I have had a thirty year love affair with Italy. The sun is warm, the figs
are sweet and the people generous of spirit. There are olive trees and
Giottos, turquoise seas and musky churches and a daily civility that warms
my heart. I spent a winter of my youth near Siena, met my husband
in Florence and since then Italy has delighted me and drawn me back both as
a professional photographer and on the slightest whim.
Over the years I have travelled from London to Rome, Naples to Venice
photographing some of the finest homes for international sales and rental
companies and for interiors magazines. And then one day I came across the
Marche. Arriving here it seemed to me so quiet and beautiful, what with its
mountains and sea, peaceful medieval hill-towns and kind, hard-working
people. And so before long we had bought a farmhouse with wild fields and an
olive grove and here I feel at home.
Since then I have grown deeply fond of Marche. I care about my adopted
village, this landscape, these buildings and their future. However, the
population in the countryside and hill-towns is diminishing. My neighbours
are elderly and few, yet still working hard on their land. Their knowledge
about living here has been handed down over generations. They know about the
earth, the stars, how to find wild herbs, prune olive trees and when to
plant their garlic. Their skill and wisdom are invaluable and I believe can be shared by our generation and taken
into the modern world.
Here in my village many houses stand empty; their shutters closed, owners
dead and children gone off to the city. The village needs people who want to
make a home here. Who will not only buy or rent a house, but who will buy
their honey from Primo, their handkerchiefs from Maria and their biscuits
from Rita the baker. There are some fine buildings to be saved and tangled
gardens to restore, so if you want a home in Italy you'll find a warm
welcome in these hills.
Houses for sale in Marche |