Val Brandet, Brescia, Lombardy, Italy (© ClickAlps/Alamy)
Camillo Golgi was the first Italian to win the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1906, thanks to his discoveries on the nervous system.
In the heart of Val Brandet, within the Adamello Park in Lombardy, where winter's silence finds its voice, lies the municipality of Corteno Golgi—named after the physician and Nobel laureate Camillo Golgi, who was born here—a place that preserves memory and beauty, science and nature.
Here, every sound becomes rarer, more precious. The wind brushes the trees like fingers on taut strings, and the snow falls slowly, as if time itself had chosen to slow down. Amid the white folds of the valley, a small waterfall resists the frost, continuing to flow, to speak. Ice surrounds it, grips it, but does not stop it. It is like a voice that refuses to be silenced, a breath that carries through the season.
Walking here feels like stepping into a suspended moment, where the world becomes simpler, more truthful. You feel your heart slow, your eyes fill with stillness. The cold stings, but does not wound—it awakens. And that small waterfall, so discreet, becomes the centre of everything. Here, even winter has a voice. A subtle voice, flowing between stones and mingling with the white. A voice that does not seek to astonish, but to remain. Because even in the frost, there are those who continue to flow.