Alcamo Farm Animals and Aromatic Garden

REVIEW · SICILY

Alcamo Farm Animals and Aromatic Garden

  • 4.045 reviews
  • 1 hour 30 minutes (approx.)
  • From $42.05
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Operated by Bio Fattoria Augustali · Bookable on Viator

Traveller rating 4.0 (45)Duration1 hour 30 minutes (approx.)Price from$42.05Operated byBio Fattoria AugustaliBook viaViator

This farm tour smells like Sicily. I love the hands-on aromatic garden stop and the up-close farm animals experience that feels personal, not staged. You’ll get a guided loop through olive, vineyard, and citrus paths, then finish with tasty farm-made bites.

What really makes it special is the way the visit mixes nature with interaction. I like that the activities are built for real participation, from a sensory plant game to feeding hens and meeting horses, donkeys, goats, and more. And if the farm’s team includes Beatriz and Finella Ammoscato in your group, you’re in for storytelling along with the snacks and sightseeing.

One possible drawback: at about 1 hour 30 minutes, it’s a short, evening sampler. It’s not a long, hour-by-hour winery deep course, and you’ll still want comfortable shoes because the farm paths are part of the experience.

Key Highlights You Should Actually Care About

Alcamo Farm Animals and Aromatic Garden - Key Highlights You Should Actually Care About

  • Aromatic herb game + bouquet: make a small take-home bouquet while you learn plant scents in a fun, sensory way
  • Animal time with supervision: feeding hens and getting hands-on with goats and donkeys
  • Farm-to-table tasting: homemade bread, honey, olive oil, cheese, juice, and wine tasting for adults
  • Small group size: up to 15 people, which keeps the vibe relaxed and question-friendly
  • Sicilian farm hospitality: the experience is guided by the farm’s family team, including people like Beatriz and Finella Ammoscato in some groups

Where Farm Augustali Is and How the Evening Works

Alcamo Farm Animals and Aromatic Garden - Where Farm Augustali Is and How the Evening Works
This tour takes place at Bio Fattoria Augustali near Partinico, in Sicily’s countryside. Your meeting point is Farm Augustali on SS 113 (km 318, 700, 90047 Partinico PA, Italy), and you go back to the same spot when it’s done.

The timing is built for the end of the day: it runs Monday to Saturday, from 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM (for the 2026 season window listed). The schedule matters because you’re not rushing through ruins or city stops. Instead, you’re seeing the farm when the light and temperatures tend to feel more forgiving for a walk.

Also, private transportation isn’t included. The good news is that it’s listed as near public transportation, so you might be able to get there without needing to arrange a car solely for this outing. The ticket is mobile, and service animals are allowed.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Sicily

The Olive, Vineyard, and Citrus Walk That Keeps Moving

Alcamo Farm Animals and Aromatic Garden - The Olive, Vineyard, and Citrus Walk That Keeps Moving
The visit starts with a guided walk along paths that lead through the olive grove, vineyard, and citrus grove areas. This isn’t a long hike; it’s more like a guided stroll where you can actually enjoy what’s around you. The wording about the paths being suitable for pleasant nature walks is important, because it tells you this is designed to be comfortable for most people.

What you’re really doing here is getting a farm view of Sicily that you can’t get from a roadside pull-off. You’ll see how the different plants share the same hillside life—olive trees, grapevines, and citrus all coexisting in one working landscape. Even if you’re not the type who studies agriculture, it helps you connect food you’ll taste later to where it actually comes from.

A practical note: because it’s a farm path experience, plan for uneven ground. You don’t need hiking boots, but you do want shoes with grip. If you’re traveling with kids, this is one of those tours where they can look forward to the next stop without getting bored too fast.

Aromatic Garden Sensory Game and Your Take-Home Bouquet

After the farm walk, there’s a dedicated stop in the garden of aromatic plants. This is one of the best parts if you like do-something learning.

Instead of a dry lecture, you’ll take part in a sensory game involving the herbs and plant scents. Then you create a small bouquet to take with you. That take-home detail matters more than it sounds, because it turns the experience into something you can remember at home—like you brought back Sicily in a small, fragrant packet.

Some reviews also mention a bigger sense-of-smell and taste focus during the visit, with moments tied to honey and the farm’s production. While every group’s timing can vary, the overall idea is consistent: the garden is meant to train your senses, not just show you pretty plants.

If you’ve got a family, this herb stop is also a nice switch from animals. It’s hands-on, it uses curiosity, and kids can participate without needing to be fearless around animals.

Animal Encounters: From Feeding Hens to Goat Milking

Alcamo Farm Animals and Aromatic Garden - Animal Encounters: From Feeding Hens to Goat Milking
The animal area is where this tour earns its reputation. You’ll step into the farm’s living world and meet animals up close, including horses, donkeys, chickens, geese, rabbits, and goats. The key word is supervision: you’re not wandering into an animal pen alone.

This part of the tour includes feeding hens and getting familiar with the animals’ habits and curiosities. Goat milking is also specifically mentioned, which is a memorable, hands-on farm moment for adults and kids alike.

Then comes the donkey experience—walking on a docile donkey is described as a highlight. Even if you don’t think you’ll enjoy it, it’s one of the activities that tends to surprise people. One reason it works: it’s simple and short, but it gives you a true farm contact moment rather than just a photo.

A family-focused benefit shows up in the feedback too: kids often get a lot of structured interaction, which keeps the energy positive instead of chaotic. It’s not just petting for the sake of petting. You’re learning what to do and what to expect in a safe, farm-controlled way.

Bread, Honey, Olive Oil, Juice, and Wine Tasting

When you reach the snack stage, the tour shifts from senses of smell and sight to senses of taste. The farm’s snack is described as homemade bread with honey and olive oil, plus juice. For adults, there’s wine tasting.

The sample menu listed is cheese, olive oil, hand-made bread, wines, and honey. In plain terms: you’re eating a starter-style mix of local staples, not a fancy restaurant platter that feels disconnected from the farm.

In some groups, reviews mention tasting specific Sicilian wine styles—one example named Catarratto—and also tasting reds like Syrah. That doesn’t mean every tour pours the same labels, but it does fit the overall promise of a real farm wine moment rather than a generic sip.

Some visitors also describe honey-focused stops, including sweets made from the farm’s honey, and a broader look at how the farm’s production works. Even if your exact order is slightly different, the pattern is consistent: the farm wants you to understand what you’re tasting by placing it in context.

Practical tip: this is an evening event, so it’s smart to eat earlier if you’re hungry. The tasting is enjoyable and filling for a 90-minute outing, but it’s still a snack-and-sample format.

Price and Value for a 15-Person Experience

At $42.05 per person for about 1 hour 30 minutes, this isn’t a budget bargain tour—but it’s also not inflated “tour bus Sicily” pricing. The value comes from three places:

1) Small-group size (max 15): you’re more likely to get attention, questions, and hands-on moments.

2) Included tasting: homemade bread, honey, olive oil, cheese, juice, and adult wine tasting are all part of the price.

3) Activities, not just views: herb garden game + bouquet, plus supervised animal interaction.

When a tour includes food and hands-on farm moments, the per-person cost usually feels fair, because you’re not paying extra for each separate experience. Also, the meeting point is the farm itself, so you’re not paying for a long chain of transfers that can eat into your time.

Not included is private transportation, so think about how you’ll get there and back. If you’re staying in nearby towns like Partinico or Alcamo, it could be a simple evening plan. If you’re farther out, you may want to arrange your own ride so you’re not stressed about timing.

Who Will Love This Tour (and Who Might Feel Rushed)

This is a great match if you’re traveling with kids, or if you just like farm life and food. The structure suits families because it alternates between walk, garden activity, animals, and tasting. Kids often thrive with animal interaction, and the aromatic garden gives them a second type of participation.

It also fits couples and friends who want a quieter Sicily moment. This isn’t a shoreline day or a big-city museum block. It’s countryside time with a real working farm, where you can relax outdoors and still leave with edible souvenirs.

Who might reconsider? If you’re the type who wants a long, deep wine education session, you may feel the 90 minutes is too short. This tour gives you a taste and an overview, not a multi-hour classroom-style production seminar. And since it involves walking around farm paths and animal areas, you’ll want to wear shoes you trust.

Should You Book the Alcamo Farm Animals and Aromatic Garden Tour?

Alcamo Farm Animals and Aromatic Garden - Should You Book the Alcamo Farm Animals and Aromatic Garden Tour?
I’d book it if you want an evening that feels grounded in real farm life: herb scents, animal encounters you can participate in, and a tasting that uses what the farm grows and makes. The small-group setup and the mix of activities are the big wins for value.

I’d skip or swap it if you need a longer wine-focused experience, or if your schedule can’t handle a set evening window. But if your ideal Sicily day includes countryside walking, supervised animal time, and bread-and-honey tasting you can actually enjoy, this one fits nicely.

FAQ

What is the duration of the Alcamo Farm Animals and Aromatic Garden tour?

The tour lasts about 1 hour 30 minutes.

How much does it cost?

It costs $42.05 per person.

What language is the tour offered in?

The tour is offered in English.

What’s the maximum group size?

The experience has a maximum of 15 travelers.

What is included in the price?

It includes snacks.

What food and drink can I expect?

You can expect homemade bread with honey and olive oil, plus juice, and wine tasting for adults.

Where does the tour start?

It starts at Farm Augustali on SS 113 km 318, 700, 90047 Partinico PA, Italy, and ends back at the meeting point.

What are the operating hours?

Monday to Saturday, 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM, during the listed season dates.

What is the cancellation policy?

Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

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