Showing posts with label countries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label countries. Show all posts
Saturday, 7 March 2015
Unusual architecture
When we started thinking about moving away from the UK, Italy was our country of choice. I spent many hours scouring the internet, studying all the different Italian regions, comparing the prices of the houses and dreaming...
The region of Puglia captured my imagination with its unique architectural characteristics. I fell in love with the trullo. Unfortunately, the asking prices for a trullo in good condition were very steep. The starting prices for trulli in need of modernisation were not that low and the costs of remodelling them in accordance to the regulations were prohibitive.
Properties in the desirable areas of Italy were too expensive for us and we ended up in France.
The rest is history...
Here's what trulli are all about and you'll see why I found them so attractive. They are truly amazing (groan).
A trullo (plural, trulli) is a traditional Apulian dry stone hut with a conical roof. Their style of construction is specific to the Itria Valley, in the Murge area of the Italian region of Apulia (Puglia).
Trulli were generally constructed as temporary field shelters and storehouses or as permanent dwellings by small proprietors or agricultural labourers. In the town of Alberobello, in the province of Bari, whole districts are packed with trulli. The golden age of trulli was the 19th century, specially its final decades marked by the development of wine growing.
The vast majority of trulli have one room under each conical roof, with additional living spaces in arched alcoves. Children would sleep in alcoves made in the wall with curtains hung in front.
A multiroomed trullo house has many cones representing a room each.
The thick stone walls and dome of the trullo, pleasantly cool in the summer, tend to become unpleasantly cold during the winter months, condensing the moisture given off by cooking and breathing and making it difficult to feel warm even in front of the fire. The inhabitants simply leave the doors open during the day to keep the interior dry, and live more outdoors than in.
Today the surviving trulli are popular among English and German tourists and are often bought and restored for general use. However, anyone wishing to restore a trullo needs to conform with many regulations as trulli are protected under the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) world heritage law.
Labels:
architecture,
countries
Sunday, 1 March 2015
Amazing lake
This is Lake Retba (or Lac Rose), in Senegal. The colour is caused by Dunaliella salina algae, which produces a pink pigment, and it changes depending on the seasons. It's more pronouncedly pink in the dry season (Nov - June) and duller in the rainy season (July - Oct). The lake is separated from the Atlantic Ocean only by a narrow corridor of dunes and has a very high salt content, up to 40% in places. Salt is exported across the region by up to 3,000 collectors, men and women from all over Western Africa, who work 6–7 hours a day and protect their skin with "Beurre de Karité" (shea butter), produced from Shea nuts, which is an emollient used to avoid tissue damage.
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Today I'm introducing a new way of celebrating readers' birthdays. There are only so many relevant cakes and cupcakes I can find for each person and I risk repeating myself, so on the first day of each month, I'll wish all readers, including lurkers, a very simple but heartfelt Happy Birthday! The bonus are the zodiac cookies...
Tuesday, 2 December 2014
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