[VideoView]

Albert Brecher

Rhizome dig
interviewer:
Ruth Deutschmann
photography:
Benjamin Epp
copyright location:
Grinzens
date of recording:
2008-07-07
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1935
transcription:
From whom did you learn all this? Yes, from my father. When we went into the mountains, for example, as we have often dug trees. Because you used the tree as well as sticks of firewood. And yes, the sticks are a much better firewood than the parent itself, bituminous or much harder. And there we have to on a page - whichever is where the fallen Bam, where he bent - for example, if he had fallen down the valley or would you cut off the uphill root. Excavated, cut off the root, that he had no more uphill. And the downhill side, as you have above attached a rope high up on Bam, and has bent the tree. And when he hung up so that he had more weight to the top, then you have him pulled up and chopped off the lower roots. And if the tree has turned the whole weight of the stick then, afterwards so the roots have become yet more freely. And you can easily cut off herauswühlen or cut. It has been chopped off by the roots, which is not quite well, was a strong root. After they have been removed. Then they just rolled down.