tv Handwerkskunst Deutsche Welle October 29, 2022 12:03pm-12:46pm CEST
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the region, on the other hand, a potential victory offered variables narrow would be, would be that the consolidation of their far rights in the country on a confirmation for his controversial why of doing politics. so this is a very important election, not just in brazil, lola or bars of arrows is, is very important also for latin america. because as i said, this is the largest democracy of the continent and also the main economy of the regional. so what happens in brazil has an impact in the whole continent and environmental essay, the outcome of brazil's election could decide the fate of the world's largest rain forest. amazon plays a crucial role in regulating the world's climate. a deforestation of amazon has sort under incumbent shire bull scenario, who has rolled back environmental protections. more fires are raging in the rain forest right now than in, over a decade. as farmers clear land for cultivation. often those fires earn out of control. armed with only a bucket molina recall liana was trying to save her home as the flames draw nearer
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. but her house is completely surrounded regarding the fires have been getting closer for days. the wind is especially scary. molina and her husband, wellington se they know who's responsible for this fire and brazil's amazon estate . it's the farmers who deliberately burned the jungle off. now the fire has reached us. deforestation of the amazon rain forest and brazil has increased by nearly 50 percent since last year. that's the highest rate of destruction in 15 years. according to the environmental n g o e amazon. in the neighboring state, the indigenous carol puna people are witnessing the devastation 1st hand. their land is under state protection, but every day loggers encroach on their land and chopped down the most valuable trees to buzzle the lockers a doing this so that later they can sell the logs legally,
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even though my view of it back soon to pick up this log level with tribal leader andre car. a puna is worried in recent years, these criminals have become increasingly ruthless and indigenous territories with other people here. they took away the best log schema and then said everything else on fire. so they couldn't find cattle here. the car up who no people live far away from the big cities and receive almost no support from the bull sanara government but h t that we are fighting for our rights to our land given but even in court instead of food. however, if congress continued plans, we can protect things to subordinate teachers, chartres will lose our loan, their goods b. s. as they had the,
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brazil's agricultural lobbyists have been trying to get such a law passed for months without success. so far back at melina and wellington's house, the fires are growing more threatening as the winds pick up her paper at 1st, only the dry grass was burning. now a few minutes later and everything is on fire, it will be weeks until it rains on the fires and the region retreat again. the niger area is struggling to contain an outbreak of cholera as it contains with its worst flooding in a decade. many of those forced from their homes by the floods have moved into temporary camps. some areas are conflict has already displaced 1000 healthcare facilities are overwhelmed by the influx of patients. i and tests are warning that outbreaks, waterborne diseases like cholera could become more common as flooding intensifies to, to climate change. dw correspondent lice who interested in the nigerian capital of
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boucher earlier. he told me how people at the epicenter of the outbreak and northeastern born of state are dealing with the situation. it is a very difficult tuition in most of this areas, especially in boredom hosted where over 10 local gutmann affected now from just 7 at the beginning of the month. because getting clean water is challenging. decide areas ravaged by vocal her for over a decade on the i just relocated back to the community to pick up their lives and be are confronted with this devastating flood which watches. so many grabs. so many pri, latrice to a door tight is contaminated. i'm getting clean water. it's not us easy on the health facilities, our d over stretch. so it's a very difficult situation for them. and you know, nigeria is
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a county where is f as in scarcity of health officials. some qualified have left the country. does that us, tim walking is difficult area to paused for any medical of shows to say, i want to go to the not is on walk dead on the few under on no private hospitals which couldn't help and support what that little government facilities established are doing. and we've spoken about how this color outbreak is being driven by the recent flooding. we do know that this more intense funding is linked to climate change. is there a debate in nigeria on how to tackle climate change? there is an ongoing serious debate in nigeria. some our do calling on the government to declare it of the emergency. then i just president just last week, give his minister 90 days to come up with
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a policy how to mitigate dis climate change, especially flood and what many people see it as a belated position because they havoc already happened. people already affected. maybe he is thinking of the next flood that might come because climate chancey, siri, ality, and the government has established an agency which is yet to go into action in nigeria. but the reality is dot beside flawed in nigeria is present desertification, garlic erosion, and so many adapt problems associated with climate change. so the government is insistent that they had been down on best to see that the control this what the people are saying, we have not seen much. and we need to see what we more because this climate change is already effect in us. not only flawed but so many issues like that as going to
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be fear of foot castillo this year. because um, after the flood, most of the rice plantations were washed out completely and even affect the grins that had been produced on nigeria close ha bought us for quite a long time to kinda law. we must produced what we're going to it within the country. thank you so much for that update our course on it. oh, i so address let's bring you up to speed now with some of the other stories making news around the world's authorities in the philippines. a tropical storm. now guy has killed at least 45 people. flash floods and landslides have left and dozens of others injured or missing. scientists have warned that typhoons are becoming more powerful as the world gets warmer because of climate change. since tens of thousands of people brave the rain and downtown tie, pay for the 20th tie $1.00 pride parade in 2019 taiwan became the 1st country in
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asia to legalize same sex marriage. and the event aims to highlight the progress of l. g. b, c, q plus rights in taiwan. while the united nations, as it is increasingly concerned about reports of death in iran, amid continued anti government protest, thousands have been demonstrating across the country for more than a month. only the death of 22 year old gina law. i mean, she died in custody after being arrested by the so called morality police, or allegedly incorrectly worried for head guard. your organization around human rights says that more than 250 people have been killed in the crackdown malesky is a commentator on politics in iran and conduct research into public attitudes there . earlier he told me the anti government protest we're seeing have much broader public support and ever before. yes, i think that it is more than 40 days that we can see the streets our people are on
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the streets and also it seems on estoppel. and we should consider that every groups of people are tired of the situation. so we can see from all demography groups and all the regions in the country, you know that different ages, different levels of education. so they are all against the regime. our survey results showed that this is not just to say that for instance, highly educated or younger generation just are against the regime. so we could see that regarding the compulsive job regarding the conceptual concept off the islamic regime. all the friend groups are against that. and that's why we can see the majority of about 80 percent against the region. so those numbers now on the streets, and i think that they consider that if they want to leave the streets, then maybe they will face against what they face that are there. ways of protest all are past years. we know that they did the november 2019 and so in that a day a start, they wanted to fight until the end to we. and so you think it's broader public
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support from different social groups for these protests, of course it began as mainly women led it. is it safe to say it's not purely a feminist movement anymore? yes, this is, this is the receipt of a in fact have a very important role. and so that can also be a job which is connected to them at the main issue for women. a call the airline wall of the summit to public as a job one sec. so that's why we see that it's very important to consider that that was the, initiate sion of the process. on the other hand, they should consider that as our numbers showed that only 15 percent of iranians that support these compulsory. so you see that how iranians are tired of all these things over the past 40 days. and so at considering that our number's also for 2020 so that we deal with such low numbers and support based on your figure is why is it
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so important to the iranian government that women where the job we can say that this is a kind of for the da p, r a, it's some resumes ideology and they think that if they just surrender 40 demand, then maybe they have to accept more. and this is something that i also, i think the leader of some of these, you mentioned. and so on the other hand, they know that this is not just the issue of the job. and so did the stomach regime is somehow in the phase of collapse and the people don't want it. it's a national community is not happy with all things that this regime that doesn't mean that the region. so i think that this is the kind of issue of a life and death for them. and it's very, very briefly before we go, do you think the authorities will offer any reforms to the protesters that may be may be? but i think that people know that the regime is
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a lying and the ceiling. so moral where people want. so changing the regime and the replacing get you the kind of sick log democracy as our numbers. so. and so in that way, i think this is not that that, that even people would accept such as such a kind of a reformer, let's say suggestion or something like that. okay, thank you so much. i'm afraid. that's all we have time for on this show. thank you tom. i'm a lucky at tell by university for joining attorneys update at this hour. thanks so much for watching. ah, her, i'm skim that. i want the tags and in the end is a meet you on what i wanted to you anymore. we will send you back. are you familiar with this reliance on the what's your story.
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ready ready i was women, especially victims of vine and seen and i'm some take part and send us your story. we are trying always to understand this new culture. so you are not a visitor, not a guess. you want to become a citizen in phil migrants, your platform for reliable information. when will the leaning tower of pisa collapse? many world famous monuments are at risk. you to climate change war and negligence. but with the help of 3 d scans, drones and a i, we can save these eye clinic buildings, at least virtually how it works. that's our topic on ship today. ah.
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having digital backups comes in handy like of your diploma or your favorite. todos the same is true for historic buildings that have deteriorated over the years like mexico cities famous metropolitan cathedral, which has been damaged by several earthquakes. luckily it's 3 d model is earthquake proof. that's also a detailed 3 d model of the gateway of india and moon by which has been eroded by sea water. but it's estimated at so far, only about 15 percent of the world's casual heritage has been digitally preserved by now. ukraine's cause will have it. it is especially at risk, it's not only buildings and gods as that in danger, but all kinds of online archives of things like paintings and lid, which to me, in ukraine, russian bombs are not only killing people and estimating homes and infrastructure, they're destroying cultural heritage too. right now,
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everything's at risk. everything from physical museum collections to records of library holdings, to servers with web sites. at the end of the day, the internet is as physical as, as anything else that depends on servers that have to be connected to power and connected to cables. and those servers are at risk of being destroyed. if servers are destroyed, digital backups of art and other records are lost to. that's why quin number ski and a group of librarians researchers and programmers join forces to start suture saving ukrainian cultural heritage online. soon after the russian attack suture volunteers began archiving as much as possible, relying on what they could find from ukrainian cultural institutions online. we're trying to, to capture those websites with everything that's on them. any pdf, any image, any 3 d model or, or walkthrough. we're trying to capture a version of,
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of all of it so that, that can be a, you know, something that is safe and outside the country. ah, some tech companies are supporting search by providing servers in storage for free . so far, the group has saved more than 30 terabytes of content from over 3500 websites. more than 1300 volunteers helped with the task. sometimes it's not even like a firefighter squad, it's, it's more like, you know, neighbors with water buckets. you know, many of us had not really done any work on web archiving before this year on quinn, dombrowski hope so, chose archive will never actually be needed. we, we don't actually want these to be useful if they're useful it's, it's a sign that something terrible has happened in terms of the preservation of, of cultural heritage. the great thing about this project, anyone can pitch him. you can learn more at social dot org. sometimes doing your part to digitally preserved cultural heritage is simple. other times more expertise
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is needed. ah, the great wall of china is the world's longest manmade structure. it's more than 20000 kilometers long. over 2000 years old and in desperate need of repair draws are used to survey ports of the wall that are difficult to access. after filming the wall of close, the data is then used to create 3 d models. a i is then used to scan these models, identified the damage, unplug the necessary repairs, the non profits. cy arc specializes in 3 d laser scans of endangered cultural sites . here's how it works. the laser scanner sensors pulses of light through by measuring how long it takes for the lights to be reflected to our ferry surfaces. it's possible to determine the size and surface material of objects. this method is called lighter. another technique that's used as photo grammar tree,
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where overlapping photos are combined to create extremely realistic. in 3 d models . anyone can check out the scans on google's arts and culture platform, or download the datasets on open heritage. 3 d. digital technology has become critical in reconstructing destroyed buildings. in august 2015, the temple of balcony and palmera syria was reduced to rubble by the islamic state . terrorist group. however, back in the 1950s, swiss archeologist to po colors, excavated undocumented, the temple. the information you collected back then made it's possible to create a virtual reality image and 3 d model, or the temple of bounce. yameen is supposed to be rebuilt, just like pun mirrors, arch of triumph, which was also destroyed by ins. using digital muddles. robots built
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a smaller replica of the archway which has been exhibited in several cities. hopefully, the arch of triumph can one day return to its original location in syria. in 2019 of fire destroyed large parts of the natural dom cathedral. the incident shot france and people worldwide did this mean one of the most iconic landmarks in paris was lost forever. fortunately, not its cowardly being restored, which would be original. thanks and part of this man, andrew tell him. no tra, dom was a lifelong passion for andrew talon here. the belgian born art historian is walking around the 850 year old cathedral before the fire. he was recording a $360.00 degree video, which is why the image looks a bit distorted. mother, interesting detail to see about this is
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a bit of lead that was often used as a joint between edge betted elements such as this talon used laser scanning technology to map no to them. he collected more than $1000000000.00 data points, which he then linked to photos of the scanned areas. andrew became fascinated with the cathedral from a very young age. his work there in trying to create a global laser survey. that is really what makes his work stand out there. so we are still reading the benefits of that effort from 2010 in 2012. he scans not as much as i'm, you know, but it does, since it's not hundreds of cathedrals from sweden to spain not turned on was i think, a crown jewel on a lot of ways. and andrew talon did not live to see exactly how important his scans would turn out to be several months before the fire destroyed notre dams. roof inspire,
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he died of cancer. part of the reconstruction plan is based on talent work. it is one of several records that we have of the pre fire state of neutral. and this is of course, critically important as the decision was made to restore the building identical, you know, to damage restoration, teen combine talents, models with additional scans resulting in this impressive 3 d model. you square developer, autodesk provides a cloud based data platform, which gives all the stakeholders involved in reconstruction, access to the latest records that makes it easier to plan construction, work like calculating how many oak trees need to be felled to replace no 2 dimes fire frances determined to restore the cathedral, true to its original design,
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the one that andrew talon and his team mapped before the fire, thus safeguarding its future. there are many ways in which cultural heritage can be endangered. one prominent example art stolen by colonizers, the kenya based non profit african digital heritage, is working to digitize these treasures. and we frame how this history is documented . yet another advantage of digital copies, cultural heritage can be showcase to a global audience online. ah, artifacts from african history? ideally, you might see them in person in the museum collection, but kenyan historian, child diana, minor, once more, world wide accessibility, we decide for many reasons, one of the primary ones being access enabling audiences practitioners be such as to access materials remotely, to access material from different countries, you know,
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you don't have to be in kenya to access cultural heritage. another reason why we digitize is to preserve the material, the digital heritage specialist trains museum staff across kenya. the teams have a huge task ahead of them. digitizing tens of thousands of books, papers and photos. some of them hundreds of years old. i lot of the time when i'm training on digitization, i would say about the process of digitization is not about just sticking the photograph. it's about the decisions that you make before you take this photograph . the 1st step is inspection and selection. not everything can be digitized choosing the right to objects is also a way of writing history. when we are digitizing,
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do we still defeat the theme? colonial kind of tom. we still repeat the ways in which our people are objects i describe or is this an opportunity to say ok, let change how things are described. ah, one example. the mama comes in the 1950s. the british army and colonists detained many canyons and forced labor comes using a kind of material. the african digital heritage, non profits has created a 3 d scans of the country. we've been going out into the field documenting this site in that kind of i would say akila gina sands to see what structure still exist as well as contextualizing this tangible heritage, this tangible metal buildings in land to people as memories and people stories digitizing african cultural heritage is a way to re examine, contextualize, and preserve this history and culture in i feel
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that they walk back, read, going to digitize here. see is also about connecting time. we are connecting the past the present. and in this very act we are shipping future. 7 thanks to digitization, it's possible to safeguard casual heritage for generations to come. but 3 d models shouldn't be regarded as mere replacements or backups of the originals. instead, there a chance for people across the globe to get to know cultural sides, they otherwise may have never seen was your take? can monuments really be capital on the screen? or do you need to physically be there to get the full experience? let us know what do you think as offer now? bye bye. ah ah.
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ah. today i'm going to take you on a trip along to section wine route, from placement to mason. right winery denise says it all. 61 field kilometers. you just have to come to the 2nd one route. it's a small wine region, but it's got a lot of history and culture. just checking on why i have been threatened has been beaten. i have been sick astray did because we tried to to show dory of face of mafia all over the world. environmentalists are in danger. the enemy, roofless corporations corrupted government agencies and criminal cartels.
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targeted environmentalists in danger. in 30 minutes, w. these places in europe are smashing all the records, stepped into a bold adventure. it's the treasure map for modern globetrotters. discover some of you up to record breaking sites on google maps, youtube and now also in book form ah, ah, ah. with traced and on the elbow river, it's early in the morning and the old town is only just beginning to stir, waiting for the 1st tourists. you could spend days
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just going through the churches and museums. mm. mm. but i've got other plants. i have a steamship waiting, one from drake. since white fleet. today, i'm going to take you on a trip along the saxon wine route, right? wine root, the name says it all, and one of those ships down there is going to take me quite comfortably into the vineyards, starting here in preston via got a boil all the way up to the town of mason. my day includes a sparkling wine to her at buck about castle. ah, we visit the irish spoken mason. the cradle of saxony. at my colleague, nicholas furnished has sent us a travel report from spits, burden. ah ah the white fleet
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and dressed and still as 9 historic paddled steamers. ah these days the ship stopped. vian steams along the saxon wind route. one last look at jason's skyline. and then it gets rustic. ah! after about an hour i go ashore in without a boil, the city is the center of the sex and wine root. ready it is one of the smallest and northern most wind growing areas in germany. ready the steep slopes, the small palaces and the dry stone walls, that's what the region is known for. most of the wind produced here is served and consumed locally. the oldest winery in
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saxony is the whole for loose knits. it used to belong to the saxon electors and the most famous of them august, as the strong is said to have celebrated lavish wine gallows. here to day, organic winds are produced on the hoof loose knits which you can taste on the terrace time for a 1st class and the 1st jet blue. hello. hello. you have already prepared something. what do we drink? let's get the let's to clean the requests. welcome drop is a trevino. what is that? this is a wine, great. that's been grown here for centuries to the best of hell. he can only offer organic why? why, why english? so the 1st of las nits is the 1st and only organic vineyard in the former east germany would the decision to do this was made immediately after the wolf fell.
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we'd had pretty bad experiences with the pesticides used during these german years . what we wanted to do things different long as they did outside and with person feeling. so it was natural for us to occupy this nation or in dialogue and a half less. next is doing quite well to fill them with guns, good. divine, the wine that is produced here in saxony, can i buy it anywhere? sure, this is on it. my. it's available over the internet. most vineyards have an online order service that most of the sacs and wine is drunk here in saxony. ah, boy, of that cause. so the sexton by this'll take share of germany's totaled wine production comes to justice 0.2 percent, and a 1000000 unto from new komatsu by a put send to us. i chose how little it is been a lot more wine is drunk in saxony than grows here. i feel vexed if there are many stories about august, not a strong, he said to have drunk 3 leaders of wine daily. is that correct? as a hats vibe as well and said that he drank 2 to 3 bottles a day on good days in cheerful company. it might have been as many as 6 or 7. yes.
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me that he drank excessively or for both as i hop on the but compared to his father, johan gale. the 3rd who was a real drinker, augustina was fairly moderate. well on and a double instrument, relative, musical, think of leveling moderating. don't eat to a health ah, for section elector love the beautiful things, not only wine and women, but also pump and splendor in every form. he has made the least in what it is today . a pearl of the barrack, and here are the highlights. ah 300 years ago, augustus the strong ruled as prince elector of saxony and king of poland. he brought artists and architects to his court. he had seen and marvelled at the splendors of courts in france and italy as
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a young man and invested great sums to transform the sleepy dresden into a european class metropolis of the arts. he had that sphinx palace built, for instance, in this sprawling complex. the prince celebrated lavish, gallus court balls and masquerades that often went on for days. today that spring a houses several collections started or greatly expanded by august. as the strong one is the old master's picture gallery among the masterpieces to be seen here are raphael sistine madonna, with its world famous details. the collection focuses on great works from the 15th to the 18th centuries. from titian to rembrandt. that singer hosts great names of art history, much to augustus the strong's credit. the prince elector also decreed
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a thorough renovation for the dresden castle. he had the state apartments installed now after being closed for over 70 years. they've reopened to the public . after world war 2 bombing, the dresden castle was just a shell. reconstruction only began piece by piece in 1986. the painstaking restoration of the state apartments is yet another phase and a long process. the dresden armory started by saxon dukes and electors has been open to the public since 2013 incidentally, augustus the strong was not quite as good a commander in war time as he wasn't architect or art collector. his treasure chamber. the green vault sparkles with jewels and precious gemstones augustus the strong himself put them on public display. what good his wealth and
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fine taste and art without some one to admire it. among the most spectacular pieces is the royal household of delhi, encrusted with nearly 6000 diamonds. originally, it cost some $60000.00, which took august is 5 years to pay off. finally, we come to the residence, frown. key of august is the strong lived to see its cornerstone laid but not its completion. this church of our lady, too, was consumed by the flames of the 2nd world war bombing. it was only reconstructed after germany's re unification. the frau and kisha with its slender almost floating dome is a masterpiece of baroque architecture. augustus the strong would certainly have liked it. ah, now we go up to the winery called golden of og. the golden wing of god. a boy. hello. hello lucas. it's nice to have you here at the golden wagon before we go to
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ride back. thomas toilet is an innkeeper tour guide and hobby vintner. he climbs this staircase many times a week. he owns a little vineyard next to the golden wagon. so out of breath. no, no, no, i'm in good shape. this it isn't. keeps me fit. the long climb is rewarded with a spectacular view of the alba valley. on clear days he can see all the way from the golden wagon to dressed an ent, the czech republic. by october, most of the grapes have already been gathered. only a few bunches remain on the vines. thomas corbett says about 80 percent of all vintners in saxony. do it as a hobby. like he does. as a boy, he worked in his uncle's vineyard and later took it over. the work is tiring, but the wine is delightful.
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all these walls are they just ornamental or do they serve a purpose for hunting in thick tim allens and can walls are very important. facts and he's very far north for a wine region and we've got some problems with climate and him a wall like this, soaks up the sun all day and stores heat like an oven and then radiated backwards as we, i'm a little so watson is there a difference between wine growing in east germany 30 years ago and today as before went that i said john and yet in denying back not that much has changed about the vineyard. wanted to stay. the steep slopes in particular, are still kept up by the hobby vintners. as for the commercial wineries down here produce their premium winds, their top quality winds up on the slopes as well. of course it's to my knowledge, but the hobby vintners are the ones who sweat and strained to keep these walls built up. though with state financial support and those are will do that. but basically it's very demanding work and global established things all by who says you're all be vintner. jenna ryan. not we found a smart solution in saxony, but we work smaller areas not as many binds, but put all the more love into it. nissan was having,
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are you looked down on by the professional wine growers as the thing is, i just would as if the pope is in the professional wine growers, are glad to have the hobby vintners working to keep the countryside in shape by peoples that they would not be able to handle it economically, such di the steep slopes, couldn't be maintained without a hobby vent nurses, and if the vineyards fell into ruin, the tourists wouldn't come home and the commercial wineries wouldn't be able to sell their wines any more. i'd never cove cummins on, did he have to work daily or are there rest periods and i what happens for example in winter i lost his much been vinto. that hasn't been though still in the winter, the vines have to be pruned and the trellises repaired was marked by the window when others meanest. of course, if it's minus 20 degrees celsius out and snows on the ground, that's when you enjoy your wine. i said you hobbies, insolent of aches, but you have to have the time that's will to bow on good. i skipped. they say a vine wants to see it master 17 times, apes, dockside house. but there are different views on how to spread those around a year. dug up to those feet by them. if you know how many vines are you,
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the master for 830. and these 830 vines will make 830 bottles of wine. and i'll try one of them. so was a harvest, right? i brought you a flavor, full drop from the golden wagon and try it, hoop yama. it's was to visit the solars. thank you for waiting fruit. does that remind me off? maybe pineapple that so i lost. ah yes. yeah. very good luck in that. the pineapple no to quite pronounced. am i wine connoisseur? mine cannot blend because you're learning. i'm impressed. it has a taste greg was is that's the most important thing. charitable is getting to know the country and it's people tasting typical food and typical drinks . that's very important for a lot of people when it comes to traveling. some people also need a little bit of action me, for example, or our view xena moorlick,
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a jewel of sexton, these vignettes, it's becca bob castle named after the count, who had it built around 1730. today, it's the location of the saxon state vignette. it produces wine both sparkling at none and offers tours and overnight stays. i've sampled several winds to day. now i choose a sparkling wine tour. it begins with beginnings, of course,
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and to look back at the castles history in your art zone, that's over 190 years ago, in 1836 saxon wine, gro, as had the idea to bring the bubbly beverage to saxony, north, that was champagne at the time a trend in you drink a french cell, a master brought the art of making, sparkling wine from champagne year to the elbow, hillsides all my life. ah, the tour proceeds to the winery the various types of wine age in enormous tanks, the cellar master combined them to produce sparkling wine did for the game, right. his compliment each other very nicely laced lincoln and pino bronco together to create our classic bottle. fermented sparkling winds in the tradition of augustus the strong and our cafe through the base wine ages over several years. then yeast is added for the alcoholic fermentation makella, myself.
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