The old wooden buildings lean together like elderly friends sharing secrets. These structures, weathered by centuries of alpine winters, tell stories in every beam and shutter. Animals once lived on the ground floor, their warmth rising to heat the family quarters above. Practical, efficient, perfectly adapted to mountain life.
The narrow passages between buildings are too tight for modern vehicles, creating pockets of peace where the only sounds are our footsteps and the distant clang of cowbells. We pause to admire farm implements hanging on walls like gallery pieces. Scythes, rakes, and tools whose purposes we can only guess at.
On the steep meadows above, I spot something that stops me in my tracks. An elderly farmer, still cutting hay by hand, each swing of his scythe as rhythmic as a meditation. In an age of mechanisation, some traditions refuse to bow to modernity. These high pastures demand respect for the old ways.