Looking far into the past can teach and inspire us, especially in the field of folk traditions.
At the SKRINA Ethno Gallery, we are trying to keep it alive, which is why we have prepared  Shepard’s whistle for you, which the children made themselves in a rural setting. During the grazing season, they passed the time by making various toys, most often out of linden and oak wood.
Until the end of the Second World War, there were big differences between the toys of rural and urban children. Peasant children did not have much time to play, as they had to help their parents with farm work.
With their creativity, they replaced all the toys that were sold in city shops.