Olive c’e l’hai? C’e l’hai l’uva?
“Do you have olives?” “Do you have grapes?”
They’re questions asked frequently this time of year, in Umbria and all over Italy. Because midsummer is when we all start to speculate about the fall, and what kind of harvests we’ll have. Right now, we’re hopeful. The grapevines and olive trees are loaded with fruit, and thus full of promise for a good vendemmia (grape harvest) or raccolta delle olive (olive harvest). If the majority of the crops survive until harvest time in September and October, harvest time in Umbria will be a banner season.
But it’s a big “if.”
One bad storm can ruin a harvest, and a lot can happen in a month or two, most of it out of the hands of farmers and normal folks, like us, who have a grove of olives to make our own olive oil. Here are just some of the variables:
Drought
A hailstorm
The olive fly
Here’s the wildcard in every annual olive harvest. The olive fruit fly, Bactrocera oleae, lays its eggs under the skin of growing olives. The larvae hatch within a few days and spend the next several weeks munching on the pulp of the olive before eating their way out, leaving behind shriveled olives and a ruined harvest. Many growers large and small refuse to treat with pesticides, so it’s really just a waiting game to see what the olive fly will do. One sort of pyrrhic piece of good news: sustained temperatures above 32 C (or just under 90 degrees) kill the eggs and larvae — though their tiny corpses remain in the harvested fruit, which is kinda eewww…
What a failed harvest means…
For people like Paolo and me, who are hobby growers of olives, a failed harvest is more disappointing than devastating. It means that rather than consume our own EVOO for the year and share it with our friends and family, we have to purchase olive oil — and trust me, our home-grown version is far, far superior.
But for commercial growers or grapes or olives, a failed or low-yield harvest is a huge financial setback that might take several years from which to recover, assuming a good season follows the bad one. Sometimes, drought, hail or olive flies strike year after year. Several bad harvests in a row might mean a farmer has to lay off his crew, seek work elsewhere, or even fold up shop entirely. For consumers, poor harvests can significantly raise the prices of wine and olive oil, as supply is not great enough to meet demand.
Picking grapes and olives are among the most cherished things to do in Umbria — in the countryside, at least — and a favorite activity in our autumn central Italy tours. It’s simply one of the best ways to feel connected to the land and its people, and to agrarian traditions that have carried on here for centuries, even millennia. Neither activity is terribly physical, though I suppose hauling giant nets heavy with olives can be a little strenuous.
A backup plan for our guests….
When we have a bad olive harvest, as we did in 2023 (thanks, olive fly), we all miss out on the seasonal ritual, and so do our guests. And it’s why I never promise that we’ll pick grapes or olives, any more than I’d promise that we’ll find mushrooms, truffles or wild asparagus. Could it happen? Absolutely? Will it happen? We just have to wait and see.
Grape and olive harvests only happen in the fall. But any time of year you join us on a tour, we’ll include some outdoor activities that connect us with nature and the land. These experiences are more than just a chance to get outside — they provide cultural context and human connection, and help us to better understand the people of Allerona and appreciate their enduring, essential, and sentimental relationship to the land.