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Harvest Celebration in Italy

cinque terre
Bella Italia!
Contact us for Dates

Join us on a fabulous adventure in Tuscany, Cinque Terre and  Venice that is filled with artistic wonders, magical landscapes, and culinary delights!

We are very excited to offer a wonderful opportunity to a small group of fun-loving and caring people to join us on a fantastic excursion to such a magnificent country. We want to offer this trip as an intimate journey so we can tend to each individual, so, we are limiting it to only 7 people. 

 

Our first destination is the fabulous Tuscany provence, spending some time in and near Florence. We will stay in a small villa nestled in the valley of the Chianti Vineyard region, sipping the intriguing wines, tasting the delicious dishes of the region and immersing ourselves in the charming culture. From there, many exciting places are available to us to experience such as Florence, San Gimignano, Volterra, Siena, beautiful wine castles and others.

After a few days we leave the Tuscany provence. We stop for lunch in Pisa an we then travel to Cinque Terre....what an amazing and magical area! The beauty of the villages is astounding and there are lots of opportunities for hiking, strolling in the villages, breathing in the magnificence, and of course eating more delectable food and tasting their special wines. 

After a couple of days we go to Venice. It's hard to describe how incredible it is to be in Venice. It is a city of splendor, uniqueness and charm. Its ancient colorful history, its inspirational art and its majestic culture is still alive in the colors and architecture of the houses and buildings. It's easy to close your eyes and find yourself in a city filled with rousing life and mystical powers of the past.

Scroll down to read more details of the places you will explore.

 

                           Your Hosts

Franco was born and raised in Italy and in his heart still considers it his home. He loves sharing his insights and love of this beautiful country.

Kay lived and worked in Florence and has wonderful memories of her experience there. She knows the area very well and has wonderful connections throughout this region. 

 We want to share the beauty and excitement of this amazing country with people who we know will appreciate and celebrate this enchanting part of the world. If you would like to see great photographs of our recent trip, please  go to http://web.mac.com/peterproulx/Peter_Proulx/Italy_2007.html Two of our recent participants captured wonderful memories of their experience. This is a great preview of what you will experience on this journey.


tuscany

Villa Coltifredi

While in Tuscany you will stay at Coltifredi, a charming villa nestled in amongst vineyards, olive groves, and woods. It is located near  Mercatale Val di Pesa, an enchanting village right in the heart of the Chianti Classico area, 300 m. above sea level.

Historically Casa Coltifredi was a typical Tuscan Villa, with a solid structure originally built in the 1400’s on the Bishop's land. From here you may take a short walk into the village and immerse yourself in the delightful Tuscan shops, walk in the country side amongst the vineyards, or relax and read by the pool.

 


cinque terre vacation
Cinque Terre Hotel
 

In Venice you will stay at the Riva Hotel located just
a short walk from St. Marks Square. From this centralized
area you have easy access to many of the splendid sites of
this memorable city.
Nice hotel - great location


                                                                                     


The Cinque Terre Hotel where you will be staying has comfortable rooms, a great location and a delightful and friendly owner and staff.

Itinerary

 

Day One – Departure from your home city. This is a day of travel. From the U.S. most flights leave in late afternoon or evening and arrive in Florence the following day. If you would like any assistance in arranging your flights, we are more than happy to support you with those arrangements.


Day Two  – We will meet you at the airport and transport you to the villa. Depending on arrival time, you may have a light lunch and get cozy in the place that will be your home for the next several days. If you wish you may explore a quaint nearby village after you have rested and settled in, you may walk in the surrounding countryside and vineyards, you can take a dip in the pool or just relax and enjoy the sweet country air. A welcome  dinner will be served.   D


Day Three – For those that wish to be up early, we offer a meditation and yoga session. Breakfast will follow, and then we are off to explore the spectacular Chianti region. Castel Gabbiano, Castel Palaggio, and Verrazano are among the wineries we visit. Usually at this time of year there are several wine and harvest festivals in the area and we will help them support their local customs. B

 



Day Four – After yoga and breakfast, we are off to San Gimignano and its unique seven towers and then Volterra with its exciting history. Scroll down to learn more about these two walled citadels. Towards evening we go to the village of San Donato for a marvelous dinner at Ristorante Locanda and then return to the villa. B


Day Five – A full day in Florence awaits you after our morning ceremonies and breakfast. Florence is rich, colorful and inspirational. A detailed description of this center of the arts is written below. Upon your return to the villa, you will be pampered with a wine tasting event and a delicious Italian dinner. BD


Day Six – Breakfast will be served and then a fascinating day in Siena, a medieval wonder. Surrounded by olive groves and the vineyards of Chianti, Siena is one of the most beautiful cities of Tuscany. Scroll down for more on Siena. We have dinner in Siena and return to the villa in time for a social gathering. B


Day Seven  – We leave Tuscany this morning and after breakfast we travel to Pisa. You have time in Pisa to visit the Leaning Tower, the Cathedral, the museum, the shops in the piazza, and have lunch there. In the afternoon we depart and arrive in Monterosso, one of the five villages of Cinque Terre. After settling in at your hotel you can go for a walk on the beach, explore the village and get ready for a delicious dinner by the sea. A stroll after dinner along the seashore is always a great way to conclude the day. B

Day Eight – There are five villages in Cinque Terre and you are free to explore all five of them today. You have a choice of walking the revitalizing pathways that connect all the villages, you can catch a local train that serves all five, you may take a boat between them or do a combination of all of these. Scroll down to learn more about Cinque Terre and what this area has to offer. After dinner,  you can join us for a social gathering at the hotel before turning in. B 


Day Nine  – After breakfast at the hotel, we leave these seaside gems and head towards the Queen of the Adriatic, Venice. Along the way we stop for lunch. If you have not been to Venice, it’s hard to describe the magic and intrigue that is present. After you check in to the hotel and settle in, you go on a gondola ride through the mystical canals and spend the evening after dinner listening to music in Saint Mark’s Square, walk  the busy entwining streets, or attend one of the concerts…an evening in Venice is always inspiring. B


Day Ten  – You are on your own in Venice for a full day. You may have breakfast at the hotel and then…enjoy, explore, eat, drink, and immerse yourself in the charm and culture of this amazing city. Scroll down to learn more about this memorable city. B

Day Eleven – This is the concluding day. We take a boat back to where we left our van and we take you to the airport in Venice for your departure. This last day is always filled with many emotions and memories. As you leave this exquisite country you can always take with you the magnificence and magic you experienced. "Speremo che tutti stanno bene a che cuesto era un viaggio fantastico"... Hugs and good-byes...for now

 

B= Breakfast included

D= Dinner included


venice tours
                       

Cost & Details


Cost: $2,450 (double occupancy)


The package ...includes: picking you up at the airport in Florence, returning you to the airport in Venice, providing all the internal transportation throughout the trip, all accommodations at a beautiful villa in Tuscany, hotels in Cinque Terre and Venice, all breakfasts, two dinners including the dinner we'll prepare together at the villa, wine tasting gathering at the villa, vineyard experience, and a gondola cruise in Venice. You will need to provide: your air-fare, all lunches, seven dinners and gallery/museum fees.


REGISTRATION or More Information
If you would like to register, or if you have any questions, give us a call and we'll gladly answer your questions and take care of registration.
Global Journeys
516-343 3210
You may also e-mail us at info@globalj.org
If you prefer, you may fill out the form below and we'll respond to you within 24 hours.
Also, scroll down to learn more about the places you will explore.

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Florence... a City of Stone

Florence is an amazing city situated in the Arno valley. It's historic importance and artistic contributions make it a city that is a must to visit.

At the heart of the city is the Fountain of Neptune, which is a masterpiece of marble sculpture at the terminus of a still functioning Roman aqueduct. The Arno river, which cuts through the old part of the city, is as much a character in Florentine history as many of the men who lived there. Historically, the locals have had a love-hate relationship with the Arno — which alternated from nourishing the city with commerce, and destroying it by flood. Many of the bridges across the Arno were built by the Romans.

One of the bridges in particular, however, stands out as being unique — The Ponte Vecchio, whose most striking feature is the multitude of shops built upon its edges, held up by stilts. First constructed by the Etruscans in ancient times, this bridge is the only one in the city to have survived World War II intact.

The most famous palace in the city is San Lorenzo, which has become a monument to the Medici family who were one of the most powerful families in Florence during the 15th century. Nearby is the Uffizi Gallery, one of the finest art galleries in the world.

San Gimignano... La Cittá delle Belle Torri

Perched on a hill with its towers thrown into sharp relief by the deep green mountains behind it, San Gimignano looks like a town plucked from a fairy tale and set into the Tuscan countryside. Of course, it's not. Nor has it always been the sleepy little town it is today: In the late middle ages it was one of Central Tuscany's most important trading centers, strategically perched astride the intersection between the main highway from Rome to the Alpine passes, and the road connecting the Tuscan heartland to the maritime republic of Pisa and the coast.  We will spend a half day or so visiting this ancient village that affords wonderful opportunities for unique photography and marvel at the beauty and spirit of its structures.

Here's a little more information about this charming town. San Gimignano is a small walled medieval hill-top town in Tuscany, Italy, about a 35 minute drive north-west of Siena and about the same distance southwest of Florence. It is mainly famous for its medieval architecture, especially its towers. In Tuscan medieval walled towns, rich families competed in the erection of high towers, that served as lodgings, fortresses and prestige symbols. Because San Gimignano sits atop a hill the skyline can be seen for several miles outside the town. In medieval and Renaissance times it was a stopping point for pilgrims on their way to Rome and the Vatican.

While in other cities like Bologna or Florence, most or all of the towers have been brought down due to wars, catastrophes or urban renewal, San Gimignano managed to conserve about 15 towers of varying height. The modern town has extended some kilometres out and is no longer affected by this race.San Gimignano is also famous for its Torture museum, with a display of instruments and devices for torture in various times and places, complete with multi-lingual descriptions of their use.There are many churches in the town: the two main ones are the Collegiata and Sant'Agostino.The town is also known for the white wine grown in the area, Vernaccia di San Gimignano.A fictionalised version of San Gimignano features in E.M. Forster's 1905 novel Where Angels Fear to Tread as Monteriano.


Siena... a medieval wonder

Surrounded by olive groves and the vineyards of Chianti, Siena is one of the most beautiful cities of Tuscany. Set on three hills, the city is drawn together by winding alleyways and steep steps, whilst the Piazza del Campo stands at its heart, and the Duomo and St Maria della Scala serve as additional cultural landmarks. Famed for the "Palio", the annual historic horse-races that take place on 2 July and 16 August, it is also home to one of the oldest Universities in Europe, which ensures a vibrant Italian student atmosphere throughout the academic year.

There are so many great things you will see in Siena. It has uniquely preserved medieval architecture, and you can walk from tiny piazzas shared by you and a couple of pigeons to stately 14th and 15th century buildings. There is always something to notice and admire as you explore this unique city. Limited traffic within the city centre enhances your experience and adds to the feeling of stepping back in time into a medieval world.

Here's a bit of history about Siena and links to find out more about this enchanting place. Siena is a city in Tuscany, Italy. It is the provincial capital of Siena province.The historic center of Siena has been declared by UNESCO a World Heritage Site. Siena, like many other Tuscan hill towns, was first settled in the time of the Etruscans (c. 900 BC to 400 BC) when it was inhabited by a tribe called the Saina.

The Etruscans were an advanced people who changed the face of central Italy through their use of irrigation to reclaim previously unfarmable land, and their custom of building their settlements in heavily armoured hill-forts. It has been argued that their Pagan society which practiced matrilineal inheritance, and was devoted to their goddesses was one of the reasons why Roman Goddesses such as Diana and, with the arrival of Christianity, the Virgin Mary came to be of such importance to the people of the Italian peninsula. If this is true, it suggests that the Cult of the Virgin which is omnipresent in the fabric of Siena's ancient stones has an origin which is older still.

What we can say for certain is that the Romans founded a town called Saenna Julia on the site of a pre-existing Etruscan settlement, and from this has grown modern Siena. Siena may then have been under the control of invading Gaulish forces – who are known to have sacked Rome in 390 BC. Some archaeologists assert it was controlled for a period by a Gaulish tribe called the Saenones.

The Roman origin accounts for the town’s emblem – a she-wolf suckling the infants’ Romulus and Remus. According to legend, Siena was founded by Senius, son of Remus, who was in turn the brother of Romulus, after whom Rome was named. Statues and other artwork depicting a she-wolf suckling the young twins Romulus and Remus can be seen all over the city of Siena. Other etymologies derive the name from the Etruscan family name "Saina", the Roman family name of the "Saenii", or the Latin word "senex" ("old") or the derived form "seneo", "to be old".

Cinque Terre... the gem of the Italian Riviera

The Cinque Terre (CHINK-weh TAY-reh, which means “five lands”) is a series of villages clinging to a remote stretch of the Riviera coastline. Each town is a variation on the same theme: a pastel jumble of homes crouching in a gully like crusty sea creatures in a tide pool, undisturbed by traffic or modern development.

The rugged villages of the Cinque Terre, founded by Dark Age locals hiding out from marauding pirates, were long cut off from the modern world. Today the villages, linked by a milk-run train, a ferry, and a spectacular trail, offer their charm and uniqueness as we explore  this rocky coastline of northern Italy with terraced hills and vineyards sloping steeply down to the sea. You can enjoy hiking, swimming, drinking  wine, eating delicious food and watching the blazing Mediterranean sunsets away from the busy tourist spots. The area is surrounded with terraced olive groves and vineyards, orchards and chestnut woods.

To find out more about each of the villages, click on their names:

The Cinque Terre are five coastal villages in the province of La Spezia in Italy. "Discovered" by foreigners in the late 20th century they have come to be among the most touristed areas of Italy. The coastline, the five villages, and the surrounding hillsides are all encapsulated in a national park of the same name.

The five villages are, from west to east (i.e. towards LaSpezia):

  • Monterosso al Mare
  • Vernazza
  • Corniglia
  • Manarola
  • Riomaggiore
 

Venezia...la Serenissima,

Queen of the Adriatic

Volumes have been written, miles of canvas have been painted, and scores have been sung to describe this wonder. Is it a city of canals and palaces...or a tawdry sewer alive with crowds and charlatans? Venice's nature is dualistic: water...land, long history...doubtful future, airy delicacy...dim melancholy. Franco spent several summers there living with his grandmother. His experience of this is unique city is one of awe and magic. "The light is entrancing, meandering through the maze of canals and lanes is sensual, and the hushed backstreets are filled with surprises and charm."

If you would like more background information about Venice, click on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venice

In Venice light and water combine to create a restless magic. All borderlines are eradicated some where between dream and reality, present and past, the ethereal nature of this town has fascinated many famous people. Here it is what some others have said about Venice...

"Between the still-slumbering walls of brick and marble, beneath the ribbon of the sky, more and more brightly gleamed the ribbon of the water."
Gabriele D'Annunzio
"Nothing is simpler than to lose oneself in Venice; and nothing is more fun than to be in this labirinth without a Minotaur, as a Theseus without an Ariadne's thread."
Jean-Louis Vaudoyer
"The Grand Canal, the most beautiful thoroughfare in the world that I know of, has the best houses along it, and runs from one end of the city to the other."
Philippe de Commynes
"When I went to Venice, I discovered that my dream had become-incredibly but quite simply- my address."
Marcel Proust
"It is charming to disembark at the polishedsteps of a little campo- a sunny, shabby square with an old well in the middle, an old church on one side and tall Venetian windows looking down."
Henry James
"And at night they sang in the gondolas, and in the barche with lanterns; the prows rose silver on silver,taking light in the darkness."
Ezra Pound
"Here it is S. Marco, the tower, the piazza, Palazzo Ducale. Probably such a jewel doesn't exist anywhere else in the world."
Hippolyte Taine
"A realist, in Venice would become a romantic, by mere faithfulness to what he saw before him."
Arthur Symons
"Venice is not only a city of fantasy and freedom. It is also a city of joy and pleasure."
Peggy Guggenheim

 


                  Volterra

The town was a
Neolithic settlement and an important Etruscan center with an original civilization; it became a municipium in the Roman Age. The city was a bishop's residence in the 5th century and its episcopal power was affirmed during the 12th century. With the decline of the episcopate, Volterra became a place of interest of the Florentines, whose forces conquered Volterra. Florentine rule was not always popular, and opposition occasionally broke into rebellion. These rebellions were defeated by Florence.

When the Florentine Republic fell in 1530, Volterra came under the control of the Medici family and later followed the history of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany.

                                                   Main Sights

  • Roman Theatre (1st century BC), excavated in the 1950s.
  • Piazza dei Priori, one of Italy's most beautiful squares.
  • Palazzo dei Priori, built in 1246.
  • Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta. It was enlarged in the 13th century after an earthquake. It houses a ciborium and some angels by Mino da Fiesole, a notable wood Deposition (1228), a masterwork of Romanesque sculpture and the Sacrament Chapel, with paintings by Santi di Tito, Giovanni Balducci and Agostino Veracini. In the center of the vault are fragments of an Eternal Father by Niccolò Circignani. Also noteworthy is the Addolorata Chapel, with a terracotta group attributed to Andrea della Robbia and a fresco of Riding Magi by Benozzo Gozzoli. In the nearby chapel, dedicate to the Very Holy Name of Jesus, is a table with Christ's monogram, allegedly painted by Bernardine of Siena. The rectangular bell tower is from 1493.
  • Medicean Fortress (Maschio), now a penitentiary.
  • Guarnacci Etruscan Museum, with thousands of funeral urns dating back to the Hellenistic and Archaic periods. Main attractions are the bronze statuette "Shadow of the Night" and the sculpted effigy of an Etruscan couple in terra cotta.
  • The Etruscan walls, including the well-preserved Porta dell'Arco (3rd-2dn centuries BC) and Porta Diana gates.

Chianti is a vast geographic area from the hilly landscape placed at the center of the Tuscan region, between Siena and Florence, whose limits are distinguished at the North in the Ombrone river; at the East in the Monti of  the Chianti, at the South in the Arno and at the West in the valley of Elsa.
Its hills, crossed by a rich network of short rivers, those of the Pesa, the Elsa, the Greve, the Ombrone and the Arbia, are everywhere famous for the incomparable naturalistic beauty and as an example of harmonious union between environment and human activity, which is reftected by the orderly cultivation of vines and olive trees and by the golden expanse of grain. The rural reality of the Chianti region is not however monotonous, it also presents, in fact, woodland areas composed essentially of oak and chestnut trees of coppices that cover the slopes of the surfaces. The fascination of this territory lies in the perfect equilibrium between the soft forms of slopes and the thousand nuances of color and crowded woods, populated by ancient castles, secular parishes, pleasant villas and large Jarms, in which the tradition well mixes with the most modern criteria of organization and production.
A region, so to say, with a primarily agrarian vocation, whose roots go back to a very remote past, as it is shown by it's name, "Chianti, " that according to some scholars would derive from the Latin clangor which stands far "sound of the trumpet": referring to the noise produced by the instrument anciently used during the hunting parties in this territory; according to others, from Clante, the name of etruscan families who lived here between the VII and the VIII centuries BC and to whom the introduction of the vine and it cultivation in Thscany is attributed.
The term appears far the first time in 790 in a manuscript drafted by a monk in the Badia of San Bartolomeo a Ripoli, even though the description that he gave of the territory does not seem to correspond, since the monk describes it as a very humid zone as opposed to
the mountainous and dry characteristics of the Chianti region. Later, in documents of the XIII century, the term comes to refer to the Monti of the Chianti (which in reality, in spire of their name, are little more than high hills).
Already around the year 1000, these lands began to appear among the possessions of  the marquis Ugo of  Tuscany and of his successor Bonifacio, who donated ampie portions of  them to the Fiorentine abbey. An approximate division of  the territory between rural earldoms and the great abbeys of
Passignano, Montemurlo and Coltibuono dates back to the same age: an equaI partition between civil and religious power.
This is the period of  maximum expansion of a demolished domain that covers the region with a great number of castles spread for the most part on little hills, in militarily strategic positions.
Among them are those of Cintoia, Lamole, Montefili, Montefioralle, Panzano, Verrazzano, Uzzano, Vicchiomaggio, Cacchiano, Brolio, Meleto, Tornano, Vertine, and Aiola.
In this time originates the long easting contrast between Guelph Florence and Ghibelline Siena for the supremacy on a such a vast and rich area. A curious legend narrates an episode which illuminates us on the grade of existing rivalry, at the beginning of the thirteenth century, between the two republics for the attribution of their boundaries. The argument was centered on a competition of speed between two horsemen, who were to depart, one from Florence and the other from Siena, and meet at a point which would then delineate the limits of their respective territories. The hour of departure was fixed at the first calI of the rooster: The Florentines, astutely would use as an alarm clock a young black rooster which, kept without food, launched his calI much earlier than dawn. It was in this way that the florentine horseman, departing earlier could cover a greater distance than his rival, conquering more land for his republic. The place in which the two horsemen met stilI carries the name of Croce Fiorentina.


Pisa is a city in Tuscany, central Italy, on the right bank of the mouth of the Arno River on the Ligurian Sea. It is the capital city of the Province of Pisa. Although Pisa is known worldwide for its Leaning Tower, bell tower of the cathedral, the city of over 87,500 residents contains more than 20 other historic churches, several palaces, and various bridges across the Arno River.
                         Ancient times

Pisa's origins remained unknown for centuries. The city lies at the junction of two rivers, Arno and Serchio in the Ligurian Sea forming a laguna area. The Pelasgi, the Greeks, the Etruscans and the Ligurians have variously been proposed as founders of the city. Archeological remains from the 5th century BC confirmed the existence of a city at the sea, trading with Greeks and Gauls. The presence of an Etruscan necropolis, discovered during excavations in the Arena Garibaldi in 1991, allowed to clarify its Etruscan origins.

Ancient roman authors referred to Pisa as an old city. Servius wrote that the Teuti, or Pelopes, the king of the Pisei, founded the town thirteen centuries before the start of the common era. Strabo referred Pisa's origins to the mythical Nestor, king of Pylos, after the fall of Troy. Virgil in his Aeneid states that Pisa was already a great and developed centre by the times described; the foundation of the city in the 'Etruscan lands' has been credited to settlers from the Alpheus coast.

The maritime role of Pisa should have been already prominent if the ancient authorities ascribed to it the invention of the rostrum: it took advantage of being the only port along the western coast from Genoa (then a small village) to Ostia. Pisa served as a base for Roman naval expeditions against Ligurians, Gauls and Carthaginians. In 180 BC, it became a Roman colony under Roman law, as Portus Pisanus. In 89 BC, Portus Pisanus became a municipium. Emperor Augustus fortified the colony into an important port and changed the name in Colonia Iulia obsequens. From 313 it became the seat of a bishopric.


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516 343-3210
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