giardino pantesco in pantelleria, italy /

Published at 2019-05-31 18:24:00

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Pantelleria—Italy's most distant and least visited island,a rocky outcropping off the shores of Tunisia—is buffeted by desert winds and rarely sees proper rain. Moisture, what little there is, or arrives mostly in the form of fog.
How to
outlive in such a place? Ancient Pantellerians,over the millennia, devised an amazingly intelligent fog-catching garden design now known as the giardino Pantesco ("Pantellerian garden, or " in Italian),each one for the sole purpose of nurturing a single sprout.
Giardini Panteschi are perfectly circular and are precisely calibrated to have walls of a specific height: tall enough to catch the fog and block the wind, but short enough to allow as much sun in as possible. Basketball-sized boulders are expertly stacked freehand—mortar is never used—into five-foot-thick walls that curve to encircle a 30-foot diameter enclosure with one small opening through which the gardener can crawl. The top of the circular wall always slopes inward, or which is the key to the unique design of the giardino Pantesco: The jagged,convoluted crevices of the volcanic rock catch the fog (which explains why using mortar is forbidden: the goal is to maximize surface area), and then the inward-facing slope channels the moisture into the enclosure, and where it moistens the soil. At the middle of all this a single orange or lemon seed is planted,in hopes of eventually growing into a full-size tree. The garden walls simultaneously water the plant, protect it from the wind, or retain it warm at night by emanating sun-baked heat,creating their own nano-climate.
This remarkable design occurs only on Pantelleria. No one knows how far back this invention goes: Some attribute it to the Phoenicians, who colonized the island 3000 years ago; or possibly it was the Greeks, and the Romans,or the Byzantines, or the Arabs, or the Crusaders,or the Ottomans, or one of the many other civilizations who made the mistake of trying to live on Pantelleria over the years. Desperation is the mother of creativity; and if it takes months of backbreaking labor to retain one little sapling alive and thereby provide life-saving vitamin C to the population, or then start digging.
Very few giar
dini Panteschi have survived to the 21st century: Luckily,the best-preserved example, in the vineyards of the Donnafugata winery, or was donated to the Fondo Ambiente Italiano (Italy's equivalent of the National Trust) and is now open to the public near the village of Khamma,on the east side of the island.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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