Xwejni Bay in Gozo, Malta, has a way of making everyday elements look like a quiet choreography between sea, stone and sun. You can"t help but pause and look closer, right? Centuries back, families began carving these limestone pans, shaping hundreds of basins that trap seawater with each wave. Once the water settles in, the sun"s heat does the rest, slowly evaporating it into natural Mediterranean salt. Gozo became a salt-making hub because its limestone coast is easy to shape, and its warm, dry summers keep the crystallisation process steady. The first crystals form around May, marking the beginning of the harvesting season. Workers rake the salt by hand, sweep it with brooms and brushes, gather it into small piles to dry for another day, then bag it and store it in the caves.
Salt evaporation ponds on the island of Gozo, Malta
Today in History
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2026 Winter Olympics
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Ljubljana, Slovenia
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Happy International Day of Forests!
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Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival
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Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument, Maine, USA
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The white trilliums in Ontario, Canada
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Home of the ‘world’s worst smelling food?’
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The 50th Toronto International Film Festival
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Endangered Species Day
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Bring the king cakes
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Fly me to the moon
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Rapa Nui National Park, Easter Island, Chile
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A gorge-ous place to drop in
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Arches National Park, Utah, USA
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The natural ice wall of Misotsuchi, Chichibu, Japan
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Trevi Fountain, Rome, Italy
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A 50-year balancing act
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Petroglyphs near Fruita in Capitol Reef National Park, Utah, United States
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Mid-Autumn Festival
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Winter solstice
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A sea of humanity
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A time-worn medieval marvel
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Pushkar Camel Fair
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World Dolphin Day
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A glimpse of Yoho National Park
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Dragon waterfall, Venezuela
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The ancient home of the Minoans
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Mam Tor, Derbyshire, England
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What returned to this city 500 years ago?
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Traditional red fishermens cabins, Reine, Norway
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