The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

That Riviera touch

A trip to Mediterran­ean glamour spots in Italy and France sees Francesca Gosling converted to the joys of ship cruises

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Did you know that throwing a coin into Rome’s Trevi Fountain is only lucky if you chuck it over your left shoulder with your right hand?

Or that you can actually sit and eat in the St Tropez boutiques of Dior and Roberto Cavalli?

I learned these pub quiz gems during my first ever cruise, a stay-and-sail trip through the glamorous Italian and French Riviera.

Developed by Kuoni in partnershi­p with Azamara Club Cruises, the new five-day trip includes a one-night stay in Rome before embarking on a gentle sail to St Tropez and Portofino, stopping for the best part of a day at each port, so guests get a chance to have a really good explore.

Think luxury accommodat­ion, top-end restaurant­s and evening entertainm­ent all in one place – but with a whole new scene at your doorstep every day.

As soon as I step into my gorgeous en-suite stateroom, I almost squeal with joy at the sunlight drenching my private balcony.

However, it’s the ship’s excellent restaurant­s that really send me into a head-spin.

I’m not much of a carnivore but the juicy sirloin cooked to perfection and slathered in rich mushroom sauce on board the ship’s speciality steak restaurant Prime C is sublime.

I don’t have long to explore the ship, though, as we soon arrive at our first stop – Rome.

Having never visited before, I can’t wait to start our evening tour.

I fight the urge to get embarrassi­ngly trigger happy with the camera as we drive past the Vatican, Colosseum and Piazza Venezia – impressive by day but spectacula­r when lit up at night like fairy tale palaces.

We stop for a three-course dinner in a back street restaurant, gorging on fresh pasta and creamy pannacotta.

Our tour guide, Sofia, then whisks us through the city she describes as an “architectu­ral lasagne”, starting at the magnificen­t Trevi Fountain and finishing in the bustling Bohemian streets of Trastevere.

When we reach the church of Santi Vincenzo e Anastasio a Trevi, I’m glad I’ve already digested my dinner. Among the astonishin­g artefacts on display is a stomach-churning selection of 25 preserved Popes’ hearts.

Back on board the ship, we spend a night partying to DJ Marcio’s tunes and trying our luck (responsibl­y, of course) at the casino.

Our next stop is St Tropez, made famous by Brigitte Bardot in the 1956 film And God Created Woman. Today, it’s still a swanky holiday haven for the world’s rich and famous.

As we only have an afternoon to explore, I opt for a boat tour. I’m so busy gawping at perfectly tanned families soaking up sun (and champagne bubbles) on super yachts that I almost miss a glimpse of Ms Bardot’s house.

I have the chance to indulge my own A-lister fantasies at a super chic White Night party on the pool deck as we set sail again.

We enjoy flowing wine and made-toorder Crepes Suzette and go to bed as the lights of the French Riviera fade into the distance.

When I wake up, I’m greeted with the luscious green hills of Liguria’s Portofino.

With its palatial red and orange mansions dotted here and there, I can confirm the region is every bit as beautiful as Hemingway promised.

We drive from the colourful beach of Santa Margherita to the town of Rapallo, as our guide points out the olive groves, which produce oil so precious it is never exported beyond the region.

After preparing a lunch of hand-made ravioli swimming in a rich, herby sauce, chefs at a traditiona­l hilltop restaurant show us how to make bread stuffed with creamy stracchino cheese.

I even try my hand at making pesto from scratch.

Our voyage comes to an end all too

soon the following morning but we still have time for a final stop at the Roman city of Ostia Antica.

I hire a headset for eight euros and wander through the extraordin­arily preserved walls and columns of ancient buildings, imagining what life would have been like wearing a toga.

Spending days at sea has never really appealed to me before but with so much time spent on land, this trip has eased me gently into the world of cruising.

Floating between destinatio­ns is actually a very pleasant way to see the world – along with my new-found factoids about Brigitte Bardot, that’s another gem I’ve gleaned from this holiday.

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 ?? Pictures: PA. ?? Clockwise from left: the ligurian village of Rapallo, Italy; the bay of Saint Tropez; the Discoverie­s Restaurant on the Azamara cruise ship and its deck pool at sunrise.
Pictures: PA. Clockwise from left: the ligurian village of Rapallo, Italy; the bay of Saint Tropez; the Discoverie­s Restaurant on the Azamara cruise ship and its deck pool at sunrise.
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