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HUNTING

Reader question: What are the rules around hunting in Italy?

Hunting season is underway in Italy. If you live in the Italian countryside, knowing the law can help you protect your rights and safety.

Reader question: What are the rules around hunting in Italy?
Photo by Kyle Glenn on Unsplash

Question:Hunting season is on in Italy, and where we live we seem to be surrounded by hunters firing away at dawn and again at dusk.

“What are the rules around hunting in Italy, and what measures can a home owner take to prevent hunters from getting too close or disregarding what the law says?”

Anyone who spends much time in the Italian countryside in autumn and winter will quickly get used to the sound of gunshots, as hunting is a popular pastime in many rural areas.

Italy’s hunting season technically runs from the third weekend in September until January 31st, but 16 regions also have a ‘pre-opening’ season, starting from the first weekend in September, when certain species of birds can be hunted.

Often, the noise of shooters taking aim at wild boar will do no more than disturb your morning peace; but at worst, it can make you fear for your safety and that of any pets or livestock.

And it’s not unreasonable to worry: according to data from Italy’s Hunting Victims Association, 19 people were killed and 60 injured in the 2022-2023 hunting season.

READ ALSO: How dangerous is the Italian countryside during hunting season?

Unfortunately, private land isn’t automatically legally protected from hunters, as current Italian law requires landowners to erect a 120cm-high fence all around the property, or a watercourse at least 3 metres wide and 1 metre deep, if they want hunters to stay away.

Italy does, however, have national legislation that lays out some clear rules and restrictions around hunting.

Hunters must keep at least 100m away from buildings, stables and agricultural machinery in operation and 50m away from roads and railways, and must be at least 150m away when shooting in their direction.

The activity is prohibited in public and private parks and gardens, national and regional parks and nature reserves, land where sporting activities are carried out, and farmyards.

Hunting is permitted from one hour before sunrise until sunset. It can be carried out no more than three days a week, and is completely banned on Tuesdays and Fridays.

National legislation regulates hunting in Italy.

National legislation regulates hunting in Italy. Photo by Paul Einerhand on Unsplash

Hunters must have a valid firearms license from their regional government, which they can only receive upon passing a rigourous exam.

Separately, Article 703 of Italy’s Penal Code bans the use of firearms in the vicinity of inhabited areas and public roads, and Article 659 enshrines people’s right to rest and work without disturbance.

It’s one thing for a law to exist, however, and another matter to get it enforced.

More than one grassroots organisation has sprung up in Italy with the aim of cracking down on hunters who violate the rules with apparent impunity.

Caccia Il Cacciatore (‘Hunt the Hunter’) says its members in towns and villages around Rome have had success in passing local ordinances banning hunting altogether in certain areas.

This does away with the need to demonstrate someone is in violation of specific rules based on location, distance or time of day, which can be hard to prove in practice.

The organisation provides a step-by-step guide as well as templates for filing formal complaints.

For this kind of local initiative to work, of course, you’ll need to drum up enough support from your neighbours to convince your mayor to issue this kind of blanket ban.

Just one of many reasons why it’s worth integrating into your local community as a foreigner in Italy.

 

Member comments

  1. There’s a bit of an anti-hunting theme in the article. Some more information regarding responsible hunting such as best regions for certain game, hunting clubs, firearms acquisition and transport would be nice. Hunting helps keep some balance with nature such as culling invasive wild boar. Most also enjoy the food produced from the harvest of wild game. And much like the balance of nature, more information on how to responsibly balance hunting with community quality of life would be helpful.

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MOVING TO ITALY

Readers recommend: Eight books you must read to understand Italy

After we published our own recommendations of some of the best books to read for those considering a move to Italy, The Local's readers weighed in with suggestions of your own.

Readers recommend: Eight books you must read to understand Italy

In our previous guide to some of the best books to read before moving to Italy, we asked our readers to get in touch with your recommendations.

A number of you responded with your favourite reads about Italy; here’s what you suggested:

Ciao Bella – Six Take Italy

An anonymous reader describes this as “a delightful book about an Australian radio presenter who takes her husband and four children Bologna for a year which turns into two years (one being Covid).”

Kate Langbroek’s comic memoir “had me laughing and crying,” they write.

A Small Place in Italy

An apt choice for those considering their own rural Italian renovation project, Sam Cross recommends this book by British writer Eric Newby about buying, remodelling and moving into a cottage in the Tuscan countryside.

Cross also recommends Newby’s earlier work, ‘Love and War in the Appennines’, about his time as a British prisoner of war captured in Italy by the Germans in WWII.

READ ALSO: Eight of the best books to read before moving to Italy

Here, the author tells of his escape assisted by local partisans, “including a girl, Wanda, who became his future wife. A beautiful story,” says Cross.

The Italians

The Italians is written by veteran Italy correspondent John Hooper, who formerly wrote for the Guardian and is now the Economist’s Italy and Vatican reporter.

From politics to family traditions and the Mafia, the book tackles a range of aspects of Italian history and culture without getting lost in the weeds.

Simone in Rome describes it as “the best single volume on Italian customs and culture there is”.

READ ALSO: Nine things to expect if you move to rural Italy

Venice

It may be more than six decades old, but Jan Morris’s Venice is still considered one of the definitive English-language works on the lagoon city.

Book, Venice, library

A woman reads a book in Venice’s famous Acqua Alta library. Photo by Clay Banks on Unsplash

Though a work of non-fiction, the book has been compared to Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited for its nostalgic, evocative tone.

“A personal view, beautifully written,” recommends reader Mary Austern.

Thin Paths

Described as a mix of travel book and memoir, Thin Paths is written by Julia Blackburn, who moved with her husband into a small house in the hills of Liguria in 1999.

Despite arriving with no Italian, over time she befriended her elderly neighbours, who took her into their confidence and shared stories of the village’s history under the control of a tyrannical landowner and the outbreak of World War II.

“Write it down for us,” they told her, “because otherwise it will all be lost.”

READ ALSO: Six things foreigners should expect if they live in Rome

In Other Words

If you’re currently learning Italian, consider Pulitzer Prize-winning author Jhumpa Lahiri’s In Other Words / In Altre Parole, which discusses the writer’s journey towards mastery of Italian through full immersion.

Reader Brett says, “The book is written in both Italian and English, presented on opposite pages, so it’s also a nice learning tool!”

Lahiri has since written Racconti Romani, or Roman Tales, a series of short stories set in and around Rome riffing off Alberto Moravia’s 1954 short story collection of the same name.

A Rosie Life in Italy

Ginger Hamilton says she would “highly recommend the ‘A Rosie Life in Italy’ series by Rosie Meleady.”

It’s “the delightfully written true story of an Irish couple’s move to Italy, purchase of a home, the process of rehabbing it, and their life near Lago di Trasimeno.”

The Dark Heart of Italy

Reader William describes The Dark Heart of Italy by Tobias Jones as an “excellent” book.

The product of a three-year journey across the Italy, Jones takes on the darker side of Italian culture, from organised crime to excessive bureaucracy.

Though it was published in 2003, Dark Heart stands the test of time: “twenty-odd years old but the essential truth of it hasn’t changed,” William writes.

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