This is the beginning of the evening because I knit my motorcycle through a sharp switchback along the east coast of Mallorca. Arriving in the city of Dega, where the sandy expansion of the Mediterranean woke up to the right, where the sandstone of sandstone arose on the beach on each other.
As the long -term creative center of the island, it offers something different from the metropolitan capital of the rural village Palma. It is here, between the lined narrow streets with the dry-stone walls of the bronze era, which the ancient heritage and modern reality of Mallorka collide mostly.
While I am always grateful to find myself on a Belleric Island in June, Peering on Firoza Calace And is surrounded by pine forests that give perfume to the wind, I am not only happy in the offerings of the island here. Instead, I have come to Mallorca to report on the rise of tours, projects and hotels, helping tourists to join the island’s handmade past and present.
I throw sinful dirt road to Guithhouse Son rolinArtisan Crafts Travel Company Thread Caravan as a guest at the beginning of my home for the week Mallorca Creative Island RetreatHundreds of ancient olive trees in the 14th century monastery are surrounded by UNESCO-Heritage Tramuntana Mountains, with their lime inner parts in son Rullan, exposed dark wood beams and coined iron beds frames.
In a direct partnership with the local people, Thread caravan Heritage crafts-centered trips with unique art and culinary experiences worldwide. For a visit to Mallorca, they collaborate with Madrid-Environment Clara Polanko, who spent every summer of their childhood on the island and now CDMX runs Habardashri Donde Clara,
“The craft land has a window – it uses what grows there, what is touched and shaped by generations. When visitors make it with their own hands, they use a different kind of knowledge: a rhythm, care and memory lies,” said Polyko.
When we travel, the words of Poanko echo in my mind LalanaturaThe purpose of a virgin-on initiative is to restart the Mallorcan wool once again, which is re-established for an waste product today and most of it has been burnt.
Photo: Luna Antonia Arboleda
While Llanatura Cofounder Eugenia Marcote takes us through a dry felting workshop, she describes the need for procedures that use low water in Mallorca, where drought is extended by a spike in each summer, such as visitors come. Llanatura’s wool processing reduces water use, and the brand supports water conservation with its design ethos. “I like the plant dys. But we have water problems here, so we decided not to dye, which is a practical decision, but also a political,” he said.