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Hundreds evacuated after series of rockfalls in Italy's Brenta Dolomites

Hundreds evacuated after series of rockfalls in Italy's Brenta Dolomites

The Guardian30-07-2025
Hundreds of hikers and tourists were evacuated and dozens of trails closed after a series of rockfalls on the slopes of Cima Falkner in the Brenta Dolomites in the north of Italy, as experts warned of a sharp rise in landslides in the area linked to thawing permafrost.
In recent days, visitors reported hearing loud booms followed by rockfalls and thick clouds of dust rising from Monte Pelmo in the Val di Zoldo after rocky pinnacles broke away and crashed down into the valley below in the municipality of Selva di Cadore in Italy's Belluno province.
Another collapse was recorded on Cima Falkner, where experts say the entire area is undergoing a process of erosion linked to rising temperatures and the wider climate emergency. No one was injured and the falling debris came to a stop higher up the mountain.
'Multiple rockfalls have occurred on both the western and eastern slopes of Cima Falkner in the Brenta Group,' read a statement by authorities in the region of Trentino-Alto Adige. 'As a result, all climbing routes and hiking trails directly affected by the area have been immediately closed.
'All hikers in the area have been evacuated. We urge everyone to pay maximum attention and strictly follow the ordinances to ensure their own safety.'
Following reports of rockfalls, a technical inspection was conducted on Tuesday by the geological service with the support of a helicopter unit, which confirmed that 'the entire summit is affected by an ongoing geomorphological process, likely linked to permafrost degradation'.
Rockfalls have always occurred in the Dolomites, but experts this year warned of a striking rise in the number of collapses, driven by extreme heat and weather events intensified by the climate crisis.
'Never before have we seen such an incredible increase in rockfalls,' Piero Carlesi, president of the scientific committee of the Italian Alpine Club (CAI), told la Repubblica. 'Landslides are on the rise, and the main cause is the climate crisis. There's no doubt about it.'
He added: 'Mountains, by definition, are destined to collapse – they won't remain as we know them for ever. What's different now is that we're seeing a clear acceleration of these processes, driven by heat and extreme weather events intensified by the climate crisis.'
Cold temperatures, causing water seeping into rock fractures to freeze, acted as a kind of glue, holding the rocks together. But now, Carlesi said, with rising temperatures, that glue was disappearing and fractured rock was increasingly breaking off and tumbling down gullies. 'It's happening more and more often,' he said.
Last year, Italian scientists who took part in a campaign launched by the environmentalist group Legambiente said the Marmolada glacier – the largest and most symbolic in the Dolomites – could melt completely by 2040.
Their report said Marmolada was losing between 7cm and 10cm of depth a day and that over the past five years, 70 hectares (173 acres) of its surface had disappeared.
Since the beginning of scientific measurements in 1888, the Marmolada glacier has withdrawn by 1,200 metres in an 'irreversible coma'.
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In 2022, a collapse on the Marmolada mountain sent an avalanche of ice, snow and rock downslope, killed 11 people.
Erosion and rockfalls are on the rise not only in the Dolomites but across the entire Alpine range, according to mountaineers and experts. In late June 2025, Mont Blanc experienced a record-breaking heatwave with temperatures remaining above zero for an extended period at high altitudes, including the summit.
Bernard Vion, a 66-year-old mountain guide, has been walking and climbing in the French Alps around Pralognan-la-Vanoise since he was a child and accompanies visitors on climbs. He said rockfalls and other dangers caused by climate change had complicated work for him and his colleagues.
'We have never seen rock falls of such intensity and regularity before. The permafrost, which is like a kind of cement holding the rocks together, is melting, meaning they have no cohesion and they collapse,' he said.
Vion opened his phone to show a message from another guide with pictures of a large rockfall near a mountain refuge at about 2,800 metres above Pralognan-la-Vanoise on Monday. 'He was really shocked. He said he never expected it to happen there,' Vion said.
'For several years now we have had to develop the ability to observe these phenomenon and spot the warning signs. In some cases we've had to totally modify our itineraries to reduce the risk to our clients. Even for us guides this is difficult and I worry about amateur climbers who don't have the same mountain culture.'
He said 'of course' this was due to climate breakdown. 'You'd have to be blind not to see it. Anyone who doubts this should come to the mountains.'
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The 26 loveliest places to stay on the Italian Lakes
The 26 loveliest places to stay on the Italian Lakes

Times

time5 hours ago

  • Times

The 26 loveliest places to stay on the Italian Lakes

Como, Maggiore, Garda … the names alone are enough to lull you into soporific bliss. The lure of Italy's northern lakes was forged in Roman times and reinforced over centuries. Celebrities, cardinals and queens have had homes here. Artists from Turner to (Mary) Shelley have taken inspiration from their depths, and today we still make for the lakes in the hope that our stress levels will be stilled as calmly as those glacial waters. Each lake has a different vibe and fanbase. Como, of course, is the daddy of all luxury retreats: a jagged lake directly north of Milan, shaped like a beehived woman mid-sprint. Here, the Alps squeeze the water as tightly as the hotels do your wallet. To the east, Lombardy melts into Veneto on buzzy Lake Garda. The only lake with a Mediterranean climate, it's beloved by adventure types (there's a running and cycling path along the northwest waterfront) and families who come for the water activities and Gardaland, a rite-of-passage theme park for Italian children. Maggiore is somewhere between the two — not as high-luxe as Como yet not as popular as Garda. This is a place where aristocratic families still own swathes of land and the ribbon-like road winds around at water level rather than rollercoastering, as it does around Como. Then there are the smaller lakes — less famous, which means less spoilt. Iseo is my favourite for its Como-ish glassy waters and panettone-like island in the middle, Monte Isola. The Milanese, meanwhile, prefer Orta: a mini Maggiore with Como-level hospitality, only minus the crowds. Lake Caldaro is my wild card: a pool-like blob 90 minutes north of Garda, in the foothills of the Dolomites, in German-speaking South Tyrol. Surrounded by vineyards and restaurants, it's a lake for grown-ups with nothing to prove — less drama but lots of dolce vita. Whichever you pick, some of Italy's best hotels are waiting for you. Here are 26 of the best. This article contains affiliate links that will earn us revenue The grandest of dames on Lake Como — quite an achievement — this sumptuous old-school hotel started off as a cardinal's mansion and later played home to Caroline of Brunswick, our short-lived 19th-century queen. It's still fit for royalty with high-ceilinged, antique-filled rooms, corridors hung with paintings, and a sweeping staircase that means you can't help but make an entrance, even on your way to breakfast. Summer's peak season — the lakeside pool and sprawling gardens are the draw — but it's also magical in winter, with a city's worth of Christmas lights illuminating every surface, boat rides with hot chocolate on hand and heated gazebos so you can still enjoy the lake B&B doubles from £676 ( Fly to Milan • Villa d'Este hotel review: a Lake Como retreat loved by the A-list This is Como but not as you know it. On the millpond-calm waterfront of Vassena — 15 minutes south of Bellagio, on the quiet side of the lake's quietest leg — this peaceful restaurant with rooms is a retreat from the general Como madness. Plump for a lake view and you'll get a small but beautifully renovated room with putty-coloured walls, exposed beams and glass doors leading out to your balcony hoisted over the water (where your private breakfast is served). There's a free shuttle to Bellagio and the owners have a fleet of rental boats to hit the water. Guests get priority at the restaurant, where everything from the bread to pasta is B&B doubles from £155 ( Fly to Milan So you want that priceless Como experience but without overtly luxury trimmings. You'll need this family-owned 18-roomer just outside the quiet village of Pognana Lario. On the rollercoaster road to Bellagio, this is the less chic side of Como's posher leg, meaning fewer fancy restaurants but tonnes more atmosphere. The focus is on nature not flounce, so the minimalist, white-walled rooms are angled towards the water. As is the small garden — sit under the centuries-old cedars, on the platform embedded into the lakeside wall, or in a deckchair on a bobbing pontoon. Go for a room in the palazzo, suspended between the cedar branches and the water. Details B&B doubles from £562 ( Fly to Milan The northern half of Lake Como is less sceney, more real. There are campsites, simple hotels and the odd boutique standout such as this converted vicarage 25 minutes' drive north of Tremezzo. Where other hotels go all out to glam up, this is suitably sober: there's a monastic feel to the rough-plastered, open-beamed rooms and the cellar breakfast area. Rooms overlook the lake or the garden, while the pool is within earshot of Cremia's bell tower. Details B&B doubles from £228 ( Fly to Milan At the turn of the (last) century, Menaggio, on the western shoreline of Lake Como, was the place to be. Today it's as elegant as ever but nowhere near as crowded as the towns further south. That means you can enjoy all the luxurious trappings of its history at this grande dame, built in 1890 but overhauled and reopened in 2021. Today the columns and chandeliers of the ground floor contrast with the modern simplicity of the rooms upstairs — all neutral colours with feature wallpaper revving things up. The 1,200 sq m spa has everything from saunas to a salt room. Last year a beach club opened on the nearby B&B doubles from £574 ( Fly to Milan Cutesy Varenna is one of the top draws on the lake, and this is the loveliest place to stay. Once a stately home of various gentry, Villa Cipressi is now a hotel owned by the town council and managed by locals. Rooms are spread across three buildings dating from the 14th century; despite the history they're modern in feel, with simple whitewashed walls and parquet floors, putting the focus on the lake outside. The grounds house a botanical garden that is open to the public, including a gateway onto the lake that's (sadly) big on Instagram. Out of business hours, though, it's all B&B doubles from £258 ( Fly to Milan This really is a vibe: a storied 80-room grande dame on Como's sunny western shore, down the road from the gardens of Villa Carlotta at Tremezzo. A hotel since 1910, it has been brought up to date by the De Santis family — who have owned it for the past half-century — mixing the old (carved, gilded headboards) with the new (mint green and buff walls) in the bedrooms, plus outdoor dining and the signature pool floating leisurely on the lake itself. Details B&B doubles from £781 ( Fly to Milan There's no need to bankrupt yourself for a lakeside stay — not when there are four-star digs like this, between Como city and Cernobbio's famous waterfront. For roughly the same price as a night at Villa d'Este you can get a week at the Villa Flori, originally a 19th-century mansion, which has conserved the frou-frou stucco and terrazzo floors of its previous life. Upgrade to a classic room from a standard for that all-important lake view. But bring earplugs: the only downside is that it's on the busy main Seven nights' B&B from £1,891, including flights with checked luggage and transfers with easyJet Holidays ( So you want to visit Como but you don't want the full-on overtourism experience. How about this: 20 minutes from Como's quieter eastern leg, sitting pretty on a lake of its own. Think of Lake Annone as two teardrops flicked off Como's bottom-right foot. This is slow tourism: a sleek, modern ten-room mansion, which opened earlier this year, bang on the waterfront. Entry-level rooms are immersed in garden greenery; for a lake view, upgrade to a junior suite, complete with a mini hammam in the bathroom. Details B&B doubles from £338 ( Fly to Milan • What I learnt attempting to do luxury Lake Como for less This deliciously old-school hotel is a glimpse of real life: a family-owned villa (yes, that statue is of Gina, the owners' bulldog), once the property of the Feltrinelli family. Follow the breathe-in lane carved into the cliffs 400m above pretty Gargnano and you'll emerge at this 19th-century mansion, which was overhauled this year. The views are, of course, jaw-droppers; rooms in the main home (our pick) are relatively simple, with pretty pastels, parquet floors and flouncing headboards, leaving the focus on the views outside (other rooms, including the hammam-equipped spa suites, which opened this year, are in a modern annexe — more privacy but less history). Outside there are nearly 100 acres of grounds to explore, including the pool which, naturally, comes with a side of lake view. Details B&B doubles from £275 ( Fly to Verona Cape of Senses opened with a bang in 2023 above Torri del Benaco, on Garda's east coast where the bulbous south gives way to a more alpine, mountain-hugged lake. Designed especially to catch Garda's most spectacular sunsets, it's a thoroughly modern affair with local stone, wood and tiles amping up the sustainability. The contemporary, neutrals-filled rooms all overlook the water through floor-to-ceiling windows and balconies. There are two pools, but the spa is the main draw, with a sauna overlooking an olive grove and an excellent range of treatments using herb-powered products. Details B&B doubles from £416 ( Fly to Verona A slender peninsula tickling the southern part of the lake, Sirmione is one of Garda's most visited villages. The Romans used to come to enjoy the thermal waters here, and today you can follow in their footsteps with various hotels doubling as spas. Terme is arguably the best value, with 102 simple but elegant rooms with views over the town and the lake (lake-view rooms have balconies suspended over the water). There's a good selection of single and family rooms. The spa area is a mix of thermal pools, plus extras from a sauna and hammam to salt room and argillarium, where you can douse yourself with mineral-infused clay. Details B&B doubles from £112 ( Fly to Verona You're right on the lakefront here, but you wouldn't necessarily know it, thanks to the 17-acre park that swathes the hotel in green: sprawling lawns, century-old trees and palms reminding you of the Mediterranean climate. It's a big beast of 254 rooms, including bungalows dotted about the grounds. The room categories have wildly different feels; our pick are the Sequoia rooms, hugged by trees with views of the lake squeezed in by high, primeval cliffs, or the park-bound bungalows for a glamping feel. Family-run, it's also family-friendly with a kids' club, a pizzeria as well as a new Italian restaurant, and three pools. For the adults, there's outdoor yoga and a spa offering everything from ayurvedic treatments to Botox-effect facial B&B doubles from £370 ( Fly to Verona This world-class resort is hoisted high in the cliffs above Gargnano's lemon groves and blends traditional Chinese medicine and western techniques. The sprawling 4,300 sq m spa offers traditional Chinese medicine-based treatment plans including a salt-infused floating pool and tuina (traditional Chinese) massages. You don't have to be a spa fiend to stay, though — this is perhaps Garda's most spectacular setting, with 27 acres of flower and herb-filled parkland enjoying sweeping views over the lake below, a clifftop pool, plus two wonderful restaurants overlooking the water. The rooms — all soothing neutrals — look onto the park and the lake beyond, with private balconies and grassy terraces. Heaven. Details B&B doubles from £324 ( Fly to Verona Sporty types rejoice: this hotel on the northeastern shore was built for those of you who want to cycle, run and windsurf around the lake. This self-styled 'triathlon hotel' attracts a self-selecting bunch of guests, and they really love it. Activities include guided biking and hiking, yoga lessons and triathlon camps, and there's a shuttle service to biking trails, a CCTV-equipped bike room, helmet lockers, and pools and a sauna for end-of-day recovery (they have thought of everything). And the rooms? You'll probably be too knackered to notice, but they're fun affairs, with brightly coloured walls, jazzy art and smatterings of pink lighting. Details B&B doubles from £136 ( Fly to Verona Benito Mussolini could have chosen anywhere to live when he set up his Garda-based puppet-state Republic of Salo in 1943. This was his choice: a ravishing lakeside mansion, built in 1892 for the Feltrinelli publishing scions. Little has changed over the past 133 years: it's still a waltz back in time with stuccoed walls, painted ceilings and stained glass around the grand staircase. This is one of Italy's genuine bucket-list hotels. To do it right, get a wondrously flouncy room in the main villa (not the outside buildings). Out of budget? Know the feeling, but the two-Michelin-starred restaurant is open to B&B doubles from £1,553 ( Fly to Verona • Read our full guide to Italy Just five minutes from Garda's southern coast but well away from the crowds, this self-contained resort is a peaceful oasis just off the motorway (though you wouldn't know). Set on its own dinky lake, the Laghetto del Frassino, it has 97 modern rooms scattered around barnlike buildings, two pools, an organic vineyard, a restaurant overlooking the water, and a brood of chubby cats padding around the public areas. It's all rather slick — rooms have features like exposed-brick walls and floor-to-ceiling windows — but beneath that is a real commitment to sustainability, with green roofs, bat houses, a spelt field for biodiversity and more than 400 trees to help the property B&B doubles from £130 ( Fly to Verona Think of this as an upmarket agriturismo or B&B a farm producing wine, olive oil and unforgettable stays thanks to the 44 acres of lawn, olive groves and gardens unspooling towards the distant blue. There are eight rustic rooms (lemon walls, exposed beams and rolltop baths), plus a lovely garden pool and homemade limoncello to enjoy in the loungers beside it. Bardolino itself is an easy seven-minute B&B doubles from £240 ( Fly to Verona Another recent opening for Torri del Benaco, Borgo Tre threw open its rustic doors (it's an 18th-century farmhouse) in 2024. It's a hybrid between a holiday home and an agriturismo; there are only four suites (two more are planned this year), the farmhouse is hemmed in by pine forest, olive groves and lemon trees, and each suite is self-sufficient with kitchen and dining areas (though there's also a communal honesty box, and you get a breakfast box delivered each morning). It's a nice bet off-season, because each suite has a fireplace as well as views of Torri del Benaco and the lake beyond. Details B&B doubles from £518 ( Fly to Verona • Lake Como v Lake Garda: which one should you visit? It looks a bit like a Loire Valley château crossed with a National Trust property, but Castello del Pozzo is one of a kind. In the hills west of Lake Maggiore, this is a fun, neo-gothic castle, though the site's history dates back about 1,000 years, when Milan's Visconti family stamped their mark on this territory. Today it's still family-owned by the Dal Pozzo d'Annone family, who have had it for six generations. The rooms — split between the castle, villa and stables — are contemporary classic with pastel walls, heavy curtains and antique furniture reupholstered in fancy patterns. Don't spook easily? Book the Queen Superior Barbara room in the old tower, with a resident B&B doubles from £195 ( Fly to Milan • 10 of the most beautiful places in Italy When is an Italian lake hotel not in Italy? When it's at the northern end of Lake Maggiore, a quick skip across the Swiss border. That explains the prices here in Ascona. Reopened in April after a seven-month renovation the rooms now, er, rock with colour, whether that's bright yellow walls, striped curtains or funky patterned wallpaper. The views range from garden to mountain to a sweeping panorama all the way down the lake. Outside, past the three swimming pools, lies 500m of private shoreline and a water sports school offering everything from stand-up paddleboard sessions to waterskiing. Details B&B doubles from £489 ( Fly to Milan Gorgeous Iseo, midway between Como and Garda, and about half the size of its bigger siblings, is a light-under-a-bushel kind of place. It's less chi-chi than Como and less family-focused than Garda, which means better prices. Better still, it's in the sprawling wine country of Franciacorta. L'Albereta is Iseo's grande dame, a vineyard-hugged, ivy-swathed villa with a world-renowned spa attached. The 38 rooms are all rustic-luxe, with biscuit-coloured walls and patterned furniture; restaurants run the gamut from a fun pizzeria to L'Aurum, run by the superchef Enrico Bartolini. And then there's the spa, or Chenot Espace, Italy's only spa for the Chenot Method, which specialises in detox (hence another Chenot-specific restaurant for those easily tempted). You're a 15-minute drive from the southern shore at B&B doubles from £311 ( Fly to Bergamo OK, this isn't on the lakefront — it's a 20-minute drive to Sarnico, at the base of Lake Iseo. But it really is worth the drive to a 16th-century monastery perched on a conical hill that's often magically shrouded in morning mist, thanks to the foggy Po Valley. The owner, Rosalba Tonelli, has lovingly converted the cells into 14 unique rooms; maybe you'll have colourful walls, an iron bedstead or antique furniture. Winding up the hill you'll find tiered gardens and the pool, while at road level is the new spa. The cloister is dominated by the restaurant serving the hotel's own veg and wine, plus local products, from lakefish to B&B doubles from £164 ( Fly to Bergamo Nudging to the left of Maggiore, Orta is the lake of choice for Milanese weekenders, which means it's calm midweek and has fantastic restaurants and swish hotels. This historic farming estate has been turned into a seriously chic aparthotel perched above the town of Orta San Giulio on the eastern shoreline. The owners, the local architects and brothers Gian Carlo and Matteo Primatesta, not only designed and renovated this as an ode to their lake, they have also planted a vineyard and vegetable garden to supply their restaurant. The rooms all have lake views and terraces (perfect for your breakfast box), from the one-beds with kitchenette to the self-declared luxury category; the style is Kit Kemp-esque with striped walls and patterned headboards. The two-bedroom family suites are good for groups of adults. Details B&B doubles from £259 ( Fly to Milan Whatever Como can do, Orta can do just as well, if not better. This is its answer to all those Michelin-starred restaurants hogging its bigger sibling's shoreline: a three-star restaurant and Relais & Châteaux hotel owned by Antonio Cannavacciuolo, one of Italy's foremost chefs. The location: a wildly flamboyant Moorish-style castle built in whimsical 19th-century style. The food: the best of Italy, as seen through the lens of this Campanian maestro. The rooms: 14 of them, including in the tower, with flamboyant tiles, Moorish arches in the bathrooms and even carved and gilded B&B doubles from £338 ( Fly to Milan The Kalterer See, otherwise known as Lago di Caldaro, is the lake you didn't know you needed; relatively small, shaped like a portly seated cat, surrounded by superb wineries and restaurants, but nowhere near as prohibitively expensive as its more famous cousins. As the German name suggests, you're in South Tyrol, an hour south of Bolzano, yet instead of toothy Dolomites this is all rolling hills and wine estates. On the east shore, 80m inland, this 12-room pensione was transformed during the pandemic into a funky hotel with simple but stylish rooms, a meadow out the back and, down the road, a lakefront lido with pedalos and rowing boats for Half-board doubles from £131 ( Fly to Verona Have we missed your favourite? 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28 of the best places for an autumn city break
28 of the best places for an autumn city break

Times

time5 hours ago

  • Times

28 of the best places for an autumn city break

Autumn has plenty going for it in the northern hemisphere. Leaves turn wondrous colours as mushrooms, nuts and truffles lend depth and character to restaurant menus. Wines are harvested, cakes begin to be served in cosy cafés and opera houses commence new seasons. Festivals seem to be everywhere, while hotel prices often reach off-season lows in November, meaning more luxury for your hard-pressed pound. There's also plenty of flexibility — although some cities, such as Seville and Marrakesh, remain agreeably warm, others, including Krakow and Edinburgh, become snugglier and even more romantic. Here are our favourite places for an autumnal escape. This article contains affiliate links, which may earn us revenue Morocco cools down in autumn, with summer's high 30s giving way to a more pleasant 22C in October or 21C during November. That's perfect for strolling the Majorelle Garden's colossal cacti, for watching snake charmers perform at dusk on Djemaa el-Fna, the focal main square in Marrakesh, or for wandering the shopping souks past carpets, slippers and silverware. On food stalls, look out for newly ripe pomegranates — with juice carts offering freshly squeezed versions rich in antioxidants. There's one near upmarket Riad Sakkan, a good place to base yourself thanks to its rooftop restaurant, heated pool and boutique suites. • More great hotels in Marrakesh• Best restaurants in Marrakesh Numerous harvests make Umbria, Italy's 'green heart', thrum with autumnal activity: wines, olives, saffron, truffles, chestnuts, mushrooms and more. Staying in elegant Perugia, the region's capital and a city that gradually winds upwards to its palatial Sina Brufani hotel, it's possible to arrange tasting-tour day trips or simply to browse regular farmers' markets. Chocolate is another reason to visit now: not only is Perugia home to the Baci-making Perugina firm, but it hosts the Eurochocolate festival's tastings and cooking classes annually in late October or November. • Best family-friendly villas in Italy Autumn in Paris is all about chocolate, courtesy of the world's biggest bean feast: the Salon du Chocolat trade fair, which takes place at the very end of October. And if you can't make it to the salon, book yourself into the cute Hôtel du Petit Moulin in the Marais and create your own tour of the city's best chocolatiers. Patrick Roger, Jacques Genin and Alain Ducasse all have boutiques nearby. Finish by scoffing your purchases amid the falling leaves in the Jardin des Tuileries. • Best hotels in Paris• Read our full review of Hôtel du Petit Moulin More than 140 years since its first stones were laid, Gaudí's famous church, the Sagrada Familia, is nearing completion. Two more of its towers are done, leaving only the fifth unfinished and due to be finalised in 2026, as you'll see from the rooftop bar at the Sercotel Rosellon. Then embark on an autumn feast of Barcelona's exotic seasonal fruits. Book into the swanky art nouveau Hotel España, next to Las Ramblas, and just round the corner the Boqueria market will be brimming with pomegranates, quinces, persimmons and prickly pears. • Best affordable hotels in Barcelona• Best things to do in Barcelona Admittedly, the 870m (2,854ft) Uetliberg is no match for the Alpine peaks further south in Switzerland. But it's only four miles from the centre of Zurich, and its summit is served by its own railway, the S10. After the ascent, you'll get a jaw-slackening view that mixes autumn foliage and distant snow — particularly popular in November when it pokes above the blanket of cloud that often covers the city. For quick access to the trains, stay at the eclectic, colourfully decorated 25hours Hotel on Langstrasse. Then combine with the super-cool Museum of Design and some old-town coffeehouse chat at Café Henrici for a seductive mix of town and country. • Best hotels in Switzerland• Most beautiful places in Switzerland Autumn is a great time to visit Washington DC, the political heart of the United States, with colour peaking in the National Arboretum. Book the crisp, contemporary CitizenM hotel and you'll also be close to the (free) National Gallery. Nearby, guided tours of the Capitol building are also free. • Best hotels in Washington DC• Best things to do in Washington DC Come autumn, Madrid warms itself up with hearty stews and cochinillo asado (roast suckling pig). Also on the menu: the Prado's breathtaking collection of paintings by El Greco, Velázquez and Goya, and a day's hiking in the Sierra de Guadarrama National Park. The park's waterfalls, pine forests and craggy peaks are only an hour's drive from the city centre. One Shot Fortuny is a chic, modern hotel away from the most touristy areas, but with restaurants and museums within easy walking distance. • Best affordable hotels in Madrid• Barcelona v Madrid: which is the best Spanish city break for you? The Black Forest marches right to the edge of Freiburg, so you don't have to go far to find its blazing autumn foliage. Take a short walk up the Schlossberg to get your bearings, then start exploring — riding the Schauinslandbahn cable car, or taking the Höllentalbahn railway to the Ravenna Gorge waterfalls. Back in Freiburg, the friendly Park Hotel Post is a great base for exploring the old town's sites, including the cathedral, its market and the Augustinermuseum of medieval and baroque art. • Best river cruises in Europe You don't have to drive very deep into France for a proper gastronomic break. Turn right at Calais, and in a couple of hours you'll be scoffing mussels, langoustines and oysters at Sur Mer, Alexandre Gauthier's seafood restaurant at Merlimont-Plage, south of Le Touquet on the Opal coast. This, however, is only a starter. Gauthier's La Grenouillère, which has two Michelin stars, has reopened after 15 months of closure due to flooding — and you can also stay at his deluxe guesthouse, Pieux, in the same small town as Field Marshal Douglas Haig's First World War HQ, Montreuil-sur-Mer. • Best vineyard hotels to visit in France In Venice the crowds are thinning, prices have dropped, and the weather is a whole lot more conducive to sightseeing. So book the chic and understated Ca' di Dio hotel at the entrance to Arsenale before the winter rains arrive, and enjoy the latest art shows alongside those ravishing Rialto views. • Read our full review of Ca' di Dio• More great hotels in Venice Fancy some autumn colour? Then climb Berlin's Teufelsberg. It's built from rubble cleared from the city after the Second World War, and the former American listening post on top is covered with 400 works of street art. Then you can follow the Havelhöhenweg path to the Wannsee lake, winding through the 5,500-acre Grunewald forest. Back in the city, the stylish Hotel Amo by Amano, in Mitte, is a canny place to stay — it's next to Berlin's contemporary museum of photography, Fotografiska. • Great affordable hotels in Berlin• Berlin v Munich: which is better? One of Europe's most memorable autumn sunsets comes courtesy of Copenhagen's abandoned shipyard at Refshaleoen. Here, among the quays, is Hot Tub Copenhagen, a neat, friendly and entirely improbable village of saunas and bubbling pools. You book a glass-fronted sauna cabin, strip naked, and — if you're timing's right — watch the sun go down against the dome of Frederiks Kirke. Follow with a big, buzzy, communal dinner at your hotel, the snug and cosy Kanalhuset. With easy, friendly conversations warming the atmosphere, it's the very essence of hygge. • Where to eat in Copenhagen on a budget• Best hotels in Copenhagen At the Pod Baranem restaurant in Krakow, the season's porcini mushrooms are transformed into a thick, creamy soup. Join one of Delicious Poland's cooking classes and you'll be stuffing pierogi with mushrooms too. This is the moment when the city's menus are bursting with autumn flavours — borscht, chanterelles, venison and spiced apple cake among them. Just in the nick of time too. They'll fortify you against the cold as you tour its pristine Renaissance monuments. Book the chic and central Hotel Stary so you won't have far to walk. • Best things to do in Krakow• Best hotels in Krakow The days may be short, but in the seas around Cape St Vincent, at the western tip of the Algarve, the water temperature still nudges 20C. Thanks to the Atlantic's autumn storms, there's usually plenty of surf too. So if it's action, physical exercise and a sense of connection with nature you're after, head to the Memmo Baleeira hotel, just above the beach at Sagres. Experienced wave riders can also hire a surf guide. Afterwards, celebrate your successes — and your pratfalls — with draft beers and sourdough pizzas at Arte Bianca. • Best holiday villas in the Algarve• Best family hotels in the Algarve The Viennese ritual of coffee and cake is at its most comforting as the clocks go back. So start your afternoon with Klimt's glittering The Kiss at the Belvedere museum, before kicking up the leaves in the Stadtpark below. Then, make a beeline for the nearby Café Prückel before attending a free concert by students of Vienna's University of Music and Performing Arts. As darkness falls, life is all about a hazelnutty slice of Esterhazy cake on your table. Finish the day in an elegant grey room at the arty Altstadt Vienna. • Best hotels in Vienna• Best budget hotels in Vienna If you want to escape the century as well as the season, jump on a plane to Malta. From its airport, a short 20-minute transfer to Mdina will whisk you back to the 1600s courtesy of the Relais & Châteaux Xara Palace. The only hotel within the mighty cannon-proof walls of the island's former capital, this mansion sits next to the Bishop's Palace, two minutes' walk from the cathedral — and its autumn prices are surprisingly affordable. Enjoy the gleaming marble, Michelin-starred dining and a deep sense of quiet. • Best time to visit Malta: when to go and what to do• Best villas in Malta The softening sun makes autumn the perfect moment for an active city break on Madeira. It's not just the paths alongside the island's cliff-hugging levadas (irrigation channels) that make for unforgettable hiking terrain. You can also walk the narrow ridge path to the 1,861m (6,106ft) summit of Pico Ruivo for stupendous Atlantic Ocean views. Base yourself in the sumptuous Savoy Palace, on the seafront in Funchal, and you can mix your yomping with a tasting tour of Blandy's wine cellars, and some serious snacking in the vibrant covered market. • Best all-inclusive hotels in Madeira• Best things to do in Madeira If it's time to update your autumn wardrobe, Dries van Noten's home town is the place. First, treat yourself to one of the lush and intensely coloured bedrooms at Flora, and warm your eyes up with a tour of the MoMu fashion museum. Then it's time to loosen your purse strings in Antwerp's battery of boutiques. Van Noten's Het Modepaleis (fashion palace) is the biggest, but there are plenty more heading south, all the way to the magnificent KMSKA museum of fine art. Celebrate afterwards with a cocktail at Dogma, close to your hotel. • Best hotels in Antwerp NYC is a top break for most of the year, but it really sings in autumn when there is respite from the sometimes stifling heat of high summer. Central Park and the leafy Upper East Side are rendered copper and scarlet by the turning leaves; pounding the pavements for sightseeing, shopping and eating is cool and comfortable; and museums and galleries abound for indoor fun. September can remain summery, so go in October and November for true Halloween and Thanksgiving vibes: in the week up to October 31, pumpkins and cobwebs appear on the doorsteps of handsome brownstone buildings. Stay at 1 Hotel Central Park, just footsteps from New York's swathe of parkland: grab a pumpkin spice latte and explore. • Best things to do in New York• More great hotels in New York Generally speaking, an Italian city break will be mild when the UK is chilly — and there's something about Bologna's hearty-portioned, warming food scene that really suits October and November. This is the city of thick, meaty ragu, tortellini in steaming broth, salty parmesan and juicy balsamic vinegar with produce reared and made nearby. Bologna's rose-gold historic centre also has a touch of autumnal romance — and plenty of porticoes for ducking out of the rain. Go for a long weekend or use it as a jumping-off point for a larger foodie tour of the Emilia-Romagna region. Art Hotel Commercianti has affordable rooms in Bologna's historic centre. • Best Italian cities for food• Best places to visit in Italy Far south and inland, the Spanish city of Seville has a roasting hot summer. So wait until cooler October or beyond to book your foodie, romantic break here. You'll still find sunny days of up to 26C, and mild nights in the mid-teens, perfect for strolling the Alcazar gardens, sitting outside tiny tapas bars, and making a side trip to Granada for its ravishing Moorish architecture. Rowing boats in Plaza de España, a late-night scene and intimate boutique hotels make it a winner for lovers. Stay at the stylish boutique townhouse Corral del Rey, close to the main sights. • Best hotels in Seville• Best things to do in Seville If you love the outdoors, look for a city swathed in natural beauty: rising star Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia, is just one European example. Its lush, tree-lined riverside turns russet and gold, as temperatures slip from the low 20s in September to about 10-15C by day in October to November. The fairytale castle on a hill, pretty bridges and churches invite photogenic strolls, while day trips to impossibly gorgeous Lake Bled and mountain-wrapped Bohinj (most striking with their autumn foliage) balance city living with big-scale nature. Stay at the modern Hotel Cubo, close to the city's Tivoli Park. • Best small cities in the world While its August Fringe festival hogs the headlines, Edinburgh's snug restaurants, historic hotels and warming whiskies only get better in the cooler months. Hike around this sloping city of quirky alleys, a waterfront port and towering castle walls in jumper-and-jeans weather, allowing time to reach its blustery natural viewpoint, Arthur's Seat. Hang out in foodie Stockbridge for cosy pubs such as the Bailie, with its roaring fire, and check out the scarlet ivy on Liberton Kirk or Carlowrie Castle just outside town. The Roseate Edinburgh has a cosy whisky bar, freestanding copper bathtubs and warming breakfasts — all of which act as the perfect balm on chilly days. • Best things to do in Edinburgh• Best hotels in Edinburgh Hungary's top tourist city is so affordable that you can live like a king here — expect to pay from about £6 to £10 for a main course in one of its most fashionable restaurants, and as little as £80 a night for a boutique hotel near the historic centre. Stroll around Fisherman's Bastion, Buda Castle and the historic bathhouses in mild autumn temperatures (up to mid-20s). Then hit the atmospheric Jewish Quarter for top restaurants and Budapest's unique 'ruin bars', where bric-a-brac and fairy lights jazz up abandoned buildings and courtyards. Hotel Rum is a stylish, relaxed design-hotel base. • Best things to do in Budapest Some cities just have the right look for this season: glinting spires and domes, manicured parks and squares, cosy cafés and stylish, coat-swaddled locals. Prague, the Czech capital, is one such, and though it's busy year-round, autumn arrivals will dodge the thick crowds that come for December's Christmas markets. The leaves here begin to turn in October, with Letna Park becoming golden; if it's nippy, duck into a traditional tavern for a hearty bowl of goulash, or a grand café such as Café Savoy for a hot chocolate. Stay at Mama Shelter Praha, which strikes a pleasing balance between style and value. • Best things to do in Prague• Best affordable hotels in Prague Many capitals vie for the title of 'best autumn leaves', but with striking Japanese architecture surrounded by meditative gardens, Tokyo is our winner. Swap cherry blossom season for autumn and you'll find a quieter, cheaper time to visit that's still extremely beautiful. Go mid-October to November to catch Tokyo's leaves at their most dazzling, from fiery red maples to mustard-yellow gingkos — head for Mount Takao, an hour out of town, to see the most dramatic forests, or visit Meiji Shrine and Koishikawa Korakuen Garden in the city. Mitsui Garden Hotel Jingugaien is close to several of Tokyo's parks and gardens. • Tokyo v Osaka: which is better?• Best things to do in Tokyo It's a no-brainer that southern Europe stays balmy into September each year, but head to Lisbon in October and you'll still catch daily highs of 23-24C, allowing for alfresco lunches and sunlit strolls. The city sees a big surge of cruise-shippers and coach tours in summer, but these have diminished by October; flight prices and room rates also fall considerably. Explore pretty neighbourhoods such as intricately tiled Alfama, stopping for coffee and pasteis de nata when the mood suits. Book a room at the Vintage, which has a chic rooftop bar and a sublime basement spa. • Read our full review of the Vintage• Porto v Lisbon: which is better?• Best things to do in Lisbon Want an under-the-radar-city that won't be packed full of camera-wielding hordes? Croatia's inland capital, Zagreb, is a uniformly pretty little number with medieval history, leafy parks and an affordable and delicious food scene. Don't miss its fairytale-looking Gornji Grad (Upper Town), with a 13th-century tower that fires a cannon daily at midday. Warm up on chilly afternoons with a serving of strukli (layers of dough baked in a thick creamy sauce) and nightcaps of rakija, Croatia's fruit brandy. Quirky attractions such as the Museum of Broken Relationships will help keep you toasty. The elegant Hotel Esplanade evokes the golden age of rail travel. • Best things to do in Croatia• Best places to go for a city break in summer• Best cities to visit in spring Additional reporting by Richard Mellor What's your favourite place for an autumn city break? Please share in the comments below

Indian helicopters rescue people stranded by flooding in Himalayan state
Indian helicopters rescue people stranded by flooding in Himalayan state

Reuters

time7 hours ago

  • Reuters

Indian helicopters rescue people stranded by flooding in Himalayan state

BHATWADI, India, Aug 7 (Reuters) - Indian rescuers used helicopters on Thursday to pluck to safety people stranded by flood waters in the Himalayan state of Uttarakhand, nearly two days after a sudden inundation and landslides killed four, with dozens still missing. Roads crumpled or blocked by boulders kept rescue teams from reaching the village of Dharali in the state's district of Uttarkashi, a tourist spot, after a wall of water hit the area, submerging homes and cars in sludge. The helicopter rescuers were given instructions needed to ensure the operation was effective, the state's chief minister, Pushkar Singh Dhami, said. "The heli-rescue operation ... started in the affected areas this morning," he added in a post on X. Army rescuers used their hands, as well as machinery, to shift boulders from roads turned into muddy, gushing rivers, in visuals from the region. About 200 people had been rescued over Tuesday and Wednesday, army and state officials said, but many more were feared stranded and missing. Dharali, a hamlet of about 200 people that stands more than 1,150 m (3,775 ft) above sea level, is a pit-stop for Hindu pilgrims climbing to the temple town of Gangotri. "We saw Dharali falling before our eyes," said Anamika Mehra, a pilgrim headed for Gangotri when the flooding hit. "We were very scared, but the locals helped us and the army reached the next day to rescue us," she told news agency ANI. Uttarakhand is prone to floods and landslides, which some experts blame on climate change.

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