
Times have changed a bit since
1858, and you now have the comfort of small
and winding (but paved!) roads from which to
admire the cork forests of Sardina and
‘...the thick olive-green foliage almost
excluding the light of heaven, with the roar
of the wind through the trees...’. The
forests are, however, still there, and,
indeed, a newly harvested stand of cork
trees with the lower trunks stripped bare
presents a unique site. (The cork bark is
harvested every nine years.)
Commercial cork comes from the Cork Oak (
Quercus suber,
photo, left). Half of the 340,000 tons of
cork harvested worldwide comes from
Portugal; Spain accounts for about 30% and
Italy for 6%. Of the Italian prouduction,
most of it comes from central and northern
Sardinia.
Besides the familiar uses such as
bottle-stoppers and sundry other commercial
uses such as floor tiles, it should be noted
that the great Neapolitan
presepe
tradition depends on Sardinian cork for the
construction of those elaborate Christmas
manger scenes. During the pre-Christmas
rush, large quantities of sheet cork from
Sardinia line the stalls of most shops on
via San
Gregorio Armeno in Naples.
The Sardinian "cork capital" is the small
town of Calangianus in the province of
Olbia-Tempio. It is a town lying on the
granite high plains at 518 meters (c. 1500
feet) above sea level at the foot of Mt.
Limbara. The town is on the Italian
Legambiente's (Environmental League's) list
of
100
comuni della piccola grande Italia
(100 towns of little great Italy). That is,
there are 8,000 incorporated towns and
cities in Italy; 72% of them (i.e. 5,835
towns) have fewer than 5,000 inhabitants. Of
those, 100 have been selected as
particularly representative in maintaining
Italian cultural traditions.