Archaeological inference paints a vivid but cautious portrait of everyday life in the Korça Basin during the Early Neolithic. Regional assemblages from southeastern Albania and neighbouring areas show a transition to domesticated cereals (emmer, einkorn) and pulses, along with managed herds of sheep, goats and cattle. Pottery—often hand-made and burnished—served both practical and social functions, while grinding stones, simple hoes, and hearths anchored domestic routines.
Settlements were likely small and clustered, occupying fertile river terraces and sheltered valleys. Seasonal cycles of sowing and harvest would have structured labour and ritual. Material traces suggest craft specializations at small scales—pottery making, flint tool production, and food processing—embedded within kin-based households. Mortuary practices regionally exhibit variability, indicating complex social identities and possible localized traditions. Given the sparse record from Podgorie specifically, these reconstructions rely on comparisons with better-documented Early Neolithic sites across the Balkans; direct excavation and more samples from Podgorie are needed to confirm local particularities.