Babble Best: Tuscany

The five kid-friendliest spots in Tuscany. by Melanie Mize Renzulli

May 16, 2007

Bringing kids to Tuscany, the most romantic of Italian regions, seems almost as absurd as letting your five-year-old order a $50 truffle-garnished hamburger. Will your brood be able to appreciate fully the vineyard dotted vistas, quaint piazzas, and history lessons around every corner? Not very likely. But there is plenty in Tuscany to appeal to the bambini. ...read more


Lucca

Travel literature likes to talk up Tuscany's hill towns, but little Lucca, which lies in the valley of the Apuan Alps, lives up to the hype. A compact city center of a few manageable sites, Lucca's most family-friendly feature is that it is almost entirely closed off to cars. Bicycles — albeit older, single-speed types — rule the roads here, and an umbrella stroller wouldn't be out of place, either.

Head to the tourist kiosk in Piazzale Verdi, where, at €2.50 per bike per hour, you can rent bikes for the entire family — bicycles equipped with baby seats are also available at no extra charge. With your transportation set, pedal from one piazza to the next. Or, take a spin on top of Le Mura, the city's medieval fortifications that do double-duty as Lucca's public parks and passegiata paths.

Staying overnight, when the city has been drained of its tour bus crowds, is the best way to do Lucca with kids. Hotel Ilaria, located along a canal near the Botanical Gardens, has wi-fi, satellite tv, and babysitting services, as well as free bikes to use during your stay.

Hotel Ilaria, suites from €180 (or $245)

http://www.hotelilaria.com



Tuscany: Runners-Up

Arezzo

Siena

Collodi

Forte dei Marmi

The genius of Il Borro, a 2,000-acre country estate just a few miles from Arezzo, is that you can physically contain your kids without containing their enthusiasm.
...read more

The Palio horserace, a twice-yearly event on July 2 and August 16, is Siena's biggest — and, arguably, most kid-thrilling — attraction.
...read more

It isn't exactly Disneyworld — or EuroDisney, for that matter — but the Parco di Pinocchio is the spot in Tuscany to bring your grade schoolers.
...read more

When all else fails, you can always pack 'em up and head to the beach. Forte dei Marmi isn't just any beach, though.

...read more

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About the Author

Melanie Mize Renzulli is the author of The Unofficial Guide to Central Italy. She blogs about food and travel on her websites missadventures.com and italofile.com.

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