
WEIGHT: 48 kg
Bust: 36
1 HOUR:130$
NIGHT: +80$
Services: Mistress, Toys, Face Sitting, Bondage, Role Play & Fantasy
I walk on the dike leading to the Gacholle Lighthouse and feel like I am walking without moving forward. The hours go by and the lighthouse still seems so far away. Yet I see it in the horizon, small tower rising to the sky, unmissable in the landscape. Here, it is flat. Mosaics of lagoons and immense and shallow sansouires extend around me. And in the distance, the sea.
The horizon as far as the eye can see. Distances are misleading in this kind of environment. Everything seems so close. And yet. The sky is full of strange black clouds. In the distance I can see a multitude of little white dots lounging on expanses of water shining in the late afternoon sun.
Groups of seagulls, ducks, Cattle egrets and other wading birds. Their songs heard for kilometers. A strong buzzing followed by a sting on my arm tells me that mosquitoes are out. It is late afternoon in Camargue and I am looking for Greater Flamingos. Regional nature park bordering the Mediterranean Sea, Camargue, located in Provence, is a flat wetland made of marshes, meadows and rice fields. Where wild animals, bulls, horses, humans, industries and migratory birds try to live together.
The Rhone, a great European river, with its source in Switzerland, flows into the Mediterranean Sea after a journey of kilometers shaping the Rhone delta otherwise known as Camargue. Forming a triangle of , hectares linking the cities of Arles, Grau-du-Roi and Fos-sur-Mer, Camargue presents an environment mixing wild mosaic of different environments hosting specific fauna and flora and artificialization landscapes modeled by human in order to master water. Subject to the vagaries of the climate, to the presence of the sea, to the level of the Rhone and to the vegetation, the landscapes of Camargue are constantly changing.
But it is the human presence and its exploitation, since the Middle Ages with the establishment of the first villages, that predominantly influences these transformations. Towards the middle of the 20th century, agricultural intensification through rice paddies, market gardening and industrialization led to the disappearance of many natural areas. Today fortunately almost the entire delta is protected.