Belle ferme en pierres apparentes, complètement restructurée tout en conservant lea caractéristiques de l'architecture d'origine et aménagée en une villa indépendante. Position tranquille et panoramique dans la petite ville médiévale de Stigliano. La maison, meublée d’une façon confortable, est entourée d'un grand jardin en terrasses avec des arbres fruitiers et jouit d’une belle vue sur la vallée et la campagne environnante. Les animaux domestiques sont admis.
Distances: le petit village de Rosia avec commerces variés à 2 km, Sienne à 15 km, la belle ville médiévale de San Gimignano avec ses fameuses tours à env. 35 km, Grosseto à env. 50 km. La côte de la Maremme avec ses belles plages est à env.60 minutes en voiture.
A disposition des hôtes: grand jardin en terrasses, équipé avec tables et chaises, piscine privée (5,5 x 11 m - profondeur max. 1,80 m; ouverte du 31/05 au 27/09) située en position panoramique, barbecue. Accès à la propriété par une route non goudronnée d'env. 1 km, étroite et raide, déconseillées aux voitures basses. Parking dans la propriété.
Services extra à payer sur place: sur demande petit lit pour bébé ( € 50,-/semaine) et aide domestique (prix à définir).
Les enfants âgés de moins de 2 ans sont considérés comme des adultes - la capacité d'accueil de la maison est de 9 personnes (enfants âgés de moins de 2 ans inclus). Bois de chauffage à payer sur place selon consommation. Les animaux domestiques sont admis avec un supplément de € 50 à regler sur place.
Commentaires des vacanciers
The villa and its location are great. It is a bit difficult to find at first but once there it is brilliant. The dogs another renter coplained about in 2006 are still there and are very noisy, particularly at night. However, after we addressed this with the owners (who are very lovely people), the remaining nights were not interrupted by barking dogs.
The pool and the gardens are great and offer plenty of opportunity to chill out, relax and catch up on sleep - we will definitely come again.
The villa was very large with spacious rooms and high celings. This made it cool during both the day and night. Whilst the beds were very comfortable the other furnishings were a little "tired" and in need of replacement or repair. The fridge struggled to keep things cool, the toaster was a 1950's model and as mentioned on a previous review, hot water was at a premium. The overall effect was on of slightly "faded grandeur". On top of a hill overlooking Siena with mature trees offering shade during both morning and afternoon. The patio is shaded most of the day and so perfect for "al fresco" eating. Only 15km form Siena and 3km from the local town of Rosia. The local restuarant in Stigiliano is about 15mins walk. Be advised that the road to it is narrow, steep and has a couple of very sharp turns.
Casa Del Poggio was in a great location with unbelievable views of the countryside. We travelled to Rome, Florence, Venice(a little long for a day), and of course Siena and the beach as day trips. Stigliano, was walking distance and had a wonderful local restaurant . It is the right place for an authentic Tuscan experience, but the hill leading to the property, as with all of the hilltop towns, is not for the faint of heart.
We left our hearts here.
The house itself is beautiful and in a beautiful setting. Bedrooms were all fine. We loved reading or dining in the backyard. The kitchen was wonderful for cooking, although we could have used a bigger cutting board and more glasses and silverware.
We did not use the pool--it was not hot enough to swim.
The major problem at the villa was the lack of hot water. For what we were paying, and for the size of the water heater, we should have had plenty of it. But as eight people, we had to wait hours between each of us taking ten-minute showers, and this interfered with our touring and our schedule generally.
Also, there should be signs in the house at every sink to make sure that all guests know there is only ONE faucet, one of the two in the kitchen, that has drinkable water. One of our kids drank from the rainwater faucet the first night and was VIOLENTLY ILL all night. The house has long instructions in the bathrooms about not using towels for makeup, etc. Signs indicating the drinkability of the water should be up as well so that no guest gets sick. Signora told one of the parents in the first family to arrive, but the child drank the cistern water before we could tell him.
Also, directions to the villa should identify the highways that lead to the house with numbers. We spent an hour trying to figure out if we were on the right roads. We found the house only by sheer luck.
The house was beautiful, and Signora was lovely. The above problems aside, we enjoyed it very much.