Lush Lipari is the largest of the Aeolian Islands and is home to beautiful churches, intriguing museums, and an excellent area of beautiful beaches. Lipari has a bustling pace with its picture-perfect streets, lively marina, and wealth of restaurants with world-renowned chefs cooking up a seafood storm. Its volcanic origins have left behind steaming thermal waters and fumaroles. Must-see spots include the Castel of Lipari, the archeological museum, the frescoed cathedral, and the Corso Vittorio Emanuele. Outside of the town, the island is home to hikes and beaches. It's also a popular spot for heading out on Stromboli excursions.
In the north of Sicily, part of the Aeolian Islands is the ancient island of Salina. This little gem has been inhabited since the 4th century and is an incredibly scenic spot for dropping anchor and soaking up the stunning views of the island's dramatic landscape. On Salina, you will find sleepy villages, hills adorned in wild vines, and verdant mountains rising to meet the sky. Days are spent sipping wine at the local wineries, strolling the pretty villages, shopping in the boutiques in Santa Marina Salina, and dining on the finest Sicilian dishes.
Alicudi is a wild island and one of the seven that make up the Aeolian Archipelago off the coast of Sicily. Alicudi is the most remote of these islands and the least populated. Charter guests will find themselves anchored in a place of pure, rugged charm with no boutiques, cars, or even streets. Instead, donkeys will carry things around the town where less than 100 people live throughout the year. Charter guests can leave the tiny port behind and climb the mule tracks to explore this truly wild and vivid island and true trekkers can climb the summit of the former crater and stand atop Monte Filo dell’Arpa at 675m above sea level.
The western coast of the Tyrrhenian Sea is home to many treasures and San Vito Lo Capo is one of them. Summer travelers and sailors fall hard for this corner close to Palermo thanks to the wide sandy beaches and clear blue seas. San Vito Beach is a sight for sore eyes with its white sands and soft waves sitting beneath the shadow of the impressive Monte Monaco.
An impressive Blue Flag beach, it stretches on for almost 3km and offers plenty of pretty spots for sipping a Sicilian wine and watching the light change colour. Pay a visit to the nearby Tonnara del Secco with its old ruins and tales of gigantic tuna. Take the tender to Bue Marino’s Cove to see why it was awarded the most beautiful cove in Italy. Back on land and there’s a nearby nature reserve to visit to stock up on the sweet scents and sights of flora and fauna.