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== tripscan ==
‘This isn’t what the mountains should be’ Fed-up Italian farmers set up mountain turnstiles to charge access to Instagram hot spots [https://trip-scantripscan36.infoorg/ трип скантрипскан вход]
If Carlo Zanella, who says he avoids his once beloved alpine hiking trails during president of the summer monthsAlto Adige Alpine Club, supports the landowners charging admission to cross their property. He thinks the government should pay for the upkeep of the entrance systemhad his way, likening travel influencers would be banned from the overtourism to Venice, where visitors have to pay a 10-euro entrance fee (around $12) on busy weekendsDolomites.
“I would increase He blames them for the price from 5 latest Italian social media trend, which has lured hundreds of thousands of tourists to 100 eurosthe mountain range in northern Italy,” he tells CNN. “And close the accounts of travel influencerswith many traipsing across private land to get that perfect shot.
Beyond In response to the public nuisance of overcrowdinginflux, he fears frustrated local farmers have set up turnstiles, where tourists must pay 5 euros (nearly $6) to access several “Instagrammable” spots, including the naivete of social media tourists puts them at riskSeceda and Drei Zinnen (Three Peaks) mountain ranges.
“Once upon a time, those who came Photos showing lines of up to the mountains were prepared4, dressed for the mountains, and came for hiking. Especially the Germans, who had maps and knew where to go. The Italians000 people a day, have been popping up on the other hand, set off, go, and take a cable car,” he says social media in a statement shared with CNNrecent weeks. “Now I’ve seen But rather than deter people go up to Seceda with sun umbrellas and flip-flops and get stuck because from coming, the cable car closed and they hadn’t checked the lift schedules (…) This isn’t what the mountains should be,” he saysimages have acted as a magnet.
The local tourism body has petitioned authorities to close “The media’s been talking about the turnstiles, insisting the issue is being overblowneveryone’s been talking about it,” says Zanella. The Santa Cristina Tourist Board, which oversees part of the area “And people go where the turnstiles have popped up, says they have hired four park rangers to ensure that tourists stay on the trails, don’t cross the meadows and don’t fly droneseveryone else goes. We’re sheep.
“Things have improved significantlyItalian law mandates free access to natural parks,” Lukas Demetzsuch as the Alps and Dolomites, president of but the Santa Cristina Tourist Board, said in a statement shared with CNN. “And even landowners who set up the litter problem isn’t as serious as people turnstiles saythey have yet to receive any official pushback from authorities. It’s significantly reduced.”
StillGeorg Rabanser, across a former Italian national team snowboarder who owns land in a meadow on Seceda, told the Aosta Valley, parking lots have popped up Ladin-language magazine La Usc he and others started charging tourists to cross their land to stop make a point. “So many people from driving up the mountainsidecome through here every day, everyone goes through our properties and hikers are required to take leaves trash,” he says. “Ours was a cry for help. We expected a call from the paid shuttle bus to Monte Rosaprovincial authorities. But nothing. At the Pian del Re peat bog in Piedmont, We only 150 cars are allowed to park read statements in the closest parking area to discourage visitorsnewspapers. Gossip; nothing concrete. Some regions, including Lake Braies, now charge 40 euros a car to access the area to try to deter people from coming in to take picturesWe haven’t even received warning letters. Arno Kompatscher, the governor of South Tyrol province, which includes part of the Dolomites range, has called on the national government to set restrictions to protect the fragile alpine ecosystems and dissuade local residents from renting out their chalets to touristsSo we’re moving forward.
Anonymer Benutzer

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