Stayed for a week beginning of August. Flew into Pisa and got a taxi to Lido Di Camaiore which cost ninety Euro. Hotel staff warm and welcoming on our arrival. Room neat clean and a decent size for four of us (2 adults and 2 children). Our balcony looked out towards a mountain range (The Apennines) which was very beautiful and still snow covered in places.
The Hotel has a lovely pool which we had to ourselves for the first few days and even at the end of our stay when it was at it's busiest, I wouldn't say it was particularly crowded. The pool was so good we rarely felt the need to use the nearby beach, which was itself only a short walk away (a hundred yards or so). Our stay was bed and breakfast and my wife and children thought the breakfast was really good although it wasn't really my cup of coffee. I say this because the coffee seemed to only be served in thimbles with handles and even bigger cups only had a half inch of coffee in them. That and no full English were the only issues I had all week here.
My wifes only concern during the week was the street sellers during the evening which are mainly located along the pedestrianised walkway along the beach shopping precinct. They can be a bit persistent some of them, and most of what they sell seems to be fakes of recognised brands. Don't go to Lido Di Camaiore and expect to be able to eat Indian, Chinese, Thai or pretty much anything other than Italian cuisine. Having said that, it is difficult to fault the food as everywhere we ate with just one exception (and even then it was more about their rude attitude than the food), was of a very high standard and mouthwateringly good. We had one half day trip to see that old tower that won't fall down, at Pisa, which is beautiful but very busy, other than that, we spent most of the week relaxing by the pool or swimming in it. We did use a taxi and a train to visit Pisa and a cautionary note about the train service may be in order here? When we purchased the tickets at the station, the ticket sales person forgot to mention that we should validate the tickets in a machine BEFORE getting on the train. As we discovered, failure to do this will result in a fine of five Euros per ticket from the conductor on the train. Annoying really as the tickets themselves cost less than 2 Euro each and our 9 year old travelled free. It can get worse than this should you then forget to validate the return tickets. Apparently, the fine would then have been sixty Euros per ticket, and even the free tickets get fined. Needless to say, we validated ours in aforementioned machine on our return journey.
All in all, I would thoroughly recommend a stay in this lovely little town and even more highly recommend staying at Hotel Eur, with it's warm and welcoming staff (who speak way better English than I do Italian), picturesque scenery, lovely beach and lovely weather which ranged between 27 degrees and a high of 33 during the week we were there. We are looking hard at how we can juggle our finances so we can visit again next summer?