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Lozzo di Cadore

Lozzo di Cadore è un piccolo comune del Cadore, nel cuore delle Dolomiti bellunesi, incorniciato dalle cime delle Marmarole, dell'...

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Lozzo di Cadore è un piccolo comune del Cadore, nel cuore delle Dolomiti bellunesi, incorniciato dalle cime delle Marmarole, dell'Antelao e del Sorapiss. È uno di quei paesi di montagna che non hanno mai puntato sul grande turismo di massa, restando fedeli a un'economia fatta di boschi, pascoli e piccola manifattura artigiana, secondo una tradizione cadorina antica di secoli. Il centro storico, raccolto attorno alla parrocchiale, conserva tracce di archeologia industriale come la roggia dei mulini, testimonianza di un tempo in cui l'acqua muoveva le attività del paese. Attorno all'abitato si apre un territorio prezioso per chi ama camminare: il pianoro di Pian dei Buoi, punto di partenza per anelli escursionistici tra boschi di conifere e pascoli d'alta quota, e il territorio del Parco delle Marmarole-Antelao-Sorapiss, rifugio per camosci, aquile e galli cedroni. Lozzo di Cadore è, insomma, un paese da vivere lentamente, passo dopo passo.

تم التحديث في 12 يوليو 2026

Lozzo di Cadore 14°
أحد 23° 13°
اثنين 19° 14°
ثلاثاء 22° 13°
أربعاء 20° 13°

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Amid the Dolomites of Cadore

Lozzo di Cadore lies in the Cadore area, the wide mountain region of the province of Belluno that stretches at the foot of the northern Dolomites. The village sits in a basin surrounded by some of the most imposing peaks in the area: the Marmarole to the east, the Antelao and Sorapiss further south, mountains belonging to the Dolomite system recognised as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The climate is typical of high mountain areas, with long cold winters and short bright summers, and the landscape alternates spruce and larch forests with high-altitude pastures. It remains a largely natural territory, where human presence concentrates in the valley floor, leaving the higher slopes to chamois, deer and birds of prey.

History and Cadore Identity

Like other Cadore towns, Lozzo developed over the centuries a strong communal identity, tied to the ancient Regole, the collective self-governing bodies that managed forests and pastures and that still regulate the use of woodland and grazing land in much of the area today. The local economy was historically based on timber, high-altitude pastoral farming and small craft activities, often linked to woodworking and ironworking. Unlike some of the larger Cadore towns, Lozzo never underwent large-scale industrialisation, remaining a modestly sized village with an economy split between mountain farming, small enterprise and, more recently, niche hiking-based tourism.

The Marmarole, Antelao and Sorapiss Park

Lozzo's municipal territory falls within the Marmarole-Antelao-Sorapiss park, a protected natural area safeguarding an alpine environment of great biological richness. Mountain streams here host populations of brown trout and marble trout, while high-altitude wetlands and ponds are home to alpine newts, salamanders and several species of amphibians and reptiles, including some vipers. In the forests and on the rock faces one can spot chamois, golden eagles, capercaillie and black grouse, along with the dipper along the clearest mountain streams. For nature lovers, more than for seekers of grand monuments, this territory offers an authentic experience of still lightly populated Dolomite mountain landscape.

Pian dei Buoi and the Old Mill Race

The Pian dei Buoi plateau, reachable from Lozzo, is the ideal starting point for numerous hikes, including four family-friendly ring trails set in an idyllic alpine landscape of meadows, woods and mountain huts. Down in the valley, the village preserves traces of industrial archaeology tied to the use of water power: the roggia dei mulini, an artificial channel that once fed the village's millstones, tells the story of a rural economy in which water was as precious a resource as timber. Walking this route today, from Pian dei Buoi to the mill race, means crossing two complementary sides of Lozzo's history: that of the mountain as it was lived, and that of the valley-floor craft economy.

A Village for Slow Mountain Life

Lozzo di Cadore is not, and does not aim to become, a mass-tourism destination: there are no large ski facilities or spectacular attractions, and for many visitors this is an asset rather than a limitation. Those who come here find an authentic village where life still follows, in part, the rhythms of the mountains, between livestock farming, forest management under the ancient Regole system, and small, scattered accommodation. It suits travellers looking for hiking, the quiet of conifer forests and direct contact with the Dolomite environment, rather than organised services and entertainment. A village honest with itself, one that lives from the mountain before it lives from tourism.

Experiences not to miss

  • Walk one of the four ring trails starting from the Pian dei Buoi plateau
  • Discover the roggia dei mulini, a piece of industrial archaeology in the valley floor
  • Look for chamois, golden eagles and capercaillie in the Marmarole-Antelao-Sorapiss park
  • Enjoy the silence of spruce and larch forests, far from mass tourism

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