executive summary by darmansjah
Glitterati flock by the yachtful to Sardinia’s
serpentine northern Gallura coast, where exclusive Porto Cervo and Costa
Smeralda are two favorite summer playgrounds. While a winding coastal
drive—perfect for a red Ferrari roadster—offers dramatic Mediterranean views
and a powerful adrenaline rush, the real rock stars of Italy’s
second-largest island are the actual rocks, or more precisely, the prehistoric
stone dwellings found in the mountainous interior.
Sardinia is home to more than 7,000 stone nuraghi
towers, Bronze Age castles built between 1600 and 1100 B.C. Best known is
Nuraghe Santu Antine near Torralba, a well-preserved nuraghic royal palace
surrounded by the eerie remnants of a once thriving nuraghic village. To
experience modern village life on an island where sheep outnumber humans by
nearly three to one, check into Hotel Su Gologone in Oliena, where hearty
guests can sign up to shadow a local shepherd for the day.
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