Tag: Tuscany things to do
Hot-Air Balloon in Tuscany
Rise up gently from the ground and discover Tuscany from an alternative perspective!
We are pleased to be in a “position” to offer you Tuscany from another perspective, a privileged point of view.
Passengers could reach our BalloonPort in Tavarnelle Val di Pesa, or can be driven to the departure field by the courtesy car and accompanied by a member of the crew, with extra cost.
The experience starts from the inflation of the balloon at ground level, a moment which has all the anticipation of flying…defined by one observer “the Pilot-dance”. Once the balloon is ready, it’s time to jump up into the basket and prepare one’s camera…
Rides last from 45 minutes to one and a half hours, during which, thanks also to smooth flying conditions, you may take the opportunity to shoot wonderful images of exclusively Tuscan landscape: admire the infamous “red-roofed” towns and follow the course of bashful wild animals taking “flight” in the fields below…. The first light of dawn creates the magic frame for the scene your eyes are observing…
Tuscany Sports and Activities
Football is like a national pastime in Italy and Tuscany is no exception. If you have a chance to see a game, by all means, go. La Fiorentina is Florence’s team and now that they are in the Premier League, it may be a bit more difficult to get tickets. Siena and Livorno are also places to catch a football game. There’s nothing quite like the experience of watching a football game amidst die-hard Italian fans. Have you seen the World Cup lately?
But football is not the only thing happening for sporting activity. Every November, the Florence Marathon takes place. There are also opportunities for swimming, skiing, rowing (if you want a completely different perspective of the Ponte Vecchio bridge, trying rowing underneath it) and biking. The latter is especially popular – there seem to be bike tours popping up all over the place to explore the countryside of Tuscany.
And for something truly bizarre and wonderful, there is the Bravio delle Botti – every year in late August, eight neighborhoods compete in a barrel-rolling contest (yes, that’s right, barrel-rolling) in the town of Montepulciano. They roll empty wine barrels down the streets to the Piazza Grande and the winning neighborhood gets a cloth with the image of San Giovanni Decollato, and of course the bragging rights until the next year.
Actually they push barrels UP to Piazza Grande; these barrels weight less or more 80 kg., the race is 1800 meters long, and the spingitori (men that push barrel), 2 each barrel, do this in a bit more than 9 minutes. There are a lot of events connected to the race (it takes part every last Sunday of August) during the all week before and all along the Sunday such as: historical parades on Thursday night and Sunday afternoon, flags throwing, medieval shows and dinner in the contrade (the neighborhoods) almost every evening.
Half day hands on session with either lunch or dinner
The Tuscan Chef offers half day cooking courses as either a morning session followed by lunch or an afternoon session followed by dinner in the comfort of your own rental home. Hands-on lessons of about 4½hours are under the guidance of a professional chef and sommelier, and are fun, informative and full of tips and tricks of the trade. You will discover and explore the tastes and textures of some of the finest Italian ingredients from fresh home-made pasta and plump potato gnocchi with their various complimenting sauces to truffles, fragrant garden Italian herbs, porcini mushrooms and wild asparagus, freshly pressed olive oil, creamy pecorino cheeses and classic Italian wines.
Discover a taste of Tuscan heaven and savour the very best in Tuscan living gathered together in the kitchen and around the table.
Journeys through history, culture and tradition
LUCCA (half day morning or afternoon)
Join our guide for a walking experience, taking you back in time to 180BC when Lucca was founded as a Roman colony. The day will start with a stroll on top of the medievel walls (built between 1504-1645) and wind its way into the heart of the city to discover the anfiteatro, an arena shaped piazza, the church of San Michele in Foro (where Puccini began his musical career as a choirboy), the 11th century Cathedral of San Martino housing the Volto Santo, a cedar-wood crucifix said to be a true portrait of Jesus sculpted by Nicodemus, an eyewitness to the crucifixion, Matteo Civitali’s marble tabernacle the “Tempietto”, the Tomb of Illaria del Caretto (1408) by Jacopo della Quercia and Tintorettos’s “Last Supper”. A typical Tuscan lunch is offered in one of the best restaurants in Lucca and your afternoon is at leisure to stroll, shop and discover this enchanting city for yourself or join our sommelier for a wine and olive oil tasting in the cellars of Enoteca Vanni.