Pauline
Forums Admin
The Guardian - Italy to impose limits on visitors to Cinque Terre with tourist 'ticket' system, Reuters, Feb 17 2016
"Access to beautiful and rugged coastal area will be closed this summer once the number of visitors reaches 1.5 million in order to preserve the local culture"
"Tickets will be sold ahead of time online and an app created for tourists to show which of the villages are most congested."
Too many people are visiting the Cinque Terre, five villages on the coast in southern Liguria. The article says "the rugged coastal area risks being wrecked by coach parties and cruise ships." We were last in the Cinque Terre in 2004. We stayed in Levanto, the first town on the coast north of the Cinque Terre, and walked from there into the Cinque Terre or took the train. Even then the villages were packed with people arriving by foot, train or car (you can easily drive to the villages on either end, plus there is a road that connects them).
The hike between towns was beautiful, but was nose to tail when going out of the towns (and climbing all the steps).
This is sad, isn't it? An area in danger of being ruined because of its popularity? The solution, I think, is to give other area exposure, so visitors don't all go to the same place but instead spread out throughout the country.
"Access to beautiful and rugged coastal area will be closed this summer once the number of visitors reaches 1.5 million in order to preserve the local culture"
"Tickets will be sold ahead of time online and an app created for tourists to show which of the villages are most congested."
Too many people are visiting the Cinque Terre, five villages on the coast in southern Liguria. The article says "the rugged coastal area risks being wrecked by coach parties and cruise ships." We were last in the Cinque Terre in 2004. We stayed in Levanto, the first town on the coast north of the Cinque Terre, and walked from there into the Cinque Terre or took the train. Even then the villages were packed with people arriving by foot, train or car (you can easily drive to the villages on either end, plus there is a road that connects them).
The hike between towns was beautiful, but was nose to tail when going out of the towns (and climbing all the steps).
This is sad, isn't it? An area in danger of being ruined because of its popularity? The solution, I think, is to give other area exposure, so visitors don't all go to the same place but instead spread out throughout the country.