Last time we were in Italy, we spent a good part of the summer in a village on the shores of the Gulf of La Spezia in Liguria. Fezzano is one of 13 villages dotted around the bay and, in our view, one of the most beautiful.

Further west, over the Apennine mountains, you’ll find the much better known — and very much more popular — Cinque Terre.

While Fezzano is more tranquil than the villages of the Cinque Terre, certainly other tourists like us do make their way here. Though not nearly so many. And most stay only for a day or two. At the weekend, the town is alive with residents and visitors coming and going on boats, splashing about in the sea or dining at one of the village’s excellent restaurants. But during the week, even now at the height of summer, a mid-morning stroll along the lungomare reveals just a few groups of locals sitting in the shade, catching up on the news.

The waterfront here is only 500-metres long, with the yacht club tucked around a corner at one end, and the small, rocky beach at the other.

Between the two, on Fezzano’s main street, a row of tall houses faces the bay. Behind them, a maze of narrow stone paths winds up the steep hill through the rest of the village.

This is the kind of place where the mayor stops on the path for a chat, where the second-generation owner of the best restaurant in town is a guitar-playing bio-chemistry professor, and where the lady at the corner store — who’s been behind the counter for 40 years — is the cousin of your friend’s mother.

Fezzano is, quite simply, fabulous. It’s little wonder we couldn’t wait to return.