Volunteering for an Olive Farm in Puglia

An Olive Farm in Puglia

My first volunteering experience in Italy

I started looking into volunteering a few years ago because it makes it possible to stay longer somewhere and get to know the local life. Italy was my first choice, and I found the WWOOF organization. They specialize in volunteering at organic farms. A little study and a checklist got me to the sunny Puglia region as a volunteer for an olive farm.

I’m a city girl, and I had no experience with farm work, so I had quite a few things on my checklist.

In my research, I focused on these things:

1. The type of work – I stayed away from farms that had animals or bees because I don’t think I’d be comfortable working with them. I love cats and dogs, but I don’t know if I’d be able to establish a relationship with a donkey, for example.

2. Accommodation and facilities – as I said, I’m a city girl. I like sleeping in a bed and taking a hot shower, so these were on my checklist.

3. Transport issues – I looked for a place to be reasonably reachable from one of the airports. Volunteering for a farm means you might be pretty remote, so you have to consider transport.

4.  Exploring options – although I chose a place in the countryside, I wanted to visit the towns around. I did that: I saw Carovigno, Ostuni, and Lecce on that first trip. Find more places to visit in the region in my 7-days to explore Puglia itinerary.

5. I also hoped there would be other wwoofers on site since I was traveling alone.

Check out my quick guide to volunteer and travel abroad for more details.

How it works

First of all, I checked the WWOOF Italy list and map. Then I paid the membership fee to be able to contact the hosts. After I chose a few farms, I wrote to 3 or 4 prospective hosts. An olive farm in sunny Puglia sounded good to me.

I volunteered for an olive farm in southern Italy region Puglia, called I Poderi del Sole. It is a beautiful piece of land with three little houses built around a traditional Trullo, belonging to an older couple. They have olive trees and all kinds of fruit trees. I stayed in a 2-bedroom house with two other girls from Argentina. There were also volunteers from the US at the farm.

Work at an olive farm in Puglia

A typical workday started at 7:30 until lunch, usually at 13:00 or 13:30.

Work harvesting the olives is not extremely hard, though you might have a backache or heavy arms from lifting all those buckets full of olives. Early in the morning, everything was really quiet. The grass was still wet. We cleaned the olives off the branches then left them to dry for a while. No one was too talkative for at least another hour, so that was a good time to get my thoughts in order.

A net full of olives

Olive harvesting is mostly done by hand, hitting the high branches with some long sticks to make the olives fall, or sometimes with a machine that vibrates and causes the olives to fall without hurting the tree. The lower branches are “combed” with a small plastic tool.

After a while, we had a fresh snack, some fruit directly from the tree, and started chatting more. Nothing beats a fresh pomegranate from the tree. It has nothing to do with the stuff I find in the supermarket back home.

A ripe kaki fruit

Later in the morning, we started collecting the olives and bringing them in buckets to some large cassettes. There are other things to do like collecting the nets and moving them to another tree, collecting the fallen branches, cleaning the courtyard in front of the house.

Everything else about my time at an olive farm in Puglia

The host provided food for breakfast, and we ate together lunch and dinner, which were spectacular. Graziella is a fantastic and passionate cook. We’d have a hearty minestrone or pasta before the main dish, something like polpette (meat-balls) or salsiccia (sausage meat).

In the afternoons we had time to ourselves, until dinner at 7 p.m. Some afternoons, I went to the closest town with the host and wandered around for an hour or two. A couple of times, we went to the Frantoio and saw how the olives are processed into oil.

Sometimes I’d just take a walk through the olive groves. The property is not in a village, but in beautiful countryside with Trulli scattered from place to place, full of olive groves over the red Puglian soil. The house we stayed in, built around a Trullo had a roof terrace where we could enjoy the sun, read of talk before dinner.

The dancing olive trees

Volunteering for an olive farm in Puglia was a great experience for me because I got to know the locals, saw how they live and work, tasted regional food, met new people from around the world.

Check out my quick guide to volunteer and travel, and my 7-day itinerary in Puglia, this beautiful region of southern Italy.

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4 Comments

  1. Going as local as possible, have a positive impact and give back is the best way of traveling. Have you done voluntarily work outside Europe?

  2. This looks like an incredibly cool experience! I’ve never seen an olive tree before. I didn’t even know how they were grown. (Haha I know that sounds rather stupid) And to think there are Olive Farms! I bet you had really strong arms after doing that.

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