Wolves do not howl at the moon

25 March 2026
Torino
Culture & Tradition, Nature & Sport

After being gone for a long time, wolves are back. But what actually do we know about them? By Luca Giunti, naturalist, ethologist, writer, journalist and photographer (#sbaluf), park ranger in the protected areas of the Cottian Alps.

Wolves are native to our peninsula. They were forced to leave for sixty years, a short period in natural dynamics. Starting in the 1980s, from the tiny, inaccessible enclaves where they had holed up, the few surviving wolves began to look around again, walking and covering miles. Thus, wolves have returned to our midst. 

What is our response to this reappearance, to this ancient and renewed presence? We are torn betwixt fascination and unease.

The wolf is like a veteran returning from a war, which we have tried to forget: bringing back cultural memories, it ignites mysterious, ancestral and disturbing flashes in people's minds. And wherever it returns, it always raises the same problems: damages and fears. 

The damage is real and present, while the fears are much less so. But we deal with them with a medieval mindset that this educational performance seeks to turn into a growth’s one.

I Lupi Non Ululano Alla Luna
Museo Regionale di Scienze Naturali
Via Accademia Albertina 15, Torino

The venues

Museo Regionale di Scienze Naturali