Near the Church of the Blessed Virgin of Carmel is the House of Peasant Culture, a small private ethnographic museum that can be visited upon request. Materials dating back to the first decades of the 20th century are collected here.
In the house, built around 1930 with stone and ladiri, the rooms of the typical rural dwelling have been reconstructed. The entrance hall displays ancient traditional games reconstructed with poor materials: su carrucceddu, su xriccu, sa badrunfa, su cuaddeddu’e canna, is pippieddas de zappu.
Inside the kitchen we can observe the table for working homemade bread, is parastaggius with earthenware and enameled plates, cutlery, and pots, a collection of ancient rush and wheat straw baskets(su strexiu de fenu) of various sizes used to hold flour and grain.
In the room, large space is occupied by an iron bed, next to it a table cradle(su brazzollu): typical furnishings of the past.
Also on display in the house are tools that were used in ancient times in working the fields, raising livestock, and making bread. A loom dating back to the late 1800s and two looms still used for weaving and tools used for wool processing can be seen in the house on Mancini Street.