Rates per week: 350.00 €
Apartments A and C: a double bedroom and a double sofa bed (max 4 persons).
Apartments B and D: a double bedroom, a twin bedroom and a double sofa bed (max 6 persons).
Arrival: Saturday after 3:00 p.m.
Departure: Saturday before 10:00 a.m.
SPECIAL OFFER "3 x 2": in June and September, you stay three weeks paying just two!
| Al Ninfeo Apartments/Ref: 5511 | |
|---|---|
| Owner Name | Mr Mattia Vecchiarelli |
| Tel | +39 0735 777456 |
| Fax | +39 - 06233249860 |
Send E-mail
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| * Please, mention HolidayHomes.ORG | |
Cupra Marittima means history, sea, hills, and a healthy climate. The beauty of its coast, cleanliness of its water and the high quality of hospitality have all been enabling this village to achieve the European Blue Beach Flag since 1997. Cupra is a niche, which was discovered by groups of fortunate tourists, who continue to be fascinated by this impressive area. Today's village is only 150 years old but its hills describe a history going back more than thirty centuries and offer one of the most beautiful landscapes in Italy. Cupra Marittima attracts all kinds of tourism and has even been chosen to host the famous World Malacology exposition (the study of molluscs). Sportsmen also come to use the 12 km long cycle path and walkway along the Adriatic sea, the many tennis courts, the swimming pools and its nine holes golf course.
WHY THE MARCHE?
Travellers who want the best of central Italy are now heading for Le Marche, the third region, alongside Tuscany and Umbria, that makes up the area. It is pronounced "lay markay", is plural (Le Marche) and is sometimes translated into English as "The Marches".
The region lies on the eastern side of central Italy, between the Adriatic Sea and the high Apennine mountains and much of it remains unspoilt by the ravages of mass tourism.
True, the Adriatic coast has been a mecca for "sun n' sand" holiday makers for decades; but few venture far from the beaches. Inland, perhaps more so than anywhere else in central Italy, you will find places where time really has stood still. Compared to its central Italian sisters, here culture comes in more easily digestible proportions but quality, as at Urbino, is often of the very best.
WHEN TO GO
While it can be hot between mid-July to mid-August, it is rarely overcrowded and up in the mountains the breezes are cooling.
May, June and September are the ideal months to tour Le Marche if you can't take the heat; the landscape is clothed in spring green or the first tints of autumn, any rain tends towards brief showers rather than endless drizzle, and it's usually possible to find a bed without booking.
The wettest seasons are mid-February to mid-April and mid-October to mid-December when days of grey mist and rain can set in up in the mountains. It can also be cold in mid-winter, particularly when the bitter northerly tramontana winds blow.
Where to go
Whether you want to admire masterpieces of Renaissance art and architecture, trek across wild uncharted mountains or hunt out the best of the catch in a Mediterranean fishing port, Le Marche has enough to keep you busy for years. And you will rarely have to jostle with hoardes of other foreign tourists.
Many visitors who come to Le Marche are looking for a taste of the "real" Italy, unsullied by mass tourism, yet welcoming to foreigners - if that's what you want, you won't be disappointed.
http://www.le-marche.com/