We believe the best way to share Italy is to celebrate the people who make it extraordinary.
The defining landscape of inner Basilicata— bare clay gullies, razor-thin ridges, and pale eroded slopes. The unstable clay that Craco was built on, and that betrayed it.
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Sandstone spires that glow amber at dusk and pink at dawn. Two medieval villages — Castelmezzano and Pietrapertosa — cling to the cliffs among formations named the Golden Eagle, the…
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A town on the Gulf of Policastro, with the turquoise waters of the Tyrrhenian sea and volcanic black sand beaches. And a Cristo Redentore.
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An extinct volcano in northern Basilicata. Its ancient lava flows created the soils that produce Aglianico del Vulture — one of Italy's great red wines. Twin crater lakes, a cliff-face…
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A stone village perched between two mountains in the Vulture. Population crashed from 10,000 to 3,000 through emigration. Danny DeVito's grandparents left from here. Ten waterfalls, a sanctuary celebrated since…
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A 16th-century masseria in Pisticci, restored by the Giannone family — Lucani who emigrated to Toronto and came back to build something. Your home base on the Basilicata tour.
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Italy's highest regional capital at 819 metres, overlooking the Basento Valley. A city of staircases, medieval churches, and the National Archaeological Museum.
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A family bakery in Matera since 1890. You knead, shape, and bake your own Pane di Matera with Patrizia, Sabrina, and master baker Enzo. In the Sassi, women made five-kilo…
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A tiny mountain village of 740 people with a National Geographic food feature, a saffron initiative, and a Montreal diaspora.
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Her family was about to sell the vineyard. Elena said no — and turned six hectares on an extinct volcano into one of Italy's great wines.
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Named after Frederick II's 13th-century hunting palace. A city surrounded by wheat, tomatoes, Aglianico vines, peppers and olive trees.
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Andrea was riding his motorbike across Italy looking for a place to start over. A country road led him to an ancient olive grove with a Vendesi sign. Some of…
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Craco survived nine centuries of invasions, plagues, brigands, and natural landslides, only to be destroyed by leaking water pipes. Now a ghost town at the heart of the Calanchi badlands,…
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Pisticci—the White City—is at the heart of our Basilicata tour. Adele Newton's parents emigrated from here. The town was founded 3,000 years ago, and it's still standing.
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People have lived in these caves for almost 10,000 years. Our guests spend two nights here, sleeping in a hotel cut into the Sassi rock, and kneading and baking the…
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You enter through a tunnel carved into the rock face. When you come out the other side, a medieval village is clinging to sandstone pinnacles above you. One of Italy's…
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The last day of the tour. After a week of mountains and hill towns, we come down to the Ionian coast, and lunch overlooking the sea.
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This is an albergo diffuso—a hotel of rooms carved into the raw rock. You sleep like the ancient Materani, except with a first-class upgrade!
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Pina Caruso's family has been making gelato since 1956. Her signature Acheruntino — milk cream with vin cotto, toasted almonds, and Matera bread — won first place at the Gelato…
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