On the Path To Harakopio ~ The Putative Roof

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Iโ€™ve had a passion for pantiles since childhood when they appeared in a storybook I was reading. The story was set in Spain, and I have absolutely no memory of what it was about. Only the pantiles stuck. Once I had discovered what they were, and that they were made of terracotta, and so were red like clay flower pots, and nothing like the boring, dun-coloured slates on my own house, they gave me my first magical sense of โ€˜the foreignโ€™ โ€“ of lands and peoples beyond my island. But perhaps more than that, they suggested new horizons, and new possibilities; only in my imagination though. My family was not one that โ€˜went abroadโ€™.

And so this pile of tiles simply had to be recorded on our walk to the supermarket in Harakopio. It is hard to say whether they are leftovers from a past project and thus spares for an existing roof, or if they are a roof in-waiting. Or being Greece, if they are simply there, stacked up under an olive tree.

Hereโ€™s an actual Harakopio village roof: interesting compilation of new and old.

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And a roof with a very nice datura, the spitting image of the one I once planted in my front garden in Nairobi, bought from a roadside nurseryman.

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For more of the walk in words and pix see On the path to Harakopio

Roof Squares #3 Now over to Becky

31 thoughts on “On the Path To Harakopio ~ The Putative Roof

    1. Gosh, that’s a speedy response, Becky. Noticed over at Debbie’s that you said it was too hot already. Think it’s going to be hot in Shropshire today too. Look forward to see your tiles ๐Ÿ™‚

      1. Makes me inordinately happy when I find myself online at the moment someone posts and links ๐Ÿ˜Š

        My cat is already complaining it is too hot! Goodness what he’ll say this afternoon. Have a fabulous day and stay cool!

          1. Oh thank you Tish. I just feel so honoured to have met so many wonderful people via blogging who also happen to be amazing photographers. I learn so much from hosting the challenge ๐Ÿ˜Š

  1. Definitely gives you the sense of somewhere ‘foreign’. I love terracotta tiles. And I love your take on the challenge. ๐Ÿ™‚ Hot you say? No sign of heat here. Overcast again.

    1. Definitely hot now – but with a haze. While I’m here just been making an anti slug spray. It’s been tested by Gardeners World. 2 bulbs of garlic crushed in 2 pints water. Cook for 4-5 mins. Strain. Then one tablespoon in 4 litres of water sprayed in the evening onto leaves. Repeat weekly. Very good on hostas apparently. It’s worth a go I thought ๐Ÿ™‚

      1. I did that last year. The S&S just licked their lips and said “love the garlic dressing Jude” Maybe you’ll have better success. My S&S probably pop over from France.

      1. True. Many ofl the houses in the Southwest tend to be either Spanish style with this sort of roof or, maybe more in parts of New Mexico, those that are adobe. I like them both.

  2. I also love these terracotta tiles and the shot of the new and old tiles together building the roof is wonderful, Tish. I sometimes make my own terracotta plant pots. ๐Ÿ˜Š

    1. Yes. I have some good memories of Kenyan ones, especially at Hunter’s Lodge, Kiboko. Though one day when I was there the entire side of the bedroom block did a ker-thumping landslide on to the lawn. No obvious rhyme or reason.

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