See Europe’s less-crowded destinations as Americans flood the hot spots
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(CNN) — If you’ve been thinking every American you know is in Europe this summer (or headed there this fall), you might be right.
“And with such pent-up demand, the most popular destinations in Italy, France and Greece, such as the Amalfi Coast, Capri, Tuscany, French Riviera, St. Tropez and Mykonos, are seeing record-high demand.”
For her most discerning European clients, Azaria says her agency is recommending they “take full advantage of places like Indonesia, and especially Bali, in its nascent opening season” as a way to escape the current tourist hordes in the continent’s most popular places.
Within Europe, she points clients to the French island of Corsica — a “more down to earth, laid-back version of its glitzy Italian neighbor, Sardinia” — and Montenegro’s 295-kilometer (183-mile) coastline over some of the more trampled beaches and islands of Croatia.
CNN Travel reached out to other travel agents, experts and locals in Europe about where to go to get away from the summer masses in Italy, Spain, France and Croatia — among other European countries popular with American travelers — if you’re looking to go where everyone isn’t.
The Camargue, France
International tourists gravitate to the long-famous Côte d’Azur’s yacht-filled waters and name-dropper towns such as St.Tropez, Nice and Cannes. But southern France is much more than the predictable places.
Alentejo, Portugal
Portugal’s Alentejo region boasts miles of uninterrupted beach.
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When Arlindo Serrão wants time on the Portuguese coast, removed from the tourist crowds of the cities and more popular beach destinations in the country’s far south, he leaves Lisbon for a special stretch of coast in the Alentejo region.
Alentejo offers long stretches of uninterrupted beachfront and incredible wine and seafood without the hordes that descend on better-known beach destinations in the Algarve.
Here, just south of the Tróia Peninsula, the beach extends for nearly 28 miles and the outposts of Comporta and Melides are “the perfect places to stay and rest from everyday life,” Serrão says.
In addition to its spectacular beaches, the region is known for being Portugal’s largest wine producer as well as for having the most marked hiking trails in the country.
“For me, it’s a place of peace on a raw part of Portugal,” Serrão says.
Costa de la Luz, Spain
Spain’s Costa de la Luz rewards intrepid travelers who know to set their sights beyond the Mediterranean.
Spaniards stream out of their stifling hot cities in the summer to kick back on the coast, where everyone (or their grandmother) seems to own a humble second casa or apartment.
The 121 kilometers (75 miles) of Atlantic-facing southern coastline between Tarifa and the Guadiana River, near the border with Portugal, has “temperatures that are a little cooler, hasn’t been mass developed and is quite a hidden gem,” Coe says.
Highlights include the beautiful fishing village of El Rompido, the great food scene in the town of Cadiz and the wild beaches around Huelva (between Mazagón and Matalascañas). The area is also a magnet for kitesurfing.
Aeolian Islands, Sicily, Italy
Lipari is one of the volcanic Aeolian Islands located off the north coast of Sicily.
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Sicily’s laid-back Aeolian archipelago beckons with an uncrowded appeal that the Amalfi Coast or Capri can’t match.
Made of seven main volcanic islands strung like a necklace in the deep turquoise waters of the Tyrrhenian Sea off the north coast of Sicily, the Aeolian Islands are hardly lonely during Italy’s sultry summer. But their relative remoteness means they don’t get nearly the American masses of a Positano or Capri.
Ferrante names the island of Salina as his personal favorite for vacationing, but he says the islands of Filicudi and Alicudi offer the most remote and rustic experience (the latter has no cars — only donkeys to transport your luggage).
He also points to the north side of Mount Etna volcano as one of the most beautiful and undiscovered areas of Sicily. It’s just 40 minutes from the popular beaches of Taormina.
“It’s perfect for total relaxation, trekking and wellness and a paradise for wine lovers and food addicts,” Ferrante says.
Zadar Archipelago, Croatia
The car-free Adriatic islands of Silba and Olib in the Zadar Archipelago have fabulous beaches that look almost like the Caribbean, he says. You can even stay in a lighthouse on the western cape of larger Dugi Otok island.
“Those are the places we go to when we want to avoid crowds in general,” Mandic says. “You won’t really see any Americans there.”
Pelion Peninsula, Greece
And while summer’s international masses might find it hard to look past the iconic postcard white-and-blue backdrops on packed islands such as Santorini and Mykonos, Mitsakos says she often heads to the mountainous Pelion Peninsula on the eastern, Aegean side of mainland Greece for a more under-the-radar stay.
The lush and verdant peninsula, with the Pagasetic Gulf flanking its western shores, is dotted with coastal and mountain villages, with fresh seafood at every turn.
There are beaches all around the peninsula, but if you only hit two, Mylopotamos and Fakistra on the Aegean side are the can’t-miss spots. They’re tucked in natural bays where waters lap the coastal cliffs like turquoise that’s been liquefied in the dazzling sun.
Coastal Albania
The Albanian shoreline in Ksamil. Albania’s coast is far less slammed by tourists than nearby Greece or Italy.
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Far less slammed by tourists than neighboring Greece to the south or Italy across the Adriatic, the Balkan Peninsula country of Albania is still somewhat of a secret closely guarded among savvy travelers — but one unlikely to stay on the down-low for long.
“Croatians and Europeans in general are discovering the Albania coast,” said Secret Dalmatia’s Mandic. “It’s fabulous, it’s incredibly cheap. The food, the history, the hospitality, nature, the beaches, everything is here.”
Among the beaches to explore along what’s been dubbed the Albanian Riviera are Ksamil, near the Greek border, and Himare and Dhermi farther north, where you can feast on inexpensive platters of prawns, grilled octopus and flopping fresh fish plucked straight from the Ionian Sea while gazing out on its glittering expanse.
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