of them. says that once along our central street there grew a large, slender forest, as we say, stryzhnevsme, strigin, the second: the legend tells us that there was one farm here, on this farm the owners sheared sheep, and people called them strigali, that’s where the name strigin came from. another legend says that the road that now goes to there was no birch tree before, it followed the cemeteries through yaselda and through the swamp. this road was called gad. and once upon a time , thieves crossed the people who were traveling on sundays and partially robbed these people, and they said that they were cutting their hair there, and such legends exist about the names of our villages. our strigin village is conventionally divided into three parts: beaver, strigin zaseki. bobrovaya is novskaya street, there are many canals along the street, beavers live on these canals, that’s why it’s bobrovaya. zaseki - the word itself says that this is a defensive line, cut, a wide ditch was dug, trees were brought there, pointed, with their ends up , and it was a defensive line, so berezovskaya street