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IN PICTURES: Quake-hit Italian village bursts into colour in annual 'blooming'

Catherine Edwards
Catherine Edwards - [email protected]
IN PICTURES: Quake-hit Italian village bursts into colour in annual 'blooming'
The rainbow-coloured fields of Castelluccio. Photo: Tiziana Fabi/AFP

Every year, the fields of Umbrian village Castelluccio come alive with colour as part of an annual spectacle known as 'La Fiorita' (the flowering or blooming).

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Poppies, daffodils, violets and others paint the fields in rainbow hues, and thousands of tourists flock to take in the sight in the Apennine's highest village.


Castelluccio from a distance. Photo: Tiziana Fabi/AFP

La fiorita takes place in the summer months between late May and July. This year it began towards the end of the usual period, in late June, but the colours are particularly vivid thanks to favourable weather conditions.


Photo: Tiziana Fabi/AFP

Castelluccio is well-known in Italy and among chefs worldwide for the lentils that grow in these fields, which have Protected Geographical Indication (IGP) meaning they sell for a higher price due to the origin and quality. The town's lentils sell at around €12 per kilo.


Photo: Tiziana Fabi/AFP

Since the 2016 earthquakes, the annual 'flowering' has taken on a deeper meaning. The town was badly hit by the series of tremors, and the bright colours ahead of the September harvest are an important symbol of Castelluccio coming to life again.

 

A post shared by Roberta Costanzi (@robertacostanzi) on Jul 16, 2018 at 8:26am PDT

But the town has not yet fully recovered, and some of the roads leading to it are still not even fully re-opened. Residents of Castelluccio meanwhile are waiting for their quake-damaged houses to be restored.


Photo: Tiziana Fabi/AFP

This week, five businesses and two dairies re-opened for the first time since the earthquake.

 

A post shared by La Lori (@la.lori_) on Jul 9, 2018 at 7:52am PDT

A year and a half from the earthquakes, the vice-president of the Umbria region said it was a "historic and important day" for the whole area.

READ ALSO: After the earthquakes, why you should still visit Central Italy

 

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