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Postcard

Can You Guess Where This Photo Was Taken?

Date: 07/23/2007
Can you identify this photo? (Clue: It's NOT the Italian Riviera…)

Can you identify this photo? (Clue: It's NOT the Italian Riviera…)

If somebody told you this was the Italian Riviera, you probably wouldn't argue. Or at least not until you discover that a

coffee costs a dollar, half a liter of house wine is $5, and a two-course lunch of seafood soup and fried fish is $9. In a restaurant like La Perla, where locals eat, a plate of homemade pasta smothered in shaved white truffles sets you back only $13. As you know, truffles--or "white gold"--are a gourmet delicacy, and you'd pay a small fortune for such a dish in Italy.

A land of forests, vineyards, and lost-in-time hill towns, Croatia's Istrian peninsula is lovely in early summer. The weather is hotting up, the Adriatic ripples turquoise, rosemary and lavender perfume the air, and swallows swoop over the town's jumbled roof tiles. This is rapture for any artist, but thankfully there are no pretentious airs and graces about Rovinj.

Tourism is important, but this is also a real town with around 12,000 inhabitants (and a tobacco factory).

Complete with winged lion sculptures, Rovinj is one of a clutch of medieval harbor towns dating back to when Istria was under Venetian rule.

Pizza, ice cream, and architecture all betray any denials of an Italian influence, as do the street signs that are in Serbo-Croat and Italian. A square is both a trg and a piazza; a street is an ulice and a via, and Rovinj itself is also called Rovigno. During most of the year, car license plates suggest that most foreign holiday makers are from Germany and Austria, but Italian visitors arrive in droves in August, upping the pace a notch.

Expecting the same rook-the-tourist mentality as I found in Dubrovnik for meals, drinks, and shoddy accommodation, it's a pleasant shock to find Istria so affordable. In early summer, the chatty owner of the modern apartment I'm renting charges $33 per night during the week; $40 at weekends when short-breakers arrive from Zagreb. At a push, it would sleep four. It's cherry harvest time in Rovinj--many town gardens boast at least one tree…and my landlord has urged me to help myself.

Blue-mauve hydrangeas and hot pink geraniums turn even the humblest stone house into the kind of place a romantic might dream of living in. But how much would it cost to have a home here? Istria isn't undiscovered and I haven't yet come across any obvious bargains. The town has numerous real estate agencies, but the cheapest Rovinj property I've seen advertised is a $130,000 studio, with living space of not quite 400 square feet.

Steenie Harvey
Roving Europe Editor, International Living

P.S. I'll be at IL's Live and Prosper in Europe Seminar in Barcelona, Spain, Sept. 2-4, where you'll learn all about Italy, Croatia, and 10 other enchanting European retreats. I hope to see you there.

Editor's note: To get the best information on Europe first (and free), sign up to The European here.

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