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Island of Hvar, Croatia all photos (c) Lisa R. Pruitt 2024 |
I've been traveling in Slovenia and Croatia the last week or so and, not surprisingly, paying particular attention to rural places. A few days ago, I visited the Island of Hvar (population 10,678 on an island 42 kilometers long). Our guide--because it was raining and she was delaying the start of our bicycle tour--drove us over the mountain between Hvar town and Stari Grad (population 2,772), and through the village of Velo Grablje, which featured this sign about the "entity" being protected cultural heritage. (Going over the mountain as we did was a longer-distance alternative to going through a tunnel). We saw what appeared to be the only restaurant in the village overflowing with families following first communion at the nearby church. (We also stopped in the "ghost town" of Malo Grablje, a few kilometers below, along the same "back road"). Among the things we have learned here is that not only music and art, but also recipes and--as we see here--entire villages can be deemed protected cultural heritage.
As we have found to be the case elsewhere in Croatia--including on Hvar and other islands in Dalmatia, small-scale agriculture is widespread. Many folks have small garden plots in their front or back yards, and on Hvar many also have plots in the Stari Grad Plain, prime agricultural land that made Stari Grad such a desirable location for settlement. Many also have small vineyards and/or olive groves, which are also on terraces that stretch up the mountainsides.
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Vineyard near Stari Grad, Hvar Island
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Stone wall along ancient Roman road on Stari Grad Plain |
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Potato plants are as common as vineyards and olive groves on the island.
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Little free library in Stari Grad |
Our guide, who is viola player as well as a cyclist and librarian, told us about a recent benefit concert she played to raise funds to buy food for donkeys kept by a local woman. The yield from the event raised a few thousand Euros for the care of the donkeys. That outdoor concert was held near the restaurant featured in this advertisement, adjacent to the village of Dol, which rises above the Stari Grad Plain.
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Public library, Stari Grad. It is above a coffee shop, right on the waterfront, next to the city hall. |
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K-4 school in the village of Dol; older children go to school in Stari Grad
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Artichoke plant next to a stone wall on road between Dol and Vrbnj |
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Hvar is known for its lavender, which was in early season. |
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