Travelling Voices - Stories of rural regeneration /UNESCO/

Page 85

3

the case. In the past few years production of pine nuts dramatically dropped, by more than 90 percent allowing the locals to harvest only 150 tons instead of the thousands of tons they had previously. Experts claim that an invasive species, the western conifer seed bug and the drought caused by global warming are responsible for the poor crop while the locals blame the extensive rock mining and the chemicals the other mines use. Despite this calamity, the people of the Kozak Plateau are just as tough as their precious stone pine trees. They are constantly looking for new income sources. Some villages see promising alternatives in agro and hunting tourism, or just in a different kind of tourism, opening up their homes to guests and inviting them in for local meals. Others are producing and selling handicrafts like unique rugs and carpets or goods like honey, cheese, mushroom or the “blood of the tree”, the pine resin. There is also a plan to establish the Kozak Plateau Wildlife Park with caravan parks, tent camps and bungalows built from local wood and stone materials. But experts are also working hard collecting soil, leaves, cones and rainwater samples from the region. They are hoping to find a cure, so that one day the stone pines can offer a good harvest again for the villagers.

85

On a very rocky soil, like the one found in the Kozak Plateau, it’s difficult to do any agriculture. Luckily the bluish granite and quartz rocks together with the Mediterranean climate make the plateau a perfect habitat for stone pines. These tall trees with their large canopy cover the whole plateau like giant flowers to make the area look like a dark green paradise from afar. Their remarkable image gives Kozak a fairy-tale atmosphere. But these trees are not just beautiful - harvesting the pines also gave an exceptionally good income for the locals. However it’s not an easy living. First you have to wait 10 years until a tree starts producing cones and about 3 years for a cone to be fully ripe. Because of the steeply sloped land and the rocks, the harvest cannot be mechanized - you have to climb the trees, carefully select only the ripe cones, and knock them down with a long, wooden pole (with a hook at the end) called “keye”. It is not just hard, but sometimes a dangerous occupation, because of the breaking or simply unstable branches high above. Women collect the fallen cones and then set them out to dry and open in the sun. Each tree only yields a few kilograms of pine nuts, and it takes more than 10 kilograms of cones to produce 1 kilo of nuts. A decade ago the Kozak Plateau was considered one of the world’s most important pine nut exporters with its impressive 10% share of the global market. Unfortunately, this is no longer

TURKEY / Gediz - Bakircay Basins

Rocks and nuts


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Master and apprentices

2min
pages 89-92

About RURITAGE

1min
pages 93-96

Neighborhood of musicians

1min
pages 87-88

Rocks and nuts

2min
pages 85-86

Baskets and other treasures

2min
pages 83-84

The oldest retreat

1min
pages 81-82

To play, to heal

1min
pages 73-74

Return, remember, restart

1min
pages 71-72

Bread as a fruit

2min
pages 67-68

Let’s burn the bad things

2min
pages 69-70

Dresses and shields

4min
pages 61-66

Helmets and photographs

2min
pages 59-60

Crime and punishment

2min
pages 57-58

In the footsteps of Apollonia

2min
pages 55-56

Dear old days

2min
pages 53-54

Tunnels filled with adventures

2min
pages 45-46

Paintings on the meadows

3min
pages 47-52

The sleeping king

1min
pages 41-42

Everyday miracles

1min
pages 43-44

A superfood with many names

1min
pages 39-40

Grapes and stones

1min
pages 31-32

Mysteries and rocks

2min
pages 29-30

Foreword

2min
pages 7-10

Young pilgrims

2min
pages 15-16

Singing rocks

2min
pages 17-18

The dancing platform

2min
pages 13-14

Bats in the mine

1min
pages 27-28

We ♥ railroads

2min
pages 11-12

107 heads

3min
pages 19-24

Fruit fairytale

1min
pages 25-26
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.