Hi there-
I posted a week or so ago soliciting advice on our planned 6-week itinerary, which I scaled back to 5 weeks and which I removed Slovenia / Croatia from, as it was just becoming too much. I'm pretty much booked and just wanted to get advice from any Nesties who may have visited the following cities or stayed in the following hotels - if you liked it, if you didn't like it, what the best places are to eat, any off-the-beaten-path things we must do, etc. Thanks for any insight you can provide!
Lisbon, Portugal (staying at the Altis Avenida Hotel)
Lagos, Portugal (staying at the Cascade Resort)
Seville, Spain (staying at Hotel Casa 1800, Sevilla)
Granda, Spain (staying at Hotel Casa 1800, Granada)
Barcelona, Spain (staying at Hotel 1898)
Nice, France (hotel TBD)
Venice, Italy (staying at the Hotel Canal Grande)
Lake Como, Italy (staying at the Hotel Grand Tremezzo)
Cinque Terre, Italy (hotel TBD)
Milan, Italy (hotel TBD - only need one night here before our flight so something convenient to downtown would be great, as we're actually flying out of LIN, not the major airport in Milan)
Any advice - restaurants, tours, activities, things I can't miss - would be greatly appreciated!
Re: Portugal - Spain - French Riviera - Northern Italy
Last summer we did a 17 day drive from Naples to the Riviera via CT, up to Bordeaux, down to Basque country, Madrid, Toledo, Valencia, Barcelona and back (to Naples).
While we did move around a fair amount it really didn't really too rushed (we'd been to some of the cities before). If you have any play in your itinerary I'd highly recommend Basque country (either Spain, FR, or both). Really beautiful scenery and some truly unique foodie options (specifically, San Sebastian, SP, if I had to pick just one city).
Carcasonne, FR is a nice break b/w Barcelona and Nice. We also stayed in Marseilles, which was pretty skippable, IMO.
CT's lovely, but I stayed in La Spezia on that trip-- a better value, not as charming, but still a nice town.
I'd recommend a day trip (or an overnight) in Verona. It's lovely, much prettier than Milan and less crowded than Venice.
Any particular activities you're more interested (ie wine, foodie, etc)?
Oh my other tip, if you're driving, have change in France (their toll system is ridiculous... seriously. It's a sorry day when I say Italy is less of a hassle
).
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Have done a ton of research regarding the CT - it sounds like Monterosso may be back up and (mostly) functioning by around Easter; seems like they anticipate most of the trails will be open by then as well (and the main one didn't close, I guess?). I added one more day to our CT itinerary entirely because I read the NY Times article a few days ago about Portoverne - Googled it and it looks fabulous! We will probably stay in one of the CT towns and just take the ferry back and forth, but I definitely plan to check it out.
As for the question about when we're going - I'm going in mid-July so there is still plenty of time for them to make improvements. I also read a very compelling article arguing that it's more important than ever for the CT to have tourists this year - these are very small, self-sustaining villages and their residents can't "afford to wait a few years" to recover. If they don't have tourism coming in now, they risk losing those few people who work in tourism to other jobs (because they need the money) and the tourism industry there may not recover. Obviously, I'd love for the CT to be as perfect as it was before the flooding, but given that there are so many gorgeous nearby towns, I'm not too worried about going there and finding Monterosso or Vernazza haven't fully recovered; and I'd be happy to be a part of helping them to recover so that people in future years can enjoy the CT (makes me think of how NOLA really needed the tourism $$$ after Katrina, or how badly Egypt needs tourism $$$ now - but this is a safe place to go so I'm happy to do so).
Ditto Castelo Sao Jorge. We also enjoyed the Port Institute and the botanical gardens in Lisbon.
Lagos is a blast as well enjoy.