An old man recalled guiding a limping ewe across a rimed arch, testing each parapet stone with mittened hands. He trusted the curve because his father had set its keystone. Craft, like flocks, survives when tended carefully across seasons, generations, and the cold insistence of mountain winds.
Scrape gently and you might find a tiny star or initials where parapet meets coping. Such marks are shy signatures, reminders that names can fade while work continues to shelter strangers. Leave them intact; note, photograph, and quietly thank the steady hand that still helps you cross.
When spates recede, the arch speaks through duller notes, rattling chips, or small fresh gaps. Walk it slowly, feel for looseness, and hear where a bedding wants company. Community work days turn observation into action, restoring poise with kettles, ropes, levers, shared songs, and generous patience.