Saturday, 13 August 2016

Calabria

Holidays in Calabria mean more than anything else, the sea. Because of the over seven hundred kilometres of coast washed by the Ionian and Tyrrhenian seas, extraordinarily near and opposing, a coastline that alternates long stretches of beaches and bays, cliffs and headlands of incomparable beauty. Indeed, we can boast of having about a tenth of the entire coastal profile of the Italian Peninsula and in few other regions can you feel such a strong sensation of being close to the sea as in Calabria. 

Yet, despite such a strong marine character, Calabria is also much more. Its mountains ranges, with alpine scenery, forests and solemn highlands, endless coniferous woods, higher up, glades and woods of beech trees in muffled silence, together with superbly fascinating lakes and watercourses, offer surprisingly Nordic scenery.

There are still vast expanses of uncontaminated nature with rare species of wild flora and fauna, like wolves and many migratory birds. The protected areas are the most precious: Calabria has a network of parks and reserves - land and marine - that have no equal in the South and that aims at becoming completely functional. 

But the Region also holds art and  cultural treasures equivalent to the role of a crossroads of peoples that it has always covered throughout its history. A borderland between East and West and between North and South, it has always been a compulsory stopover, a place of transit and encounter, for Italy, Europe, the Mediterranean. 

Maybe in no other land have Greeks, Romans, Jews, Arabs, Suevians and Normans, Byzantines, Spanish and French, not forgetting Albanians and Piedmontese, left in such relatively small confines so many traces of their presence. In some ways the entire region is an uninterrupted park of archaeological findings and cultural heritage. 

Ans so also the language and traditions and folklore, handcraft and cultivations, widely testify that in Calabria there has been a stratification and mixture of influences, culture and traditions, mostly still alive and flourishing, and in some cases, still to be discovered. 

The same can be said for the food and wine: Calabria is, even from the gourmet point of view, the land of contrasts and identity, and today still offers, despite the overwhelming pressure towards standardisation, so many occasions for surprise and wonder. 

So here one can still savour the taste for being, not so much tourists, but travellers, explorers. Paraphrasing our land's great writer Corrado Alvaro who upheld that the Calabrians want to be spoken, one may declare that Calabria wants to be travelled. 

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