Tell me about the home you're living in.
Ryan: It's part of a very old estate, originally built as an olive factory. Back then, it housed the owners, the workers, and the animals all together. You can still feel that history in how the place is laid out and how it sits in the landscape.
Constanze: What makes it special is that it doesn't feel separated from nature. The house is built right into the mountainside, so when you step outside, you're immediately in it. We wake up every morning to the sound of our donkey — she's become a kind of alarm clock. Her name is Bolo, which came from a misunderstanding. We asked the caretaker what she was called, and he said "burro" — Spanish for donkey. We heard it as Bolo, and it stuck. It suits her.
What drew you to Mallorca, and how does living here shape your everyday life?
Constanze: We'd been coming every summer for years, so it already felt familiar. For me, it was also about returning to Europe and being closer to nature. I started studying naturopathy, and I wanted to grow herbs, understand plants, be more physically connected to where I am. I start my mornings outside, walking barefoot, then spend time in the garden working with the soil. It's about resetting, after so much time on the road, and slowing everything down.
Ryan: With the work we do, we're constantly moving in different cities, doing different projects. We needed somewhere that wasn't just another stop. Mallorca made sense because we already knew the area, and because it offers real contrast between mountains, sea, and also a different pace. The days here are simple and more intuitive. You go for walks, swim, follow the light and the weather. It's not structured in the same way.