Posts Tagged ‘siena’

How to watch the end of the Tuscan football season

You could hardly get further from the Tuscan cliche than a trip to the football. But if you’re planning to travel to Tuscany this spring, you’re unlikely to find a more authentic local experience than an afternoon at the calcio.

Read the rest at TravelEden.com.

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Siena pictures

Duomo, Siena

Duomo, Siena

In lieu of a proper post here, I have added some new shots to my flickr set: on Siena. (If you click “Show Info” in the top-right of the slideshow, I’ve written brief guidebook-style information on each slide.)

Last time I was there was in the immediate aftermath of the Palio, in the steamy heat of August last year, won by Bruco (the Worm). By chance, my room for those few nights was in the Bruco contrada. I didn’t get much sleep. On the plus side, my room was bang opposite a gelateria that I might never have found otherwise: Kopa Kabana, on Via de’ Rossi. I suggest you stop by next time you’re in town; the panpepato flavour, based on the traditional Sienese sticky honey, nutty, peppery cake, is spectacular.

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Wine Travel Guides comes to Tuscany: a review

If you’re an enthusiastic wine-tourist, or would like to be, you need to meet Wine Travel Guides. The venture was launched in 2007 to offer wine lovers the essential information for planning a private wine tour. There are now 50 regularly updated micro-region guides to download or view online, including 2 new ones on Tuscany. It’s a well-timed expansion: the region was recognised this month for excellence in wine tourism.dscf0791

An annual subscription offering unlimited access to all 50 guides is £49, or download a single guide for £7.50.

The two Tuscany mini-guides are packed with just the sort of detailed wine tourism information likely to be missing from a mainstream guidebook. Author Michèle Shah has an impressive pedigree in Italian wine, and shows it off with plenty of winemaking and DOC(G) knowledge. There’s just the right portion of technical nuggets for a proper enthusiast. Read the rest of this entry »

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A year in Tuscan festivals

February’s here, which means it’s almost time for Viareggio’s Carnevale. The Tuscan seaside town hosts the second-most important Mardi Gras event in Italy after Venice—and it all starts tomorrow, with costumed float parades every Sunday until March 1st. If you haven’t booked your accommodation yet, you’ve probably left it too late (but try the Viareggio tourist office). There’s a smaller Carnevale, aimed more squarely at children, in Arezzo, the Carnevale Aretino Orciolaia.

Corpus Domini parade, Orvieto, Umbria

Corpus Domini parade, Orvieto, Umbria

Far from peaking here, February marks the first month in a busy Tuscan festival calendar. If I was planning to attend one a month, my year might look something like this.

March

Head down to Pitigliano, in the Maremma, for the Torciata di San Giuseppe, on the 19th. A torchlit parade along ancient Etruscan tufa paths concludes with the burning of a wicker man in the town square to welcome spring. More information from the Pitigliano tourist office.

April

Aside from the obvious Holy Week and Pasqua celebrations all over Tuscany, I’d pop over the border to Umbria for Coloriamo I Cieli, a balloon and kite festival held around Castiglione del Lago on the western shore of Lago Trasimeno.

May

Ascension Day in Florence sees the annual Festa del Grillo (the Cricket Festival) in the Parco del Cascine, alongside the Arno. Though it’s not quite the same since the city banned the use of real crickets in 1999, it remains one of the city’s traditional family days out.

June

Tuscany goes festa-mad in June, and among plenty of choice I’d probably make for Pisa for San Ranieri. On the evening of the 16th, a whole stretch of the Arno is lit up with 70,000 candles, the luminara, followed by fireworks before midnight. More information from Pisa’s tourist office.

July

There’s only one place to head in July: to Siena, for the Palio. The day itself can be unpleasantly packed, so I’d adopt one of two strategies. Either go for the costumed practice days in the run-up to the main event on the 2nd (they usually begin on June 29th). Or head into Siena on the day after and book yourselves a hotel inside the winning contrada (Siena’s tourist office will help on that one). You’re guaranteed dress-suit parades, traditional songs, impromptu celebrations and all the rest of it, as the winners rub everyone else’s noses in it—all night, every night.

August

Instead of Siena’s second (and marginally more important) Palio, on the 16th, high summer would probably take me to Montepulciano. The Bravio delle Botti, an uphill giant-barrel-pushing race between the town’s quarters, takes place on the penultimate Sunday. Which doesn’t sound like much, unless you’ve ever tried to walk up that hill in August.

September

As summer comes to an end, it’s time to toast the harvest at the Rassegna del Chianti Classico, in Greve-in-Chianti. Buy a glass in the square and wander the stalls sloshing sipping away. A number of wine-themed excursions and events cluster round the Rassegna in early September.

October

It’s back to southern Tuscany in late October for Montalcino’s Sagra del Tordo. If you’ve even wondered what spit-roast songbirds taste like, washed down with Tuscany’s finest red wine (Brunello), now’s your chance to find out.

Things (thankfully) start to slow down from November. By now, I’m thinking I’ve probably earned the rest.

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Oops – Livorno Relegated

Here’s a lesson for guidebook writers: never, ever make predictions about football.

What we wrote in the book, p. 142:

They might not be a household name, but AS Livorno are a team on the up. In 2004 the team returned to Italy’s elite Serie A after a 55-year wait…

It was the kiss of death, clearly. Yesterday, the team were relegated after a 1-0 home defeat by Torino. Bah. In what’s proving a tricky season for Tuscan teams, Empoli look likely to follow them into Serie B; ironically, the two meet in a local derby next week.

That’s not to say you shouldn’t pay Livorno’s friendly little stadium a visit on matchday – see the book, p. 142. But if you’re set on a Serie A game, try nearby Siena instead. They will finish comfortably away from trouble this season (unlike last), with former Middlesborough striker Massimo Maccarone banging in the goals that have ensured another year in the top flight.

So, by way of apology for our sporting prediction gone wrong, here’s some help getting to a Siena game, that space dictated we had to cut from the final version:

Since 2003 AC Siena (Via Peruzzi 18. [tel] 0577 281084) has been playing in Italy’s Serie A, the nation’s premier football league. The team plays at the small Stadio Comunale Artemio Franchi (Via Mille 3, [tel] 0577 280937) just across from the bus station, close to the Fortezza parking.
Tickets cost €18-32 for adults, €12-28 for children 12-18 and €5-10 for under 12s. Italian families attend the games, but it’s rare to see children under 8. Siena has a good reputation when it comes to safety, though opposing fans might not be as friendly – it’s worth asking at the tourist office first. Buy tickets under the bus station at the Siena Calcio office (open 8.30am-noon, 3.30-7pm Mon-Fri, 8.30am-noon Sat).

There’s plenty more on Siena’s more conventional sights, p. 78–87 in the book.

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New Discount Museum Ticket for Siena


Anyone who enjoyed the Renaissance Siena: Art for a City exhibition at London’s National Gallery last winter should make straight for Siena’s tourist office in the Campo (see p. 80).

For €13.50, the new “Percorsi del Rinascimento Senese” ticket gets you into the heart of all that art. It covers the Museo Civico (p. 83), Pinacoteca Nazionale, the former hospital of Santa Maria della Scala (p. 84), the Duomo and Pinturicchio’s frescoed Libreria Piccolomini (p. 83), and the Archivio di Stato with its Museo delle Tavolette di Biccherna. Tickets represent a substantial saving on full-price individual admissions, and are valid through to the end of 2008.

More here.

Various other discount tickets for Siena are listed in the book, p. 85.

If you missed the London exhibition, the excellent catalogue is on sale here for £34.95. There’s also a DVD (£15) about the city and its artistic heritage.

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