Example Citations:
Denise Sofia, in black spandex sweats, trotted across the busy 20th of September Street and
neared the end of her morning jog. Her run had taken her through St. Peter's Square, along the Tiber
River, around the ancient Roman ruins of the Forum and Colosseum.
Sofia doubles as a personal trainer and guide in a new fad in the gigantic tourism trade that floods
Italy with millions of visitors every year: "sight-jogging." Tourists check
out the sights as they run past. On this sunny morning, Sofia led a German woman in an hourlong dash
over about 5 1/2 miles and 2,000 years of history. If you find the panoramas as appealing as the perspiration, consider yourself a "sight
jogger."
Plenty of business and vacation travelers pack athletic gear so they won't need to shelve their
running routines. Some hit the hotel treadmill. But more now seem inclined to marry cultural
enrichment with fitness — and a budding segment of the travel industry has responded, offering
the gel-heeled set itineraries in which a run can be particularly enriching when enjoyed in the
company of a guide, or alone on a well-planned route. Earliest Citation:
Sightjogging is the concept of Carolina Gasparetto, who has lived in Rome for
30 years and has teamed her love of the city with her job as a personal trainer.
—Barbara McMahon, "See Rome and burn," The Guardian, October 1, 2005 link |