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For many people, the well-known
Calabria is one
of
Tropea and Capo Vaticano, with its suggestive
beaches and cliffs, in front of Stromboli’s
island, not far from Sicily. Really Calabria
isn’t just that one.
Half hour from the Lamezia’s international
airport and twenty minutes by car from the
highway exit Falerna – A3, going to north, we
can find the ancient medieval village Belmonte
Calabro, an Anjou age still intact village,
placed on a rocky hill overlooking the sea with
a wide view on all the Eolie islands. Its urban
structure is still perfectly kept, and in tis
alleys and narrow staircases it’s possible to
breath the ancient times’ atmosphere. It’s
considered as one of the thirteen most beautiful
Calabria’s villages, it also belongs to a wide
territory, itself rich in ancient villages and
castle worthy to be visited, and it’s surrounded
by a luxuriant nature where, during fall, it’s
possible to pick up valuable mushrooms and
delicious chestnuts. By many points of view,
although it has typical characteristics of
southern Italy, this territory is very similar
to a miniature “little Switzerland”. Along Veri
River, a spring stream into which water flows in
every time of the year and where rare plants
vegetate, it’s possible to make long
naturalistic hikes, in a territory without human
presence. In its quarters and country wards,
scattered on surrounding hills’ crests it’s
possible to be present to those ancient rites,
as bread and home-made pasta making and season’s
preserves. Belmonte’s territory is rich in water
sources and in one of these, Peppalo’s one, some
very clear and diuretic water flows. Whilst the
sea is reachable with a six minutes of car trip,
“Casalini” pine wood is reachable with a ten
minutes trip; at a height of 1050 metres
(3.444,88 ft.) where is an equipped picnic area
and it’s also possible to take long hikes. In
the village are worthy to be visited the Anjou
castle’s ruins and the small museum of the
Belmonte’s peasant tradition.
The coastal is wide and with a fine sand at
times mixed with little pebbles, and it’s also
suitable for long sun-baths, even in october and
in november. It’s also possible to fish for from
the shore, to take long walks and to breath
hyodium emanated by the waves.
The local gastronomy is rich in mediterranean
scents and flavours it offer are very most
valuable than the trip to come to taste those
ones. The restaurants, where it’s possible to
taste dishes of home-made pasta, fresh fish
dishes and the very numerous pig meat
specialities (real “heroes” of this land’s
cuisine) are of high quality.
The visitors who love to sunk in history’s
places, with a car trip of a half hour, can
visit villages Fiumefreddo Bruzio, whose castle
keeps Italian painter Salvatore Fiume’s
paintings; Cleto, located on the rocky Monte
Sant’Angelo (Saint Angelo’s mountain),
surrounded by the “Valle degli Ulivi” (olives’
valley), where the ancient Cybo Malaspina palace
makes a fine showing, Malaspina family gave
birth two Popes, eight Cardinals and dozens of
bishops. In much more far places, after a car trip
of about two hours and after going through
Cosenza city and crossing over Sila’s woodland
rises, it’s possible to visit “Santa Severina”,
the most important historic document not only in
Calabria, but in the whole southern Italy.
For shopping lovers, Amantea, with its shops
which sell brand-name products and typical
products, is very near. Behind its back, located
on a rocky hill where there are the ruins of a
Saracen castle, there’s the old fishermen’
quarter, today inhabited by many painters and
joiner artists. One of Amantea’s peculiarities,
in addition to San Bernardino monumental
monastery, is the fresh fruit and vegetable
market. It exists since 1532 and vendors aren’t
traders rather they’re farmers who sell the
fruits of their plot of ground; this is a
gallery of picturesque and folkloric characters.
Written By Sergio Zanardi
For MediterraneoCase
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