Thursday, September 19, 2024

Sardinia: The Mediterranean isle where hikers stay for free

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Simone Gianforcaro View from Santa Barbara mining routeSimone Gianforcaro

The Santa Barbara Mining Route threads some of Sardinia’s most stunning and secluded terrain (Credit: Simone Gianforcaro)

An enticing new programme is seeking to transform a rugged corner of the Italian island into an outdoor lover’s paradise.

Renowned for its pristine beaches and dramatic granite cliffs, the Italian island of Sardinia has long been known as a jet-setters’ paradise. But away from the mega yachts and glitterati of its glamorous Costa Smeralda resort, much of the Mediterranean’s second-largest island remains a rugged, unspoiled wilderness waiting to be explored.

Now, a group of hikers and former miners are hoping to lure adventure-seekers to Sardinia’s seldom-visited south-west coast by offering free lodging along the island’s stunning 500km Santa Barbara Mining Route.

Named for the patron saint of miners, the 30-stage route passes through towering sand dunes, lush forests, craggy outcrops and nearly 150 abandoned mines. It also allows travellers plenty of opportunities to get to know local Sardinians and enjoy the island’s famous gastronomy.

“Before my trip, I didn’t know anything about the history of that part of Sardinia,” said Giorgio Pedulla, a 26-year-old data analyst from Milan who spent five days hiking the trail in March. “On this hike, you really manage to get into the culture and the life of the people who live there.”

Gianni Alvito The 500km trail passes through caves, towering sand dunes, lush forests, craggy outcrops and nearly 150 abandoned mines (Credit: Gianni Alvito)Gianni Alvito

The 500km trail passes through caves, towering sand dunes, lush forests, craggy outcrops and nearly 150 abandoned mines (Credit: Gianni Alvito)

Pedulla was taking advantage of the trail’s new Leg’s Go In Cammino initiative, which launched in October 2023 and offers visitors younger than 35 up to three consecutive nights’ accommodation for free. When hikers register, they’re granted vouchers to use in local inns, campsites and bed and breakfasts. After the free stays, they pay the standard rates of €20 a night at posadas (small family-style inns) and €28 a night at private accommodations.

The details

To receive the three free accommodation vouchers, young hikers need to purchase a €5 walker’s passport and make a small donation through the Cammino’s website. Vouchers can be used through 15 December 2024, but not during the period from 16 June to 14 September.

“We wanted to decrease the average age of our visitors, from retired people to people in their 20s and 30s. It’s also very important for us to let people know about the history of this trail,” said 30-year-old Margherita Concu, the association’s secretary and a hiker who has trekked all 500km of the trail. “We want people to learn about this community, a place that even some Sardinians don’t know about.”

The area’s jaw-dropping beauty and budget accommodations have proven a powerful draw. In 2023, 1,199 hikers set off on the trail. So far this year, 1,521 have come, trekking along mule tracks dating to 800 BCE, stone bridges built by the ancient Romans and 19th-Century rail lines. To date, 196 hikers completed the entire trail since it opened in 2017, often taking a month to do so. In addition to bragging rights, finishers receive a trophy made by a local artisan depicting a ceramic tower with three windows – the symbol of Santa Barbara.

Scenery aside, exploring the trail gives hikers the chance to fuel up on Sardinia’s renowned cuisine and hyperlocal ingredients. Travellers can sample bluefin tuna pasta in the village of Carloforte, the island’s renowned sweet onions in San Giovanni Suergiu; spiny artichokes in Masainas, chickpeas in Musei and the famous cherries and oranges of Villacidro. Along the way, visitors absorb the area’s ancient history, with sites reflecting the island’s tangled roots and vulnerability to outside conquering forces.

Gianni Alvito South-west Sardinia's mining history goes back thousands of years (Credit: Gianni Alvito)Gianni Alvito

South-west Sardinia’s mining history goes back thousands of years (Credit: Gianni Alvito)

South-western Sardinia was inhabited as far back as 6000 BCE, with mining and metal trading documented as early as the Bronze Age Nuragic period and lead and silver ore excavations starting in the second millennium BCE. When the Romans took over the island in 138 BCE, they brought advanced mining techniques and founded mining cities where they forced slaves and prisoners to work. After the fall of the Roman Empire, these mines were largely abandoned.

In quintessential Italian fashion, the trail traces a history informed by aristocrats, strikes and protests. In the 12th Century, Pisan Count Ugolino della Gherardesca developed the silver mines in Iglesias, now the starting point of the trail. A century later, when the Aragonese conquered the island, they closed the mines, sending the miners to Catalonia. In the second half of the 19th Century, as Italy was becoming a nation, the mines became newly valuable, with Sardinia supplying almost all of the nascent country’s lead and zinc. Many of the mines remained productive through both world wars, but started to decline in the 1960s and ceased operating in the 1990s.

Seeking to honour the heritage of the mines and miners, activists initiated a plan to create the Historical and Environmental Geomining Park of Sardinia and, in 2001, Italy’s Minister of the Environment signed a law recognising the park, allocating government funding and creating 500 jobs for the former miners and those who serviced the facilities. Some of these people now give tours sharing their own stories with hikers throughout the 3,770 sq km park in Sardinia’s south-west Sulcis Iglesiente region (where the Santa Barbara Mining Route is located).

Even for Italians who have been to Sardinia before, the trail is a revelation.

“I’d seen the touristic part, with crowded beaches, but had never seen this more real part of Sardinia,” said Pedulla, who discovered the free lodging promotion while scrolling on Instagram. He invited two Amsterdam-based friends, Carlo Fuselli and Cecile Van Der Stappen, all of whom relished the connections they made with locals.

Ettore Cavalli The trail takes travellers off Sardinia's beaten path and into the rural heart of the island (Credit: Ettore Cavalli)Ettore Cavalli

The trail takes travellers off Sardinia’s beaten path and into the rural heart of the island (Credit: Ettore Cavalli)

“I want to give a big shoutout to the people working on the trail. They welcomed us and started telling us their story. Some of them have had parents or relatives that were miners, so this is their personal story, not just from books,” Pedulla said.

In contrast to life in Milan, Pedulla says that the small Sardinian villages he and his friends visited were full of people ready to welcome them and make them feel like a part of the community.

“It seemed like everywhere we stopped, everybody had a cousin,” Pedulla laughed. “If we asked where to eat, it was, ‘My cousin has this great restaurant!’. When we wanted to wash our clothes, they said, ‘My cousin has a laundry!’.”

Among Pedulla’s highlights: a stop in the tiny hamlet of Masua facing the mammoth Pan di Zucchero sea stacks, where besides their bed and breakfast hosts, Pedulla and his friends constituted the sole population. There was also an afternoon guided tour of Porto Flavia, a 1920s zinc- and lead-mining facility built directly into cliffs overlooking the water, followed by a “super lunch” of sliced ham and cheese, bruschetta and plates of lasagna.

Gianni Alvito The iconic Pan di Zucchero sits just offshore from the historical mine of Porto Flavia (Credit: Gianni Alvito)Gianni Alvito

The iconic Pan di Zucchero sits just offshore from the historical mine of Porto Flavia (Credit: Gianni Alvito)

The most challenging day, a seven-hour, 20km stretch from Masua to the town of Buggerru, was Pedulla’s favourite.

“That part of the coast is very steep, so you walk on top of these big rocks that [appear to fall] straight into the sea,” he said. “All day, you have a wonderful view.”

The trio finished their adventure with an easy walk from Buggerru, past a mining museum, through a limestone cavern covered by a millennium of embedded snail shells and a cold-water grotto, to the dunes of Portixeddu. There, they swam and relaxed at the Golfo di Leone restaurant, feasting on porceddu (roasted piglet wrapped in myrtle leaves), accompanied by strong, ruby-red local Cannonau wine.

“Hiking is very tiring for your body but very relaxing for your mind. I was expecting that feeling,” Pedulla said. “[But] what surprised me was the cultural part of getting to know people.”

While Pedulla and his friends sought out company, Jiseon Moon, a 33-year-old Bergamo-based Korean, Italian and English interpreter, embraced the opportunity for solitude.

Riccardo Locci The trail offers plenty of opportunities to connect with local Sardinians, but also offers travellers solitude (Credit: Riccardo Locci)Riccardo Locci

The trail offers plenty of opportunities to connect with local Sardinians, but also offers travellers solitude (Credit: Riccardo Locci)

Moon discovered the trail through her husband, Alessio Taormina, who filmed it for his forthcoming documentary, In Sa Terra, about Sardinians’ sense of identity and bonds to their land.  

Stressed out from working three jobs, Moon made a New Year’s resolution to hike the Santa Barbara trail and arrived in mid-March.

“I’m more of a mountain person, but the first time that I saw the sea [from the trail], I was really moved. I had one of those moments where you cannot really spot the difference between the sky and the sea. I was just so moved, I started to sketch what I was seeing,” Moon said.

An experienced hiker, Moon noted that the trail offered excellent phone and internet connection, providing a sense of security. “It was just nothing else other than nature,” she added. “You see the mountains and the sea, and it was just so soothing.”

Gianni Alvito "It was just nothing else other than nature," Moon said of the trail (Credit: Gianni Alvito)Gianni Alvito

“It was just nothing else other than nature,” Moon said of the trail (Credit: Gianni Alvito)

In the evenings, Moon sometimes ate with other hikers at hostels and restaurants. Mostly, she appreciated the time she had to read and think, and was pleasantly surprised by the campgrounds in Buggerru, to which she was given a lift by the friendly owner of a cafe at Porto Flavia.

“It was a gorgeous, a former mining structure that had been abandoned. They’ve done a lot of work to make it really welcoming,” Moon said, who, like Pedulla, was struck by the towering Pan di Zucchero limestone boulders jutting out of the water just offshore.

From the scenery to the serenity, Moon says the hike provided the reset she was seeking.

“It was really special,’ she said. “The Sardinian people were so warm and welcoming. I was by myself, but I was really never alone.”

Slowcomotion is a BBC Travel series that celebrates slow, self-propelled travel and invites readers to get outside and reconnect with the world in a safe and sustainable way.

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