Category Archives: Veneto

Parting, Such Sweet Sorrow

Always regrettable to leave Venice, but one must remember you’re only feeling that wistful sadness because you’ve had the good fortune to enjoy the wonderment that is La Serenissima.  It’s been great to have Leah from Leah Travels experience Venice with us, and we’re looking forward to what she writes about her time there with us and our good friends at the Hotel Giorgione.   She got a chance to see Venice off the beaten path, to taste cicchetti at side street winebars, to eat the best seafood meals on the planet at restaurants most tourists miss and most big-bus tour operations haven’t even heard of, and see the REAL Venice as it should be experienced–a time capsule of a bygone era that you can see, touch, taste, and indulge in with your whole being.

We hope to see her again soon, and hope to share the magic with you.

Deal Alert! Spring 2015 Special (Get It While It Lasts)

We’re offering a great package deal for our Introduction to Italy with Doug Sassi–fun for the experienced traveler who wants to get an artist and art historian’s inputs on “must-see” Italy, and an immersive trip of a lifetime for the first time Italy traveler.  For the artistic community, we can include our Drawing From the Masters option–with professional drawing instruction from Raphael Sassi–for a nominal surchage (inquire with group size and dates).

Pricing for this will be based on a departure from PHL, please inquire about departures from other airports as you require.

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Arrive in Rome via an overnight flight we’ll book for you.   Spend three days and nights in a boutique hotel near the Pantheon, with Doug Sassi’s art and art history expertise guiding you through all of Rome’s captivating attractions, including:

  • The Sistine Chapel (Vatican)
  • The Rooms of Raphael (Vatican)
  • Saint Peter’s Basilica
  • Michelangelo’s Pieta and Moses
  • Castel Sant’Angelo
  • Spanish Steps
  • Pantheon
  • Piazza Navona
  • Campo dei Fiori
  • Arch of Constantine
  • Trevi Fountain
  • Circus Maximus
  • The Coliseum
  • And many, many more

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Day trip to Siena after checking out in the morning and hopping a train from Rome for an excursion to this lovely Tuscan gem where you’ll see it’s famous Piazza del Campo and Duomo, and have a lovely lunch.  After more taking in of Siena’s cultural gems, a train to check in at your hotel in Florence (a centrally located boutique hotel just steps from the Brunelleschi’s Duomo), and then walk off dinner and grappa with an evening walking tour to take the monuments of the Renaissance with Doug Sassi.  Sleep well, as the next three days will be filled with Doug’s encyclopedic knowledge of the Fiorentine masters’ works.  With Doug, you’ll have an unforgettable viewing of the following and unlimited access to his lifetime of knowledge about The Cradle of the Renaissance:

  • Santa Maria del Fiore (the Duomo)
  • The David and the Accademia
  • The Uffizi
  • The Baptistry and its famous doors
  • Giotto’s Campanile
  • Santa Maria Novella
  • Santa Croce
  • Palazzo Vecchio
  • Ponte Vecchio
  • The Leather School
  • Piazza della Repubblica
  • Piazza della Signoria
  • Boboli Gardens and the Palazzo Pitti
  • And of course the view from Piazzale Michelangelo (stunning at night and at dusk)

After the fourth night in Florence, you’ll check out for a lovely train ride through the Emiglia Romagna and Veneto country sides to La Serenissima–you’ll arrive in the afternoon in Venice in time for a late lunch of cicchetti at our favorite cicchetti bar near Santi Apostoli and check in at our “home in Venice“.  After a quick siesta you’ll take an evening walking tour with Doug along Strada Nuova and then on to a lovely meal (dinner in Venice rarely starts before 730 or 8pm) at a local family run trattoria, and then take in the view from the Rialto at night.  You’ll spend three nights in Venice and enjoy Doug’s famous walking tour (when in Italy, his *Italian* friends ask him where to go and what to do in Venice), to include things most tourists and tour groups miss off-the-beaten-path:

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And much, much more.  Three nights in Venice with Sassi Italy Tours will prove an unforgettable experience that, on day four, you’ll be sad to see come to an end.  But you’ll be back!  This we are quite sure of.

This package includes:

  • all hotel accommodations in boutique hotels known for comfort, warmth, and welcoming atmosphere that Sassi Italy Tours has vetted and has established relationships with, guaranteeing you’ll enjoy your stay
  • airport transfers from Fiumicino to your hotel in Rome and to Venice Marco Polo via Alilaguna
  • vaporetto passes in Venice
  • taxis and shuttles as required in Rome
  • all museum and historical site entry fees
  • trains between cities
  • unlimited tour guidance from Doug Sassi himself
  • AIRFARE!  Our fee includes booking your airfare from PHL to Rome and back to PHL from Venice.

All you have to do is show up at the airport for departure and we handle the rest!  This package is $4300 per person for departures from December 2014 through February 2015, and $4600 per person for departures in March and April of 2015.  Availability is limited (max group size is 6, 8 people for family groups) and airfares are, as always, subject to change which may impact pricing in the future.

I’ve done some price shopping against the big name tour groups that cram you 50 people at a time onto a bus and give you an impersonal experience, and they’re no cheaper.   This is a chance to have your own private Italy expert for ten days and nights in an enchanted country!  Don’t miss it.

Tragic

It’s the only word I can think of to describe being in Venice and to have nothing to do but follow around a rather overexposed and tabloid-celebrated actor who decided on La Serenissima for his paparazzi-bait ceremony–but such is the life of a paparazzo I guess.

Gondola and Vaporetto

Fortunately we don’t have anything scheduled there until the week after.  But I would imagine the word “circus” is going to prove appropriate.

What To Eat In Venice

When we hear from people went to a particular region and didn’t like the food, we also invariably heard from someone who didn’t partake of the recipes the region in question is known for.  Just like you don’t go to Texas for the sushi or Seattle for the southern BBQ, don’t go to Venice looking for an exquisite pizza experience.

Some of the most remarkable flavor experiences you’ll ever have are found in the Veneto.  Travel with us, and we’ll direct you to locally owned family run osterie and cicchetterie that will be guaranteed to impress!

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Drawing From The Masters This Spring

We’re proud to announce that the Bemis School of Art’s collaboration with Sassi Italy Tours and our Drawing From The Masters program is formally open for registration.  The initial departure is this February but fear not, more will follow in the future; some slots are already taken but a few remain and we strongly encourage you to contact Tara Thomas and get your deposit in now.  A course description is included at the registration link, and more information can be found here and a FAQ can be found here.

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Mi Piace L’Aperol!

If you can’t be in Venice everyday (and unfortunately who can who isn’t lucky enough to be a Venetian) it doesn’t mean you have to go without a taste of the Veneto.  Hardly!  Those lucky enough to have wandered in Venice have probably seen locals sipping at wine glasses with a curiously citrusy colored fizzy beverage and wondered what it is; for those who haven’t tried one, well…you simply must!   The Aperol spritz or Venetian spritz is just fantastic as you cook your pasta or relax in the shade.

Aperol is a light bitter aperitif; mix in a one to two or three ratio with dry prosecco and garnish with an orange or clementine slice and add a splash of club soda.  Ridiculously delicious way to send out summer and enjoy a small taste of Venetian goodness without the plane or train ride.

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Added Some Videos…

to the videos page.  I love the one of Brooke learning to make authentic tiramisu from Mama Isa in Padova.  Be sure to make a cooking class part of your Italy adventure!

 

Venice Too Crowded?

Some think so (I suspect the cruise ship problem is relevant here).  As long as you’re not there in June, July, August, or September, it’s generally not.  But even if you are, one of the perks of traveling with Doug Sassi is how deftly he can show you the Venice found not just on the Rialto and in Piazza San Marco, but also off the beaten path that takes just a bit of adventuring to find.  It can feel easy to get lost and waste time hunting around there, but we’ll get you where you can see the *real* Venice with ease and avoid the crowds.

Venice Quiet
(Doesn’t look too crowded does it?  And not that far a walk from major tourist attractions you can find quiet romantic corners like this to explore and take in the Venice Venetians know and love, if you know where to look.)

Wine Bars In Venice

Always one of the highlights of any trip to the Veneto--and the best ones are ones out of the way you either stumble upon, or have us show you.  This little one is actually one of our favorites and we’re glad to see it get mention; while it’s not easy to find, the hunting is well worth it.

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Insights About The Scrovegni Chapel

A treasure in Padova; this video provides a great example of the sorts of insight Doug Sassi is able to offer about not just the well-worn tourist attractions in Rome, Florence, and Venice, but also the off the beaten path cultural treasures Italy has in small towns everywhere.