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In the beautiful, wooded hill landscape of the Haute-Vienne
(the country of the mountains and the barrage weirs) the Naturist camping
site "Lous Suais" is situated directly by a big
lake (La Maulde).
Here one can naturally swim dive, do windsurfing, fishing. The environment
is in the best way suitable for migrations and Mountain biking.
In only 30 km distant you find Limoges, whose porcelain is world famous.
Here one can visit the medieval quarter of the Boucherie as well as
numerous museums and architectural monuments.

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In next proximity (approx. 3 km) is the village Bujaleuf with a bar and a
restaurant. The medieval city St. Léonard de Noblat is appropriately 14
km far away from the camping site. There is also the next larger shopping
possibility.
At the very calm family site you will find everything which facilitates
the daily life and enables an exciting vacation: a multi-use room with
bar, daily freshly supplied bread, a rolling shop each morning, Pommes
frites.

Once a week a community meal takes place. Once per
week there is also a so-called "open stage", where the campers
can participate. Trips and other small activities and programs are offered
by the helpers of the place.
For the small ones there is a playground with bath possibilities.
On that 5.5 hectares you will find approximately 40 tents and same
caravans. Some completely equipped tents and caravans can be rented.
The place opens from 1 June to 15 September. Reservations during the season
in the center. Reservations outside of the season under Tel.: +31
(0)618052416.

TAI-CHI
For
thousands of people all over the world, the Ying Yang symbol represents
the ancient art of Tai Chi Chuan.
The words mean ‘Supreme ultimate fist’, but to a Chinese person ‘fist’
means much more than a clenched hand. To them it means the studies and
training associated with a martial art.
Although Tai Chi can be studied as a martial art, it is more often used
these days as a method of maintaining good physical and mental health, and
can be seen being practiced every morning in parks and other public places
all over China.
In Chinese culture Tai Chi is surrounded by legend, but recent research
places its creation at the end of the 18th century by the Chen family.
Later, in the 19th century the Yang family were accepted into the Tai-Chi
circle, and created their own style.
Over the years other styles have been added, notably the Wu, Sun and Hao
styles, but of them all the Yang style is the most popular and the most
widely practiced today.
The Tai Chi forms can seem a little strange, and consist of a series of
postures, each with its own name, linked together to form a continuous
chain of movements.
I’ve explained the meaning of the word chuan, but Chi is a little more
complicated. It could be translated as ‘internal energy’. Although not
recognised by western medicine, in China it is considered very important.
The Chinese believe that the body is covered by meridians that conduct the
chi to all parts of the body. When one of the channels is blocked the Chi
cannot flow and this makes the body susceptible to illness, but the
regular practice of Tai Chi, as well as being a good form of exercise that
anyone can do regardless of age, maintains the flow of Chi around the body
and helps to keep us healthy.
  

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