Pleaux
At the very beginning of the Christianity (in the 6th and 7th centuries) in the Upper Auvergne, the city grew around the original Saint John the Bapstist church (nowadays destroyed). We found again the importance of this church into the development of Pleaux in the etymology of the name itself. “Plebes” means in latin a baptismal church. During the 9th century, five monks and a prior came from the Charoux abbey (Haute-Vienne) and settled here. They encouraged the building of the present Saint-Sauveur church, now called the Saint John the Baptist church (listed monument) and a monestary. In 128...
Show moreSaint-Bonnet-de-Salers
Thanks to its fertile ground and white-water springs, Saint-Bonnet-de-Salers enjoys rich, fine-grass pastures grazed by herds with "mahogany coats and lyre-shaped horns". The world-famous “Salers” breed cattle have their own museum here: The Maison de la Salers, as well as the headquarters of the Salers Evolution Group, which is responsible for selecting and promoting the Salers breed across France and internationally. This breed was "renewed" at the end of the 19th century by Tyssandier d'Escous, a native of Saint-Bonnet, who turned it into a cow that was both solid and magnificent, but also ...
Show moreReception room L'Hopital
Show moreRat Valley
The Ruisseau du Rat springs from the foot of Puy Violent (1592 m). It is framed by the valleys of the Aspre and the Maronne, into which it flows. Seen from the Barrouze esplanade (Salers), the Rat valley gives the impression of a suspended glacial valley with a confluence step on the Vielmur plateau and a wooded river connection gorge. From the ridgeline between the Puy Violent and the Roc des Ombres, this valley offers a magnificent barrel-shaped profile with low-lying escarpments that contrast with the neighbouring valleys with their pronounced trough-shaped profiles. To get a closer look, g...
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