Friday, June 26, 2009

Pokemon On Ti 84 Plus

hedges and sunken roads



is the sixteenth century, the landscape of woods so characteristic of the Bourbon countryside grew. Oldest burrows (tax documents that describe plots accurately) refer to gaps between what is named in the nineteenth century "domains", but then called "tenements", "mas" or "métaineries" (which have nothing to do with sharecropping or lease mid-fruit). Two "lands" are gradually delineated by "tectural, which are embankments. Gradually, they are "vegetated" with shrubs (elderberries, rosehip, Prunelier) or trees (oak, walnut ...).
In the current community of communes "grove south", which is characteristic is that the grove is often associated with a network of paths "hollow", below fields and meadows.
These manmade structures are remarkable when one considers that the sunken roads were dug with picks. I wonder about their dating and I would not be surprised that in the presence of residual elements of a landscape much older. For if it is revived in the fifteenth and sixteenth century, the grove has probably existed as to the Celtic Perode as some aerial photos taken in Britain tend to demonstrate.
These are some pictures of the current landscape render it well enough to have known Lorenzo's, once past what geographers call the "hinterland" moulinois, beyond the bridge Chinard (recalling the location of the small bridge Eschinard), and between Neuvy Cressanges.






























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