Your Search Results(showing 9)

    • The countryside, country lifex
    • The countryside, country life

      Ohio Hill Country

      A Rewoven Landscape

      by Carolyn Platt (author)

      A fascinating survey of the geologic, environmental, and human history of southeastern OhioThe southeastern third of Ohio is quite different from the flat or gently rolling portions of the state, differing in landscape, geologic history, ecology, and human history. It is the deeply dissected hill country that was formed over many millions of years by sediments eroded from four ancient mountain ranges. Continuing erosion and massive runoff from great ice-age glaciers further shaped the land and its drainage systems.In Ohio Hill Country, author Carolyn Platt describes how plant and animal life evolved to fill the many niches and microclimates afforded by the area’s weathered sandstones and shales and the ravines cut by area streams. She introduces readers to places such as the Hocking Hills and the Edge of Appalachia in Adams County, which are still home to an exotic and diverse group of flora and fauna.When European settlement began at the end of the eighteenth century, Platt explains, it inevitably caused enormous changes in plant cover and in the animal populations inhabiting the area’s thick, old-growth woodlands. Farms supplanted forests, and stock replaced many wild animals, which were both hunted for food and exterminated because they competed with domestic animals. Burgeoning iron furnaces of the Hanging Rock Iron Range, coal mining that continues today, and other forces of development have altered the original fabric of the region.The Hill Country, poorer than the rest of the state, offers both beauty and fascination. In some aspects, such as the re-growth of forests, the region has recovered from humans’ rough handling. It is an old and complex landscape with exciting and intriguing natural and human histories. With engaging, readable prose complemented by maps and beautiful color photographs, Ohio Hill Country instills an understanding of and appreciation for southeastern Ohio’s geology, ecology, and human history.

    • Prose: non-fiction

      The Garden Cottage Diaries

      My Year in the Eighteenth Century

      by Fiona J. Houston

      Challenged to prove her claim that an 18th-century diet was better than today's, for a full year Fiona J Houston recreated the lifestyle of her 1790s rural Scottish ancestors in a basic one-roomed cottage, cooking from her garden and the wild, often entertaining family and friends, and surviving on her own resources. She learned lost crafts and skills, making nettle string, quill pens and ink as well as cheese and ale, lighting her fire from flints, and dressing in hand-sewn period clothing, with nothing but an old range stove and candles for warmth and light. This beautiful, quirky, illustrated title tells her extraordinary story and is packed with historical anecdotes, folklore, practical gardening info, seasonal menus, recipes, wildlife notes and more. Includes linocuts, photos and historic engravings.

    • The countryside, country life
      April 2007

      Tremedda Days

      A View of Zennor 1900-1944

      by Alison Symons

      An absorbing and keenly observed record of agricultural life in West Penwith in the early 20th century based on, and enlivened by, the author’s own unusual family’s farming life.

    • Memoirs
      June 2000

      Pinhoe as Used to Was

      by Denys Deere-Jones

      Pinhoe, now joined to Exeter, in the 1920s was still rural. Readers who relish country life and the idiosyncracies of human nature will enjoy the author’s story of his boyhood under the rule of his father, the village schoolmaster

    • Memoirs
      July 1982

      No Problem

      The Story of a Cornishman, Part 2

      by Edward Prynn

      A Boy in Hobnailed Boots ends with Ed’s marriage. Here, with the same zest and grit as before, he goes straight on to tell of the dramas of life on farm, coast or quarry, until he achieves a house of his own where he can build his collection of giant Cornish stones.

    • Diaries, letters & journals
      June 1986

      Caught From Time

      A country diary of the 1920s

      by Anne Garnett

      Anne Garnett was a schoolgirl in the Quantock and Brendon Hills country of West Somerset in the 1920s. Aged sixteen, she began to keep a diary and her pen, pencil and paintbrush give a lively impression of the people and the country around her.

    • Memoirs
      February 1990

      Seagull Morning

      The Cornwall of My Childhood

      by Elsie Balme

      The tar making, the wood shavings on the workshop floors, the games in the streets and all that went to make up her childhood in the little fishing port of Porthleven in the 1930s and 1940s are brought vividly to life by Elsie Balme.

    • Memoirs
      June 1983

      Across Cobblestones

      by Derrick Rugg

      Derrick Rugg describes his idyllic childhood at Kentisbeare in the 1930s looking for wild violets or strawberries, of cricket, rabbit chasing and apple scrumping, until the time comes for secondary school.

    • Lifestyle, Sport & Leisure
      June 2021

      Warum Hühner scharren, nicken & picken

      by Antje Krause, Wilhelm Bauer

      Why Chickens Scrape, Nod and Peck All about chicken behaviour, habits and quirks Chicken behaviour under the microscope: Why do chickens do what they do? And why do they often not do what we want them to? Observing chickens is both relaxing and fun – some behaviours will be familiar to every chicken keeper, while others are bound to perplex and surprise. One thing is certain, though – chicken behaviour is never boring. And, not least, chickens are anything but stupid. With a great deal of humour, Antje Krause and Wilhelm Bauer explain how our chickens spend their long days: they scrape and peck, eat and drink, sunbathe and wallow in the dust, preen themselves and doze, grow and learn, entertain themselves, and much more besides. A wealth of exceptional photographs document many of these behaviours, but not all – sometimes chickens are just too quick!

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