From rq: Cellar, cellar door. Empty but for spiders, beetles, forest detritus and probably mice in winter. What a magnificent tumbledown! I’m in love with the first photo, what a wonderful place to explore. Click for full size.
© rq, all rights reserved.
Tabby Lavalamp says
Those are amazing. But I have to admit, when I saw the headline I thought this was going to be about those guys in their 40s and 50s who go to nightclubs hoping to score with a 20-something…
rq says
Sorry, I didn’t find any of those out in the country, I’ll do better next time. :D I have more photos of abandonment from this area, but it’s not an uncommon sight, as life from the farmlands slowly oozes to the city.
Ice Swimmer says
These can be called a cellar (kellari in Finnish) or ground cellar (F: maakellari) here, but often a structure like that is called on Finnish kuoppa or perunakuoppa (pit or potato pit).
The one we had at my family’s summer cottage was on a hill and you needed a ladder to go into it. Somebody came up with the idea to tie a plastic bag in a string (a length of clothesline) and tie the other end to the top of the ladder. That made the logistics of the pit much easier (especially for Grandma) and you could put often needed stuff in the bag and lower it to the pit.
jazzlet says
Wonderful moss.
voyager says
What a wonderful place and that light gives it all an air of mystery.
Raucous Indignation says
Yeah, I’m not going in there …
rq says
Awww, c’mon Raucous Indignation, horror movies aren’t documentaries…