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Sicily Insider Travel Guide PDF Hidden Towns, Heritage Trips & Relocation Tips | Agrigento, Taormina, Ortigia, Ragusa Ibla & More
This isn’t a guide written from a hotel room or a week-long vacation.
I’m Lea, founder of Nomad & Nook Travel Co. I moved to Sicily. I sold my belongings, resigned from my job, and went — chasing my family’s roots back to a small town in the Agrigento province called Cattolica Eraclea, where my great-great-great-grandparents walked the same streets that are still there today.
I spent months living across the island. I drove the mountain roads, got my car stuck in narrow medieval streets, woke up at a campground on a beach that barely exists on any map, became a coffee snob I have never recovered from, and made friends who later mailed me olive oil and homemade jam just because.
This guide is what I wrote down.
WHO THIS IS FOR
This guide is for two kinds of people: those planning a trip to Sicily who want to go somewhere real — not the tourist trail, not the cruise stop — and those who keep watching videos about €1 homes and slow living and thinking maybe.
If either of those is you, this is the guide I wish someone had handed me.
WHAT’S INSIDE
Part 1: Planning Your Trip
When to go, which airport, getting around, how long you actually need, and why you must always get the rental car insurance.
Part 2: The Places Worth Slowing Down In
In-depth coverage of towns most guides don’t mention — Cattolica Eraclea, Caltagirone, Mussomeli, Sant’Alessio Siculo, Giuliana, Sciacca, Sambuca di Sicilia, Eraclea Minoa, Mondello, Taormina, Ragusa Ibla, Scicli, Siracusa, and Ortigia — all written from real time spent there. Plus the restaurant Akropolis in Agrigento, where you can see the Valley of the Temples and the sea from your table.
Part 3: Where to Stay
What to look for and how to find accommodations that won’t show up on mainstream platforms.
Part 4: Food, Culture, and Getting It Right
How to eat well, what Sicilians are actually like, the tipping conversation Americans need to have, the coffee, the language, and what most tourists get wrong.
Part 5: If You’re Thinking About Staying
What it actually costs to live there, the bureaucracy honestly explained, real estate considerations, and resources for citizenship, genealogy, and property.
Plus: Two printable checklists — Before You Go essentials and Questions to Ask Your Travel Agent.
THE HONEST VERSION
Every guide on the market covers Palermo and Taormina. This one covers Caltagirone, which is one of the most architecturally stunning and underpriced cities on the island and almost nobody writes about it. It covers Sant’Alessio Siculo, a small coastal town between Messina and Taormina where I actually lived — with a train stop, a beautiful new seafront walk, and an Airbnb host who became a genuine friend. It covers Eraclea Minoa, a beach so quiet you can camp right on the shore and wake up with the Mediterranean ten steps from your door.
It also tells you about the Slovakian family who invited strangers to their unit for a traditional Christmas dinner in a Sicilian coastal town, and the olive oil that arrived in my mailbox months after I came home.
That’s the real Sicily. That’s what this guide is about.
DETAILS
Instant download — PDF format
Compatible with any device, tablet, or phone
Full color throughout with original photography
Printable checklists included
Price: $24
This isn’t a guide written from a hotel room or a week-long vacation.
I’m Lea, founder of Nomad & Nook Travel Co. I moved to Sicily. I sold my belongings, resigned from my job, and went — chasing my family’s roots back to a small town in the Agrigento province called Cattolica Eraclea, where my great-great-great-grandparents walked the same streets that are still there today.
I spent months living across the island. I drove the mountain roads, got my car stuck in narrow medieval streets, woke up at a campground on a beach that barely exists on any map, became a coffee snob I have never recovered from, and made friends who later mailed me olive oil and homemade jam just because.
This guide is what I wrote down.
WHO THIS IS FOR
This guide is for two kinds of people: those planning a trip to Sicily who want to go somewhere real — not the tourist trail, not the cruise stop — and those who keep watching videos about €1 homes and slow living and thinking maybe.
If either of those is you, this is the guide I wish someone had handed me.
WHAT’S INSIDE
Part 1: Planning Your Trip
When to go, which airport, getting around, how long you actually need, and why you must always get the rental car insurance.
Part 2: The Places Worth Slowing Down In
In-depth coverage of towns most guides don’t mention — Cattolica Eraclea, Caltagirone, Mussomeli, Sant’Alessio Siculo, Giuliana, Sciacca, Sambuca di Sicilia, Eraclea Minoa, Mondello, Taormina, Ragusa Ibla, Scicli, Siracusa, and Ortigia — all written from real time spent there. Plus the restaurant Akropolis in Agrigento, where you can see the Valley of the Temples and the sea from your table.
Part 3: Where to Stay
What to look for and how to find accommodations that won’t show up on mainstream platforms.
Part 4: Food, Culture, and Getting It Right
How to eat well, what Sicilians are actually like, the tipping conversation Americans need to have, the coffee, the language, and what most tourists get wrong.
Part 5: If You’re Thinking About Staying
What it actually costs to live there, the bureaucracy honestly explained, real estate considerations, and resources for citizenship, genealogy, and property.
Plus: Two printable checklists — Before You Go essentials and Questions to Ask Your Travel Agent.
THE HONEST VERSION
Every guide on the market covers Palermo and Taormina. This one covers Caltagirone, which is one of the most architecturally stunning and underpriced cities on the island and almost nobody writes about it. It covers Sant’Alessio Siculo, a small coastal town between Messina and Taormina where I actually lived — with a train stop, a beautiful new seafront walk, and an Airbnb host who became a genuine friend. It covers Eraclea Minoa, a beach so quiet you can camp right on the shore and wake up with the Mediterranean ten steps from your door.
It also tells you about the Slovakian family who invited strangers to their unit for a traditional Christmas dinner in a Sicilian coastal town, and the olive oil that arrived in my mailbox months after I came home.
That’s the real Sicily. That’s what this guide is about.
DETAILS
Instant download — PDF format
Compatible with any device, tablet, or phone
Full color throughout with original photography
Printable checklists included
Price: $24