Cultivation and farming
In order to fully recreate the atmosphere of a former village and bring our visitors closer to the living conditions of its inhabitants, architecture alone is not enough.
The life cycle of the Lasowiak and Rzeszowiak people was inextricably linked with the changes taking place in nature, and the wooden cottages or barns blended in naturally with their surroundings. Walking around the open-air museum, one can notice that a large part of the exhibition shows the way in which fields, meadows and pastures, as well as flower gardens, orchards or apiaries located in homesteads were used. Dignified lime trees and gentle birches shade the country roads, protecting tourists from the sun, just as they did years ago to protect farmers returning from the fields or children herding cows. In the ditches and along the paths, field flowers and wild herbs blossom from spring to autumn, and in the dense groves, elderberry and coral calla bushes. There is no shortage of animals either. Just like in the real countryside, the open-air museum's farmsteads contain farm animals, not cows and horses, but a rich representation of domestic fowl, with geese at the forefront, while the smaller mammals include goats, sheep and rabbits.
Guess
She has a long white neck this boat white. When she came out of the water she was nibbling the grass.