Off the coast of Estonia is an historic island, in which the few inhabitants carefully preserve their lands and culture, and visitors like us come to see them.
| One takes the ferry across. | 
| Ferryboat in distance | 
| "We live here, so stay on the paths, be quiet, and remember that this is a living place." | 
| This is a sleigh in the rafters of an old barn turned handcrafts shop. | 
| A special craft of the area using small rounds of branches to make mosaic forms. | 
| A local lady (more on which in a subsequent post) does marvellous embroidery work. This island also has its own knitting patterns for woollens. | 
| They lived by fishing primarily and farming secondarily. | 
| This place is for sale so we took a look around inside - not to buy, to see the old farm. | 
| All the doors were extremely low for people and animals. Maybe it was to keep the winter out....? | 
| Other people were looking too. | 
| Outside | 
| Inside | 
| Every farm had its own blacksmith shop. | 
| Those racks were for drying fish. | 
| Guess... I don't know either... | 
| The fishing gear | 
| A mix for fishing and farming: bobbers above and plow below, cow hides in back. | 
| Each farm had a strip of land stretching back to the sea, for hay and pasture and boat docking. | 
| Thatched roof | 
| The butler at the house door. | 
That was Part One of this island.
 
 
Amazing. :)
ReplyDeleteThe unknown machine looks similar to one that was on our family farm in Michigan so Ted thinks it's a fanning machine to clean grain and seed.
ReplyDeleteInteresting, Pam. It could well be.
ReplyDelete