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Dates: 16th – 24th May 2026 Confirmed departure
Price: £2,095 Full
Single Room Supplement: £195
Deposit: £200 per person
Price Includes: All meals, accommodation with private facilities, ground transport, services of guides, holiday report
Not Included: Flights, travel insurance, drinks and any other personal items.
Leader: Paul Harcourt Davies & Lois Ferguson
Group Size: Minimum of 4 and a maximum of 7 guests plus 2 leaders.
Grade: Gentle paced walks in a variety of terrains. Ideally suited to photography.
Holiday Highlights
- A wealth of wildflowers, insects & birds with spectacular scenery in Sibillini & Abruzzo National Parks – an area of incredible biodiversity
- Exclusive high quality & unique tour with a very small group specifically designed to increase each participants enjoyment of the holiday
- Led by locals! An elite & enthusiastic team of Paul Harcourt Davies & Lois Ferguson, residents in Italy for 20+ years
- Relaxing 2 centre tour staying in good hotels and pleasant & interesting locations
- Short drives for maximum time in the field
- Authentic Italian food (including legendary picnics by Lois), culture & history
- Evening presentations on photography & environmental topics
Explore an Apennine Paradise with Paul Harcourt Davies, on our first class tour of Sibillini & Abruzzo!

Paul Harcourt Davies is a professional photographer/author and conservationist with an international reputation gained through his images, his numerous books (19 to date), articles and lectures. He has led botanical, natural history and photographic trips for three decades and has lectured in the UK, USA, Cyprus (where he lived from 1978-81) and Italy on various aspects of photography and natural history, taught hundreds of workshops and is a prolific writer.
He is regarded as an authority on the Mediterranean flora and fauna (orchids in particular) and has been involved in numerous conservation projects. He was a founder member of the Hardy Orchid society, served as its chairman and is now an honorary Vice President: he was also chairman of Butterfly Conservation, S Wales. Paul has lived in Italy since 2003, where he is involved with numerous projects locally and nationally.
The Sibillini is a well-kept secret, forming a distinct part of the Apennine chain, the ‘backbone’ of Italy that stretches some 1200km (750 mi) down the length of the ‘boot’ from the Alps to the ‘toe’ and then beyond into Sicily. This area in central Italy offers superb walking with a remarkable diversity of habitats making it a naturalist’s paradise. The Sibillini and adjacent Abruzzo areas allow one to explore a wide range of habitats up to over 2000m thus embracing a wealth of wildflowers, insects and birds with threatened species such as wolves, the elusive Marsican bear and golden eagles, in a part of Italy well away from any tourist influx. The spectacular scenery is perfect for those who like wide-angle close-up of flowers set in stunning surroundings and there is also much to preoccupy those who love nature in close up. Paul Harcourt Davies has an international reputation for his work in both areas and as an instructor. We deliberately keep numbers of participants small, both for the sake of impact and with time to put what you learn into practice in a relaxed manner. Habitat diversity here is eye watering…Meadows at lower altitudes are full of rich populations of Mediterranean orchids and numerous other species whereas higher areas reveal alpines such as rock jasmines (Androsaces) and gentians (G Verna and G dinarica). One of Italy’s primary attractions is its renowned local cuisine and wine, and this region of the Italian mainland upholds that reputation. Paul and Lois, both Italian citizens with decades of exploration and study, provide an opportunity to experience the area’s distinctive character, ecosystems, and history. We never rest on our laurels at Greenwings, and we have changed this holiday for 2026 to use two rather than three centres and to make alpine explorations in the Abruzzo where we can add to the range of species and opportunities for birds and other fauna. The views and displays of flowers are exceptional and with climate change making timing uncertain each year it makes sense to use a wide range of altitudes to find what we want. For the first part of our holiday, we are based near the walled town of Norcia whose origins date back to the Roman garrison town of Nursia. We are on limestone terrain where all sites and ambles lie within short drives from wooded valleys to flower rich hillsides … Castelluccio di Norcia and the Piano Grande. Nothing quite prepares you for the sight when the ridge is topped and the immense Piano Grande stretches out before you, enclosed by a ring of mountains and dominated by the bulk of Monte Vettore (2476m) rising some 1462 m above the plain. For the last 3 nights we move into the nearby Abruzzo and a small hotel which gives us access to the heights of the Campo Imperatore a vast area surrounded by high mountains with a rich alpine flora and the call of choughs and snow finches as background music. The Piano Grande, once a glacial lake, is now a vast pasture where skylarks make the air throb with song. Castelluccio di Norcia is a picture postcard town (from afar) atop a knoll that is ringed with fields of poppies and cornflowers in early July. This is a tourist attraction but our trip, earlier in the year, coincides with displays of spectacular plants such as yellow tulips (Tulipa australis), white narcisssus (Narcissus poeticus), fritillaries (Fritillaria montana) and peonies (Paeonia officinalis). In season, both Apollo and Clouded Apollo, Black-veined White, Large Tortoiseshell and Camberwell Beauty are but a few of the butterflies to be seen. Many wild orchids flourish in the extensive woodlands and meadows such as Ophrys species (O. apifera, insectifera, dinarica, bertolonii, fusca..,sphegodes ) Red Helleborine (Cephalanthera rubra), Violet Limodore (Limodorum abortivum), Butterfly orchids – both greater and lesser (Platanthera chlorantha and bifolia)- Few-flowered Orchid (Orchis pauciflora), Elderflower Orchid (Dactylorhiza sambucina) and more. High up, the alpine meadow turf is coloured with hectares of mountain flowers such as thymes, forget-me-nots and Apennine rockroses spreading to tint hillsides in yellows, whites, pinks and blues. There is always a wonderful feeling of space with long views and many of our best places are on ridges…here is somewhere you can escape, and Paul and Lois regularly visit at all times of the year, they have a deep knowledge of the area and its wild inhabitants. This is an area of Italy not as well-known and certainly not anywhere near as popular as a tourist draw where the whole diversity and natural riches one could probably never exhaust…at least Paul & Lois we never will, and they stay there as often as they can through the seasons. This is somewhere that they love and where they have made many friends. Their connection with the area is extremely strong and they want to do all they can to bring this region to people whom they know will appreciate it as they do. We invite you to do just that on what promises to be a holiday to relish and remember!








Day 1
Arrival in Rome and transfer to our agriturismo base just outside the town of Norcia, truffle and gourmet capital of Italy (approx 2.5 hrs).
Day 2
In the morning we explore the fields and paths near Preci travelling along lanes and through traditionally managed meadows and woods where some orchid species thrive – to say nothing of an assortment of butterflies and birds such as hoopoe, nightjar, cirl bunting, corn bunting and scops owl. We travel a short distance to picnic and wander in an orchid-rich meadow high above the valley. After lunch, we explore parts of a local mountain with flower-strewn slopes and views over the Sibillini area to the distant snow-capped slopes of Mte Vettore beyond.
Day 3
We explore the woods and meadows along and above the Campi valley travelling up to several hilltop villages in a leisurely fashion with numerous stops for flowers along the way. Then we head up to high pastures further west where butterflies abound (black-veined white, marsh fritillary…) and skylarks, quail and red-backed shrike compete for attention.
Day 4
Today we travel to Castelluccio di Norcia where the first sight of the vast plain of the Piano Grande, is an unforgettable experience… especially just before the morning mist disperses from the ‘bowl’ ringed by mountains. We descend to the plain stopping for wild tulips and narcissus then travel towards Monte Vettore where we picnic amongst the peonies and wander along easy paths.
Day 5
You cannot explore the Piano Grande and surrounding areas in a single day so with appetites whetted, we explore the hills ringing the plain looking for the best displays of flowers we can find as camera subjects – each year they change as fields are tilled. We make use of the low angle and warmth of the evening light to get those poppy and cornflower shots to remember.
Day 6
Our transfer to the nearby Abruzzo section of the Apennines will take us via spectacular scenery with stops for roadside flowers…orchids include sword-leaved helleborine (Cephalanthera longifolia), violet limodore (Limodorum abortivum) and bird’s nest orchid (Neottia nidus–avis). Then a detour to a couple of lakes…one small one set in woodlands with a lovely flower meadow and another near Rieti where is a lake where there is a rich avifauna plus a possibility of seeing the first generation of the Lesser Purple Emperor. Our base is a mountain hotel for the next three nights with stunning scenery, flowers and spectacular castles close by.
Day 7
We travel from our base to the eastern end of the Campo Imperatore into a true alpine realm where the short turf is studded with gentians (G. verna and G. dinarica), Androsaces (rock jasmines), colourful pansies and spring crocus (Crocus vernus) near the edges of patches of melting snow… Orchids include the distinct colour forms of elderflower orchid (Dactylorhiza sambucina) as well as pale-flowered orchid (Orchis pallens). This is perfect for those glorious flowers in the landscape shots…We will meander along the narrow roads with numerous stops…including gravel areas where torrents from snow melts bring down true alpines to lower levels.
Day 8
Today we explore the far end of Campo Imperatore (snow permitting) up to 2200m and higher, with displays of crocus, yellow androsace (A. vitallina), gentians and more. We will also visit a site where we can view an established colony of Griffon Vultures.
Day 9
Return to Rome and the flights home
Note
Our time in and around mountain regions has to be a moveable feast – we literally keep a ‘weather eye’ open in this complex mountain system and rejig journeys according to local conditions to make sure we see as much as possible. Local knowledge acquired over years makes a difference. For example, snow damage in winter can result in some closed roads but we know the area intimately and have alternatives…one of the reasons for extending the trip. The pace of the tour is relaxed with a modest amount of gentle ambling to get us to the best spots.
2024 “Paul was brilliant on orchids and many other more showy species. Paul and Lois were consummate guides, friendly, welcoming and considerate towards the group and going beyond the call of duty at times to go and retrieve things that had been left at previous Agriturismos ! The pace was fine throughout, with full days, but leisurely meals and enough time for a bit of flop (or for identifying unknown plants !) before dinner. The places where we stayed were all excellent, the food equally. Lois’s picnics were a definite highlight, not least because they provided us with our 5 (fruit/vegetables) a day!” Steven L
2023 “This was a delightful holiday amongst the mountains of Umbria. The Sibillini National Park is a varied and beautiful area with a wealth of wildlife and flora. Guiding, accommodation and travel was well-planned and comfortable, as I have come to expect with Greenwings.” Bob M.























































































