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Notes from the Road
Aurélie Peters writes under the pen name L'Inconnue Célèbre.
A writer, landscape designer, and wanderer of Mediterranean roads, she spends her time exploring wild ecosystems, forgotten places, and the invisible threads that connect landscapes, stories, and people.
This journal brings together essays, travel notes, eco-landscaping insights, biodiversity, fantasy fiction, and reflections inspired by the wisdom of nature.
Consider it a collection of field notes from a life lived between gardens, books, and the open road.



How to Turn Your Garden Into a Living Ecosystem
A practical guide to creating biodiversity, resilience, beauty and life at home For many people, gardening begins with a simple question: "What should I plant here?" But nature asks a different question. "What already lives here?" A thriving ecosystem is not created by adding more plants. It emerges when water, soil, insects, birds, fungi, trees and humans begin supporting one another. The good news is that you do not need a large property, a nature reserve or a huge budget t
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What Is Eco-Landscaping?
Designing Gardens as Living Ecosystems For many people, landscaping begins with a simple question: "What should we plant here?" But ecological landscaping starts somewhere entirely different. It asks: "How does this place already work?" Before choosing a single plant, eco-landscaping looks at water, wind, soil, biodiversity, topography, sunlight, wildlife, local history and the invisible relationships that already exist within a landscape. Because a garden is never an isolate
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What Nature Teaches Us About Control and Domination
Human beings have spent centuries trying to control the world. Control the land. Control the climate. Control the economy. Control the body. Control uncertainty. Control one another. And yet, despite all our technological sophistication, many people have never felt more powerless. Perhaps because there is a paradox hidden inside control: the more a system tries to control everything, the more fragile it often becomes. Nature understood this long before we did. Nature does not
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What Nature Might Say About Feminism
Few subjects generate as much debate today as feminism. And perhaps that is understandable. For centuries, women were often excluded from spaces of power, recognition and decision-making. The desire for equality is neither surprising nor unreasonable. But when I look at nature, I sometimes wonder if the conversation might begin somewhere else entirely. Not with power. Not with status. Not with competition. But with value. Because nature seems to measure value very differently
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What Nature Teaches Us About Healing
When people are overwhelmed, exhausted, grieving or lost, they often do something instinctive. They go to nature. A forest. A garden. A coastline. A mountain. An olive grove. A quiet path where nobody expects anything from them. And perhaps the most important question is not whether nature heals us. Perhaps the question is: Why? Why do we feel different after an hour beneath trees? Why does our breathing slow down? Why does the mind become quieter? Why do so many people find
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What Nature Teaches Us About Wealth
If an alien arrived on Earth and tried to understand human civilization, they might conclude that wealth is our highest aspiration. We spend enormous amounts of time pursuing it. Protecting it. Growing it. Comparing it. Worrying about it. And yet, despite unprecedented levels of material abundance, many people still feel poor. Poor in time. Poor in energy. Poor in meaning. Poor in connection. Poor in beauty. Poor in peace. Perhaps because nature defines wealth very differentl
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Looking for a Landscape Designer on the Riviera?
More than a garden renovation — a philosophy of living Many people today are searching for a beautiful Mediterranean garden. But often, what they are truly searching for is something much deeper. A place that feels alive. A place that breathes. A place that reconnects them to something ancient they cannot fully explain. Perhaps this is why, despite all our obsession with modernity, we remain endlessly fascinated by ancient civilizations: Greece. Egypt. Old Ligurian terraces.
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The Beodo, Bordighera
Above the sea of Bordighera Alta, there is an old path that still remembers how to walk slowly. The Beodo. A narrow ribbon of stone and silence crossing olive groves, dry walls, fig trees, and forgotten gardens leaning toward the light. Long before tourists searched for sunsets or villas learned the price of their view, water already travelled here. Patiently. Through ancient irrigation channels built by hands that understood that survival in Mediterranean lands was always a
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Inner Garden
There are beings made for cliffs. They love storms, sea spray, love stories that shatter windows, and winds strong enough to uproot everything in their path. And then there are those who resemble hidden gardens nestled in the Mediterranean hills. Silent gardens. Protected by a few tired cypress trees. With white stones still warm from the day’s sun. Wild herbs growing between old walls. The scent of rosemary rising softly into the evening air. Places that do not love extremes
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Jardin Exotique Pallanca (Bordighera, Italie)
Poésie sur le jardin de Pallanca à Bordighera, Italie
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