Vacation Rental Description
HOLIDAY RENTAL. Prices from 525 euros per week. Sleeps 6/8. Flumini, 10km east of Cagliari on the coast road to Villasimius and 1.5km from the beach is this detached villa of two independent apartments. This extremely spacious ground floor apartment has been recently decorated, and newly furnished throughout.
Accommodation comprises; lounge, dining room, kitchen, sun lounge, rustic kitchen, two double bedrooms, an occasional third bedroom suitable for children, and bathroom. There is also a double sofa bed in the lounge permitting sleeping for 8 subject to prior approval of the owner and for which a supplement will be charged.
Outside is a large covered veranda with outdoor dining furniture, sun terrace, BBQ, extensive gardens and private parking. The nearest beach is within walking distance and is a small sandy cove with a tourist marina nearby. A fully stocked supermarket lies along the main road between the beach and the marina, still within walking distance.
Flumini is 25km from the airport of Cagliari with daily flights from Luton with EasyJet. The main beach of Cagliari is the Poetto which is approx. 5km away where you will find a wide choice of bars, restaurants, pizzerias and childrens playgrounds as well as a funfair and 7.5km of sandy beach. Approx' 15km to the centre of Cagliari with all the attractions this major city has to offer, travel in the opposite direction for 20km and you will be in the middle of the mountain range, known as the Sette Frattelli (Seven Brothers), with panoramic views.
Discover Sardinia
Sardinia, Italy's best kept secret where the Italians themselves love to spend their holidays. It is the second largest of Italy's islands but only has a population of approx. 1.5 million.
Sardinia's biggest attractions are it's white sandy beaches divided into small intimate coves by towering cliffs meeting the crystal waters along the 1800km of coastline providing a stunning panorama of natural beauty. Perfect for family holidays and those just wanting to leave the rat race behind.
The mild mediterranean climate makes it a great destination all year round to escape the winter blues and is a popular off season destination for rock climbing enthusiasts, bikers and hunting fans.
While the beachlife is undoubtedly the major attraction to tourists, the hinterland is an absolute must to visit , to experience the mountain lifestyle and its inhabitants culture and to taste the proudly presented homegrown produce of cured ham, salami, spit roasted suckling pig, ewes milk cheeses and of course the full bodied local wines.
The presence of man in Sardinia is attested since 450,000 years ago. The landscape is dotted with “Menhirs” considered by the Prehistoric people as the path to the Mother Earth, “Domus De Janus”, the name with which Sardinia’s popular tradition calls the thousands of tombs dug out of the rock from the Neolithic Age up to the Eneolithic Period, but the Nuraghic civilization (between the Bronze Age and the Iron Age) is still the one that most marks several Sardinian landscapes, with thousands of monuments.