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Casa Canonica - Marche
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Accommodates 6+2 4 Bedrooms
3 Baths
La Canonica means parsonage,
and as you will imagine, that is what our first-ever vacation
rental in the Marche region was: the rectory of a ruined church,
some of whose remains are visible just at the rear of the
house.
Before talking about the house,
first lets talk about the area. The Marche is the region
of Italy directly east of northern Tuscany and north and east
of Umbria. It is both a coastal and a mountainous region,
with a long Adriatic coastline forming its eastern limit and
a long north- south stretch of the Apennines forming its spine.
The principal city is Ancona. The most well- known hilltown
is Urbino. There are gracious and not-so-gracious beach towns,
charming and unspoiled hilltowns, and a magnificent and varied
scenery. Two of the great summer opera festivals of Italy
take place here (within easy driving distance of Casa Canonica):
at Macerata in a wonderful amphitheatre, and the world-famous
Rossini festival at Pesaro along the Adriatic coast.
Vacanza Bellas Marche
holiday home called Casa Canonica is located in the province
of Macerata, literally within the Monti Sibillini National
Park. So whats to do here other than enjoy the majestic
mountain view from your front yard? First, outdoors, the national
park itself offers hiking, mountain climbing and mountain
biking, horseback riding, botany, birding, butterflies, eco-activities
and water sports on several neat little nearby lakes. The
Adriatic beaches are an easy 45 minutes drive: You can
try a different one every day.
Hilltowns? San Ginesio
OK, wed never heard of it either is the closest
village to the house, and as it turns out, Italian television
just did a feature show touting it as one of the most beautiful
hilltowns in Italy. More than a hilltown, the
most fascinating city to visit is Ascoli Piceno, a delightfully
picturesque provincial capital. Also interesting are Caldarola
(for the castles), Macerata, Camerino (a university town providing
a neat student energy), Cingoli (for the views), Tolentino
(above all for the basilica of San Nicola and its delightful
cloister), Jesi, and Fermo. You should go visit Leopardis
house and Giglis grave (and museum about him) at Recanati
and the Virgins flying house at Loreto (both Recanati
and Loreto have excellent little art/artifact museums as well).
For kitsch (if Loreto hasnt sated you), you can even
visit postage-stamp- sized San Marino, have your passports
stamped (and buy postage stamps).
One sight you cannot miss is
the caverns at Frasassi. These are first-class and should
be one of the highlights of your stay.
What you really need for the
Marche is a good detailed guidebook. For there are dozens
of delightful little unspoiled hilltop hamlets, Romanesque
churches, ruined abbeys, village churches, local open-air
markets all of them waiting for you to explore without
the company of other Americans, as this area remains largely
undiscovered by those from the other side of the Atlantic.
(And lets hope that, with the exception of you, it stays
that way.)
The point is this: Variety.
Mountain lakes and trails, hilltop villages, ruined abbeys,
caverns, beaches, neat provincial capitals even outlet
stores. This area has it all.
On to Casa Canonica. If you
look at a map, the nearest villages are San Ginesio and Sarnano
(both with tourist offices which you should visit for hiking
maps and much other helpful material); the nearest large towns
are Macerata and Tolentino. The house, made of stones from
the nearby river, is American-owned, carefully restored, and
well-maintained. The grounds, recently totally relandscaped
but still not overly manicured, are dotted with apple, walnut,
and fig trees, interspersed with flowers, grape vines, an
herb garden, gently weaving pathways, and little places to
sit, all enjoying those delightful views. A characteristic
iron and granite table seats 10 comfortably for alfresco dining.
Most important, the pool area is particularly inviting, with
its own chestnut pergola, umbrella, sky chair, and other seating,
giving the whole a really self-contained feeling as opposed
as a mere adjunct to the house.
Inside, youll find original
terracotta floors, beamed ceilings, and stone throughout.
You enter through classic double doors into a spacious dining
room with high beamed ceiling. The kitchen, recently remodeled
(and therefore different from what appears in the adjacent
photo), is fully equipped with all-new appliances, granite
countertop, oven, fridge/freezer, microwave, dishwasher, and
clothes washer/dryer. Off the kitchen is a guest half-bath.
The smallish living room has comfy not- elegant furniture
with a neat original wood-burning fireplace. It also comes
equipped with satellite TV and DVD player.
Upstairs, reached by somewhat
uneven stone steps which almost certainly predate the house,
youll find Casa Canonicas 4 bedrooms. In essence, there are two master bedrooms, one with indivisible matrimonial bed, one divisible into twins. In addition, there are two
smaller bedrooms, each with trundle beds, that
is, one twin with another tucked under it which can be extracted
and raised so that both are at the same level. The trundle
beds are excellent quality, but these bedrooms are small and
are best for children or for one adult each. Canonica is not
a house, in our opinion, for 3 couples, much less 4. It is
best for one family, or for two small families, or for two
couples, or 5 adults. Six adults can fit snugly if 2 of the
adults occupy, individually, the two smaller bedrooms. The
great and unexpected feature of Casa Canonica is the bathrooms,
all with American-style showers and American-style water pressure.
One of the master bedrooms has an en-suite bath; the other
three bedrooms share two additional hall bathrooms among them.
We loved Casa Canonica when
we visited it recently. If you want luxury with staff bowing
and scraping and the sheets and towels changed daily, please
dont come here. If youre looking for a charming
lived-in home loved by its owners who are eager to share with
you the attractions of the house and the Marche, then you
can do no better than to give Casa Canonica your serious consideration.
And besides: The enormous changes the owners have undertaken
over the past couple of years have rendered Casa Canonica
even more welcoming, with a really bright, fresh, contemporary
feel without at the same time detracting from the period atmosphere.
Oh, yes, restaurants: The owners are food fanatics and keep
a house book with the names of all their favorite places within
a 5- to 30-minute drive of the house; they assure us that
there are plenty of great places to eat.
| Rates:
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Jun 23-Sep 1
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May 26-Jun 23;
Sep 1-29
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Other
periods |
| 2,250
euros / week |
1,810
euros / week
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1,500
euros / week |
| Extras: |
100 euros final cleaning
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| Arrival: |
Saturday, but inquire
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Minimum stay:
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1 week
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