Foreste Casentinesi National Park: Italy's Ancient Forest Between Tuscany and Emilia-Romagna

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: April 2026. The Foreste Casentinesi contain the largest and most ancient forest in Italy outside alpine coniferous zones — silver fir and beech trees that have been growing on the same Apennine slopes for 700+ years, protected from logging first by monastic ownership and then by national park status.

The Foreste Casentinesi, Monte Falterona e Campigna National Park (Parco Nazionale delle Foreste Casentinesi, Monte Falterona e Campigna — parks.it/parco.nazionale.for.casentinesi) straddles the Apennine watershed between Tuscany (the Casentino valley, the upper Arno basin) and Emilia-Romagna (the Romagna Apennine valleys), covering 36,869 hectares of the most ecologically intact forest in peninsular Italy. The specific Foreste Casentinesi significance: the silver fir (Abies alba) and European beech (Fagus sylvatica) forest that has occupied these Apennine slopes since the medieval period, protected from commercial logging by the Camaldolese and Franciscan monastic communities whose properties encompassed the forest area. The result: a forest of trees 200–400 years old, a structural complexity (dead wood, understory vegetation, canopy gaps) that takes centuries of unmanaged growth to develop, and a wildlife community that includes wolf, fallow deer, roe deer, golden eagle, peregrine falcon, and the specific forest-specialist birds (black woodpecker, white-backed woodpecker, honey buzzard) that require old-growth forest structure.

The Forest: Why Foreste Casentinesi Is Ecologically Unique

The specific ecological significance of the Foreste Casentinesi requires context: most of Italy's forests were heavily logged from the medieval period through the 20th century, producing the secondary forest (macchia, coppice woodland, pine plantation) that covers the majority of Italian forested area. The Foreste Casentinesi is genuinely different — a primary old-growth forest whose monastic ownership history (the Camaldolese hermitage owned the forest for commercial logging prohibition from the 11th century; the Franciscans of La Verna from the 13th century) protected it from the deforestation that stripped the surrounding Apennine slopes. The consequence: the silver fir trees of the Camaldoli forest are genuinely old-growth — the tallest trees exceed 50 meters in height and 4 meters in circumference; the forest floor has the structural complexity of unmanaged forest (fallen dead wood providing habitat for saproxylic insects, fungi fruiting bodies on rotting trunks, understory vegetation stratified from ground cover through shrub to sub-canopy); and the wildlife community reflects this complexity, with the presence of species that disappeared from most Italian forests in the 19th–20th centuries.

The Foreste Casentinesi riserve integrali (the strict nature reserves within the park — areas where human access is completely prohibited to allow maximum ecological development) contain the only reference samples of undisturbed Apennine forest ecology in Italy. The Sasso Fratino Riserva Integrale (1,217 hectares, on the Emilia-Romagna slope of the Apennine watershed, designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site's "Primeval Beech Forest" component in 2017 — the only Italian continental forest in the UNESCO designation) is the most significant: a mature beech and silver fir forest of exceptional structural integrity, accessible for scientific research only, with the specific biodiversity indicators (wood decay fungal community, invertebrate diversity, bird species composition) that confirm old-growth status by international scientific standards.

Camaldoli: The Benedictine Hermitage in the Silver Fir Forest

The Eremo di Camaldoli (the Camaldolese hermitage, founded 1012 by Saint Romuald of Ravenna) is the founding house of the Camaldolese monastic order — a reform Benedictine community that combines the cenobitic tradition (communal monastery) with the eremitic tradition (individual hermit cells in the forest). The specific Camaldoli complex consists of two separate establishments 3 km apart: the Monastery (Sacro Eremo, the lower establishment at 1,111m, accessible to visitors, with the guest facilities and the historic pharmacy — the Farmacia di Camaldoli, operating since the 11th century and still producing the herbal liqueurs, creams, and preparations of the monastic tradition, open to purchase by visitors); and the Hermitage (the upper establishment at 1,104m, the individual hermit cells distributed among the silver fir forest, accessible only for guided visits outside of community prayer times).

The Camaldolese forest protection: Saint Romuald's founding charter (the Consuetudini di Camaldoli, established in the 11th century and formalized in subsequent papal documents) prohibited logging in the forest surrounding the hermitage cells. This prohibition — maintained for 900 years — is the specific mechanism that preserved the Camaldoli fir forest in its current old-growth condition. The monks also introduced the silver fir (Abies alba) as a managed monoculture for the production of timber in designated areas (the "Foresta di Camaldoli" distinct from the strict reserve) — giving the forest its mixed character of managed plantation and old-growth remnant that the park administration now maintains.

Visiting Camaldoli: The monastery complex is accessible daily (07:00–12:30 and 14:30–18:30; free). The Farmacia (the pharmacy, which sells the monastic herbal preparations and liqueurs — the Elisir dell'Eremo and the various botanical remedies that the Camaldolese have produced since 1090) is open 09:00–12:30 and 14:30–18:00. The hermitage (the upper community of individual cells) accepts visitors for guided tours (organized by the monastery; times vary, confirm at the entrance). Accommodation: the monastery operates a foresteria (guest house) for pilgrims and retreat visitors — contact eremo.camaldoli@tin.it for booking.

La Verna: Where St Francis Received the Stigmata

La Verna (the Franciscan sanctuary on the rocky summit of Monte La Verna, 1,283m, above the Casentino valley) is the most significant Franciscan pilgrimage site in Italy after Assisi — the place where St Francis of Assisi, in September 1224, received the stigmata (the wounds corresponding to the crucifixion of Christ, appearing on his hands, feet, and side — the first documented stigmatization in Christian history). The physical site: the jagged rock formation of the La Verna summit, characterized by the specific limestone fractures that create the dramatic overhanging cliffs and the deep forest crevices that Francis specifically sought for prayer and isolation. The existing sanctuary complex (built progressively from the 13th century, with significant additions in the 14th–17th centuries) incorporates the specific rock formations of Francis's retreat — the Cappella delle Stimmate (the chapel built on the exact spot of the stigmatization, enclosing the rock where Francis was kneeling) is the primary pilgrimage destination.

The La Verna art collection: the sanctuary contains the most important collection of glazed terracotta sculpture by Andrea della Robbia in any single location in Italy — the Annunciation altarpiece (1480), the Nativity (1478), the Coronation of the Virgin (1480), and the full decorative program of the Corridor of the Stigmata are the finest output of the della Robbia workshop outside Florence. La Verna receives approximately 1 million pilgrims and visitors per year — concentrated at the feast days of St Francis (September 17, the stigmatization anniversary; October 4, the feast of St Francis).

Visiting La Verna: The sanctuary (santuariolaverna.org, free, open daily from 07:00 until evening prayer — the specific closing time varies seasonally) is accessible by car (from Bibbiena in the Casentino, 30 km, 40 min) or by foot from the Casentino valley on the CAI trail network. A full La Verna visit requires 2–3 hours; the sanctuary mass schedule includes daily Masses and the specific Gregorian chant Lauds and Vespers that the Franciscan community celebrates throughout the day. Accommodation: the sanctuary foresteria (guest house, modest rooms, €40–60/night including breakfast) is the most atmospheric accommodation in the Casentino, immediately below the stigmatization rock.

Foreste Casentinesi Wildlife

The Foreste Casentinesi wolf population (Canis lupus italicus — the Italian wolf, the subspecies that survived the 20th century extinction throughout most of the Apennines) is the most accessible in central Italy for wildlife tourism — the park maintains approximately 5–7 wolf packs in a stable territorial structure, and the park visitor centers can advise on areas with recent wolf activity. Wolf sightings are rare (early morning and late evening, on forest roads, particularly in the Campigna and Lama areas on the Emilia-Romagna slope) but wolf sign (tracks, howling, kills) is regularly observed. The fallow deer (Dama dama) population is the most visible large mammal — the reintroduced herds are commonly seen in the forest clearings (radure) in the early morning and evening, particularly in the Campigna and Badia Prataglia areas.

Best Hiking Trails in Foreste Casentinesi

TrailStartDistanceDurationDifficulty
Hermitage of Camaldoli forest circuitEremo di Camaldoli8 km loop3hEasy
Monte Falterona (Arno source)Campigna12 km one way5h upMedium
La Verna Summit Trail (from Chiusi della Verna)Chiusi della Verna7 km one way3hMedium
Campigna Forest CircuitCampigna10 km loop4hEasy-Medium
Alta Via dei Parchi (multi-day)MultipleMulti-day sections3–5 daysStrenuous

The 700-Year History of the Casentini Forest

The historical depth of the Foreste Casentinesi is inseparable from the monastic history — without Camaldoli (1012) and La Verna (donated to Francis by Count Orlando Cattani da Chiusi in 1213), the forest would have been logged out by the 14th century like every other accessible Apennine forest. The Camaldolese specifically regulated forest use — designating areas for timber production (the Foresta di Camaldoli, managed as a working forest for monastery construction and maintenance), areas for hunting (the preserved deer and boar populations that the monastery managed), and areas of complete prohibition (the Sasso Fratino-type strict reserves around the hermit cells). This monastic land management system, maintained by ecclesiastical authority through the medieval and early modern periods, is the origin of the park's current ecological condition. Dante visited the Casentino valley in the early 14th century during his Florentine exile (the valley appears in the Purgatorio, Canto V, in the description of the soul of Bonconte da Montefeltro, killed at the Battle of Campaldino in 1289 — fought in the Casentino valley) — the specific landscape Dante described is recognizable today.

How to Get to Foreste Casentinesi

RouteFromTimeCost
Train + busFlorence → Arezzo (45 min, €9) + bus to Bibbiena (30 min, €4)1h 30min total€13
Drive from FlorenceA1 → Arezzo → SS71 toward Bibbiena → Camaldoli road1h 30min€8 toll
Drive from BolognaA14 → Faenza → Passo del Muraglione → Campigna2h€6 toll

A car is strongly recommended — the park's major sites (Camaldoli, La Verna, Campigna, the forest road circuits) are distributed across the park area and require a car for efficient access. The Casentino valley (Arezzo → Bibbiena → Poppi → Pratovecchio) is the main access corridor from Tuscany; the SS310 from Forlì through the Muraglione pass is the main access from Emilia-Romagna.

Q&A: Foreste Casentinesi National Park Questions

What is the best time of year to visit Foreste Casentinesi?

The Foreste Casentinesi has four genuinely distinct seasonal profiles, each worth experiencing for different reasons. Spring (April–May): The forest floor wildflower bloom (wood anemone, hepatica, wild orchids) under the still-bare beech canopy; the return of migrant birds (the honey buzzard, the short-toed eagle); and the wolf pack activity at maximum (the pups born in April–May increase the pack's territorial vocalization — howling audible at dawn and dusk from forest clearings). Early summer (June): The complete canopy leaf-out, the forest interior at maximum greenness and coolness (the old-growth fir forest is 5–8°C cooler than the surrounding landscape on hot days); the La Verna rock garden in flower; and the Camaldoli hermitage in its most photogenic fir-forest setting. Autumn (September–October): The beech forest color change — the Foreste Casentinesi's beech component turns golden-orange in October, producing the finest deciduous forest autumn in the Italian Apennines; the fallow deer rut (the males' roaring in the forest clearings of Campigna and Badia Prataglia); and the porcini mushroom season (September–October, the Casentino valley's most culturally significant seasonal event, with the specific Fungo di Badia Prataglia local market and festival). Winter (December–March): Snow transforms the old-growth fir forest into the Apennine equivalent of the Christmas card — the specific visual of snow-laden silver fir branches against the dark forest floor is unlike any other Italian landscape; the cross-country ski trails of the Campigna area operate December–February; and the wolf tracks in fresh snow make winter the most productive season for sign-based wildlife observation.

Can I pick mushrooms in Foreste Casentinesi?

Yes, with a regional permit (the Tesserino Micologico, available from the local Comunità Montana or municipal offices in the Casentino valley, €20–30/year or €5–10/day). The regional regulations limit mushroom collection to 3 kg/day per person, prohibit collection in the strict nature reserves (riserve integrali), and require that only edible species be collected (harming protected or rare fungal species is prohibited). The porcini (Boletus edulis and related species) are the primary target, available September–October after rain; the ovoli (Amanita caesarea — the Caesar's mushroom, considered Italy's finest edible fungus, an orange-red egg-shaped species emerging in July–September) are also collected in the Casentino. The Sagra del Fungo at Badia Prataglia (September/October, specific date varies — check comune.badia-prataglia.ar.it) is the most important Casentino mushroom festival, with market stalls, cooking demonstrations, and the specific local tradition of funghi trifolati (porcini sautéed with garlic and parsley, the canonical preparation of the Casentino).

What is the Casentino valley and how does it relate to the national park?

The Casentino is the upper valley of the Arno river — the basin above Arezzo, in the province of Arezzo, Tuscany, surrounded on three sides by the Apennine range and drained by the young Arno flowing southward toward Arezzo and eventually Florence. The valley has been continuously inhabited since at least the Bronze Age, and its human geography (the castles of Poppi, Romena, and Porciano; the battlefield of Campaldino where Dante fought in 1289; the medieval town of Bibbiena; the Pratovecchio-Stia industrial wool-working tradition) is as significant as its natural heritage. The national park occupies the forested Apennine slopes above the valley floor — the Casentino's human communities exist alongside the park rather than within it, in the characteristic Italian pattern of ancient rural habitation coexisting with natural heritage designation.

What Nobody Tells You About Foreste Casentinesi

The Camaldolese Monks Invented Systematic Forest Management in Medieval Italy

The Camaldolese monastic community's forest management protocols — established in the 11th–12th centuries, formalized in the Constitutiones Camaldulenses (the rule of the Camaldolese order) — represent the earliest documented example of systematic sustainable forest management in Italy. The monks designated specific forest areas for production (selective cutting on rotation, ensuring continuous forest cover), specific areas for hunting (managed deer and boar populations for monastery meat supply), and specific areas of absolute protection (the forest surrounding the individual hermit cells, treated as sacred space). This three-zone management system anticipates the modern IUCN Protected Area classification by 800 years and is the direct historical precursor of the national park zoning (core zone, buffer zone, sustainable use zone) that the Italian park system now applies. The Camaldolese management archives (preserved at the hermitage) are the most complete pre-modern forest management documentation in Italy and are studied by forest historians as a reference for medieval land-use practice.

Foreste Casentinesi Autumn: The Peak Season

The October colour change in the Foreste Casentinesi is among the finest deciduous forest spectacles in Italy — the beech (Fagus sylvatica) canopy transitions from green through gold to copper-orange in a 3-week window from mid-October to early November, producing the landscape that has inspired Casentino artists and writers since Dante visited the valley in the early 14th century. The specific Casentino autumn recommended itinerary: drive the Via dei Sette Ponti (the ancient road connecting the Casentino to Arezzo through 7 Roman bridges — the bridges survive, spanning the lateral streams of the Arno basin) in early November morning light; walk the Camaldoli fir forest in the first week of November (the silver fir understory takes on a deep green intensity against the falling beech leaves); and the Porcini season (the Fungo di Badia Prataglia, September–October, the most important local cultural event of the Casentino year).

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