1st trip to Italy - advice?
#1
Original Poster
Joined: May 2011
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1st trip to Italy - advice?
I'm trying to plan a trip (10 days?) to Tuscany & Rome in early October to visit my neice who will be studying abroad in Florence. The majority of my time will be spent in Tuscany with a few days in Rome, perhaps. I was thinking about staying somewhere in the countryside (villa?) as a base and doing day trips but wasn't sure if a day in some of the places I hope to visit will be enough. Looking for itinerary ideas. I am just starting my research but hope to see:
Florence (2 or 3 days?)
Pisa
Siena
Chianti
Montepulciano
Rome (2 or 3 days?)
Other must visit places in addition/instead of the above?
Suggested itinerary/order to visit these places?
Ideas for a visit to the coast in this region?
Do you recommend having a base and day trips or moving around and staying in multiple towns?
Florence (2 or 3 days?)
Pisa
Siena
Chianti
Montepulciano
Rome (2 or 3 days?)
Other must visit places in addition/instead of the above?
Suggested itinerary/order to visit these places?
Ideas for a visit to the coast in this region?
Do you recommend having a base and day trips or moving around and staying in multiple towns?
#3


Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 26,508
Likes: 4
I would fly into Florence (or Pisa) and fly home from Rome. Or the reverse.
With 10 days, you could stay a few days in Florence, a few days in Rome and a few days somewhere in between. If you have a car, the in between stay can be essentially anywhere in Tuscany. Without a car, you'd need to pick a town (not a remote-ish villa) with good bus and train connections to the other places you want to see. Siena, San Gimignano, Lucca, Pisa and, to some extent, parts of Chianti are easy day trips from Florence using only public trans.
The hard part is deciding/limiting what you want to see/do because the list of options is very long. Resist the temptation to go to every "must visit" place.
With 10 days, you could stay a few days in Florence, a few days in Rome and a few days somewhere in between. If you have a car, the in between stay can be essentially anywhere in Tuscany. Without a car, you'd need to pick a town (not a remote-ish villa) with good bus and train connections to the other places you want to see. Siena, San Gimignano, Lucca, Pisa and, to some extent, parts of Chianti are easy day trips from Florence using only public trans.
The hard part is deciding/limiting what you want to see/do because the list of options is very long. Resist the temptation to go to every "must visit" place.
#4
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 704
Likes: 0
Sounds like a good trip. I would do at least 3 full days in Rome, 2 is not doing it justice at all. I would choose 1 location in Tuscany (Florence or Siena area) for 6 nights and do day trips, 1 in Rome for 4 nights.
If you really want to see the coast it is do-able but you would have to steal some time from Tuscany.
As mentioned above by Jean, if you can, fly into Rome and out of Pisa, or vice versa.
If you really want to see the coast it is do-able but you would have to steal some time from Tuscany.
As mentioned above by Jean, if you can, fly into Rome and out of Pisa, or vice versa.
#5
Joined: Jun 2003
Posts: 3,899
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I would not do a day trip to Rome as this is simply too short a time to even begin to explore the city. I would also suggest flying into Florence or Pisa and leaving from Rome after spending 3 full days/nights there at the end of the trip.
I would base in Florence and do day trips to Siena, Chianti, unless you are interested in renting a car and exploring the countryside on your own.
I would base in Florence and do day trips to Siena, Chianti, unless you are interested in renting a car and exploring the countryside on your own.
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