They have a tradition of making tiles in the old days. All the houses are traditional. In winter, several trees stand tall. The houses are made of stone with few leaves. A peaceful breeze is blowing there.
The village had a soul carved from history. Long before my visit, generations had shaped it with their hands—especially through the age-old craft of tile-making. It was said that each household once contributed to this tradition, pressing patterns into clay, drying them under the sun, and firing them in stone kilns that still stood like relics at the edge of the village. The rooftops were a mosaic of reddish-brown tiles, rough to the touch, weathered by time yet still beautiful in their quiet resilience.
The houses, sturdy and humble, spoke of a time when things were built to last. Each one was made of local stone—cool to the touch and heavy with memories. The walls were thick, meant to hold warmth in winter and offer cool refuge in summer. Wooden shutters framed the windows, and ivy crept lazily across many of the facades, as if nature had chosen to decorate the village in its own style.
Winter painted the place with a soft, faded palette. Several tall trees stood bare yet proud, their gnarled branches reaching to the pale sky like the arms of silent sentinels. Dry leaves crunched underfoot, the last remnants of autumn clinging to the season. Smoke curled slowly from chimneys, blending into the frosty air, and the scent of firewood gave a gentle warmth to the cold landscape.
A peaceful breeze moved through the village like a whisper. It rustled the dry hedges and swayed the hanging lanterns on porches. It wasn’t harsh or biting—it was calm, like the village itself. It carried the quiet sounds of distant conversations, the occasional bark of a dog, and the soft toll of a bell from the chapel on the hill.
Everything here moved slowly, as if in reverence to the past. It was a place untouched by urgency, where tradition wasn’t just remembered—it was still alive, woven into the stones, the air, and the people themselves.



