for its thermal baths, is “the largest deposit of bronze statues of the Etruscan and Roman age ever discovered in Italy and one of the most significant in the whole Mediterranean.”
A popular spa town with a Leading Hotel of the World
San Casciano, a popular wellness resort for its thermal springs which is an hour and a half by car from Florence’s international airport, is now gearing for an onslaught of international interest in the statues with predicted soaring numbers of requests for tours and stays in the town and in its surrounding area. It has many attractive hotels and alternative forms of accommodation including the 5-star Fonteverde Lifestyle & Thermal Resort which is a member of the Leading Hotels of the World
A new museum in the historic centre of San Casciano
The statues, some of which are life-size and others a metre high, were found in muddy thermal waters and date back to the time of the area’s transition from Etruscan to Roman rule. The exceptional finds will be the centerpiece in a new museum which will open in a 16th century palace in the historic centre of San Casciano "This is the conclusion of a dream we have had for over 15 years," says Agnese Carletti, mayor of the little Tuscan town.
Valdichiana Living is already offering guided tours
First off the mark is Valdichiana Living, a local tour operator specialized in Strada del Vino Nobile di Montepulciano and the Flavours of the Valdichiana Senese tours, which is already offering guided tours to the ancient sanctuary where the statues were found and to some of the artefacts that are already on display in San Casciano’s Town Hall.An estate with a boutique winery
The current owners are the Hands family and they have brought the old agricultural complex with its vines, land, and buildings joyously back to life. Today, at the core of the estate there is a boutique winery producing award-winning red, rosé and sparkling wines. 
Three restored villas with private pools
Alongside the impressive winemaking activities, Villa Saletta offers luxury hospitality set within a collection of impeccably restored historic villas, each featuring its own secluded gardens, private pools and beautifully designed interiors and landscapes.
Bedrooms for up to fourteen guests
Fagnana is an 19th century farmhouse with an annex set atop a hilltop with far reaching views across the valleys below. With eight bedrooms it can sleep 14. Valle is an elegant country house featuring a historic tower and is set within a tranquil secluded valley. It also includes the old hayloft which offers separate accommodations. It has seven bedrooms and can sleep 13. The secluded and peaceful Swiss-chalet-style Casolore is a hunting lodge set on a wooded hillside above the valley. With three bedrooms it can sleep six. 
Winemaking, truffle hunting and pasta-making
At Villa Saletta experiences celebrate authentic Tuscan traditions, from winemaking to truffle hunting and pasta-making as well as olive picking and sunset picnics.
®wisthaler.comA 3-hour walk to the first lake
From this point on a 13-kilometer circular route starts with an uphill climb of 1,140 meters and incomparable views from various perspectives. The first lake you reach, after about three hours, is Lago di Latte (actually there are two of them, one smaller and one larger) at 2.540 metres asl, followed by the Long Lake at 2.589 metres, the longest of the lakes at one kilometre. You then come to the Verde, Nero, Lavagna, Catino, Cesare, Vizze and Zanzare lakes.
®wisthaler.com
Residual snow or ice on the lake shores even in summer
These gems in the centre of the Texel Group are the most beautiful and famous alpine lakes in South Tyrol. Each one us different from the next both in shape and colour, and this very beautiful area has fascinating flora and fauna. The ideal time to visit is from June to September, and it is not uncommon even then to find residual snow or ice from the previous winter along the lake shores. For more information: dorf-tirol.it
®wisthaler.com Biodiversity and environmental stewardship
The Langa Cebana, Mongia, and Cevetta valleys, along with the Sorgenti del Belbo, extend beyond the better-known part of Piedmont. Following the project's launch the first tour in Langa Cebana, presented in July on the portal www.terreautentiche.it, charts two new itineraries through the Valle Mongia and Cevetta valleys and the Sorgenti del Belbo. The routes, which are open almost all year round, are a compendium of cultivated farmlands, historic villages, country churches, Langa stone Ciabot and votive altars, authentic flavours, and friendly people.
The Valle Mongia Tour and Napoleonic ruins
The Mongia Valley offers thrilling encounters with history in Napoleon's footsteps, as well as breathtaking natural beauty. The tour begins in Lesegno and continues through dense forests of oak, chestnut, beech, birch, and pine. Along the way, you'll pass through a network of well-marked paths that are ideal for mountain biking, running, or trekking, eventually arriving at Masentine, which impresses with its natural bridge over the Mongia stream, framed by lush vegetation.
In the footsteps of Bonaparte
A thrilling descent flanked by hay bale shapes leads to the town of Mombasiglio. The town has an imposing tower which is part of the castle that once served as a fortress for Napoleon’s armies. The Bonaparte Museum, which houses the largest collection of original prints and etchings by the artist Giuseppe Pietro Bagetti on Napoleon's first campaign in Italy, can be visited in the castle but it is necessary to make reservations. This first leg of the tour, following in Napoleon's footsteps, concludes with a return to Lesegno, enjoying belvedere and unparalleled views of the valleys and plains.
The treasures of the mountain route
This route passes through the municipalities of Lisio, Battifollo, and Viola, climbing up the ridges on the sides of the Mongia stream, so e-bikes are advised. Passing through Scagnello you enter a magical dimension where nature rules the landscape and, at an elevation of 900 metres asl you can enjoy an exceptional view of the entire valley and the delightful little town of Battifollo. Hikers will enjoy crossing the valley with its centuries-old chestnut and hazelnut groves, fields of ancient cereals, and buckwheat.
The ruins of a 13th-century Napoleonic castle
The Sanctuary of the Madonna della Neve is not far from Viola Castello, on a panoramic summit that embraces the valley and with views as far as the sea. Descending towards the valley you will come across the Rocca dei Cervi rock. Back in Lisio, before finishing the tour of the Mongia Valley, you can visit numerous country chapels, and then bring home memories of this very beautiful landscape, which is as delicate as a water colour.
For information: www.terreautentiche.it
The giants of Mont’e Prama are proto-historic statues
“Recently we launched two major projects. The first, the Island of the Giants is on an area with very special cultural artefacts like Mont’e Prama and its proto-historic statues. They are called giants not so much because of their size, but because they represent the ancestors, chiefs and warrior heroes of the Nuragic civilization. To promote this heritage we created Archeologico 2022, the international archaeology festival of which I was technical director, while the artistic direction was entrusted to the musician Paolo Fresu.”
“Our cultural heritage has significant value for tourism”
Some 3,600 people attended Archeologico 2022, which is backed by the Sardinian Region together with the Mont’e Prama Foundation and premiered in Barlumi before moving on to Mont’e Prama and Tharros. The event, which was also followed on live streaming, brought 55 exhibitors to the heart of Cagliari and focused on the management of the region’s archaeological heritage.
“Archeologico 2022 confirmed that our cultural heritage is not just an element of significant value for Sardinians, but also for tourism, as it is a vital component in the creation of tourist itineraries that are not centered on the sea or on Sardinia’s natural beauty.”
Sardinia’s cultural heritage management costs one fifth that of Pompei
“Our projects have a twofold value: to grow interest at a local level, and to open a window to the outside world, because more visitors mean more jobs.” In 2019, the last pre-Covid year, Sardinia recorded 1,300,000 visitors, and Giorgio Murru underlines that Sardinia’s cultural assets are, to all intents and purposes, the world’s first true scattered museum. “Ours are very respectable visitor numbers, and they are higher than the number of visitors to Pompeii. The difference is that in Sardinia the costs related to cultural heritage are one fifth of those of Pompeii. We really are the top in Italy.”
Starting on 3 December, the dozens of handcrafted Christmas cribs can be visited up to 8 January 2023. What makes these installations so special is that they are all made by skilled craftsmen and all feature water in one form or another which is taken from fountains, ancient washhouses, streams and canals.
The event is sure to attract large crowds of all ages once again to Crodo and its mountain hamlets which will host this magical itinerary with its over sixty nativity cribs. And they are as picturesque by day as they are in the evening, when the cribs light up roads, paths and mule tracks leading from the 500 metres asl of Crodo to the 1200 metres asl of the Alpe Foppiano mountains.
Discovering the cribs as you explore different trails and tracks also means discovering the environmental wonders of the Antigorio Valley. The route can be done entirely on foot or by hopping into a car on some stretches, although there are parts strictly along mule tracks and footpaths, and guided excursions with nature guides and minibuses are also available.
Another reason not to miss this magical festival are the gastronomic delights to be enjoyed in local restaurants which serve Alpine cheeses, baked delicacies, officinal herbs and high quality cold cuts.
The area also has a choice of accommodation facilities and wellness centres which makes it hugely appealing for short breaks or long weekends.
All the details, the programme of the guided tours, useful information and the complete map will soon be available at: www.crodoeventi.it.

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