Why Visit Sicily & the Aeolian Islands on a Yacht Charter?
On a Sicily and Aeolian Islands yacht charter, gently puffing volcanoes rise out of a blue-green sea, morning church bells sound across whitewashed villages and shady piazzas, and stunning black and white sand beaches glitter under the Sicilian sun.
Born of fire, the landscapes of Sicily and the Aeolian islands are pure theatre— a breathtaking visual feast of dramatic volcanoes and red rivers of lava, bubbling mud pools and lush fern forests. Inland, quiet mountain valleys are carpeted with wildflowers and grazing sheep, and shady orchards of olive and lemon trees are patchworked by ancient drystone walls.


This glorious, glamorous town sits perched high above the Mediterranean, with stunning views of Etna in the distance and an impressive culinary and nightlife scene. Taormina has been a destination for Europe’s elite since it was fashionable to take a ‘Grand Tour’ of Europe in the 19th century, with luxury hotels opening up to cater to these early high-end travellers.
The ancient city of Catania sits at the foot of Mount Etna, on the shores of the Ionian Sea. Etna has shaped the history and the architecture of this city, with each tragic catastrophe creating a new era of city design. The huge volcanic eruption and later earthquake of the 1700’s led to a baroque re-creation of the old town, with wide avenues and spacious piazzas, all created in grey lava rock from Etna’s explosions. The people of Catania know how to begin again with what they have, and have a healthy respect for ‘La Muntagna’ which smoulders above, occasionally sending perfect smoke rings into the sky.
ds as you move higher.
Finish your Sicily yacht charter in chaotic, vibrant Palermo. This city sings loudly of the past and the future, with fashionable wine bars and boutique hotels popping up by ancient cathedrals and rabbit warren streets.









































Lipari is the largest island in the chain, and is particularly famous for Spiaggia Bianca, a dazzling white beach of pumice powder, left over from the centuries of pumice stone mining on the island. The pumice has the doubly-splendid attribute of filtering the water, meaning the waters off this beach are an astonishing turquoise blue, contrasting vividly with the white beach and conjuring up a Caribbean-like paradise in the Mediterranean (minus the palm trees, that is.)