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Tuscany’s Shoreline is Italy’s Finest-Saved Secret

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Tuscany’s Shoreline is Italy’s Finest-Saved Secret



What image springs to thoughts if you hear the phrase Tuscany? I’m going to take a raffle that it includes not less than one of many following: A rustic villa or trattoria. Vineyards or olive groves and the liquids they produce. Cypress timber marching in single file up the aspect of a hill. Michelangelo’s David

Cocktails on the beach? Not a lot.

Working up the thigh of Italy for about 250 miles, the Tuscan coast appears to by some means float freed from its mom area—and the associations it evokes. As if lazy days on a ship and spaghetti with clams had been by some means un-Tuscan. It doesn’t assist that a number of the space’s seaside resorts don’t precisely ooze native character. Forte dei Marmi is a seaside village that was become a Tuscan Hamptons by well-heeled Florentines (who name it “Forte”). Viareggio, one of many first cities in Italy to service the style for sea bathing within the nineteenth century, is at this time a household resort residing on Belle Époque recollections.

From left: Faro Capel Rosso, a lighthouse with visitor rooms; the island of Giannutri, as seen from a window in Faro Capel Rosso.

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However one a part of Tuscany-by-the-Sea remains to be profoundly Tuscan and nonetheless manages to embrace the newcomers with out promoting its soul. This taking place place doesn’t have a single identify, or a single identification. Located on the southernmost finish of the area’s shoreline, it’s made up of three adjoining areas. Every has its personal habitués, its personal allure, its personal scene: Giglio Island; the Monte Argentario peninsula; and an extended stretch of seaside, dune, and rural hinterland that facilities on a cute hill city known as Capalbio. 

When Mediterranean villa rental specialist Huw Beaugié of the Thinking Traveller visited Argentario and Capalbio on a reconnaissance journey within the spring of 2023, he was impressed. Not simply by the homes, however by the individuals who had been heading there and the sense that this was a vacation spot that’s “at the start of one thing,” he advised me. “It felt very very like Puglia in 2009.”

The inland a part of this stretch, often known as La Maremma, was as soon as a marshy swamp the place malaria was rife and butteri—Tuscan cowboys—wrangled herds of long-horned cattle. The marshes had been drained, in phases, between 1829 and the Nineteen Fifties, however this remained a distant, sparsely populated place of scattered villages, boar looking, and driftwood seashores. A wild, rocky peninsula with hardly any sandy seashores and loads of rutted gravel roads, Argentario was frequented principally by yacht homeowners and mountain bikers. As for Giglio, the specter of pirate raids triggered its inhabitants to show away from the ocean for hundreds of years, taking refuge within the fortified city excessive within the island’s heart. When vacationers started to reach within the Nineteen Fifties and 60s, they had been overwhelmingly Italian.

True, Argentario’s legendary Il Pellicano resort, based in 1965 by a dashing British aviator and his American spouse, has at all times attracted a complicated international clientele. However this pleasant retreat, with its seaside nation membership really feel, may be very a lot a vacation spot resort: most friends go there to be at Il Pellicano, to not tour the world. One other forerunner of at this time’s scene is Ansedonia, a hillside group of upscale properties close to Capalbio that within the Sixties grew to become widespread with inventive varieties from the Italian capital.

From left: Luigi Baffigi, the previous keeper of Faro Capel Rosso, a lighthouse turned B&B on Giglio Island; La Roqqa’s classic Fiat 500 zooming alongside the Argentario shoreline.

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Each Ansedonia and Il Pellicano are primarily luxurious enclaves. There’s nonetheless loads of mileage in that fashion of trip. However the burgeoning southern Tuscan seaside scene is extra open and permeable. It’s piloted, not less than partially, by a brand new breed of curious guests who haven’t any want to be confined to a gated resort or villa.

Exploring Monte Argentario

Peter Pan’s Neverland was translated as l’isola che non c’è within the Italian model of the kids’s traditional—actually “the island that isn’t.” That’s a reasonably good description of Monte Argentario, which behaves like an island in each respect, and doubtless was one 1000’s of years in the past, earlier than it grew to become tethered to the Tuscan mainland by two sandy isthmuses.

Once I first visited, within the mid Nineteen Eighties, Susanna Agnelli had simply completed a 10-year stint because the almost-island’s mayor (the Agnellis, who based the Fiat firm, are the equal of a royal household in Italy). However regardless of this tony stamp of approval, Argentario was, exterior of one small marina, nonetheless a spot of journey. I keep in mind wild scrambles all the way down to rocky coves, the place my spouse and I might unwrap a picnic assembled from an alimentari (grocery). 

From 1557 to 1707, this nook of Tuscany was a Spanish garrison. It was Orbetello that benefited most from the Iberian contact. Surrounded and guarded by the lagoon that separates Argentario from the mainland, this amiable city looks like Madrid’s little Tuscan twin, with its sunny disposition, nicely developed café tradition, and homes in each shade of ocher.

From left: A Fiat 500 within the streets of Giglio Porto; sunbathing close to the city of Giglio Porto.

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Argentario itself, nonetheless, was in these years a spot of forts and garrisons, with a small civilian inhabitants concentrated in two small harbor cities, Porto Ercole and Porto Santo Stefano. The remainder was principally left to the goats. If that is Tuscany’s Amalfi Coast, it’s nonetheless in some respects the Amalfi Coast of its pioneer years. Even at this time, it’s inconceivable to finish the coastal loop of the peninsula in a automobile with out driving a number of the manner on a slender gravel highway.

With its marinas, waterfront bars and eating places, and excessive cashmere sweater depend, Porto Ercole doesn’t make a lot of a residing from fishing anymore (salty Porto Santo Stefano, on the opposite aspect of the peninsula, has a larger declare to that). However neither is it—like fairly Portofino, on the Ligurian coast—a type of locations the place the Milanese ultrarich go to play at being fisherfolk. As a substitute of a row of cookie-cutter high-end style boutiques, you’ll discover scuba diving facilities, gelaterie, and an uncommon vacationer attraction: La Grotta dei Pirati, a cave the place Porto Ercole celebrates a giant fiesta, La Notte dei Pirati, in Could. Just about the whole city goes full Jack Sparrow, dressing up in pirate costumes and waving picket swords to commemorate and exorcise the trauma of a time when assaults by the formidable Hayreddin Barbarossa, a.ok.a. Redbeard, and his colleagues had been an actual and current hazard.

It was this sense of group—mixed with the apparent scenic charms—that first attracted the household of Swedish entrepreneur Conni Jonsson to the world. After summering in Porto Ercole for a number of years, Jonsson purchased the city’s disused Cirio sardine-canning manufacturing unit in 2017. An industrial relic, it’s being reimagined as a resort with a concentrate on wellness and culinary excellence. It’s not as a result of be completed for a number of years, however Jonsson’s second Porto Ercole funding has had a a lot quicker path to completion. A modest resort overlooking the harbor—the sort of place locals would go to for weddings and christenings—was reopened in August 2023 as La Roqqa following a top-to-toe overhaul. 

La Roqqa does one thing new for Monte Argentario. It’s very a lot a resort, not a resort, one with a surprisingly city really feel—and it’s embedded in a vigorous group. I walked all the way down to Alicina sul Porto, a spot by the port the place the seafood is recent and good and the waitstaff dodge Vespas as they convey plates of garlicky spaghetti with chili-spiced totani (flying squid) throughout the highway to the waterside terrace. These staying on the town, or sleeping on yachts moored within the marina, now simply as typically head within the different path for aperitifs or dinner at Scirocco, La Roqqa’s stylish, scenic rooftop bar-restaurant, which appears, gratifyingly, to be extra keen on serving up tasty, superbly offered farm-to-table (or boat-to-table) Tuscan delicacies than in pursuing a Michelin star.

The terrace of La Guardia resort, on Giglio Island.

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Rooms at La Roqqa are easy, their minimalism tempered by heat pure supplies and a variety of shades that recall clay, cornfields, seaside, and sky. The opulence comes from the ocean view loved by greater than half of the 55 rooms. The others look onto a vertical backyard wall or above it to the slopes of a mountain topped by a Spanish-era fort. However that’s hardly a sacrifice. Barring uncommon dangerous climate, you’re more likely to spend a lot of the day on the resort’s Isolotto Beach Club, an appetite-building stroll or five-minute shuttle experience away. (The Jonsson household’s Italian hospitality firm, Miramis, additionally owns Torre di Cala Piccola, a cliffside resort on the peninsula’s western coast that already had a loyal multigenerational clientele and Argentario’s finest sundown views.) 

Mendacity on a solar lounger at Isolotto, sipping a Hugo Spritz whereas taking in a wild view of sea, rocks, spiky shrubs, and the uninhabited islet that offers the seaside membership its identify, I noticed that it’s tough to search out this stage of barefoot stylish in Italy exterior of, say, Capri or the Aeolians. However that’s Argentario for you—the island that isn’t, however sort of is.

Subsequent Cease: Giglio Island

On Giglio Island, the wave-smoothed rocks look from a distance like sea mammals petrified whereas tumbling over each other to get to the water. Aptly, there’s basking there in summer season—by intrepid human sunbathers, who drape themselves over these unforgiving boulders nonchalantly, as in the event that they had been feather beds. Above the tidal zone begins a maquis of mastic, myrtle, helichrysum, arbutus, and different aromatic, hardy vegetation, which within the greater, extra distant components of the island give method to groves of ilex, eucalyptus, and stone pine.

For a lot of centuries, life right here was as robust because the granite rocks and prickly because the vegetation. In 1544, Barbarossa, a corsair who had risen to change into admiral of the Ottoman navy, raided the island and carried away into slavery nearly a thousand inhabitants—virtually the island’s whole inhabitants. For hundreds of years, the one fortified settlement was Giglio Castello, a city constructed on a excessive ridge with good views of invading ships. Seen from under on a day of reducing clouds, the city can nonetheless appear a forbidding place, although contained in the gates, floral window bins and the strains of laundry that stretch throughout slender lanes like festive banners lighten the fortress temper. 

From left: A collection at La Roqqa; spaghetto otto pomodori at La Roqqa.

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However for all times, bustle, shade, and a wide selection of locations to eat and drink, you’ll need the seafront city of Giglio Porto, the place the ferry from Porto Santo Stefano, on Monte Argentario, docks after a one-hour crossing. On disembarking, a five-minute trolley trundle alongside the harbor previous gelaterie, swimwear boutiques, wine bars, and pizzerias results in La Guardia, a beforehand modest resort that has change into Giglio’s new fashion magnet. It was acquired in 2018 by a pair from the world of promoting, Flaminia Pérez del Castillo and Flavio Caprabianca, who reworked this native landmark right into a welcoming 29-room refuge.

Caprabianca’s design scheme, dominated by supplies like weathered wooden, rope, and cork, has given the sunshine and ethereal rooms a beachcomber soul. The couple additionally drafted the chef of their favourite Roman restaurant to create a menu that provides recent twists to Mediterranean classics like gazpacho (theirs comes with anchovies, pickled onions, olives, and toasted almonds). 

For greater than two years, starting in January 2012, the seaward view from the resort terrace was dominated by the wreck of the Costa Concordia, the cruise ship that ran aground when its captain bungled a sail-by salute and ended up on a submerged reef, ensuing within the dying of 32 passengers and crew. The Gigliesi, because the island’s inhabitants are recognized, so distinguished themselves within the generosity they prolonged to survivors that they had been collectively awarded a medal for civic benefit by the Italian president. Giglio’s rising popularity looks like a well-earned turnaround after a setback that was simply the newest in its hardscrabble historical past.

And so to the lighthouse. Nowadays, true luxurious is as a lot about being given the possibility to flee and sit back in exceptional environment as it’s about silk sheets and champagne. On Giglio’s wild southernmost headland, Faro Capel Rosso defines the brand new pattern, particularly if you issue within the problem of getting there. Picked up in a battered Fiat in Giglio Castello by the genial Luigi Baffigi, who manned and maintained the lighthouse and its lamps for 37 years earlier than the system was automated in 2012, my spouse and I had been pushed alongside a potholed highway previous historic buildings known as palmenti. Resembling ruined chapels, these had been used for wine making, as soon as the bedrock of Giglio’s economic system.

From left: The principle staircase at La Roqqa, a resort within the Tuscan city of Porto Ercole; sunbathing for 2 at La Roqqa’s Isolotto Seaside Membership.

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The place the highway gave up in disgust, Baffigi shouldered my spouse’s rucksack and led us down a rocky path. We had been so intent on not slipping on the unfastened stones that, after we lastly had the leisure to lookup, the lighthouse was proper there, with its red-and-white horizontal sweet stripes, as if the outside design scheme had been entrusted to a bunch of four-year-olds.

Inside, all is breezy and marine. The jaunty billiard room, with its nautical décor, units the playful tone for what has change into a four-bedroom retreat that cries out for a bunch of household or associates, although it additionally features on a by-room foundation. Given the distant location, breakfast and dinner are included within the nightly price. Each had been ready by Saverio Cristiano, a critical, passionate islander who sources most of what he serves domestically. (A fisherman had introduced him a basket of lobsters the morning we arrived, so it was lobster for dinner, accompanied by greens and herbs from Cristiano’s backyard.)

There’s no pool, however paths under the lighthouse descend to 2 swimming coves, one in all which is just about assured to be sheltered from the prevailing wind (the easterly cove additionally has a small touchdown space that enables for arrival by boat, climate allowing). You may bask within the solar or stargaze on the roof under the lighthouse’s revolving lantern, or head again up that rocky entry path for a wine tasting at Fontuccia, one of some enterprising producers which have begun to replant the island’s conventional Ansonica vines.

From left: Chef Luca Morroto at La Dogana by Enoteca La Torre, a restaurant in Capalbio; stir-fried rice, burrata, prawns, and glassworts at La Dogana.

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In one in all these spots, it’s possible you’ll nicely meet one of many three Mura sisters, whose household make ophthalmic devices close to Florence. They received the proper to run hospitality within the lighthouse till 2036 in an Italian state public sale, which they entered, in response to Veronica Mura, “within the spirit of a mad gamble.” That spirit nonetheless pervades a spot of uncommon enchantment, the place friends are made to really feel like a part of an prolonged household. 

Exploring Capalbio

The prepare that chugs alongside the coast from Rome to Capalbio is a gradual however regular launch from the Everlasting Metropolis’s historic weight and intense city power. First, after a short glimpse of St. Peter’s dome, come the postwar suburbs, the factories, the automobile showrooms. Sprawling dormitory resorts like Fregene and Ladispoli are up subsequent: seaside cities that double as Rome’s seaside. There’s some reduction, some empty house, as you press on north previous Tarquinia, however not till the prepare crosses the border with Tuscany does peace descend.

From left: The personal backyard of a villa at Terre di Sacra, a resort close to Capalbio; a villa bed room at Terre di Sacra.

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The prepare passes an extended stretch of dunes, fields dotted with grazing cattle, and a lake that, if the avian gods are smiling, could host a blush of flamingoes. Within the distance is the good mass of Monte Argentario, lambent by morning, dramatically backlit at sundown. Seeing the signal capalbio, you descend at a type of cute rural prepare stations made even cuter because of the fairly good bar-trattoria it conceals.

Again within the day, when my spouse and I lived in Rome, we might take our bikes off the train at Capalbio and cycle again alongside the slender highway that runs parallel with the railway. Each quarter-mile alongside the highway, common as clockwork, stood a reasonably white home surrounded by a patch of backyard. Every had an alfresco eating space and a view over the Lago di Burano Nature Reserve wetlands to the road of dunes that separates this coastal idyll from the seaside. Possibly sooner or later, we advised ourselves.

Thirty years later, I used to be sitting within the shade of an historic mulberry tree within the backyard of a type of homes, which is on the Terre di Sacra property. I was talking with brothers Uberto and Niccolò Resta Pallavicino, who’re half homeowners. In 1919, their grandfather fell in love at first sight with this wild coastal prairie when a prepare he was touring on broke down. Three years later, he and a bunch of traders from Milan and Turin based Terre di Sacra. Although a lot diminished by the compelled expropriation that accompanied the top of Italy’s feudal system within the Nineteen Fifties, the property was nonetheless left with a giant chunk of land that stretches for seven miles alongside the coast and contains 22 of these fascinating white homes, initially constructed to accommodate sharecropper households.

From left: An aperitivo on the La Guardia resort; contained in the La Guardia resort.

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Within the early Nineteen Fifties, Uberto advised me, few understood the choice of grandpa and his fellow shareholders to hold onto the agriculturally poorer coastal strip when the property was decimated by the Italian authorities’s land-reform invoice. “At the moment,” he mentioned, “everybody can see how farsighted it was.”

The visitor lodging at present accessible at Terre di Sacra embrace weekly leases of the homes, a few of which have swimming pools or personal entry to the seaside; a wise glamping space with a mixture of tented and picket lodges; and what’s left of the easier campsite that was established within the Sixties. A restaurant and seaside membership, La Dogana by Enoteca La Torre, have been constructed within the dunes, and La Macchia—one other membership, this one members-only—is housed in a Sixteenth-century farmhouse and watchtower.

A lighthouse within the city of Giglio Porto.

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La Macchia’s members encompass a few of northern Italy’s wealthiest households. However removed from being a playground for the ultra-rich, Terre di Sacra looks like a love story. Way back to 1968, the property ceded administration of simply over a thousand acres of its land, together with the Lago di Burano saltwater lagoon, to the Italian department of the World Wildlife Fund. The group hosts visits to this essential wetland reserve, which is dwelling to greater than 270 completely different chicken species. It has additionally restored nearly the entire historic properties on the property and a number of other miles of drystone partitions; constructed lengthy hedges to stop wind erosion; and transformed to natural agriculture. It will get 84 p.c of its power from renewable sources. “This isn’t a style vacation spot,” mentioned Uberto as we watched the solar set over Argentario. “It’s a spot of the soul.” 

A model of this story first appeared within the Could 2025 difficulty of Journey + Leisure underneath the headline «Tuscany By the Sea

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