Back in early August at the club a game was in progress that had an interesting bit of terrain:
I asked what they were and was told they were apparently used for grain storage and very common in Galicia. The name of these buildings was a bit tricky for our inglese tongues. Later, through using Wikipedia, I confirmed them to be hórreos https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H%C3%B3rreo
What piqued my interest was that I was about to go to Spain, specifically Galicia to walk part of the Camino de Santiago.
So imagine my excitement on the first day of the walk, 6 September,
when I saw my first horreo.
Ooh and look, there's another!
A notice board gave me the necessary information
to mansplain to a fellow pilgrim
when she asked me what they were.
Very excited to see a wooden one.
And this old one on another farm.
But they were even on the streets!
But it was the seemingly abandoned ones that had the most charm
I'm guessing this one is no longer in use,
by humans at least.
Speaking of humans, here is a delightful one to show scale
Every day provided more examples.
More prevalent than churches and graveyards
Almost organic.
A wonderful adjunct to the walk.
So, on the right we see a symbolic horreo, a traditional way of storing rural produce.
While on the left we have an adjacent church, a Camino way post complete with pilgrim.
In the background there is an example of a modern way of storing human remains.
One final photo. The last two days of our walk were rainy,
not conducive to photography. But this intrigued me...
The bottom has been bricked in, with what to my wargame eye,
looked like some kind of embrasure.
I'd seem a number of these kinds of apertures,
and while sure they were just for ventilation,
couldn't help thinking they were some way of repurposing
of excess fortification stoneware.
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