Sédelle
The Sédelle is a river in the Creuse department, central France; it is a tributary of the river Creuse and a sub-affluent of the Loire.[1]
Sédelle | |
---|---|
near the Pont Charraud at Crozant | |
Physical characteristics | |
Mouth | |
• location | Creuse |
• coordinates | 46.3984°N 1.6189°E |
Length | 37.6 km (23.4 mi) |
Basin size | 250 km2 (97 sq mi) |
Discharge | |
• average | 2.89 m3/s (102 cu ft/s) (near Lafat) |
Basin features | |
Progression | Creuse→ Vienne→ Loire→ Atlantic Ocean |
Geography
It is 37.6 km (23.4 mi) long.[1] The river spring is located near Lizières. The river has a meandering path. It joins la Creuse near the lac de Chambon.
Towns
La Sédelle flows through the communes of Lizières, Saint-Priest-la-Feuille, La Souterraine, Saint-Agnant-de-Versillat, Saint-Germain-Beaupré, Saint-Léger-Bridereix, Sagnat, La Chapelle-Baloue, Lafat and Crozant.
Fish
La Sédelle is lush in wild trouts (truites farios), chubs, bleaks, pikes and zanders. Elle fait ainsi le bonheur des pêcheurs creusois.
Curiosities - Tourism
- La Souterraine, medieval town, 11th and 12th century church (tower from the 13th), with a crypt enclosing an old subterranean* Gallo-Roman sanctuary. Many middle-age and Renaissance houses.
- the name of the city
- The lac de Chambon : aquatic sporting activities; hiking; dam visit
- The Crozant school, inhoding landscape painters of the 19th and 20th centuries, near Crozant and Fresselines (a generic term), referring to those who sought inspiration on the riverbanks of la Creuse. In 1889, during a stay at Fresselines, Claude Monet carried out a first series on the confluent of the two Creuses. He made 23 canvas paintings in the valley.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/452775413509259265/796507687386218496/ErE9TXWWMAELw3Y.png
gollark: Hmm, apparently someone thought of it and it doesn't work, sad!
gollark: If websites can display images off the local disk with `file:///` URLs and the like, find image files on disk by randomly generating plausible image file names (lots are like `IMG_20210304.jpg` so quite guessable), and seeing if they load right.
gollark: That `<img>` thing gave me an interesting idea for a fingerprinting technique.
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