CHINK-weh TAY-re, what a special place! The rugged portion of coast on the Italian Riviera. "The Five Lands" is composed of five villages: Monterossa, Vernazza, Corniglia, Manarola and Riommaggiore. The coastline, the five villages, and the surrounding hillsides are all part of the Cinque Terre National Park and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site that includes a protected marine area.
The area is very clean and eco friendly with lots of recycling bins and no fast food places anywhere or rubbish. The pass you have to buy to enter the park goes towards helping the villager's well being by providing them with free health screenings, natural medicines, subsidised child care and a free shopping service for the elderly.
We stayed in the medieval town of Manarola built at the mouth of the river Volastra, on a high rock 70 metres above sea level.You can here water gushing down the streets under the houses as you walk up the hill through the village. It's a very charming village and has lots of brightly coloured tower-houses and steep steep, narrow alleyways leading to the seafront.
Everthing is grown or built on teraces as the landscape is so steep. Part of its charm is the lack of visible "modern" development. Walking paths, trains and boats connect the villages, and cars cannot reach them from the outside. Known for its Pesto, grapes especially the Sciacchetrà a dessert wine and a dry white wine, olives (olive oil), Farinata found in bakeries and pizzerias- essentially it is a savory and crunchy pancake made from a base of chick-pea flour and grappa.
We had a very active few days here and on Easter Sunday we spent most of the day walking or hiking uphill and downhill in the countryside from Manarola to Vernazza. Had to walk up to the village of Volastra where we had an amazing scene of our village and the sea. We rested outside the local church called Nostra Signora della Salute ("Our Lady of Health"), very impressive and built around the twelfth century. From there we continued uphill on winding tracks, through olive orchards and vineyards, past small farm lets and old homes, along narrow cliff paths all the way to Vernazza. We then caught the train back.
The next day we caught the train to Monterossa and hired an umbrella and sat on the beach for a couple of hours. In the opposite direction we walked the 2 km trail from Riomaggiore to Manarola called the Via Dell'Amore ("Love Walk"), a nice easy walk! By the time we left I felt as if I had done one hell of a work out!
The next day we caught the train to Monterossa and hired an umbrella and sat on the beach for a couple of hours. In the opposite direction we walked the 2 km trail from Riomaggiore to Manarola called the Via Dell'Amore ("Love Walk"), a nice easy walk! By the time we left I felt as if I had done one hell of a work out!
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