In the heart of the Guspini countryside, set within a landscape worthy of a bucolic painting and nestled among silent, colorful hills, stands the Menhir of Genna Prunasâa basalt sentinel that has watched over the land for millennia.
Standing 1.70 meters tall, it is a primordial symbol representing the Mother Goddess, a pagan icon of the Ozieri culture linked to the worship of water and fertility. Its surface is marked by several cup-marks of mysterious meaning, like the wrinkles of an ancient memory, while its carefully chosen position speaks of rituals, astral observations, and deep connections with nature.
Approaching the Menhir of Genna Prunas means not only contemplating a megalithic and archaic monument, but also sensing the symbolic power of a people who entrusted their spirituality to stone. It is a place that calls for silence, for listening, and for that sense of wonder that only the great mysteries of the past can awaken.
