Traditional stafylodohi on Samos

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These are stone-built tanks where, in those years, UWC Samos collected the grapes of the vine-growers of the island, who transported them with the animals to the area of stafylodohi.

Stafylodohi are raised tanks, about 3 meters high, supported on stone beams with a straight surface where the grape production was discharged. Permanent stafylodohi began to be created in all traditional wine villages of Samos, when the Union of Cooperatives was established in 1934. They were mainly made of local materials (stones and mud) with some cement mortar as a coating of the structure.

They included a ground floor section whose height was about 3 meters (to accommodate the loading and unloading vehicles), an elevated platform, a scale, tanks and an office space for recording the quantities. They were used until about the 70s and were gradually abandoned. Today, we come across stafylodohi scattered all over the island as we tour the wine-producing villages of Samos. They stand abandoned, but remain silent witnesses of another era when winemaking activity flourished on Samos.

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