People as Ecological Partners
Generations of shepherds, terrace‑builders, and foragers have partnered with lichens, fungi, and bees, not as owners but as neighbors. Their calendars braid saints’ days, pasture rest periods, and moonlit olive sorting, while today’s cohort adds sensors, soil assays, and shared mapping. Together they protect corridors for wolves and pollinators, celebrate reciprocity at roadside festivals, and choose slowness when speed tempts, proving that hospitality to place returns abundance in fibers, aromas, livelihoods, and friendships that outlast weather and fashion.