Stubble
Botany
The thatch is the woody stem (often dug with the entrenœuds and sometimes very cutting) of Poacées, in the past called Graminées.
Generally this term indicates the Paille after the harvests.
The thatch which remains on the ground after the harvest is called éteule.
Use
Thatch can be used like Litière for the animals and was used for a long time to cover the roofs, its use was very widespread until the end of the Moyen-âge. In Ireland, it thatch becomes again very popular thanks to the treatment of fireproofing.
From there the denominations come from “and thatched roofs” “Chaumière S”.
The joint pasture of thatches was practiced in the system of the three-year rotation. It is the common grazing land.
Geography
The term thatch , with female, also indicates, in Auvergne particularly, a waste land left in waste land. Ex: … an abandoned child was found in a thatch…
The thatches or high thatches are meadows of altitude in the Massif of the Vosges. The local Flore must adapt to difficult weather conditions: strong winds, cold, snow, exposure to the sun. It is made up of thatch (from where the name), of low shrubs (Myrtille S, Airelle S, Bruyère S).
Toponymy
- Chaume is old a Commune Frenchwoman Coast-with Or, now integrated into Thatch-and-Courchamp.
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