Hello everyone, welcome back to italianpod101.com. |
My name is Desy, mi chiamo Desy, and in this video, we're going to talk about what |
happens in Italy in July. |
luglio in Italia |
You may have some problems pronouncing it, but July is called luglio, also there's a |
famous song that goes like luglio col bene che ti voglio, so July with all the love I |
have for you. |
It's not really a sentence that you would use every day, but it's also a nice one to |
remember and to practice saying luglio and the LL sound in general. |
luglio col bene che ti voglio |
Anyway, what happens in July in Italy? |
I'd say technically nothing, but also a lot. |
There are no specific holidays, so no bank holidays or big celebrations, like nationally, |
but also there are many many sagre and feste, festivals, so feste, sagre and paglio around |
Italy. |
Now we're going to see what that means. |
una sagra, so una sagra, it's actually like a fair or a festival, but it's something that |
happens every year in order to celebrate a saint or an event. |
So it's actually about products a lot in Italy. |
For example, there is la sagra del tartufo, truffles festival, but it's not really like |
a festival, it's just like really a celebration of the product itself and everyone goes there |
to taste, buy, experience it, it's in Abruzzo. |
In Terracina there is la sagra del pesce, the fish one, but also many feste del vino, |
wines festivals. |
It's because July in Italy gifts us with good weather, okay, sometimes there are storms, |
but in general it's really hot and sunny, so it's easy and really pleasant to stay |
outside. |
Now another interesting one is la cipolla rossa di Tropea, red onion in Tropea, which |
is in Calabria, Calabria, so South Italy. |
But there are also, what I was saying before, a lot of paglio, this doesn't really have |
a translation because it's a celebration of a small town or city, it really celebrates |
the history of the place. |
In fact, you can find things like giullari, giullari, jesters, mangia fuoco, mangia fuoco, |
fire eater or sbandieratori, sbandieratori, flag waver, because bandiera means flag, bandiera |
means flag, so sbandierare is to move the flag around. |
So it's in many historical places, the biggest, the most famous is Venezia, Venice, there |
is la festa del redentore, festa del redentore, so the savior, the redeemer literally. |
It happens every third Sunday of July in order to celebrate the ending of the plague in 1575 |
and 1577, actually it lasted two years. |
So you'll see a lot of historical costumes but also fireworks and gondole going here |
and there, really traditional. |
In Villa Stellone next to Turin, so Northern Italy, there is il paglio dei templari, Templar's |
Knights' paglio. |
So here too, again, like Middle Ages, armors and so on. |
In Umbria, you can find a really interesting one, it's il paglio dell'ovo, ovo is an old |
way or dialectal way to say uovo, so egg. |
So something really peculiar of this paglio is that the city divides in three, four or |
five, depending on how big it is, teams from different neighborhoods of the city. |
So in this specific one what they do is they play, let's say, fire gun with eggs, so they |
have to hit each other and the one that lost last year's competition is the one that today, |
so this year, is the target and they get hit with eggs, which are not really fresh and |
in the past it was supposed to be with chestnuts, but then it was too painful actually, so they |
switched to eggs. |
So you can find a lot of typical and really old traditions that we still try to keep alive, |
but also you can find, let's say, proper festivals, I don't want to say like the others are not, |
but something more modern. |
For example, there is the Jazz Festival in Umbria, which is kind of historical, in fact, |
its first edition dates back to 1973, or also there is Lucca Summer Festival, Lucca Summer |
Festival in Tuscany. |
It's about music with many artists coming from all over Italy, I'd say, and Lucca is |
a really nice setup because it's really historical. |
There are walls, like the real old ones, and yeah, it's really enjoyable in July. |
Of course, we also have to mention that July is a really, really nice month to go on holiday |
in Italy. |
Not most people go in July, but in August because the agencies and the companies just |
close in August, but if you're lucky, you can ask to have some holidays before, or maybe |
you can just take turns with your colleagues, and if you go around in July, I'd say that |
it's not so crowded as it would be in August. |
Not to mention that July is the hottest month of the year, close to August actually, because |
the maximum is like 29 and minimum 20ish, but in August you find more storms, because |
I don't know why, but the wind is just more present in Italy, while July is really nice |
for the sea. |
Just remember that in Italy in July schools are closed, so you will find a lot of kids |
and students around. |
For the reason I just said, so the weather not being stormy, July is the perfect month |
to go visit islands, for example the small ones like Capri and Ischia or Isole Eolie |
or Tremiti, which I recommend to look up if you don't know. |
When it's too hot in July, I mean in summer in general, but in July for sure, you can |
find granite, shaved ice and of course ice cream, gelato, gelato everywhere, and watermelons, |
anguria, anguria, which are really popular because as I just said, it's really hot and |
you have to restore liquids somehow and water, right? |
So it's the perfect month to eat a lot of ice cream without feeling guilty. |
Jokes aside, that was it for July in Italy, let me know what you would try or if you |
know any other particular festival that I don't even know about, write it down in the |
comments and if while travelling you want to be able to have real Italian conversations |
with native speakers, make sure to click the link in the description and download our PDF |
lessons. |
I'll see you soon, bye bye, ciao ciao! |
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