Customs and traditions for guests
Ulrike Laimer from Lana’s Goldbichlhof farm is one of the
“Creative Farmers”. Her 17th-century farm with its two buildings
and a barn is located at 450 metres (1,480 ft) above sea level.
The barn is home to 15 sheep – the pastime of Ulrike’s father –
and some chickens, which are busy chasing the flies sitting on the
barn windows right as we get there. The total land amounts to
2.6 hectares and is used for orchards and vineyards, but also for
some chestnut trees. Ulrike has planted more than five apple
varieties, focusing mainly on Golden and Stark Delicious and Fuji.
And she grows four different types of wine grapes: Chardonnay,
Sauvignon, the aromatic Gewürztraminer and Schiava. Most of
her grapes are shipped to a winery, and only some of the Schiava
harvest is pressed at the farm for their own personal use. The berries and fruit grown out in her garden are used for making
delicious jams. And Ulrike also makes her own apple juice and
South Tyrolean speck, a bacon variety: She buys legs of pork from
farmers personally known to her and prepares them in her own
smokery (a special room known as Selchküche, which all those
farms used to have in the past) following old, traditional recipes.
For Ulrike, it’s all about diversity, and she would hate restricting
herself to just one thing. And her guests love the opportunity to
try her home-smoked bacon, eat some fresh eggs for breakfast
and savour her home-pressed wine. The 45-year-old rents out
two apartments for holidaymakers. To improve the farm Holiday
experience, she and some other farmers founded the “Creative
Farmers” cooperation group 14 years ago. The women in the
group now organise guided moonlight walks with torches, wine
tastings and invite their guests to cook traditional South Tyrolean
specialties such as apple strudel or dumplings. Customs and traditions really matter a lot to Ulrike. When baking their own
bread, the women of the group use old, traditional recipes. Some
evenings, the Goldbichl farmer simply enjoys spending the night
outdoors with her guests, having a nice BBQ in summer or roasting
chestnuts in autumn. “I feel very lucky that I get to live on a farm. I really enjoy the peace and quiet up here”, she says, and is
happy whenever she has the time to do so.