Five years ago Catholic priest Johannes Schwarz left his parish to “withdraw for a few years“ in the Italian Alps (in the shadow of his beloved Monte Viso). He bought an old “rustico“ - stone farm building - for 20,000 euros and transformed it into his mountaintop hermitage. Inspired by the early Christian desert hermits from the “200s and 300s when some people went into the deserts of Egypt and Palestine searching for a more rigorous life“, Schwarz found something remote: he has only one full-time neighbor on the entire mountainside and in winter, he often has to snowshoe for a couple hours just to buy food and supplies. To be as self-sufficient as possible, he makes his own bread and stores plenty of potatoes which he grows using Ruth Stout's “No-Work“ gardening method. To grow much of his own fruit and produce, he terraced the steep hillside (using stones from the area) to create micro-climates. “You try to build walls that have southern expo
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