Cseri Miklós - Horváth Anita - Szabó Zsuzsanna (szerk.): Discover Rural Hungary!, Guide (Szentendre, Hungarian Open Air Museum, 2007)
VIII Bakony, Balaton-Uplands - VIII-1 Watermill from Nyirád
to store grain, food and rarely used household wares. The owners joiners bench and carving tools are also kept here. The apiary, with straw beehives on shelves, was built next to the stone fence enclosing the yard. and the pot bench are used for storing household utensils. Everyday household equipment hangs on the lower part of the kitchen walls, beneath the level of the smoke. The pantry is used Pigsty According to early 18th century descriptions pigs fattened on mast in the oak woods of the Bakony were kept in forest-pigsties. The continuity and importance of pig-keeping is indicated by the fact that pigsties were found in almost every yard even as recently as the 19th century. "Hidas" is a speciat kind of pigsty with a timber frame, thatched roof, wing-walls and a peculiar feeding-door where the hog-wash could be poured into the trough. In some cases the oak pigsty was decorated with carvings or burnt motives.