Italy's Hilltowns On Your Own by Kathleen Winkler
Tour buses nose up to the ancient city wall, side by side like
cattle in a pen. The doors whoosh open spilling a stream of tourists who gallop for the
medieval gate. Inside they'll find a warren of narrow streets filled with shops selling
Coach bags, Hermes scarves, and the ubiquitous tee shirts emblazoned with
"Siena" in gold lame. Several hours later the tourists emerge to climb aboard
the busses again, convinced they've "done" an Italian hill town.
But they haven't.
They've seen the Epcot version of a hill town. A stage set. A pretty picture airbrushed
for tourists. Oh, it's medieval alright; Siena is very old. Its square and cathedral are
worth seeing. But the medieval is so overlayed with the modern, it's in danger of being
lost. There is another way
to see Italian hill towns - the real ones, that is. Do it on your own. Of course, you'll
need a little guidance. Otherwise it's easy to get lost wondering among the twisting back
roads and lanes that honeycomb the Italian hills. The answer? The many bed and breakfasts
or small charming inns that dot the landscape in Tuscany, where the owners who have spent
their whole lives in the area are happy to devise a tour just for you. Inns such as La
Querce. Tucked into a twist of road at the edge of the small town of Chiusi (about an hour
south of Florence), hosts Paolo and Michela Bartolozzi, along with Paolo's brother, Guido,
specialize in helping guest see a part of Tuscany that tourists usually blaze right past.
Their flag and flower bedecked pale-yellow farmhouse, the early part built in the 18th
Century, was part of a working farm raising wheat and cattle until 1972. Then it became a
small hotel.
The Bartolozzis bought it in 1995 and, after loving restoration, opened it as an 11 room
bed and breakfast. The rooms with their cool tile floors, heavy wooden shutters and
whitewashed walls each have a private bath and amenities rare on small inns such as
televisions and in-room phones. Yet the prices are moderate. There's also an in-house
restaurant under a brick archway that specializes in true Tuscan fare: rabbit-sauced
pasta, an array of roasted meats and vegetables, wines and desserts of the region.
But the best part of staying at La Querce is having your own tour coordinator sitting with
you at breakfast, maps spread out on the table, while he traces your route for the day.
Fluent in five languages including English (he teaches hotel management at the University
of Rome), Paolo delights in sharing his corner of the world with guest. The first place he
will send you is into Chiusi, just minutes away. This small town boasts one of the most
complete Etruscan museums in Tuscany (the Etruscans inhabited Italy before the Romans and
were absorbed into Roman culture, but not before leaving behind a huge number of tombs
filled with statue-crowned sarcophagi and dark brown painted pottery). Your ticket
includes a visit to two Etruscan tombs hollowed out of a grassy hillside. Visit Ristorante
Zaira in town and the father of the tomb (now the wine cellar) his restaurant is built on;
dusty wine bottles pyramid on black-and-white mosaic floors dating from 650 B.C. After
Chusi, Paolo presents a menu of hill towns, some that attract a few tourists here and
there and others you reach by gravel road where tourists never go. Consider:
Bagno Vignoni, the town of the hot springs. The
centerpiece of this tiny village is a large, square hot water pool built in ancient times
and visited by such notables as Pope Pius II Piccolomini, Saint Catherine of Siena, and
Lorenzo "the Magnificent" de Medici, along with anyone else who wanted an
arthritis cure. You can't bathe in the pool anymore, but you can dangle your feet in
the hot water stream flowing at the edge of town.
Rocca D'Orcia, were a forbidding tower on a strategic
hilltop broods. You can climb the tower, peek through the arrow slots and imagine yourself
part of a medieval army holding off the enemy.
Castiglioncello Del Trinoro, a village so tiny it's
barely a crossroads. Gravel lanes wind around sleepy stone houses, dozing in the warm
Italian sun.
Monticchiello, the town of flowers. Dooryard gardens
grace the cobbled streets, spills of flowers overflow clay pots and wrought iron
balconies. A outdoor restaurant with colorful umbrellas tucks into the corner of the
ancient wall commanding a spectacular view of the rolling green countryside.
Radicofani, the town you can see from 20 miles away.
Its crenelated-tower crowned castle is enthroned on a high hill looking like a monarch
gazing solemnly over his domain. Hike the narrow streets, lick a gelato in the charming
square, and revel in castle romance.
Montefalco, an old military town. The wine bar in the
square offers free tasting in their wine cellar and you'll surely want to tuck a bottle or
two of the local vintage into your luggage.
These, of course, are just a few of the hill towns you can visit in
Tuscany and nearby Umbria - there are literally hundreds. From Chiusi you can easily drive
to the more well known towns such as Montepulciano, San Gimignano, and Assisi. Siena and
Florence are but an hour and a half away by train and you'll avoid the driving and parking
hassles the influx of tourists has created. When visiting Tuscany, don't be satisfied with
just the tourist hill towns written up in your guidebook. Get off the beaten track and see
the true old Italy; you'll take home memories that go far beyond shops and postcard
stands. You'll taste the quiet life that still exists tucked into central Italy's
grape-terraced hillsides.
La Querce is located just off the Chiusi exit of the A1
Milan-Rome highway. You can fin information about Tuscany and La Querce on the Internet at
www.valdichiana.it/expo/laquerce.
The inn can be reached by e-mail at laquerce@krenet.it.
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