Stone by Stone: State Certificate for Margers – a Victory with Unanswered Questions
Camí de Sa Figuera Near Alaró and Mallorca’s Dry-Stone Tradition
Near Alaró, the Camí de Sa Figuera shows how Mallorca’s dry-stone walls still shape the rural landscape.

Answer
What is the Camí de Sa Figuera near Alaró known for?
More questions on this topic
Related follow-up questions from the same article, collected in one place.
What does the new state certificate for dry-stone builders in Mallorca actually mean?
It formally recognises dry-stone building as a professional qualification in Mallorca.
Will the dry-stone certificate in Mallorca be enough to attract young people to the trade?
The certificate helps, but young people will also need financial and career support.
How is dry-stone building taught in Mallorca?
Training is planned as a 600-hour qualification, but the course locations and funding are still unclear.
Can experienced Margers in Mallorca be recognised without retraining from scratch?
Yes, but only if practical experience is properly recognised in the qualification process.
Why are dry-stone walls still important in Mallorca today?
They protect the landscape, reduce erosion, and remain part of Mallorca’s heritage.
What needs to happen for dry-stone training to work in Mallorca?
Funding, course locations and support for apprentices will decide whether the training succeeds.
Where in Mallorca could future dry-stone courses be offered?
Courses could be run in schools, trade centres, or mobile workshops across municipalities.
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