10 Reasons You Need To Visit Puglia

Visit-Puglia

Puglia needs to be on your bucket list. This region of Italy that makes up the thin heel of Italy’s boot looks like no other part of Italy. It is wildly beautiful, with white-washed towns looking out over the crazy blue of the Adriatic on one side and the Ionian Sea on the other. Home to fields of olive trees and the largest wine growing area in all of Italy, Puglia is a mecca for foodies and oenophiles. The beaches stretch for miles on end, the history and the architecture are captivating. It is so easy to close your eyes and imagine running away to Puglia and never coming back.

10 Reasons You Need To Visit Puglia

1. The Landscape.

Santa-Cesarea-Terme

Puglia is gorgeous. Flanked by the Adriatic on the east coast and the Ionian on the west, Puglia has around 800 km of staggeringly beautiful coastline, with white sandy beaches and dramatic rocky cliffs.

Adriatic-Coast

Adriatic-Coast

It also has endless vineyards and olive groves, and is sprinkled with picturesque whitewashed towns and villages.

Puglia-Coast
Ostuni, Puglia

The Trulli

The Val d’Itria area of Puglia is filled with amazing hobbit-like cone roofed houses. They are quite magical! We stayed in one for three nights, and it was really quite special.

trulli-puglia

Related Post: What are trulli? 

3. The Picturesque Little White Towns

Throughout Puglia the countryside is speckled with picturesque little white towns. They offset the colors of the land, and gleam and sparkle against the lapis lazuli ocean. The are simply exquisite!

Monopoli-harbor
Monopoli harbor

They also are quite intricate, and form a labyrinth of narrow, winding streets that circle around, double back and lead to dead ends.

white-streets-ostuni
Ostuni, Puglia

For centuries Puglia was under attack and relatively defenseless with its endless coastline, so the towns were built into mazes designed to confuse and dis-empower invaders while allowing the inhabitants a chance to escape.

old-town-ostuni
Ostuni
layered up for rain, cold and sunshine in Cisternino

I fell in love with Cisternino, Locorotondo, Ostuni and old town Monopoli.

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Locorotondo
old-town-cisternino
Cisternino

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4. The Lack Of Tourists.

Otranto-Puglia
Saturday morning at Otranto cathedral

Although Puglia is an absolute tourist’s paradise, compared to the rest of Italy it really doesn’t have many tourists.

If you have ever traveled to Florence, Venice or Rome you will know exactly what I’m talking about!

Italians, Germans and Brits know their way around the beaches, but outside of August and the end of July and beginning of September, Puglia is tourist-light.

Puglia
Lecce on a Saturday afternoon

Any place that doesn’t have bus loads of tourists tends to have authentic food and fewer t-shirt shops.

Piazza-Duomo-Lecce
Piazza Duomo in Lecce, Saturday afternoon

You also get the added bonus of standing directly in front of art and statues and great sights instead of 5 bodies deep!


5. The People

I have always found Italians to be the friendliest people anywhere, but I particularly loved the Pugliese. Everywhere we went locals wanted to chat, point out cool things to look at, welcome us to their town.

ostuni-locals

I met this darling little lady, Caterina, in Ostuni.
She lives in a teeny tiny little home on a whitewashed street, and walks everywhere every day with a cane that she hid for our photos.

We chatted for ages and she told us all about growing up in Ostuni, and living there her entire life.

puglia-ostuni

What she lacked in teeth she made up for in heart. She was just adorable!

ostuni-streets

Related Post: How To Order Coffee In Italy

6. The Food.

Oh lord. The food!

Octopus-Salad
Octopus salad at Miseriaenobilta in Alberobello

Puglia is a major agricultural region, so everything you eat is local and fresh.

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Handmade Orecchetti with turnip greens in Santa Cesarea Terme, Puglia

From handmade orriechetti to fresh seafood, to the simplest of salads, eating in Puglia is heaven. And crazy inexpensive.

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The remnants of a 15 euro order of seafood antipasti at Torre San Sabine, Puglia

7. The Beaches.

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Sunset, Polignano A Mare, Puglia

Puglia’s coastline gives you and endless stream of stunning beaches.

Best-Beaches-Puglia
Due Sorelle Beach, Otranto Puglia

Whether you want white sands and an Italian Maldives experience, rocky cliffs to dive from, dramatic rocky beaches, lidos or private, isolated coves, Puglia has it all.

Best-Beaches-Puglia

The water is a surreal carcophany of see thru blues – you can almost hear the colors! As far out as you swim you can see to the bottom, the water is so clean and pristine.

Puglia-Coastline
Grotta Azzurra, Salento Coast Puglia

You can take boats out to blue grotto caves and swim alone in water.

Related Post: How To Use The Train System In Italy

8. The Wine

Puglia grows 17% of Italy’s wine, an annual yield larger than the entire production of Australian wines.

The most famous wines from the region are the hearty reds Primativo and Negro Amaro, and the crisp white Fiano.

While ordering bottles of wine with dinner is always fun, we particularly loved being in little local restaurants and getting liter jugs of the house wine for 4 euros! The crazy thing was the house wine was just fantastic, every single time.

9. The Olive Oil

Much of Italy’s olive oil production happens in Puglia.

puglia-olive-trees

Driving through the countryside you see endless olive groves, some with giant old trees up to 500 years old still standing sentry, watching over incredibly fertile land that makes nutrient rich olives that burst with flavor.

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ancient olive tree in Puglia

A simple mixed green salad with fresh olive oil from Puglia and a sprinkle of salt can change your life forever!

10. The Easy Way Of Life

Travel in Puglia is so incredibly easy. Contrary to everything I read prior to going, the roads in Puglia are fantastic. Driving is a breeze because the roads are not only in good shape but are also well sign posted.
The people are friendly and kind, the pace of life is slower, with everything closing down for siesta from 1pm til 4pm.
The lack of cruise ships and tour buses disgorging thousands of nikon wielding tourists into the streets means that Puglia is still authentic and very affordable. Beautiful vacation rentals are very inexpensive, as are consumer goods and food and wine.
Puglia feels like a secret. A magical, mystical secret, and is the perfect place for a glorious vacation.
Rail Europe (Americas)

Into The Mezzogiorno

puglia-santa-cesarea-terme

Are you following the new Glam Italia tour on Instagram?
(@Corinnamakeup ) 

Today we are leaving Rome and heading into the mezzogiorno, Italy’s fabulous south.

We will be spending time on glorious beaches with sapphire seas, staying in mystical looking conical houses, cave hotels and Moorish styled beachfront properties.
We are visiting two different regions, the driest region in all of Italy, Basilicata, and the most fertile region, Puglia. There is going to be so much to see and it’s going to be spectacular!

When I get home I’ll be blogging in depth about these fantastic places to add to your bucket list, but in the meantime I hope you will follow along on Instagram.  

Ciao!