even the little bits of grass around the peaks in foreground could actually be used. I’m amazed how risky cows behaviour is regarding to the abyss, and goats somehow are just completely not afraid of heights at all and hop around on 400 meter cliffs like a walk in the park. So you can grow food (meat+milk) on mountain sides during summer
Comment on Is land inclination included in area calculation?
ricecake@sh.itjust.works 3 months ago“significant” being the keyword. :)
There’s clearly a slant, but you can see where it was a bit too much and so they added retaining walls to level things out.
In a place like this, you can tell what places are suitable for farming, which could be farmed with a little leveling, which are suitable for grazing, and which are just too steep for food.
They’re definitely not going to entirely level every place, but you also can’t grow food on the side of a mountain. :)
freebee@sh.itjust.works 3 months ago
ricecake@sh.itjust.works 3 months ago
Yup, it’s why grazers are so common in mountainous areas. It’s way easier to manage goats and cows in a mountain, with some fruit, hay and wheat fields to supplement down in the valleys than it is to reshape the steep areas to make them suitable for crops.
It’s why Switzerland has it’s own type of cheese, and the flattest parts of the US are predominantly known for “lots of corn”.To be clear though, the unusable areas I referred to were more the mountains in the background, or the nearly shear cliffs in the middle ground that the shepherd is unlikely to let the (perfectly willing) goats graze on, on account of needing to be able to get the goats later. :)
NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world 3 months ago
There’s clearly a slant, but you can see where it was a bit too much and so they added retaining walls to level things out.
I have seen farmers work on steeper slopes (not saying it would be easy…).
I would rather guess the purpose of these retaining walls is to slow down the soil erosion.
dmention7@lemm.ee 3 months ago
The photo of the terraced farming actually brings up an interesting point–in order to render those slopes usable for farming, terracing approximates the “flat” projection of the terrain anyways, so you end up with the same result. Buildings and any other usable structures follow the same rule: you can only build vertically, so the effective surface area is the same as the flat projection.