The Province of Brindisi (Italian: Provincia di Brindisi) is a province in the Apulia region of Italy. Its capital is the city of Brindisi. It has an area of 1,839 square kilometres (710 sq mi) and a total population of 401,652 (2013).
Restaurants in Province of Brindisi
5 based on 484 reviews
Mandatory booking by phone or email. Check in time is 9.30 / 11.30 and 15.30 / 17.30. You will visit the monumental olive grove, the hypogeum crusher, some historic rooms and end with a tasting of extra virgin olive oil. The duration is about 60/70 minutes and the cost is 10 Euros, pp., 5 Euros for the children and is free under 6 years.We only speak Italian and English language
We went with a travel group from Espressino Travel and had a delightful tour of this olive farm followed by a very informative olive oil tasting. They showed us olives trees dating back 3500 years that are still producing olive oil.
4.5 based on 293 reviews
An area of great beauty, too perfect to be real but very real indeed, blessed with countless gorgeous villages like Ostuni and Locorotondo and of course those incredible Trulli.
4.5 based on 124 reviews
what's best is?.The church is just one minutes from the Brindisi Airport.Just go on , pass the rental car parking place , follow a little road near the military base.At 9AM the church was open and there something for everybody.Do not expect Milano Duomo but you can breath the 13 century history.
JUST 1 minutes from DROP OFF CAR.No ticket or fees.
4.5 based on 910 reviews
Not as exciting as, Locorontondo or Cisternino and certainly less touristic than Alberobello it is nevertheless a nice place to spend some time.
4.5 based on 226 reviews
Personally I found this the most beautiful place of Brindisi; so special-small , circular and inside you can feel the Middle Ages atmosphere with the knights coming back from the Crusades.
Very friendly guard at the entrance. Free. The only thing they ask you to do is sign a book, a small effort considering in other places they would certainly ask an entrance fee.
4.5 based on 220 reviews
But very interesting.You can walk alone through the little path and see and read the information.You can immagine what there is under the green grass waiting to be unburied.
There is a little museum and ticket entrance is ridicolous.Two Hours is enought to enjoy all.Pay attention because there is an underground ancient roman store and you can walk inside.Very beautiful....
4.5 based on 365 reviews
This old Roman column sits overlooking the harbor with another that had not fared that well and is quite impressive up a flight of steps. To find it go towards the harbor down the main street ( Corso Giuseppe Garibaldi) and turn left at Piazza Vittorio Emanuele and you will find it a few hundred meters along the road on the left.There is no English explanation of the history.
4.5 based on 1 reviews
Torre Guaceto Marine Protected Area (MPA) is located in southeastern Italy (southern Adriatic Sea), it covers about 2220 ha and it was established by the Mininster of Environment with a Decree on December 4, 1991. The MPA, falling within the municipalities of Brindisi and Carovigno, has a coastaline of about 8 km from the Apani area till the littoral of Punta Penna Grossa and it extends from the shoreline to 50 m depth. The management authority of the reserve is a consortium composed by the Municipal districts of Carovigno and Brindisi and the no-profit association World Wildlife Fund (Wwf-Italy) Torre Guaceto, besides a MPA, is also a State Natural Reserve extending for about 1.200 ha, having a marine front of 8 km. It was established by the Ministry of Environment, with a Decree on February 4, 2000. Besides the reserve includes the wetland of international interest "Torre Guaceto" according to the Ramsar Convention. Within the framework of the EU programme "Natura 2000" and of the linked Italian programme "Bioitaly", the Region Apulia, according to the EU Habitat Directive 92/43 proposed Torre Guaceto as a site of Communitary Interest named "Torre Guaceto Macchia San Giovanni". Furthermore, the Region Apulia individuated the wetland of Torre Guaceto as a Zone of Special Protection (ZPS) according to the EU directive 79/409 "Birds". The Site of Communitary Interest includes a marine priority habitat for the EU, the Posidonia oceanica meadows. The Management Consortium of Torre Guaceto has approved the management plan of the Site of Communitary Interest (Dir. 92/43 EC) "Torre Guaceto Macchia San Giovanni". The document has been sent to the Ministry of Environment for its approval. Torre Guaceto MPA is divided in three zones, according to the different protection: A Zone, no-entry, no-take zone; B Zone, the General Reserve; C Zone of Partial Reserve. The coastline is characterized, along the western sector, by a series of small subrectangular coves with pocket Beaches, until the eastwads projecting promontory of Torre Guaceto. At east of this promontory the coast is mainly sandy, with reduced rocky formations and low rocks emerging right in front of the promontory and eastwards from it (little isles of Apani), and is characterized by a regular, sinuous coastline. The eastern coastal sector, furthermore, is incised by ten little Valleys oriented from South to North, some continuing also underwater. The inland part is devoted to the typical agricultural practices of the area, continuing the plant cover present also outside the Reserve, with secular olive trees, mixed cultures, and red soils, not covered by vegetation. In the area between the road and the coast, terrains are in a more natural condition. The spatial succession ranging from beach, dune, and Mediterranean scrub ends up with agricultural areas (mainly vegetable gardens) and some reforestation. The second coastal stretch, developing southwards, does not include neither dunes nor beach. It is characterized by a low and rocky coast, with small Beaches and whose vegetation reaches the coastline. The dunes of Torre Guaceto maintain their maximal expansion, since there are wide stretches of grey dunes that reach 15 m in height. The dune environment is diverse and is characterized by habitats of interest for the EU such as: dunes with meadows of Brachypodietalia and annual vegetation; mobile littoral dunes with Ammophila arenaria ("White Dunes"); annual vegetation of marine deposition lines, and the coastal rocks with Mediterranean coastal vegetation, with endemic Limonium spp.. The waters facing on the coast are inhabited by bird species with strong affinity for marine environments (e.g. divers, grebes, petrels, cormorants) and for swamps, like those of the order Anseriformes, that often rest and forage in the waters of the marine reserve). Many anatids rest in marine waters both during migration and in other periods of the year, when they are not active. The submarine landscape is constantly characterized by two subsequent escarpments, parallel to the coastline and with a medium slope. These escarpments are divided by flat surfaces due both to erosion and, mostly, to deposition. The rocky midlittoral is characterised by the presence of red algae as Laurencia sp, and Corallina elongata and by a Cystoserietum that forms belts along the rocky littoral. The rocky infralittoral is characterized by photophylous algae and by sea urchin barrens and encrusting alge accompanied by the few animal species that resist the grazing activity of sea urchins. Posidonia oceanica meadows are one of the most characteristic habitats of the sandy infralittoral. The intricate morphology of the meadows forms a series of microhabitats that provide both food and shelter to numerous organisms, from fish and crustaceans to sponges, bryozoans, hydroids, anthozoans and bivalve molluscs. Patches of Cymodocea nodosa are also present. In the C zone there are stretches of precoralligenous formations with many organisms in perfect state; particularly numerous are both the yellow and the white sea fans (Eunicella cavolini, Eunicella singularis). Also the bryozoans Sertella sp. e Myriapora truncata are very common. Coralligenous formations are comprised between 22 and 30 m depth, with discontinuous distribution and forming a series of patches on the sandy bottom. Coralligenous formations become scarcer at depths greater than 30 m, reaching a depth of 45 m, where the sandy bottom is replaced by mud. Muddy bottoms are inhabited by a rich fauna of molluscs, brittle stars, sea stars, sea cucumbers, vagile and tubiculous polychaetes, with various types of tubular protections. Torre Guaceto AMP has obtained the Emas II Registration (Reg CE 761/2001) in 2005. In relation to the individuated driving forces (touristic diving, visits on federal properties and nearby areas, illegal fisheries, outflow of water from the Canale Reale and from the wetland, marine pollution) the environmental analysis for the EMAS registration of the Reserve set objectives of environmental conservation. Torre Guaceto is included in the SPAMI List, according to the Barcellona Convention.
We spent the day here as the pool was broken and very glad we did. The water is stunning, translucent.... can walk out to waste level for ages. Sandy beach (no shade.... you need to bring that!). We couldn't drive to the actual beach.... had to drop the car off about 5-10 mins away and jump in the mini bus that seemed to just shuttle back & forth for 5 euros....
4.5 based on 209 reviews
dont, really don't walk there!
almost dead we arrived there! from the castle you can't see much, so nothing along the way. most parts as well military restricted area! the monument is temporally closed! one a great view and fotostop to Brindisi old town
to Promenade is under construction too, will finally a nice place i think and if to public boat will stop there the place will be great to visit (maybe then open too!!!)
by the way: a taxi back takes 30€! means more as to airport - well we don't care after this walking experience at all......
visit: 15min - by foot get there 45min
local bus somewhen from somewhere, so no need for tourist....
4.5 based on 853 reviews
The Duomo in Ostuni is beautiful in its own way, but you may find that you've seen enough churches already. I would personally say that it's not in-and-of-itself a reason to go to Ostuni, but it's worthwhile popping into if you go past. Ostuni itself is good for other things though - a small art shop just down from the duomo off via Cattedrale on vicolo Bovvio, and only homemade ice cream in Ostuni at Cremeria alla Scala (the rest are just factory products - don't waste your time!). Steps are in the shade in the morning, good place to take a break
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