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LA BELLA VITA

La Bella Vita: Italy’s best ski resorts and how visiting Venice will change in 2024

From finding the ski resorts Italians prefer to making sure your next trip to Venice goes without a hitch, our weekly newsletter La Bella Vita offers you an essential starting point for eating, talking, drinking and living like an Italian.

Plan de Corones
A skier is pictured on a slope of the Plan de Corones (Kronplatz) ski resort in the Trentino Alto Adige region. Photo by Marco BERTORELLO / AFP

La Bella Vita is our regular look at the real culture of Italy – from language to cuisine, manners to art. This newsletter is published weekly and you can receive it directly to your inbox: go to newsletter preferences in ‘My Account’ or follow the instructions in the newsletter box below.

Wintry weather is well and truly on the way in Italy now, even down here in the southern region of Puglia. It’s definitely not a part of Italy that many people associate with winter cosiness and snowy scenes – in fact, it almost never snows here on the coast, though it does occasionally inland – but I’m looking forward to spending some time further north this winter, particularly for skiing.

We reported recently how a new rail route will soon make it easier to reach some of the most beautiful slopes in the north-east of the country directly from Rome. But it’s not necessary to travel that far – did you know there are also some great skiing holiday destinations in southern Italy? Not in Puglia, which is too flat, but Sicily, Calabria and Abruzzo are among the mountainous regions Italians, more than foreign visitors, head to for winter sports – and costs are usually lower than at the most glamorous hotspots in the Alps and Dolomites.

Here’s our roundup of some of the best ski destinations around the country to suit different budgets, preferences and ability levels:

From experts-only to family-friendly: 12 of the best Italian ski resorts

Venice, aerial view

Venice can get very crowded, but there are ways to avoid congestion even in peak season. Photo by Miguel MEDINA / AFP

Looking further ahead to travel plans for spring, regular visitors to Venice have been wondering for a while now what exactly the city council’s ‘tourist tax’ is going to involve and when it will be in force after it was confirmed in September.

Venice authorities last week announced the first details of the scheme’s trial phase: day visitors will need to pay five euros to enter the city centre on 29 dates, stating with the first peak tourism period of the year, from April 25th to May 5th.

The fee will also apply for the rest of the weekends in May and June, as well as the first two weekends of July, Venice city council confirmed.

We looked in detail at what else visitors will need to know, including how to pay and who’s exempt:

EXPLAINED: How will Venice’s ‘tourist tax’ work?

Whenever you next plan to visit Venice, if you’ve already seen St Mark’s Square, the Rialto Bridge, and the other major sights, you’ll likely want to explore off the beaten track.

We’ve got a quick guide to doing so from our Venetian reporter, who recommends the best ways to get around, some fascinating sights that not everyone else will be visiting at the same time, and the areas where you can stay without being immersed in a bagno di folla (literally ‘crowd bath’) as soon as you step outside the door. Even if you’ve visited the floating city several times, these are always good tips to keep in mind.

Five essential tips to escape the tourist crowds in Venice

Remember if you’d like to have this weekly newsletter sent straight to your inbox you can sign up for it via Newsletter preferences in “My Account”.

Is there an aspect of the Italian way of life you’d like to see us write more about? Please email me at news@thelocal.it.

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LA BELLA VITA

La Bella Vita: 10 ‘new’ Italian words and the stories behind Italy’s street names

From 10 ‘new’ Italian words to look forward to in 2025 to the people and stories behind some of Italy’s common street names, our weekly newsletter La Bella Vita offers you an essential starting point for eating, talking, drinking and living like an Italian.

La Bella Vita: 10 ‘new’ Italian words and the stories behind Italy’s street names

La Bella Vita is our regular look at the real culture of Italy – from language to cuisine, manners to art. This newsletter is published weekly and you can receive it directly to your inbox, by going to newsletter preferences in ‘My Account’ or following the instructions in the newsletter box below.

Whether you’re exploring the narrow alleyways of a traditional centro storico or sitting in traffic on a busy road, you might wonder at some point who the people who gave their names to Italy’s streets were.

Italy’s vie hide the stories and life accomplishments of notable Italian figures of decades and centuries past. 

From kings and queens to army generals and maverick inventors, here are seven of the most famous.

The people and stories behind some of Italy’s common street names

Languages are known to constantly evolve, with some words and phrases gradually falling into disuse and new ones being incorporated into day-to-day conversations by speakers.

Italian is no exception. 

As people’s vocabulary changes, so do dictionaries, with compilers regularly including the most popular language additions in the latest editions. 

Italy’s 107-year-old Zingarelli dictionary has recently revealed 10 ‘new’ Italian words it will feature in its 2025 edition, with six borrowed directly from English.

10 ‘new’ Italian words to expect in 2025

The city of Treviso may not be the first city that comes to mind when thinking of Italy’s northern Veneto region, likely because the same region is also home to Venice – the ‘floating city’ that welcomes over 5.5 million tourists every year – and Verona, the city of romance made famous by Shakespeare’s star-crossed lovers Romeo and Juliet.

But while the popularity of its neighbours may have spared Treviso (and its beauties) from large tourist crowds in the past, this has seemingly started changing in recent years as arrivals in the city were up by some 24 percent in 2023 compared to 2022.

A view of Treviso's Palazzo dei Trecento

A view of Treviso’s Palazzo dei Trecento. Photo by Balint Miko on Unsplash

That said, tourist figures in Treviso are still much lower than in Venice and Verona, and the inland Veneto city continues to offer a serene and bonafide Italian experience.

From scenic canals and centuries-old architecture to culinary traditions – including a certain iconic Italian dessert – we rounded up six of the best reasons to visit it.

Six reasons to visit Treviso before it becomes too popular

Finally, as the days get shorter and the summer heat abates in favour of cooler temperatures, thousands of Italians around the country are preparing for one the most stressful style-related rituals of the year: the summer-to-autumn wardrobe switch. 

The cambio armadio is nothing short of a major event in Italy, so much so that it tends to take up a full weekend (or two in some cases).

But why is the autumn wardrobe switch such a big deal in Italy? We explained what it’s all about below.

Why the great autumn wardrobe switch is serious business in Italy

Remember if you’d like to have this weekly newsletter sent straight to your inbox you can sign up for it via Newsletter preferences in “My Account”.

Is there an aspect of the Italian way of life you’d like to see us write more about on The Local? Please email me at news@thelocal.it.

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