The 5 Best Things to do Good for Kids in Castiglione del Lago, Umbria

December 19, 2021 Tonie Szymanski

Castiglione del Lago is a town in the province of Perugia of Umbria (central Italy), on the southwest corner of Lake Trasimeno. Orvieto is 59 km (37 mi) south, Chiusi is 21 km (13 mi) to the south west, Arezzo is 56 km (35 mi) to the north west, Cortona is 21 km (13 mi) to the north and Perugia is 47 km (29 mi) to the south east.
Restaurants in Castiglione del Lago

1. Motonautica Carli

Excellent
100%
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Satisfactory
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0%
Overall Ratings

5.0 based on 19 reviews

Motonautica Carli

NOLEGGIO 2021 - our boat rental is TEMPORARILY closed - aimed at protecting public health and preventing the spreading of COVID-19 disease. We rent motorboats powered by mercury 40hp fourstroke. Please make a RESERVATION by email. A refundable security deposit is requested. No license is needed.

2. Rocca del Leone

Piazza Gramsci, 06061, Castiglione del Lago Italy +39 075 965 2484 http://www.roccamedievale.it/rocca-del-leone
Excellent
51%
Good
42%
Satisfactory
5%
Poor
1%
Terrible
1%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 514 reviews

Rocca del Leone

Reviewed By patrickgX7609CY

A fabulous place to visit in a beautiful town. The closed corridor access to the castle is amazing to walk through and then you go up spiral stairs and can walk right around the ramparts with brilliant views all across the lake - all good fun and a bit of an adventure for any able bodied person of any age.

3. Palazzo della Corgna - Palazzo Ducale

Palazzo della Corgna - Palazzo Ducale Piazza Antonio Gramsci 1/06061, 06061, Castiglione del Lago Italy +39 075 951099 http://www.palazzodellacorgna.it/
Excellent
44%
Good
42%
Satisfactory
13%
Poor
1%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 408 reviews

Palazzo della Corgna - Palazzo Ducale

Aka Palazzo Ducale. Next to (and sharing a ticket with) the Rocca del Leone fortress that you do have listed, but they need to be referenced separately; they are two very different attractions.

Reviewed By KatrinaMolini - Corciano, Italy

We visited Palazzo della Corgna in the afternoon and had the most fabulous time there! We saw the exhibition of Mikhail Koulakov, a Russian modern painter. It was a small exhibit but we found very interesting the building itself, which had stunning frescoes. It was a curious combination of “old” and “new”. Then we took the passage to Rocca del Leone (included in the ticket) and enjoyed a breathtaking view on the lake! The colors were fantastic!!! I highly recommend to come closer to sunset time for this purpose. P.S. The lady at the desk was nice and spoke English (we asked her about the bathroom, which requires the key and is located downstairs; you can also find a snack and soda machine there).

4. Isola Polvese

Castiglione del Lago Italy +39 347 848 9578 [email protected] http://www.polvese.it
Excellent
47%
Good
34%
Satisfactory
9%
Poor
3%
Terrible
7%
Overall Ratings

4.0 based on 250 reviews

Isola Polvese

Reviewed By F12MPpeters - Rome, Italy

Isola Polvese, Lago Trasimeno, Umbria Lago Trasimeno is half-way down/up the Italian peninsular – about mid-way between Rome and Firenza – and generally considered the fourth largest lake in the country at 124 km2 surface area and perimeter 50 km. There are bike and walking trails that follow the lake shore for those interested but, for us, there simply wasn’t the time available. We had three little kids in tow, ambient temperature mid-summer this year have been in the high 30s degC and there’s more than sufficient geography, history and social development available harping back to the Etruscans to keep us interested for the next 100 years There’s more - Lago Trasimeno is in Umbria with all those gorgeous tourist/culinary pleasures/images. Isola Polvese is the largest of the three islands in Lago Trasimeno - the others are Isola Maggiore and Isola Minore - at around 70 ha. The history of the island encompasses the Etruscans, the Romans and the Umbrian people – Ombri/Ombrii – one of the ancient Italic peoples who date back >3,000 years. It was the Romans who eventually dominated, settling and incorporating the region into their greater empire (as they were to do across much of the Europe of the day). The lake was an important source of fish before the modern age when people depended largely upon what they could grow/harvest/capture locally. Fishing villages cropped up around the lake and on the islands – harvesting carp, pike and tench. The 600-year old castle/keep on Polvere and others elsewhere around the lake provided security. Notwithstanding this, the island was sacked by the Florentine army in the 17th century and declined thereafter until relatively recent times. Check out the museum in San Feliciano and there’s another on Maggiore – describing the importance of fish/technologies/employment/security of the lake. To get to Isola Polvese there’s the ferry from San Feliciano - notwithstanding this easy option we met up with a float board brigade when swimming off the beach at the eastern end of the island – the one opposite San Feliciano just 2.5 km away; dozen people had paddled across led by a guide. From a distance it looked as if they were simply standing on the surface of the water and swinging their paddles. Novel. We had a week’s holiday en famille and had taken a place above San Feliciano looking west over the lake – catching some gorgeous sunsets/evening skies. As a group we were six adults and three little kids, and time tends to race when you’re having fun. We’d scheduled half-day on Polvese and another half-day on Maggiore - first time on Polvese, but Maggiore we’d visited a few years back. Five of us - the other couple with their little girl - left earlier for the 20 minutes crossing. There were couple dozen fellow-travellers on the boat so lots of spare seats. The fare was €6 return each per adult with the little girl travelling free. It was a pleasantly warm morning with a galaxy of views back towards San Feliciano and the hills behind the village and the distant lakeshore to the south. Comfortable – scenic lakeside Umbria at its best. Once across, coffee/brioche beckoned and we headed for the ‘Café L’Isola’ on the edge of the little compound of buildings, offices, country house/restaurant (at the end of the jetty turn right – 50 m). Prominent wall boards around the jetty describe what the island had to offer, places to visit, native fauna and more. The island is part of the Trasimeno Regional Park and provides a centre for enviro-scientific development including the impact of tourism on the island. We had the beach 400 m away in mind for much of our time on the island – rather than walk the trails – but there’s the ruin of a pentagonal-shaped castello medievale that’s just on the other side of the compound that was an easy first option (given that we were still on-the-move); again, about 400 m through the buildings where there’s also a public lavatory. The small castello was pristine – renovated, clean and presentable. It was on sloping land. Walk inside and there’s just the surrounding walls to see with a 12-15 m tower in the wall at the highest point up-slope. There’s also a walkway around the walls 5-6 m high, but it wasn’t open to us. We had the place to ourselves. Returning through the compound, again, there’s those well-preserved/presented period buildings that impress. We collected the other couple and their two children at the ferry terminal on the way back to the beach – they’d taken the next ferry (45 minutes later) … what did we do before cell phones? Then to that beach – us and 90% of the other people on the island that day; it was easy to sit, sunbath, read, swim, play with the children and more. There was plenty of room on the beach and a deal of shade behind it. Some people were cooking BBQs. Lago Trasimeno provides all those popular Umbrian images, but it is not a swimmer’s lake – shallow with warm water sure, but opaque/clouded with mud and lake weed underfoot – it’s an agricultural lake and largely dependent upon local run-off. Lack of clarity means keeping an eye on small children because you can’t see beneath the surface. Beaches too are few and far between and they are not particularly sandy. Looking back … pleasant memories of an interesting day away where you’re not dependent upon the car for transport … the ease of remaining in one place, peaceful, the views across the lake and, of course, travelling by boat - open top deck, bright/high skies, distant green/grey hills. Embarking from San Feliciano and returning there later in the day – there’s this well-placed bar in the village along the lake shore from the jetty: ‘Il Chiosco’ - start the day with coffee/brioche and, late afternoon, it’s time for gelati. Peter Steele 18 February 2020

5. Pescatore Cafe

Viale Divisione Partigiani Garibaldi, 1/A, 06061, Castiglione del Lago Italy +39 347 667 8398 [email protected] http://www.facebook.com/pescatorecafebar/
Excellent
28%
Good
53%
Satisfactory
13%
Poor
5%
Terrible
1%
Overall Ratings

4.0 based on 149 reviews

Pescatore Cafe

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