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Old typical Norwegian wooden home with turf roof covered with grass. Jostedalsbreen National Park in Norway.
Koh Mook, Thailand - January 13, 2014: Traditional Stilt house in Koh Mook island, a tiny beautiful island off Trang coastline. In the background, people walking on the road.
Port Nolloth, South Africa - March 11, 2024: Rustic beachfront bed and breakfast accommodations in small coastal town
Closed basin green area abandoned house view.Wooded area in nature.
Oberfell, Germany - 07/06/2023: forest hut and barbecue site
Newfoundland and Labrado, Canada.
Old, worn cabin from Sea Sami Culture in Finnmark, Norway
The Gallery grave of Keryvon is a megalithic complex located in the commune of Pleumeur-Bodou in Côtes-d'Armor.
Site of the ruins of Temple of Wiracocha, temple of Viracocha at Chacha (Raqchi), Cusco, Peru, South America
Traditional house in Old town Torshavn is capital of Faroe islands
Trsic, Serbia - July 11, 2022: A little place in serbia where Vuk Karadzic was born. Old Serbian traditional house.
Traditional thatch roof with holding stone. Isle of Lewis Scotland.
A long driveway leads up a dry brown hill. At the very top sits a large house. Behind house and hill is nothing but blue sky.
Crosstown, Traytown, Glovertown, Culls Harbour, Eastport Beach, Salvage, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.
Torekov, Sweden - Aug 16, 2021: Yellow wooden hut on rocky coast in the seaside village of Torekov in Sweden.
Some Facts about Irish Stone Walls\nWhy are there gaps in Irish stone walls?\nMany of the stone walls in the west and south of Ireland are known as ‘dry stone walls,’ meaning that they are made entirely without any mortar or other materials to help stick them together. As such, this leaves gaps between the stones, something tourists often notice as they drive past and can actually see the sky straight through them. Many of the walls here are quite ancient, and as such were made before the advent of or easy access to mortar and other cement-like materials to build them up.\nHow do they stand up then?\nWhile I’m not an expert wall-builder or stone mason myself, I have actually built a small section of stone wall here in the traditional style. Irish stone walls are made by carefully selecting the correct stones bit by bit as you progress onwards and upwards. One must ensure that each rock will properly be at rest within the wall, sitting still and balancing atop the last layer. Another thing I learned the hard way is that a common technique is to actually place the smallest stones along the bottom and then finish or ‘cap’ them with your larger and heavier rocks. Although seemingly counterintuitive at first, the downwards force of these larger rocks can help pack down the bottom layers, compressing them together and preventing them from moving or spilling. But yes, there’s a lot of trial and error as you go, especially when it’s your first time learning how to build an Irish stone wall.\n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation to Ireland in July 2022. The Stone Walls are from the Aran Islands.
South America, Pisac (Pisaq) - Inca ruins in the sacred valley in the Peruvian Andes, Peru
Castlebeach Bay is close to the village of Dale at Pembrokeshire Coast Path.
View of colorful bathing wooden cabins of Gouville on the dunes
Straw canopy on grass at beach in Fethiye, Turkey.
Wooden buildings in rural areas
Abandoned house on Sambro Island
A house stands in a field by a river
view of the saksun landscape at the faroe
Bungalow resort in Zanzibar on a sunny day
Pasture with stone wall and rund-down home at west coast of Ireland.
Heiligenhafen holy harbour is a village at the Baltic Sea coast of northern Germany
Wooden staircase outside an old  worn  abandoned traditional Norwegian  farm building in early fall with colorful vegetation.
Sisimiut, Greenland, Denmark: - Traditional Greenland turf house reconstructed in Sisimiut .
The Roche-aux-Fées is a dolmen in the commune of Essé, in the department of Ille-et-Vilaine, Britanny, France.
Free Images: "bestof:Omond House - Laurie Island.jpg en The stone hut known as Omond House was erected in 1903 on Laurie Island in the South Orkney Islands to house shore-based"
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