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Just popping in to recommend the west side south of Cinque terre—golfi poeti. Lovely beach towns and great hiking/walking and way less crowded. And you’d be near Pisa, and the Apuan Alps, and Florence.
I also love the Umbrian countryside around Terni up to montepulciano. We visit family in Orvieto and it’s just beautiful. |
We did Italy last summer with kids ages 11 and 13 and loved. My kids want to become Italian and live there forever
I have to say that Rome was not all that. We loved Venice and Amalfi esp Positano. Venice for 2-3 days is enough for sure and only 4 hours by speed train from Rome, easy. If I did it again, I would actually skip Rome but if first time, I would only do 2-3 days there as well. I would look at other places you can go either as day trips from Rome or just other towns and travel via train throughout. Amalfi is amazing. Boat rides is where it's at esp for older kids. It's hard because it's the opposite direction from Venice but what we did was Rome and Venice then 5 days down south before heading back up a day to depart from Rome. I looked at hitting Orvieto and Ponza day trips from Rome - I couldn't make it work unfortunately with our schedule. Another option is to hit the islands of Italy which a lot of people don't realize is amazing. So Capri, Ponza, Ischia. For us, Italy is about taking your breath away in it's beautiful sights. The water and the way their architecture is of small towns. It's about food. It's less about hitting 101 museums and actual seeing stuff as it is enjoying our environment. We did Pompeii and we did Colosseum but honestly, we loved it for the former experiences even more!! |
I'm sorry but this is a terrible idea. A 12 hour ferry or train ride on a 10 day trip makes no sense. |
Personally I wouldn't do it either, but it's actually a 7.5 hour train ride from Rome to Taormina if you catch the right one- do Google Maps transit from Rome to Taormina leaving at 8:45 AM. |
| Another vote for Venice over Florence. We did Venice-Bologna area (for Ferrari Museum, which was lots of fun)-Umbria-Rome in about 2 weeks and it was wonderful. Would have loved another couple of days but it wasn't too rushed. Kids were 12 and 15 at the time. Kids loved Venice, for what it's worth. I can't imagine skipping it personally. |
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Venice. That's where you must go on a first trip to Italy. Rome is awesome and I get why you go but Venice. That's the place you MUST, doesn't really matter what ages. And it's not that it's to see a ton, it's to experience it. It's just a really neat place, the ambiance, glass making in Murano and how the layout of Venice. You just really don't get that anywhere else in the world. I've done water towns of China and it's still just really different.
We took our kids to Venice for a day 1/2 and it was still worth going. Sitting in St. Marks and just snacking and listening to the music there is something you just don't get to experience anywhere else. Yes, Florence is beautiful and Lake Como is beautiful but there's something about that experience of sitting and not doing much but people watching and being in the square that really stays with you as a memory. My kids are not really into culture - they are science kids and 1 loves history and the other loves shopping but both of them LOVED Venice. I have to warn you it's crazy crowded the later you go in summer and even June is pretty bad but hey, it's Venice
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this is completely ridiculous, i can't believe you came here and wrote this complete nonsense. rome is a very unique city, more different from "other big cities" than paris is. your kids are not history buffs. |
| Has anyone visited Venice in the winter? |
Bologna and Parma were beautiful, felt very authentic compared to Florence or Venice |
| Whatever you do, get skip the line tickets in Rome because things are already selling out quickly as it’s a jubilee year. Heaven forbid the pope not make it out of this illness, even more people will be flocking to pay respects. |
We did the boring Rome Venice Positano and loved!
I would note however seeing the islands would be my bucket list: Ponza, Ischea, and not Capri but a couple near Amalfi. You can easily combine with Rome. For the south I'd see Sicily and Puglia and the small towns near there. |