5 hours
E-voucher
Multiple
Experience the Tuscan countryside from a perspective rare to visitors on a private Vespa tour from Siena. In addition to navigating for you, your guide ensures the best views and stops for photo opportunities along the way. The day includes a Tuscan–style lunch and complimentary wine tasting with vineyard views.
Operated by
Tuscany Private Tour
8 traveller ratings
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513vicp, Sept 2025
This tour was fantastic top to bottom. our tour guide Sam took spectacular care of our group. We spent over two hours riding our Vespa scooters through the Tuscan hills with amazing views. This was followed by an AMAZING lunch and wine tasting. I would highly recommend this!!!!
Response from Host, Sept 2025
Thank you so much for your fantastic review! We are thrilled to hear that you enjoyed our tour and appreciated Samuele's dedication and professionalism. He truly embodies our passion for sharing the beauty and culture of Tuscany, and it means a lot to us that you noticed his commitment. We can’t wait to welcome you back during your next visit to Tuscany!
Shaheen A, Sept 2022
My wife booked this tour in advance via TripAdvisor. We never been on a Vespa, but wanted the full Italian experience while vacationing in Tuscany. The initial booking page didn’t disclose (and still doesn’t) that experience is mandatory. The only mandatory requirement was a driver’s license, which we both have. We assumed the tour would provide first timers with a basic lesson based off the reviews on the TripAdvisor page. Long story short, we showed up to our tour and the owner told our guide that there has been too many recent accidents and injuries. He asked if we had any Vespa experience, and we both said no. He allowed me to “test drive” the Vespa in a parking lot and said I was not experienced enough and could not do the tour. “No experience, no ride” was his exact words. I agreed with him entirely and definitely didn’t want to put myself or my wife at risk of injury. We mutually agreed to cancelled the tour and I requested a refund. They tried to offer us an alternative option within their tour offering, but it wasn’t the experience we were looking for so we declined their offer. He told us to take the refund request up with TripAdvisor and that he wasn’t going to refund us our money because he saved us from hurting ourselves by not doing the tour. We went back in forth, but his logic was ultimately we were in the wrong for booking the tour in the first place. The owner recently updated his TripAdvisor page, but that doesn’t help us as we had an existing booking that they approved us for. If this was noted upfront, we would’ve never booked this tour in the first place. We’re currently in conversations with TripAdvisor to get our refund request resolved before we dispute this charge with my credit card company.
Response from Host, Sept 2022
Dear customer, we are very sorry to receive a bad review as you did not take the tour. As per the Italian law, a car driving license is required to drive a Vespa and there is no other type of certifications. As you wrote in your review, we tested you like all of our customers but you weren't able to drive. As you wrote, you have decided not to depart to don't risk to endanger you and your wife. We have many clients who have had no experience but who are able to drive after the briefind and test drive we do and manage to enjoy the tour. In order to allow you to explore the area according to your plans, we have offered you a tour with other vehicles but you have decided to decline the offer. Booking a tour that involves self-driving a vehicle that you have never tried before, means considering the possibility that you will not be able to leave and this is not a provider disservice.
Tony_N, Jul 2022
This is a “Must Do”. So much fun! Our guide, Tommasso was fabulous. I wasn’t sure what to expect but this tour was a highlight of our Italy vacation. We drove Vespas to a couple ancient castle villages then Tommasso gave us personal tours on foot. He was passionate and knowledgeable about their history. All was very interesting. The lunch we were treated to at the end was a special treat. I highly recommend this tour.
Response from Host, Aug 2022
Buongiorno Tony_N, Thank you so much for taking the time for a review and we are so happy to read this tour was the highlight of your Italy vacation! We well know that Tommaso is a great guide and has a great passion. We look forward to arrange another exeprience for you in the future! Regards.
391patc, Oct 2021
Description says it all. This was a great experience, although I'd recommend caution for anyone who'd be nervous riding a Vespa. The one's we used were 150 cc (which are decently large/heavy) and the traffic is fairly fast. We had both had moped experience before this so it was a great experience, and they do give you a warmup/training session in the parking lot before you go and they ensure you know how to operate the scooter.
Response from Host, Nov 2021
Buongiorno 391patc, thank you so much for this review. We are really pleased to know you enjoyed our Vespa Tour and you noticed how much we care about our clients security. Hope we will have the possibility to arrange some other experiences in you future visit to Tuscany! The Staff
The area around the capital has been inhabited since 2000 BC, as evidenced by the archaeological area of Poggio la Croce where the remains of an ancient village emerged and where, during the excavations carried out in the last decade, they were brought to light many exhibits. Later, even if very few traces have emerged, the presence of an Etruscan village can be assumed. By the fall of the Western Roman Empire, in the 5th century, small agglomerations of a rural nature had already formed in the area, which still exist today; these villages were Castelvecchi, Monterinaldi, Volpaia and Radda itself.
Between the 9th and 10th centuries the area of Radda saw the birth of the feudal society which involved the building of the villages. The first certain document in which Radda is mentioned is a diploma from 1002 in which Emperor Otto III confirmed the donation made by Countess Willa in favor of Badia Fiorentina. The locality Radda appears in many documents of the Badia Fiorentina until the XII century. Ramda judicaria fiorentina et fesulana is reported in a document of the Badia a Coltibuono of 1041.
On 25 May 1191 the emperor Henry VI granted the castle of Radda and its court in fiefdom to the Counts Guidi, the same fiefdom was again confirmed by the emperor Frederick II, even if already in the thirteenth century the territory of Radda was dependent on Florence . The castle was sacked by the Sienese in a raid in 1230 while in 1268 it was occupied, together with other localities in the Chianti region, by French troops led by Carlo I d'Angiò. A new occupation and a new heavy looting Radda suffered it during the second Aragonese invasion in 1478.
Administratively Radda was the capital of the Chianti League, comprising the territories of Radda, Gaiole and Castellina. From the end of the thirteenth century it became the seat of a podestà appointed by the Florentines and in the municipal statute of 1415 Radda was confirmed as the capital of the League. Among the podestàs of Radda is Francesco Ferrucci.
In the seventeenth century, after the conflicts had ended, the castles were transformed into stately villas in which the owners dedicated themselves to the production of wine. Radda in Chianti was visited in 1773 by the Grand Duke Pietro Leopoldo who found it far from everything. As a consequence of the visit, the roads were improved but the territory of Radda was always poor and isolated. The affection for the Habsburg-Lorraine dynasty remained strong for a long time, however, considering the fact that at the plebiscite of 1860 for the annexation of Tuscany to Sardinia, Radda voted against (281 yes out of 581 voters, out of 879 entitled [4 ]).
This situation reached its climax in the 1950s when the depopulation of the countryside, a phenomenon common to many areas of Chianti, reached its peak. In the seventies the rediscovery of these places began and slowly all the castles, villas and individual farmhouses were restored and farmhouses and farms were planted there.
The area of Panzano was already inhabited in Etruscan times as evidenced by the discovery of a stele dating back to the VI - V century BC. at the parish church of San Leolino, stele then dispersed. Even in Roman times the area was densely inhabited, from that period there are numerous traces in the toponyms including Panzano himself. At the beginning of the 10th century the parish church of San Leolino in Flacciano was mentioned, which later became Panzano.
In the XII century the first testimony of the name Panzano is had which is mentioned in the plebe Sancti Leolini sitam in Panzano while in the tenth of the XIII century the church of Santa Maria placed in the castle is also mentioned. The castle of Panzano certainly had already developed before the XII century and was among the possessions of the Firidolfi family.
Of the historical events of the castle not many traces remain. In the mid-thirteenth century when the Florentine countryside was organized in Panzano leagues it was included in the Lega della Val di Greve. After the Battle of Montaperti in 1260 the castle was sacked and two towers were destroyed by the victorious Ghibelline troops. During the war that opposed Florence with the Visconti of Milan Panzano, in 1397, was occupied and sacked again by Alberico da Barbiano's troops.
In 1478, the Sienese troops and their allies, the troops of the King of Naples Ferdinand II of Aragon invaded Chianti for the second time. On that occasion the castle of Panzano was one of the most important bulwarks in defense of the republic of Florence so as to become the seat of the Commissioner of the Republic. After the fall of the Republic of Siena in 1555, Panzano will no longer be involved in warfare until 1944.
The mound of Montecalvario, an Etruscan tomb located near the town and dated 7th-6th century BC. and the Necropoli del Poggino, located near Fonterutoli, attest to the presence of the Etruscans in the area. According to the excavation campaigns carried out from the eighties in the Castellina area, the presence of a large town was certain; inhabited center which was to be located in Salinvolpe, a few hundred meters from today's Castellina.
There are more testimonies from the medieval era. The first certain documents date back to the 11th century when the area was a fief of the nobles of the Castello del Trebbio, a family related to the Counts Guidi. In the twelfth century Castellina came under the influence of Florence and in 1193 an agreement was signed between the lords of Trebbio and Florence in which the Florentines were allowed to militarily preside over the castles of Trebbio and Castiglione (now Castellina). After the Lodo di Poggibonsi of 1203, an act in which the Chianti borders between Florence and Siena were sanctioned, Castellina found itself to be one of the most important Florentine outposts since it was located on the most direct road that put the two rival cities in communication.
In the 14th century Castellina became one of the cornerstones of the Lega del Chianti, so much so that it was the head of one of the third parties in which it was divided. The Terziere di Castellina administered the part of the Chianti that slopes down towards the Valdelsa. In 1397 it was sacked and completely burnt by the troops of the Duke of Milan Gian Galeazzo Visconti commanded by Alberico da Barbiano. In 1400 it was decided to fortify Castellina, and in the list of reformations preserved in the State Archives of Florence it is written
«On site qui dicitur la Castellina fiat fortilitia»
The works, however, had to proceed slowly so that in 1430 the workers of the Opera del Duomo were commissioned to fortify Castellina together with Staggia Senese and Rèncine; Filippo Brunelleschi was sent to establish the type of necessary interventions and to estimate the costs. In 1452 the walls of Castellina suffered the assault of the Aragonese troops but resisted. Very differently things went in 1478 during the second Aragonese invasion of Chianti when Castellina was conquered by the Sienese and Neapolitan troops. On that occasion the defense of Castellina was personally directed by Giuliano da Sangallo while Francesco di Giorgio Martini was in command of the besiegers. The Sienese occupation lasted until 1483 when it was resumed by the Florentines.
In 1774 with the administrative reform of the Grand Duke Pietro Leopoldo, Castellina became the seat of the Community from which the current municipality will derive.
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A full refund will apply if you cancel more than 24 hours before the activity start time.
No refund is possible if you cancel less than 24 hours before the activity start time.