During the 1800s and early part of the 1900s, the Canal du Nivernais was the route used to get timber from the eastern part of the country down to Paris and the ports along the sea. now, it's a bucolic float for tourists who rent canal boats, or who bring their own. Somewhere in Burgundy, France; Septemeber, 2009.
Friday, June 27, 2014
About Me
- Name: Gr8fulTed
- Location: Madras, Oregon, United States
Aging boomer into the Dharma, The Dead, Todd Snider, Little Feat, politics, peace, negating the Radical Right, travel, the Net, Firefly\Serenity, helping my community, laughing, photography, art, music (playing, listening, supporting)
Links to the Weird and Wonderful
- Tricycle Buddhist Review
- US Campaign For Burma
- Alternative News Source
- Scraps Along The Way
- The Sassy Crumudgeon
- ...she's a flight risk
- Notes to a Nameless Daughter
- Access To Insight
- Hollyhock Farm
- yoonanimous
- Tiny URL
- My Whim Is Law
- Jack Bog's Blog
- Daily Kos
- The Rambling Taoist
- Freeway Blogger
- Enlighten Me
- Dharma Vison
- When This Is, That Is
- Tina Harris' Photo Art
- there once was a girl
- Blognetnews Oregon
- Crosscut, News of the Great Nearby
- J-walk Blog
- Gr8fulTed's Trading Site
- Gr8fulTed's Rock Photos Site
Previous Posts
- Big difference in being back on the west side o...
- Another great off the beaten path destination i...
- The largest ferry fleet in the world is BC Fer...
- It's no secret that we here at the Grind tend t...
- The inner courtyard of the Louvre at night is ...
- Vista House at Crown Point on a sunny day (for...
- The day comes to a bucolic end along the Sound,...
- Getting off the beaten path not only means few...
- A tiger lily in the wild discovered while hikin...
- Clouds hang over the Pont Neuf. Although "Pont ...
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home