It's hard to talk about roccoli. You want because they almost no longer exist. You want it because someone wanted to connote them with negativity. But is not so. The roccolo is difficult and to understand it you have to live it in your inner self; today, more than in the past, maintaining a structure dedicated to birds seems more costly than beneficial. And then what would be the sense of maintain with so much effort hornbeams artfully modeled for a fantasy of sounds and colors?
It is precisely from this question that you understand its importance, its usefulness. You have to look at the roccolo with an intimate eye as if it were a work of art, a real historical garden, perhaps its precursor. But then you realize it has something more. Like a historical garden, it is conservative not only of plants but above all of techniques and works of man that would otherwise be lost. It is an intangible heritage that it sinks into our roots, in forgotten gestures but always the same and repeatedly different, in colors, in smells that take us back to a dimension that is as distant as it is important.
But it doesn't stop there. Projected towards the future, the bird can be used for the study of migrants as well as its garden to preserve rare plants and crops. A world made of harmonies and silences as sonorous as they make you think about the importance of creation even if you are not a believer. It certainly helps you to understand how much there is to preserve and safeguard in our countryside and in the works of man, including hunting (Source: Hunting Federation).