demo: add Montalcino story showcasing full-bleed and image-caption shortcodes

Demonstrates all three image-caption width variants (column, full, bleed via
full-bleed shortcode) in a real story context with narrative prose.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Claude-Session: https://claude.ai/code/session_01WPJztrVGbwic2xTG7G9fjM
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---
title: 'The Road to Montalcino'
date: '2026-09-06'
location_name: Montalcino
location_country: Italy
lat: 43.057
lng: 11.489
hero_image: hero.jpg
hero_alt: Vine rows climbing toward a hilltop tower in early morning light, mist in the valley below
published: true
---
The climb to Montalcino starts gently enough. A white gravel road, the kind that shows up cream in photographs and grey in real life, curling upward through the first vineyards. The gradient is polite for about twenty minutes and then it isn't. By the time the tower came into view above the tree line we had stopped pretending to chat and were just breathing.
[full-bleed image="photo-2.jpg" caption="The valley floor from halfway up — on a clear morning you can see all the way to Monte Amiata" alt="Wide view of Tuscan valley with vineyards in foreground and hills receding into morning haze" credit="Day 6, 07:40"]
Brunello country. The vineyards up here have a precision to them that you don't get further down — rows tighter, stakes straighter, the ground between them weeded with what looks like obsessive care. These are grapes worth taking seriously and the farmers treat them accordingly. We rode between the rows for a while, the vines overhead, dew still on the leaves.
[image-caption image="photo-1.jpg" caption="Sangiovese Grosso — the only grape permitted in a Brunello. The bunches are small and tight, almost black by September." alt="Close-up of dark grape clusters on a vine with green leaves, morning light filtering through" credit="Canalicchio di Sopra vineyard" width="column"]
The town at the top is small enough that you can walk end to end in fifteen minutes, but it has everything: a bar with a terrace facing southwest, a shop selling nothing but wine, and an enoteca run by a man who spoke no English and didn't need to. He poured three glasses without being asked and set down a plate of bread and something salty. We drank slowly. The view from the terrace was the entire reason the town exists in the position it does.
[image-caption image="hero.jpg" caption="Montalcino from the south approach — the fortress is eleventh century; the view it commands is the reason it was built exactly here." alt="Hilltop town of Montalcino with medieval fortress visible above terracotta rooftops, vineyards in foreground" credit="09:15" width="full"]
[pull-quote]
Every Tuscan hill town has a reason to be where it is. Montalcino's reason is military, but after a thousand years all that fortification has become a very good wine cellar.
[/pull-quote]
The descent was fast. White gravel becomes tarmac becomes a smooth fast road through the valley and you can carry almost everything you earned on the way up. We were back at camp by noon, which felt like cheating. In the afternoon I slept for two hours in the shade of an olive tree, which did not feel like cheating at all.