“Oh beloved Orangerie of Versailles (…), all of your regal magnificence is far from the enchantment nature has blessed the solitary valley of Milis with!” This is how Valery, librarian of Versailles, described the orange groves of this town in the Upper Oristano area during his 1834 tour of Sardinia. He compared the groves to the Esperidi Gardens, in reference to the guardian nymphs of gardens rich with “golden fruit.” A visit to the fertile valley of the citrus trees, known as the Vega, was something all travellers touring Sardinia in the XIX century were enchanted by, including the author-general Alberto La Marmora who, in his Viaggio in Sardinia, mentions the groves with heartfelt enthusiasm. Twice, in 1829 and in 1841, he took King Carlo Alberto to visit the area. The scenery around Milis really is something of a Garden of Eden, (as Valery said): the lanes of orange trees in Spring perfume the air with orange blossom, and in Winter decorates it with the sweet fruit.