In our hinterland is found the Argentina Valley. When Taggia is abandoned, going by commonplace street, the nature becomes undisputed hero of the valley lying a behind, an area shut between steep inclines, hesitant to the entry of pamplon auta men, covered with thick woods, dissipated by middle age towns remained practically immaculate, inside which still today the previous plans its old plots.

Campo Marzio is a little hill in the most highlighted bottleneck of the stream, set apart by survives from a pre-Roman town and by its ensuing Roman strongholds. The principal town of the Valle Argentina is Badalucco in a junction position for schedules from the lower part of the valley towards the mountain. The town crowds its harsh cut stone houses on the slope before Mount Faudo. In the town, made of stone, to attack each corner and exploit each cleavage, one finds forcing obscure figures settled in frescoes and, in the soggy and quiet rear entryways, a super durable craftsmanship display in the open shows models ceramics and molded record. The “sagra du stocafissu a baiicogna” is the bright touch that draws in to the town, during the long stretch of September of every year, crowds of travelers and “experts”.

Following the commonplace street, yet turning right and after a few short curves, you meet Montalto Ligure in an all encompassing position. The rumors have spread far and wide suggesting that, around the year 1,000, a youthful wedded couple who got away from the “jus primae noctis” (the right of the principal night), laid out this town. Here the Romanesque ward church of San Giorgio jelly significant frescoes; the ornate area church is rich of renowned artworks, for example, polyptych by Ludovico Breashed this town. Here the Romanesque area church of San Giorgio jelly significant frescoes; the elaborate ward church is rich of renowned works of art, for example, polyptych by Ludovico Brea.

Carpasio is a mountain town, with its low houses with record rooftops, noteworthy as a result of the idea given by the covering of its back streets and its covered paths, overwhelmed by the superb ringer pinnacle of the congregation of Sant’ Antonino. Returning on the common street, going up the valley, the explorer meets the town of the 23 watermills, Molini di Triora, with its fifteenth century beginning extravagant area church and the safe-haven of Nostra Signora della Month. Here, each year in September, travelers from the coast, merge for a gathering of extraordinary gastronomy, the “sagra delle lumache” (the snail celebration). Likewise deserving of being visited, are the adjoining villas of Andagna and Corte.

In the past it was the storehouse of the Republic of Genoa and Podesteria, today Triora is known as the “town of the witches” inferable from a preliminary held in 1588 and closed, with a sentence of culpability for black magic of a gathering of nearby ladies who, as a result of their gathering in a separated spot (the Cabotina), were considered at fault for the looming starvation. There is memory of that occasion in the nearby ethnographic and black magic gallery, for the karma of shops and handcraft studiosthat show entertaining sorceress dolls and sell alcohol of the witch and snail milk, very much combined as one creations of grappa (refined alcohol) and fragrant spices. The archaic town is a craftsmanship gem, steep, harsh, worked without deterrents, entire with all due respect arrangement of entryways, curves, back streets and fortressed-houses.