SC -cooling Creme' Bastarde
Par Leijonhufvud
parlei at algonet.se
Tue May 23 21:40:46 PDT 2000
On Tue, 23 May 2000 allilyn at juno.com wrote:
> Constance will have no trouble. She will dig a 10 to 12' hole, forge
> stone axes and mallets, hike to the nearest mountain range, hew stone to
> line the cellar, construct a wooden wagon from trees she fells herself,
> breed, raise and train a team of oxen to pull the stone laden wagon back
> to the cellar site. After researching and reconstructing period cement
> methods--and then deciding to cut the stone to stand alone--she will
> divert a mountain stream through the cellar, placing her hand thrown
> pottery containers in the cold stream. The contents will get cold. ;-)
Sounds like a version on the theme of "standing, in a canoe". All the
earth cellars I have seen (they are fairly common in the countryside
here) are OOP, but they were constructed above ground, with no mortar,
and with soil/turf piled on top of them. The construction method has
been described as
* build wooden frame according to a special method
* make stone shell on top of frame
* remove wooden frame (by knocking out key piece)
* add soil cover and a door.
No idea how old this method is, but the stone was gathered, from the
same source that one uses when one builds stone walls around the fields.
/UlfR
- --
Par Leijonhufvud parlei at algonet.se
Remember: The light at the end of the tunnel is muzzle flash.
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