The film starts on St. The procession from Kelme to Verpena. Then, it shows the dawn of the morning, as cars pass by, the town's cleaners begin their work, the crowds gradually increase, and finally Kelme is plunged into the bustle of the day. It shows the life of the city: one person talking on the phone, another riding a scooter on the pavement or doing something else. The filmmakers also visit the Bičiulis editorial office. R. Ščiglinskienė's lively conversations take place in the main marketplace in Kelme, and the founder of the Hazel Museum, Mečislovas Ežerskis, who has already carved 3,270 walking sticks, is briefly interviewed, as well as the researcher of the history of the Kelme region and collector Vainius Urbonavičius. The latter's collection alone contains 126 paintings. And then there are a lot of other works of art, rare books, newspapers, magazine sets, etc. Valdas Bandza, a stonemason who does not speak, does his work, but the images associated with him are accompanied by the music of A. Bielkin. It shows images from the Samogitian ethno-cultural courses, last year's stone masons' plein-air festival, the spectacle "Lifting the Wave", the art festival "Kelmė ratas", the activities of Valdas Pūtvis-Putvinskis are widely presented, and so on.
A separate part of the film is entitled "The Stone Blues". It shows the artistic wonders of stone created by the famous folk artist Juozas Liaudanskis, the works carved in the stone carvers' open-air workshops, caressed and even kissed by the actors of the Maly Theatre.
Of course, a documentary is a genre of cinema, the content of which cannot be described. It has to be seen.