Subject: Re: markers on river banks
Date: Aug 01, 2001 @ 21:23
Author: Peter Smaardijk ("Peter Smaardijk" <smaardijk@...>)
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The Heringsbosch case is an older demarcation. They didn't put metal
plates in roads like they do nowadays, because the road surface back
then was not as it is today. Stones and pillars was the fashion back
then.

Peter S.

--- In BoundaryPoint@y..., Mats Hessman <blofeld_es@y...> wrote:
> >The "neutral roads" along denl are a bit like rivers, too, with
the
> >boundary marker pairs on both side of them. I think in these cases
> >the boundary follows the middle of the road, but you don't want to
> >but your markers there, of course.
>
> About markers in the middle of the road: Those of you who are
planning
> to visit Büsingen and are interested in boundary markers should not
miss
> the markers numbers 6, 122 and 123. The two latter have been shown
> in this group (I think), and the first is rahter new; a metal plate
> put in the middle of the road in 1977, if I remember correctly.
>
> Mats