12th Century plants: Difference between revisions
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==Farmland Plants== |
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See also [[hedges]] |
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==Woodland Plants== |
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[[Guingamor]] (line 423-424) mentions an [[olive]] tree in the middle of the woods, but this may be unusal - it is above a fairy pool. It also mentions a wild [[apple]] tree and an [[oak]] old enough to have a hollow (line 439) - different from the [[coppised]] oaks of the woods edge and hedges. |
[[Guingamor]] (line 423-424) mentions an [[olive]] tree in the middle of the woods, but this may be unusal - it is above a fairy pool. It also mentions a wild [[apple]] tree and an [[oak]] old enough to have a hollow (line 439) - different from the [[coppised]] oaks of the woods edge and hedges. |
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Woods for hunting were carefully cultivated - trees were culled at a sufficient rate to leave clearings suitable for grazing animals such a deer, but not at such a rate that the trees |
Woods for hunting were carefully cultivated - trees were culled at a sufficient rate to leave clearings suitable for grazing animals such a deer, but not at such a rate that the trees were completely cleared away. [[Guingamor]] after travelling 150 years into the future where the wood is no longer at the centre of a kingdom and thus had been neglected comments that it is "so ugly and overgrown" (line 585). Clearly maintaining a forest was a constant battle against nature. |
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[[Category:12th century]] |
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[[Category:plants]] |
Latest revision as of 19:00, 19 May 2006
Farmland Plants
See also hedges
Woodland Plants
Guingamor (line 423-424) mentions an olive tree in the middle of the woods, but this may be unusal - it is above a fairy pool. It also mentions a wild apple tree and an oak old enough to have a hollow (line 439) - different from the coppised oaks of the woods edge and hedges.
Woods for hunting were carefully cultivated - trees were culled at a sufficient rate to leave clearings suitable for grazing animals such a deer, but not at such a rate that the trees were completely cleared away. Guingamor after travelling 150 years into the future where the wood is no longer at the centre of a kingdom and thus had been neglected comments that it is "so ugly and overgrown" (line 585). Clearly maintaining a forest was a constant battle against nature.