Round the Bend

One look at the map of of Europe confirms that the Rhine is a fairly straightforward river flowing in a pretty straight line through the Upper Rhine Valley between Basel and Mainz although it’s a wide plain that would invite any river to meander.

Well, it used to. Until Johann Gottfried Tulla came along in the early 19th century and presented plans to straighten the riverbed and make it easier for shipping traffic. His plans were executed and industry had a very profitable waterway as a result.

The riverbends of the old river were still there once the straightening was complete although in most cases cut off from the flowing river. And many local recreational areas were thus born, smaller and larger lakes, sometimes with islands, open for swimming, boating and wildlife. In other words – this is definitely a more natural state than the shipping route on the other side.

One such area can be found just north of Mannheim, the Lampertheimer Altrhein.

Bird life feels relatively safe on the stretch of land which forms a barrier between the new and the old Rhine.

A grey heron struts his stuff.

This mandarin duck hen was on her own. These ducks are not indigenous to Europe but it’s not uncommon to see a single one or a pair near native duck varieties. Not being a birder, I would have had an easier time if her mate had been around.

And this swan was definitely feeling right at home and let down his feathers.

Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge: Water found in Nature

Amassed Flowers

I’ve never heard the term conglomerate being used for a flower meadow but it is one with this definition: a thing consisting of a number of different and distinct parts or items that are grouped together.

The Ragtag Daily Prompt: Conglomerate

Hail Sol Invictus!

For Saturday’s Ragtag Daily Prompt I posted a photo of the Roman villa rustica which was found and the foundations excavated near our town about 40 years ago. I realised that I didn’t have many photos of the site so I made the 2 km trip and took some more yesterday afternoon.

This is a view of the small temple at the back of the house. As far as I know it is not known what god or gods were worshipped here but the timeframe (first to third century AD) and artifacts found in the Roman city of Lopodunum (Ladenburg) nearby suggest that it might have been Sol invictus.

So in honour of his longest reign this year:

The Cosmic Photo Challenge: Midsummer

Let’s Hope It Won’t Rain

Villa Rustica in Großsachsen

In the early 1980s the site of a Roman villa was discovered near our town. The foundations were excavated and then enlarged so that visitors would have more of an understanding of the layout of this villa rustica. The foundations were only augmented and some of the walls were built up to less than half their original height. The photo shows an outside wall with half a window in it, just to give the impression of what it kind of looked like in around 300 AD.

The Ragtag Daily Prompt: Incomplete