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Gocce di Montagna: three years of commitment to the conscious use of water in high-altitude mountain huts

A project born at altitude

Arriving at a mountain hut after hours of walking often means rediscovering an immediate sense of welcome. A warm meal, shelter, a shared pause, the chance to stop and look at the mountains from a different perspective.

Yet it is precisely in alpine huts, where human presence comes into direct contact with the balance of the natural environment, that it becomes clear how some resources we are used to taking for granted in everyday life are, in fact, fragile and limited.

Water is perhaps the most important of these.

This awareness gave rise to Gocce di Montagna, a project created by AKU together with the Guide Alpine Aquile di San Martino di Castrozza to promote a more mindful and responsible use of water at altitude.

Launched three years ago with a direct focus on alpine huts, the project is now evolving into a broader awareness initiative on the conscious use of water across mountain areas. It is a journey that involves not only those who manage and visit mountain huts, but also alpine guides, operators, local communities, hikers and everyone with a direct connection to these environments.

At the beginning, talking about water scarcity at altitude meant addressing a topic that was still barely present in public debate, yet already evident to those who experienced the mountains every day. Today, that awareness has become the starting point for building a shared culture of responsibility, one that can begin in mountain huts and extend to all mountain territories.

Water in the mountains can never be taken for granted

In the city, turning on a tap is an automatic gesture. In a mountain hut, every litre of water has a different story.

It may come from a spring, from rain, from melting snow, from a glacier or from the slow dripping that gradually fills a cistern. Its availability depends on weather conditions, the season, altitude, the hut’s exposure and the ability to ration it properly.

For this reason, in high mountain environments, water is not merely a resource to be managed. It is a concrete measure of limits. A limit that should not be seen as deprivation, but as an invitation to shift perspective. Accepting one less shower, limiting unnecessary washing, understanding why the menu may be simpler at certain times, or asking the hut manager how much water is available are small gestures that help build a more conscious relationship with the place that welcomes us.

Mountain huts as laboratories of awareness

The mountains are often described as sentinels of climate change. Here, the effects of environmental transformation are particularly visible: retreating glaciers, a rising freezing level, more sudden rainfall, reduced snow accumulation and greater instability in water availability.

All of this has direct consequences for life in mountain huts.

An alpine hut is not a hotel at altitude. It is a presence in a complex environment, where every service requires care, organisation and respect for the resources available. In this sense, the mountain hut becomes a true laboratory of civic awareness: a place where we can learn to use resources more wisely, recognise the value of limits and bring more responsible habits back down to the valley.

A commitment for everyone

In recent years, water availability in alpine huts has become an increasingly concrete issue for many areas of the Alps. Hut managers, local sections, associations and mountain communities are now dealing with a resource that is less predictable, more fragile and increasingly connected to the effects of climate change.

This is the context in which Gocce di Montagna takes shape: the project through which AKU promotes a more mindful and responsible culture around the use of water at altitude. It is a journey built over time, together with those who experience the mountains every day, with the aim of raising awareness among hikers and mountain enthusiasts about the importance of small, conscious gestures.

The message remains simple: water in the mountains can never be taken for granted. Respecting it means respecting the work of hut managers, the balance of the huts and the fragility of the environments we move through.

Mountain huts, alpine dairies, alpine guides, operators, local communities and enthusiasts thus become part of a network in which the care of water can travel from valley to valley, from trail to trail.

From individual gestures to shared responsibility

The strength of Gocce di Montagna lies in the simplicity of its message: every action matters.

It is not about giving up the mountains, but about inhabiting them better. It is not about turning the experience at altitude into a list of restrictions, but about understanding that every environment requires attention, measure and adaptation.

Asking the hut manager for information, avoiding wasting water on unnecessary washing, accepting the conditions of the place and respecting the instructions received are concrete actions, accessible to everyone.

At altitude, even the simplest gestures take on a different value. They remind us of what often escapes us down in the valley: water is a precious, limited and increasingly fragile resource, and the way we use it reflects our relationship with the environment.