30 June 2020

Saint-Chamant du Cantal in pictures







Here are a few fairly random photos I took in Saint-Chamant in the Cantal (Auvergne) nearly 11 years ago. This is Walt looking out a window at the house we rented for that trip.







Here's a house in the village. The date over the door says 1851. I wonder if it's occupied. Maybe just the ground floor is lived in. Those shutters on the upstairs windows have seen better days, and the ones on the downstairs windows are just gone.





I liked these carved plaques on the village school building. Schools in France used to be segregated by gender.





That was the case when I was a teaching assistant in Rouen in 1972-73. I worked in the boys' high school, the Lycée Corneille. The girls' high school was the Lycée Jeanne-d'Arc. I think both are what they call mixte nowadays.








These are cows that I photographed pretty much in the center of the village, near the Château de Saint-Chamant. Photos of that monument TK, as we used to say (to come).









This beast and the ones above are not even cows of the Salers breed. This one looks like a charolaise to me.



8 comments:

  1. I guess you're right about Charolaise. I like Walt's photo.

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    1. Looking more closely, I think those reddish-tan beasts in the photo above are not cows but maybe male calves — veaux. I wonder what breed they are.

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  2. Yes, i also thought they were oxen. Too big, in my opinion, to be calves.

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    1. Perhaps they are Limousin cattle. They certainly live in a place of green pastures.

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    2. The terminology in this area is very complicated in English. See this Wikipedia page.

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    3. Just looked at the link and my head is spinning :-) Very complicated is an understatement!

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  3. I love cows! My grandfather raised purebred Hereford cattle, the pretty reddish brown ones with white faces. We always said that the cattle had much better pedigrees than we did! ;)

    Thanks for these pictures, Ken.

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  4. Well, now, that was fascinating, that lesson on Wikipedia about the terminology in English, for these animals. I had heard so many of these (cattle, cow, heifer, steer, cattle, bull, ox, oxen) without realizing what the difference was.

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