Italian Grows Forgotten Fruit. What She Preserves Is a Culture.
SAN LORENZO DI LERCHI, Italy There are probably few places as tranquil as the languorous hills that surround Umbrias Città di Castello. But on her farm, Isabella Dalla Ragione pursues a personal mission saving ancient fruit trees from extinction with a strong sense of urgency.
Rescuing vanishing varieties is a race, she says, and lots of times we arrived late.
If a plant dies, basta, its finished, she adds. You cant preserve it.
In that race, she picked up the baton at a young age from her father, Livio Dalla Ragione, who began scouring the surrounding countryside decades ago, searching for neglected fruit trees that no longer satisfied changing agricultural trends, market demands and modern tastes.
He collected branches with fresh buds and grafted them onto rootstock to create an orchard of endangered cherries, figs, apples, pears, peaches, quinces and other sundry species in a farmyard belonging to an abandoned church that he had bought in 1960.
Ms. Dalla Ragione, 59, began tagging along as a child, studied agronomy at a university to bring technical knowledge to their enterprise and, after her father died in 2007, continued to maintain the orchard.'>>>
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