So life in the countryside seems a little bit boring or compliacted. What are the pluses and minuses of living in a country? What i would prefer and why? I think that life in the country is most interesting in summer, because you can peacefully enjoy the nature in your own garden. In the city it is impossible. In the country you almost never can't be in a situation, that there is nothing to do. You will always find new activities, because you need to take care of the yard, irrigate glasshouses and flowers, dig and etcetera. These activities are not minuses at all, but just keep you rather in action, that you don't get too comfortable, so it is good for you too. Over the years it can be tiring, but it is already a habit and your own work is always good to enjoy. I think that if people, who are lived for many years in the country will move in the city, will feel that they are still missing something.
286.Immaculate veatu, laitmatu 287.Impact to environment mõju keskkonnale 288.Inelegant- maitsetu, ebaelegantne 289.Infiltrate sisse tungima 290.Influence on design mõju disainile 291.Informal vabakujuline 292.inlet - sissepääs 293.Interior- sisemaa, siseruum 294.Intervention sekkumine 295.Invaluable hindamatu 296.Inverted application pööratud rakendus 297.Involve managing sisaldab haldamist/juhtumist 298.irrigate niisutama 299.Irrigation - kastmine K 300.Kiosk- paviljon, suvemaja L 301.Labor-intensive - töömahukas 302.Labourers- tööline 303.Laden with salt- soolast koormatud 304.land area- maa-ala 305.Landscape gardening maastiku kujundamine 306.Landscape specialist- maastiku spetsialist 307.Large leafed- suureleheline 308.Lattice- võre 309.Lawn- muru 310.Layout- asetus, paigutus 311.Leaking lekib 312
Elias Mountains, an extension of the Cordillera stretching north into the Yukon and Alaska. The highest point in Canada, mount Logan, rises amid a huge icefield in the southwest corner of Yukon, the largest icecap south of the Arctic Circle. The British Columbia interior varies from alpine snowfields to deep valleys where desert-like conditions prevail. On the leeward side of the mountains, for example, a rain-shadow effect is created, forcing Okanagan Valley farmers to irrigate their orchards and vineyards. The Interior Plains - The Prairies To drive across the Prairies is to see endless fields of wheat and canola ripening under a sky that seems to go on forever. The plains of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba are among the richest grain-producing regions in the world. Yet even here are surprises. If you leave the road at Brooks, Alberta, and drive north, you descend into the Red Deer River valley. Here, in desert-like conditions, water and wind have