Daily life at Les Perrats can be sketched from traces: stone tools shaped into microliths, fragmented bone points, and the charcoal signatures of small hearths. These remains suggest groups organized around foraging zones rather than large villages. People likely moved between riverine fishing spots, wooded hunting grounds, and seasonal plant-gathering locations, creating a rhythm of mobility tuned to fish runs and mast cycles.
Material culture implies tasks divided across activities — tool production, hide working, and food processing — often undertaken in semi-sheltered hearth clusters. Personal adornment is poorly represented at this small site, but regional Mesolithic assemblages include pierced shells and bone beads, hinting at social expression through ornaments. Social groups were probably small, kin-based bands, flexible in membership and alliances, with knowledge transmitted through intimate contact networks. Children learned craft skills by observation; specialists may have existed for tool production in places where high-quality flint was available.
Archaeobotanical and zooarchaeological data are limited at Les Perrats specifically, so reconstructions rely on analogies with nearby Mesolithic sites. This means everyday routines should be viewed as informed hypotheses that fit both the material traces and the seasonal ecology of SW France.