The Morning Call (Sunday)

‘Like stepping back in time’

Without tourists, life in a Tuscan village in Chianti evokes the past

- By Gaia Pianigiani

CASTELLINA IN CHIANTI, Italy — For decades, the rolling hills of Chianti in Tuscany have been a holiday destinatio­n for tourists from all over the world. Nearly year-round, visitors take on the region’s winding roads in their rental cars, admiring the landscape laboriousl­y sculpted by farmers, where vineyards blend into olive groves, and forests of oak trees give way to cypresslin­ed drives.

For me, this is home.

More than 114,000 tourists passed through my village in 2019, and the number was even higher in previous years.

But the pandemic — which has unsettled the globe and taken more than 75,600 lives in Italy alone — has brought tourism to a halt across the country and in my village, Castellina in Chianti, a hamlet of 2,800. Foreigners, who usually would be sipping espressos on the local bar’s terrace or grocery shopping at the farmers market, are nowhere to be seen. And without them, the town seems to have slid back in time.

Decades ago, villagers needing medical advice, paperwork for health services and even some routine procedures such as blood tests often turned to the local pharmacy, which sits on the ruins of the town’s late Medieval gateway, just across from the church. Over time, though, national policies required the town’s health office to expand its services, so people went there instead.

But local authoritie­s closed the health office in March because of the coronaviru­s, and residents again found themselves relying on the pharmacy for basic health care and routine tests.

“People came to us like they used to decades ago,” said Alessio Berti, 68, who has run the pharmacy for the past 46 years.

In the first wave of the pandemic last spring, villagers lined up in front of the pharmacy every day to hunt for vitamin supplement­s and face masks, he said. The four pharmacist­s — all members of the same family — worked long shifts and spent hours at the computer trying to help residents with paperwork. The shop became a communal clinic, the access point to online health services and an impromptu emergency room.

“They are well organized,” said Sonia Baldesi, a 67-year-old retiree who joked that she was old enough to remember when Berti started working as the town’s pharmacist. “They offer small services that allow us to skip a trip to Siena, and that’s not a small thing these days.”

It’s a personal touch that is characteri­stic of the town. Masked, people greet each other on Castellina’s street, even if they aren’t sure to whom they are speaking.

“Residents all know each other and help each other if they can,” said Roberto Barbieri, 52, who manages the village’s Coop supermarke­t.

Castellina was not hit hard by the coronaviru­s in the spring, but clusters emerged in town by the fall. The virus was the topic of conversati­on on the street or at the supermarke­t, as relatives of people who tested positive hoped their loved ones would be spared.

So far, only one Castellina resident has died from the coronaviru­s, in November.

“This time, it’s close to home,” said Claire Cappellett­i, the 62-year-old co-owner of a leather goods store in town that has been in her husband’s family for more than a century.

Like other business owners who depend on the tourist season, the Cappellett­is have had a disastrous year. When the nationwide lockdown was imposed in March, they were preparing for the start of the tourism season. But until restrictio­ns were loosened in June, they could not sell a single item — from a handmade leather bag to colorful loafers.

They installed hand sanitizers and kept the wooden shop doors wideopen for better ventilatio­n, but the first few Europeans who ventured to Castellina did not arrive until late July. The usual throng of Canadians, Americans and Australian­s never showed up.

Many tourists and some locals, however, were pleasantly surprised to find the village free of crowds. The summer was reminiscen­t of the late 1990s, before the buses loaded with tourists started arriving in Chianti.

“It was like it used to be, like stepping back in time,” Cappellett­i said.

Nostalgia, though, is not good for sales. Cappellett­i said her shop’s revenues were down 80% since the pandemic started, a figure mirrored throughout the village. But by working round the clock, and keeping expenses low, the family has kept the business afloat.

They also opened an online store. Their usual clients — some longtime Chianti visitors — started ordering goods from across the ocean, some just to help the Cappellett­is.

“We now have great-grandchild­ren of our first customers,” said Claire’s daughter, Nicole Cappellett­i, 32. “Our customer base saved us.”

For others in the village, the year was not so terrible.

“We were shut for a good part of the year, but when the restaurant opened, Italians and some foreigners who own property here came and did not skimp on food or wine,” said Giuseppe Stiaccini, co-owner of the town’s oldest restaurant, La Torre. It opened in 1922 and served as a cafeteria for Allied troops during World War II.

Some locals — exasperate­d by the town’s slow internet service as they tried to work remotely — hope that is one good thing that the pandemic will bring: faster Wi-Fi.

Recently, workers were digging a hole on the provincial road crossing the town where eventually fiber-optic cables for faster connection­s will be buried. A crowd of residents gathered to watch — with hope.

“Maybe we’ll jump into the 20th century soon,” an 87-year old resident joked.

 ?? NADIA SHIRA COHEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? The village of Castellina in Chianti, Italy. Much of Castellina’s economy relies on tourism. The lack of visitors has sent the town to more modest times.
NADIA SHIRA COHEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS The village of Castellina in Chianti, Italy. Much of Castellina’s economy relies on tourism. The lack of visitors has sent the town to more modest times.
 ??  ?? Claire Cappellett­i, right, and her daughter in their leather shop in Castellina. The Cappellett­is have kept the business afloat by working around the clock.
Claire Cappellett­i, right, and her daughter in their leather shop in Castellina. The Cappellett­is have kept the business afloat by working around the clock.

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