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In Tuscany, Farms Embrace Nature — and Visitors

With enthusiasm for natural wines gaining momentum, Tuscany’s growing cluster of biodynamic farms offers tastings and a place to stay.

Fattoria Sardi, family owned for over 200 years, is part of a cooperative community of biodynamic vineyards and farms in the Tuscany region of Italy.Credit...Susan Wright for The New York Times

Just beyond the medieval ring wall of the Tuscan town of Lucca, the city rapidly gives way to country villas and agrarian pastures. Among these fertile hills, a flourishing cooperative community of biodynamic vineyards and farms has taken root — with several of them now welcoming guests for farm stays.

These local farmers — despite ostensibly being in competition — turned to each other for help in adopting a chemical-free, biodynamic system, which treats the farm holistically as one big organism of plants and animals. They established friendships and then in 2016, formally established the Lucca Biodinamica, capitalizing on the rising interest in natural wines.

One of the pioneers of the Lucca Biodinamica movement, Giuseppe Ferrua runs Fabbrica San Martino, along with his wife Giovanna Tronci. In summer, the farm is a teeming, arcadian slope of greenery, where donkeys graze amid wildflowers and white-blossoming olive trees, and meadows of jade-colored grapevines blanket the terrain up to the woodland’s edge.

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The garden area of the 1735 Baroque chateau at Fabbrica San Martino.Credit...Susan Wright for The New York Times

The couple’s 1735 Baroque chateau neighbors the former peasants’ home where, from March through November, visitors rent humble accommodations filled with recouped country furnishings — enjoying the farm’s sylvan hush, learning about biodynamic agriculture, and tasting wines. Following the tenets of biodynamic vinification, the wines are fermented with naturally occurring yeasts, and bottled with much less sulfites and none of the 60 additives of industrial production.

“These wines express their territory and history,” Mr. Ferrua said. “A commercial cabernet tastes the same whether it’s from California or New Zealand. That’s not really wine. That’s just a beverage.”

Mr. Ferrua and another local winemaker, Saverio Petrilli of Tenuta di Valgiano, were the first in Lucca to turn their farms biodynamic under the tutelage of Alex Podolinksky, an evangelist of the movement. “In one year, I witnessed the soil darken,” Mr. Ferrua said. “The plants were healthier, and the grapes took on a deeper flavor.”

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Merlot and Sangiovese grapes in the vineyard of Fattoria Sardi.Credit...Susan Wright for The New York Times

San Martino was already organic before becoming biodynamic in 2002, but he describes organic farming as “just a topical method that’s a good way not to pollute, but not a good way to create an equilibrium for plants.”

In biodynamic practices, originally espoused by the wide-ranging thinker Rudolph Steiner (who also inspired the Waldorf schools), San Martino’s farm animals, swallows, honeybees and plants contribute to a thriving ecosystem. To the mystification of skeptics, the farming calendar is determined by the heavenly bodies: growers harvest when the moon is full and sap rises in plants, mirroring the tides. Cow horns are packed with compact amounts of fertilizing manure or sunlight-attracting quartz and buried underground over winter. In springtime, their contents are sprayed with rainwater on the land.

“Everyone in our circle converted to biodynamic because they could see and taste the difference,” Mr. Ferrua said. Of Lucca’s 18 winemakers, 13 are in the Lucca Biodinamica network, rendering it the most concentrated biodynamic cluster in Italy. Fabio Pracchia, a Lucca local and editor of the Slow Wine guide, credits the movement to this corner of Tuscany’s less-established wine status.

“There are no big, external investors like in Montalcino or Chianti — owners work the land themselves,” he said. “They experience the improvements firsthand so they’re motivated to make the switch.”

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The children of the owners of Nico Bio, a pastoral biodynamic farm in Tuscany, attending to the hens.Credit...Susan Wright for The New York Times

Currently heading Lucca Biodinamica are Mina Samouti and her husband Matteo Giustiniani of Fattoria Sardi, who praise the willingness of the group’s many producers to share seeds, equipment, techniques and experiences.

Fattoria Sardi, family-owned for more than 200 years, occupies two antique farmhouses — a winery and a guesthouse encircled by grapevines where crimson clover and golden mustard flowers naturally fertilize the terrain for the vineyard’s much-loved rosé wines. In their lodgings, guests can cook vegetables from the garden to accompany the wine, or receive cooking lessons or meals from the produce-growing team of another Lucca Biodinamica farm, Maestà della Formica.

The more modern Tenuta Mareli occupies the rebuilt former carriage house of a neighboring church in Lucca’s countryside. Owners Francesca Tomei and Daniele Lencioni created rustic-style rooms — sloped wood-beam roofs, quilt-topped iron-frame beds, and terra-cotta tiles — but with air-conditioning, heated floors, and a diminutive basement spa. Overlooking a hill of olive trees and a garden full of rosemary, lavender, and rosebushes, guests enjoy tastings of Mareli’s own honeys, jams, and wines, plus local pecorino and cured meats.

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Breakfast with biodynamic produce is offered at Nico Bio, a vegetable plantation rather than a vineyard.Credit...Susan Wright for The New York Times

Nico Bio, a vegetable plantation rather than a vineyard like the others, offers a more pared-down and pastoral farm stay of cozy little rooms amid dense, bucolic forest. Owners Elena and Federico Martinelli serve garden dinners of their biodynamic produce most nights, accompanied by Valgiano wines. At Nico Bio, there are donkeys, chickens, heat from solar panels, and water filtered by plants, but no Wi-Fi or cellphone signal, and unlike the rest of the farm stays, no pool.

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An olive tree stands amid the vineyards of Fabbrica San Martino, a biodynamic farm and vineyard.Credit...Susan Wright for The New York Times

“It’s simple here,” Ms. Martinelli explained, as choruses of birds crooned from the surrounding trees. “But we like to be really close to nature.”

Laura Rysman is a contributor to The Times and T Magazine, the Central Italy correspondent for Monocle, and the author of the Wallpaper Guide to Milan. More about Laura Rysman

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section TR, Page 5 of the New York edition with the headline: Farms in Tuscany Are Embracing Nature, and Visitors. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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