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GoNOMAD Destination Guide Lake Maggiore, Italy: Fanciful and Fantastic Lake Maggiore, Italy’s second biggest lake. Acting as a watery boundary between two regions – Lombardy and Piedmont, Maggiore can also claim to be in two countries at once: its northern tip sits in Switzerland. WHY GO? Because all of the Italian lakes have huge charm, and Maggiore – also called Verbano - is no exception. 34 miles from Milan’s Malpensa airport, Lake Maggiore is less glitzy than Como, less crowded than Garda, and is, on the whole, a more natural experience. Until you reach Stresa however, where the fantastical and the grandiose rule.
On Maggiore you get to nod off on a ferry boat and wake up in another country, which is great fun if you’ve remembered your passport, and less amusing if you haven’t. WHEN TO GO April to October is the best period if you plan on enjoying the botanical gardens or the sun. As with the other lakes, some of the hotels and restaurants are closed between November and March, though Maggiore has a number of working towns which continue to function long after the tourists have gone home.
HOW TO GET THERE Milan’s Malpensa airport is the nearest to the Italian part of the lake – 34 miles away. Milan’s Linate is also relatively near, though you could consider flying to Zurich and training it to Locarno if you want to include Switzerland in your trip. At the time of writing, a direct flight from New York to Zurich is a good $300 cheaper than one to Milan. For updated boat services on the lake check out navigazionelaghi.it or pick up a timetable at your hotel. The fastest service from Locarno in the north to Arona on the southern tip of the lake takes around 1 hour 45 minutes. There is an hourly service from Milan’s central station to Stresa, the best known resort on the lake, and though you can book online, Trenitalia’s Swiss cousin, SBB CFF FFS is a lot easier to navigate if you want to book tickets to Locarno. These days Milan’s majestic Stazione Centrale boasts plenty of automatic ticket machines, so standing in the wrong line for 45 minutes is something you need do only if you’re killing time between trains. BEST ATTRACTION(S) The Isole Borromei (Borromeo Islands): Isola Bella, Isola Pescatori and Isola Madre. Isola Bella is indeed beautiful - and very theatrical. A Italian baroque palace with terraced gardens, it seems at odds with its surroundings. It’s been described as an enormous tiered wedding cake, and French composer Gabriel Fauré wasn’t overly impressed: "on Isola Bella... nature has been tortured into artificiality’’ he wrote. Charles Dickens was a fan, though, and reasoned [that] " …however fanciful and fantastic the Isola Bella may be, and is, it still is beautiful.’’ Love it or hate it, but see it you must.
Take a look at Isola Madre too, the largest of the islands and perhaps the most composed. The Borromeo family home comes complete with peacocks, parrots and pheasants, and a garden that is particularly beautiful in the spring.
Ernest Hemingway was invalided here in 1918 when it served as a hospital in the First World War. He came back in 1948 and set some of ‘A Farewell to Arms’ here. If that doesn’t appeal, pick up a copy of ‘Good Blood’ (2004) by Aaron Elkins. A mystery, set in Stresa and on the fictitious ‘Isola de Grazia.’ Rocca di Angera BEST UNUSUAL ATTRACTION
By way of thanks he dedicated the next forty years of his life to Saint Catherine – spending every day of those 40 years in a cave as a hermit. Locals lowered food and water to him in a basket, while he developed quite a reputation for his piety. The convent – deserted since 1770 when the Austrians suppressed it – dates from the 13th century. An incredible feat of engineering and of religious devotion. BEST ACTIVITY OR TOUR Lago Maggiore Express -
Take a round trip, between Stresa and Locarno via Domodossola. You take the tiny ‘Centovalli’ –railway, which twists, climbs and creaks its way between Switzerland and Italy through the Centovalli (One Hundred Valleys) and the Valle Vergozza. From Domodossola to Stresa on a regular Trenitalia train. Lake travel by boat. Craggy rocks with the bluest of lakes way below you, (gulp); waterfalls, chestnut woods, tiny rustici (stone built houses) just metres away from the train window. To visit nearby Lago d’Orta, take the bus to Omegna and then hop onto a boat to Orta San Giulo. For an online regional bus route and timetable check out vcoinbus.it.
San Giulio d’Orta is an exquisite lakeside town with a view of the most beautiful lake island in northern Italy: Isola San Guilio. After the excesses of tour parties, backpackers, pullmans and traffic on every other lake in northern Italy, the tranquility of San Giulio d’Orta will leave you wishing you’d booked a week here instead. Well, there’s always next year. Above Locarno in Switzerland take the stunning cable car to Cardada-Cimetta and enjoy the view. The cable car was designed by Swiss architect Mario Botta. It deposits you at Cardada (1400 metres - 4,593 feet) and you then have the option of walking or taking the ski lift a further 300 metres to Cimetta. A 360° panoramic view, and the peaks of Monte Rosa are your prize. For another great view, try Monte Mottarone, between Lakes Maggiore and Orta. A cable car swings you up to the peak in 20 minutes, and at nearly 1500 metres (4,921 feet) the views are stunning - all seven lakes in Lombardy and Piemonte, weather permitting. Apparently Milan’s duomo can even be seen - if you know where to look of course. As at Cimetta (see above), locals ski here in the winter. BEST ALTERNATIVE
The Locarno Film Festival, fourth most important in Europe, kicks off the first week of August and runs for nearly two weeks. Spend the night here and watch a movie in Piazza Grande - on the biggest outdoor screen in Europe. Check out a report on this year’s festival at kamera.co.uk The official site is at www.pardo.ch BEST LODGINGS
A tip: the road that runs down from Locarno to the south of the Lake is beautiful but tough to drive (you compete with lines of slow-moving caravans and buses) and hellish to cross. In Switzerland, head to Ascona. Unlike many other towns on Maggiore there’s no traffic between you and the lake. The Hotel Piazza au Lac offers clean, well-priced rooms, all with a view. Book early enough and ask for a room on the third floor. There are plenty of campsites for those on a budget – Camping Riviera in Cannobio has direct access to the lake. Locarno has a couple of luxury campsites (5 stars, no less) with caravans to rent, Camping Tamaro and Camping Delta at the end of the lake and a youth hostel in the town (Via Verenna 18; Email). Verbania also has a youth hostel (Via alle Rose 7; Email). If you’re looking to rent an apartment, a local company, Lago-Holiday has a good selection and a website in English and in Baveno, near Stresa, there’s the Residenza Ortensia which offers small appartments (open all year). BEST EATS
Cannobio:
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