We spent a fascinating evening a long year ago at Le Panier d'Alice in La Celle Guenand, at a réunion organised by the Association Nomade "Le Champ des Livres". The president of the Friends of the Grand Pressigny Château Museum, Mr. Michel Geslin, brought a sample of his personal collection of prehistoric stone tools, many of them collected by his grandfather, along with a box of modern tools and devices, and he invited those present to match the old with the new. It has led us to become Amis de la Museé ourselves.
M.Geslin is holding a 'chunk' of fossil wood that someone brought along. |
The coffee grinder and the mill wheel dressing hammer are 'together'... from time to time the quern and its tool needed to be re-dressed... the tool for that is under the coffee grinder handle. |
The hammer here is similar to the first post on this blog... the similarity of these tools is wonderful. |
The missing picture... the 'lighter' is the best in my opinion! |
In the first picture... the stone sphere, smooth and polished, was used for grinding grain, and another stone sphere, with a knobbly surface, was used to roughen the surface of the millstones and the grinder once they became too smooth.
We all also had the opportunity to bring along our own "finds".
One of our flakes proved to be a waste fragment from the production of a Grand Pressigny "livre de beurre".
Our "Swiss army flint" was indeed a multi-use tool with different man-made edges and notches and we had found an arrowhead. Not one of the beautiful classic "arrow pointer" shape, but an arrowhead just the same. More about these in following posts...
Mr. Geslin holds these and other talks quite regularly, so if you see one advertised, we recommend a visit.
4 comments:
The similarities between the ancient and the modern are striking (pun intended).
When you think of the gaps in time when we've re-invented the wheel!! What goes around.... comes around.
We passed the sign for the museum several times during our last visit - but somehow never made it inside. It's on our list of things to do !!
I take it you mean the Tool & Craft museum at La Celle Geunand... not the Chateau above you!?
Yes... it is well worth the visit... and the doorman/guide is very knowledgeable.
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