Tuscan- style
farm tourism takes root in Croatia
October
2005 (Reuters)
- For years, Portugal's Algarve, France's Provence or Tuscany
in Italy have been leading the field for farm holidays in peaceful
rural settings. The picturesque Istrian peninsula in Croatia's
northern Adriatic is keen to join their ranks. Judging by the
Stancija Negricani, a sprawling farm estate surrounded by pastures
and woodland in the hamlet of Divsici in the south of the peninsula,
the idea may take off. In the past few years, the number of rural
households offering accommodation and home-made food has risen
from a handful to more than 200, spread across the triangle-shaped
peninsula whose lush vegetation belies the closeness of the sea.
"Istria and Croatia have long attracted tourists because of the pristine coastline
and crystal-clear sea. A decade ago we started thinking 'Why not
also take advantage of our unspoiled hinterland?' and a few years
ago kicked off the project," said Marino Brecevic of the
Istrian Tourist Board. Now the tourist board wants the "agrifarms"
to take care of business for themselves.
"We can carry on promoting agritourism, but the owners will
have to organise themselves and facilitate their business by linking
up with tour operators in Europe who sell such offers," Brecevic
said.
Istria was part of the Austro-Hungarian
empire until 1918 and was then ruled by the Italians until World
War 2, and many inhabitants speak both Croatian and Italian. It
was spared the devastation of the 1991-95 war following Croatian
independence.
Since 2000, tourists have been steadily returning to the Adriatic
which, thanks to 50 years of communism and a decade of war and
isolation, has remained pristine and alluring.
ELICACIES ABOUND: Stancija Negricani, north of the largest Istrian city of Pula,
is one of a few dozen more exclusively furnished farms in the
area. It covers 34,000 square meters (8 acres) and is equipped
with a playground, pool and beach volleyball pitch.
The owners, Mirjana and Marijan Modrusan, quit running a restaurant
four years ago and invested in buying an estate and making it
suitable for about 20 guests. t"We ran up a considerable
debt to start this business. We wouldn't have achieved this had
we not enjoyed refurbishing an old farm. . . (and) if our only
motive had been quick profit," Mirjana Modrusan said.
The guests, mostly from Britain, Germany and Italy, can enjoy
delicacies such as ham, cheese or pasta with truffles and home-made
bread and sausages made to a family recipe. They can learn how
to prepare traditional Istrian dishes and spend time in the wine
cellar – another indispensable part of an Istrian country
household.
The Modrusans have a contract with a British travel agency and
also advertise on a website. However, they agree that agritourism
needs a more organised effort. "It is difficult to define
what a real farm holiday should include. At the moment, accommodation,
food and facilities on offer at rural estates are not properly
classified and vary a lot," Marijan Modrusan said.
VILLA HOLIDAYS : A more luxurious version of Istrian agritourism
includes villa holidays, aimed at wealthier guests. Rented villas
are particularly popular with British tourists, who account for
about 80 per cent of villa clientele. The business is evidently
booming and some foreign media have dubbed Istria "the new
Tuscany."
The recovery of Croatia's tourist industry has spilled over into
the capital, Zagreb, whose refurbished facades, new luxury shops
and central European charm are proving a tourist draw. Sprawling
between the Sava river in the south and Mount Medvednica in the
north, the city of one million has never been a tourist hotspot,
unlike the scenic coast.
However, the Zagreb tourist board says about 38,000 foreign tourists
visited the city in July this year alone, a rise of 38 per cent
compared with last year.
"Many of the tourists are interested to see life now, after
the war, compared to what they saw here under communism,"
said tour guide Hela Markanovic, 40.
Most tourists like to explore the cobbled lanes of the old Upper
Town but many also roam the wide downtown streets lined with shops
selling designer clothes and high-tech equipment.
A sore point remains the unwillingness of shop-owners in this
conservative Roman Catholic society to work on Sundays.
"Along with lack of public toilets and parking lots, the
main problem is that shops, souvenir shops and exchange offices
are closed on Sundays. That shows how much more effort we need
to have a professional tourist industry," Markanovic said.
( source: )
Other Travel
Articles of Istria:
- Hire
yourself a piece of history in 'the new Tuscany' - From village houses to palazzos, the Istrian peninsula is
the new place to go for charming self-catering properties: With
its lush green hills, fertile valleys and honey-coloured medieval
hilltop towns, Istria has been described as 'the new unspoilt
Tuscany'. But Istria can stand firmly
on its own merits, among which are modest prices, a glorious
unpolluted coastline (albeit without sandy beaches), picture-postcard
Venetian strongholds such as Rovinj, a safe, tranquil environment
- the region was untouched by the civil war of the Nineties
- and friendly people. Plus bags of history - there's scarcely
a civilisation that hasn't left its mark - and the Croatians
of today keep up the cultural traditions with exhibitions, concerts
and festivals in even the smallest villages. read
more
- Other Istria related Links : Top
Tourist Sights of Croatia ::
Photo Album - Cities of Croatia
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