LE MONT St MICHEL...
#AbFav_PHOTOSTORY
#AbFav_FACADES
The climb to the abbey is hard and, it is hot -- by the time you have mounted the celebrated Escalier de Dentelle (Lace Staircase) to the gallery around the roof of the abbey church, you will have climbed no fewer than 900 steps -- but it's worth it…
Perched on a 264 feet high rock formation sits Mont St. Michel.
The original site was founded by an Irish hermit, who gathered a following from the local community.
During the seasons' highest tides the abbey is surrounded by water.
During low tide the flats provide food for the world's only herd of salt water plant eating sheep (Les agneaux des prés salés), the meat tastes salty.
Mont St. Michel's tides can rush in at incredible speeds.
The tides in the area shift quickly, and has been described by Victor Hugo as ‡ la vitesse d'un cheval au galop, "as swiftly as a galloping horse."
The tide actually comes in at 1 meter per second.
Popularly nicknamed "St. Michael in Peril of the Sea" by medieval pilgrims making their way across the tidal flats, the mount can still pose dangers for visitors who avoid the causeway and attempt the hazardous walk across the sands from the neighbouring coast.
The dangers from the tides and quick sands continue to claim lives.
Mont Saint Michel is a small rocky island about 1 km from the north coast of France at the mouth of the Couesnon River in Normandy.
The mount is best known for the medieval Benedictine Abbey and steepled church that occupies most of the 1km-diameter clump of rocks jutting out of the waters of the English Channel.
THANK YOU, M, (*_*)
For more: www.indigo2photography.com
IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
"MONT St MICHEL", France, Normandy, architecture, church, abbey, water, scape, colour, horizontal, "Nikon D200", "magda indigo"
LE MONT St MICHEL...
#AbFav_PHOTOSTORY
#AbFav_FACADES
The climb to the abbey is hard and, it is hot -- by the time you have mounted the celebrated Escalier de Dentelle (Lace Staircase) to the gallery around the roof of the abbey church, you will have climbed no fewer than 900 steps -- but it's worth it…
Perched on a 264 feet high rock formation sits Mont St. Michel.
The original site was founded by an Irish hermit, who gathered a following from the local community.
During the seasons' highest tides the abbey is surrounded by water.
During low tide the flats provide food for the world's only herd of salt water plant eating sheep (Les agneaux des prés salés), the meat tastes salty.
Mont St. Michel's tides can rush in at incredible speeds.
The tides in the area shift quickly, and has been described by Victor Hugo as ‡ la vitesse d'un cheval au galop, "as swiftly as a galloping horse."
The tide actually comes in at 1 meter per second.
Popularly nicknamed "St. Michael in Peril of the Sea" by medieval pilgrims making their way across the tidal flats, the mount can still pose dangers for visitors who avoid the causeway and attempt the hazardous walk across the sands from the neighbouring coast.
The dangers from the tides and quick sands continue to claim lives.
Mont Saint Michel is a small rocky island about 1 km from the north coast of France at the mouth of the Couesnon River in Normandy.
The mount is best known for the medieval Benedictine Abbey and steepled church that occupies most of the 1km-diameter clump of rocks jutting out of the waters of the English Channel.
THANK YOU, M, (*_*)
For more: www.indigo2photography.com
IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
"MONT St MICHEL", France, Normandy, architecture, church, abbey, water, scape, colour, horizontal, "Nikon D200", "magda indigo"