I Love Touring Italy - Gran Sasso, Abruzzi

Published: 13th April 2011
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If you are in the mood to tour Europe you should consider visiting the Gran Sasso (Great Stone) mountain range in the Abruzzi region of central Italy. Depending on your interests, this beautiful area might be your ideal vacation spot. You can ski, engage in other winter sports, simply enjoy nature or much more. This area is definitely off the beaten path, despite the fact that it is fairly close to Rome. Be sure to read the companion articles in this series that present eastern and western Abruzzi.

The Gran Sasso and Monti della Laga National Park was established in 1991. It covers an area of over two thousand square kilometres (about 800 square miles) of mostly mountainous terrain located only 130 kilometers (approximately 80 miles) east of Rome. The area includes many rivers that run into the Adriatic Sea, which boasts many fine resorts and relatively few non-Italian tourists. You will find winter sports facilities, not really surprising when consider that Corno Grande, for example, at just under three thousand meters (more than a mile and a half), is the highest peak in the Apennines. These peaks are snow-covered during much of the year. Below the Corno Grande peak you'll find the Calderone Glacier, which is the southernmost glacier in Europe. This glacier has lost over 90% of its volume in less than a century. Some say that it will disappear by 2020.

The Gran Sasso slopes are grazed by sheep, cattle, and wild horses for most of the year. The park provides a home to rare species of wildlife incluing the Apennine wolf, the Marsican bear, wildcats, wild boar, and chamois. Wild flowers and birds abound.

A hotel on the Campo Imperatore was once home to a particularly vicious snake in the grass, Italian fascist dictator, Benito Mussolini. He was imprisoned there from August until September 1943 when freed by a Nazi commando operation before meeting his timely end. On the other hand "The Gendarme" peak was renamed in 2005 "John Paul II Peak" to honor Pope John Paul II on what would have been his 85th birthday. He had visited the Gran Sasso many times, saying it reminded him of the mountains of his native Poland. At the southern edge of Campo Imperatore within the national park are three medieval hill towns once ruled by the Medicis: Calascio, which sits before the ancient fortress ruin of Rocca di Calascio, Santo Stefano di Sessanio, and Castel Del Monte.

The park is home to the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso (Gran Sasso National Laboratory) located below 1400 meters (almost one mile) of solid rock, and, according to many, near two major and highly active seismic faults. The laboratory employs over 700 scientists from twenty different countries and is part of the movement to preserve the Gran Sasso environment.


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Levi Reiss authored or co-authored ten computer and Internet books, but would rather drink fine French, German, or other wine, paired with the right foods. He loves teaching computer classes at an Ontario French-language community college. Visit his Italian travel, wine, and food website www.travelitalytravel.com and his wine, diet, health, and nutrition website www.wineinyourdiet.com.

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