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Category Archives: Country

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Tuesday Night Music Club

Blasdale Home Posted on September 4, 2012 by SteveSeptember 3, 2014

Another lovely  dry and hot day idling in the Marais region of France. Went for a cycle ride with Mikie on a circuit route  to Damvix and back. Spotted a few Dragons flying around.  Rosemary and Linda headed off to Coulon and visited a very good museum all about life on the Marsh.  Rosemary had headphones with an English translation of a film about the history of the Marais.  Main commentator had a Welsh accent of which Rosemary much approved.

The night was a disturbed night.  The owl in the roof space decided to become a noisy owl, and proceeded to make a sound like crunching bones.  I know owls don’t have molars, so really can’t at all be sure what it was up to.  Rosemary flushing the loo at 3 am elicited a hiss of protest from the resident.

Posted in France | Tagged Arcais, Coulon, Damvix, France, Marais | Leave a reply

Monday Monday so good to me

Blasdale Home Posted on September 3, 2012 by SteveSeptember 4, 2012

Linda, Rosemary and I set off for a cycle ride, cycles prepared, seat lowered for Rosemary, and tyres pumped up and off we set.  Three hundred yards down the road there was an explosion like a gun, Linda was horrified the neighbour was out shooting rabbits.  Nope, it was the inner tube of Rosemary’s bike bursting.  Quick walk back to the house and left Rosemary behind, and off we went again.  Did a quick circuit along the dykes and through the fields.  Little wildlife to be seen.  One escaping bull calf, and a dead Coypu on a bridge. 

Back at the ranch lunch was prepared and then we were off to Surgeres.  Surgeres is apparently the centre of the dairy industry of the region.  Even butter labelled Surgeres can be found in the supermarket.  There is an citadel in the centre, but little remains other than part of the fortified wall, a church and a tower.  We took an English guide leaflet from the tourist office. This leaflet provided much light entertainment and brain exercise, but we discovered Surgeres was the centre of the diary industry.  We suggested Mike and Linda set up a tourist guide translation company.  A beer at a local cafe, where the waitress was a Brit heading back home to start her University course at Cardiff.

Some supper shopping and then home for wine, and some manual labour podding  Linda’s white bean harvest.  This continued while the pizza dough base rose   Finished the evening making and consuming pizza and red wine. while reminiscing on the long lost colleagues from the Walker era.

Posted in France | Tagged Arcais, Coypu, France, Surgeres, Walker | Leave a reply

Lazing on a sunny afternoon in the summertime

Blasdale Home Posted on September 2, 2012 by SteveSeptember 3, 2012

Not a sunny day, but warm, with little wind and no rain, almost what the doctor ordered. Lazy day, ate our pain au raisins from the supermarket. I accessed the Internet, emailed, blogged etc, while Linda & R went off to view L’s vegetable and flower potâge. Mike had to take cycling clients to the airport in La Rochelle. Rosemary, Linda and I went out to a vide grenier (aka car boot) in a nearby village. En route, the petrol light came on, but it was easy to fill up at the supermarket under Linda’s expert tuition. She said how the government had reduced the price per litre by 5 cents, to try and boost the economy.

The boot sale was depressingly large and every stall had to be examined. But fairly early on, lunch was purchased, sausage and frites and a glass of rosé. We sat at a table with a French couple, with whom Linda chatted and who had done well buying clothes for their grandchildren. It was an all-day event; it was even open during the French lunch time period. Not to miss their lunch, many of the car booters were sat around groaning tables behind their pitch, reluctantly getting up to deal with a passing purchaser. There was entertainment with some youths playing English rock songs. They did break for lunch. Rosemary actually made a couple of purchases, a roundish shaped Ricard water bottle and an old French linen shirt come nightie.

Back at the gîte supper was dutifully prepared, BBQed spatchcocked chicken, sausages, and roasted veggies from Linda’s veggie patch. The odd glass was drained.

Posted in France | Leave a reply

Saturday It’s gonna be a long drive home

Blasdale Home Posted on September 1, 2012 by SteveSeptember 3, 2012

The Mistral really challenged my patience during the night. You could hear the gust in the nearby trees and count the seconds for the gust to turn the tent into a twisting, bulging hallucinating mess. Not the most conducive sound and sight to help one get to sleep. Slowly the clocked ticked on and 7 arrived. Dressed ourselves and packed the tent, at least it had not rained during the night, small blessings. The tent required some firm handling to control its riotous antics and to stuff it into its ever shrinking bag. At least we were not in the middle of a thunderstorm, another blessing.

Off we went on our way to Mike and Linda in Arcais where we were going to be staying in their gite. Long motorway drive all the way to Niort, should be good, French motorways are typically uncrowded. Oh yeah every blasted French person and their dog seemed to have taken to the road today. The only time the road was quiet was during the long French lunch break. Bouchon after bouchon all the way to Niort. Even a brief respite at a motorway café was a let-down. I have always been impressed by the motorway cafes on the routes to Lyon and the Tarn, but this route along the South and then up to Bordeaux was the pits. The cafes were small, and crap, mainly serving drinks out of vending machines.

Turned off at Niort, and headed to a super market at Mauze-sur-le-Mignon and stocked up with food, which, with the prospect of a fridge, we could finally do. Arrived at Linda and Mike’s where they had supper and a drink awaiting us. A pork and bean stew with Toulouse sausages. Suitably replenished we went to bed in a very quiet, dry and windless gite. Bliss.

Posted in France | Leave a reply

Friday Every time the cold wind blows

Blasdale Home Posted on August 31, 2012 by SteveSeptember 3, 2012

No rain during the night, and the wind was not bothersome. Lovely bright morning, a tad nippy though. After pain au raisins and coffee we were out down to the coast to check out the sea side restaurants. We ended up down in Carro, seemingly on an island bordered by Marseille to the East and oil refineries to the West. The Mediterranean did not seem warm to touch, but was pretty rough looking, 30 plus windsurfers were making the most of the wind. It was now 12 o’clock so most of the French sailors were heading back to shore for their 3 hour lunch break.

We found a small café and I ate the classic French Mussel classic, Moules et Frites followed by Tart Tatin and icecream. Rosemary was presented with a huge Pizza.

Back to the car and a trip up the road past the oil refineries and then back home stopping for a coffee. The first town we have seen this year where there were groups of men playing Boules at the Boulodrome.

Back at home, the tent had pulled out a few pegs, must have been windy, or the soil with the drenching it has received in the last few days had grown a tad soft. I now think we have chosen the windiest pitch in the whole of the campsite. The Mistral blows directly onto our tent. Supper was the remains of the olive bread.

R and S Blasdale are out of here in the morning. Let’s hope it does not rain during the night.

Posted in France | Leave a reply

Thursday God of Thor

Blasdale Home Posted on August 30, 2012 by SteveSeptember 3, 2012

Woken early morning before light by the pitter patter of rain, and thunder, Very loud thunder which made me jump. At getting up time, the rain had stopped, so breakfast and into town where we bought a roti chicken and some rustique olive bread for lunch from the market. Again stopped Rosemary from buying kittens.

Lunch over and the rain returned. Clear now, let Friday be a better day. Weather forecast looks OK.

Posted in France | Leave a reply

Wednesday Pont du la Gard

Blasdale Home Posted on August 29, 2012 by SteveAugust 29, 2012

First off to a market in the near town of Mouries. Strange things markets, they run them in the morning, with the result that by the time you come to cook your food in the evening, it has all started to breed vast quantities of bacteria and started to stink to high heaven. So though nice markets are, for those without refrigeration and not eating at lunch time, they are rather a window shopper’s paradise.

After a quick look around the market, it was off to Pont du la Gard to see this wonder of UNESCO. I have to be amazed that this stone bridge an aqueduct built in Roman times still stands. Maybe it was too large and too far away from large towns in the Medieval times to have been dismantled and turned into cathedrals and housing. Missing also the industrial revolution of acid rain dissolving the lime stone, suffice to say sufficient of the aqueduct remains to leave a very strong and beautiful engineered structure.

In recent years the French, or was that the EU, or UNESCO have spent a lot of money in building some grand exhibits. I learnt a lot about Roman plumbing, and was left wondering what happened during the dark ages between the Roman rule and eventually the Victorian age when sewers and plumbing came back into fashion. We all probably smelt rather bad. There was a lot to read and view in the underground exhibition hall. The film, (viewing available in English) was though rather trite, and spent more time on glamour and kissing couples. What we wanted were hard facts on when the place was built, why, and what renovation has been done.

Back to the campsite, and down to the local shop to buy the food for the evening meal. Maybe tomorrow as the market is in town we will have lunch cooked with market provenance. I see a lazy afternoon ahead.

Oh and as for weather forecasting, Meteo France got the sun and cloud right, but I really don’t count the extremely small rain shower, 10 drops on me, as showers.

Posted in France | Leave a reply

Tuesday Thunder and Van Gogh again

Blasdale Home Posted on August 28, 2012 by SteveAugust 28, 2012

It was a restful night with the lack of wind, but ominous clouds surrounded us in the morning. Down to the bread shop and back with pain au raisins, at 1 Euro each they are cheaper than those at the supermarket in Arles. Don’t buy the pain au chocolat though; not such a bargain. Breakfast over and the ominous black clouds had started to emit rumbles and flashes of lightening, soon to be followed by a torrent of rain which lasted several chapters of the book ‘Blind Eye’ by Stuart Macbride. Screamed my head off at a snake by the tent, but Rosemary claimed it was a very large earthworm. Mmm. Took a look at the French weather forecasting service, they got that one wrong, so not any better than the UK weather guessing service. I hope that’s the case, as they have rain and lightning now for most of the rest of the week.

Rain stopped, so we were off to look at some local sights, so a trip to Arles, a town where Van Gogh lived and drank. May have seen the café where he imbibed, were definitely on the correct street, but alas no café jumped out with signs saying ‘Van Gogh drank here’.
Impressions, reminded me of the 1970s game of Text Adventures with the ‘lots of narrow windy passages’. Large Roman amphitheatre which is still used to this day for shows involving bulls and matadors. No killings though. Not to be outdone by other cities, there appeared to be another amphitheatre only a few yards away. Lunch was eaten at a restaurant in view of the Roman amphitheatre, mousaka and steak (not exactly French cuisine), and then more wandering around narrow windy passages.

The day was pleasantly warm, cloudy with the odd burst of sun. That was what was forecast, not the torrential downpour.

Posted in France | 2 Replies

Monday Van Gogh & Gaugin

Blasdale Home Posted on August 27, 2012 by SteveAugust 27, 2012

Another night of buffeting and wondering where the tent would end up.  Always worse when in the tent at night, compared to outside in the morning.  Today did the works at the local grockle spot of Les Baux De-Provence.  Here there was a fortified hill that was rather carved out of the limestone more than built.  Free to visit the village which consisted of shops and restaurants.  Cost five Euros to park in the village or the roads leading up. Energetic scrooges could park a little further out and walk a little more.  Parked in the village, early birds, bought the works, visited the ruins, watched the treblechon, photographed the rocks and even a Dragonfly.

Took a look around a gallery, after the mandatory French lunch, which for the Brits, who are not used to large lunches, was a baguette.  The gallery by some possibly famous French Provence artist was of pictures of the Provence and his tour around other countries which seem to have excluded the UK.  What more can I tell you about him, he was born in 1907, and lived to 1990, and met Picasso in Nice.

Short walk down the road took us to an excavation in the limestone.  The excavation was underground, and carefully done to leave smooth plat square surfaces.  Projectors then projected (what else do they do) images onto the walls. These were Van Gogh & Gaugin set to music, and an excellent sequence of the seasons, and elements of the earth (you know Earth, Wind, Fire, Water).  Was quite spectacular, pictures to be processed and posted at some stage.

Back to the town, dehydrated, and few beers better, went shopping for supper.  Good thing we bought all we required, the rest in the larder was being raided by the smallest ants I have ever seen.

Posted in France | Leave a reply

Sunday Festival of the oldies

Blasdale Home Posted on August 26, 2012 by SteveAugust 27, 2012

Lovely sunny day all day, with a brisk breeze (wish the breeze had not breezed during the night, felt the tent was going somewhere). Today there was an event on in the village Maussnnes les Alpilles, (for those not following the plot, this is where we are camping). The road through the village was shut off, and lots of stalls had been erected. Not a French market but a celebration of the ancient peoples. Lots of people were dressed in clothing from the early 20′ century. Stalls with traditional skills, and traditional schooling and traditional dress. Procession of carts, men, women and children dressed in various clothing from various ages, playing whistles and singing, or just walking. Nice way to spend a few hours sipping a cold beer and watching people walk by.

Lunch purchased from the Spar opposite where we were sitting. Rosemary quickly rushed in as it was showing signs of closure.

After our lunch we went for the ‘Tres Facile’ walk into the Alpilles. This took us along a road, where we were surprised by all the running water, and irrigation channels with sluices. Worked out that water was being piped off the hills and used to water the fields on the other side of the road. Some splendid Mas and some for sale. Walked up into the rocky hills where Rosemary appeared to be a rather prevalent weed. Spotted a couple of different species of Dragonflies. Pictures probably not very good, as they were being buffeted by rather strong winds.

The directions were somewhat ambivalent and we were not at all sure of our location. Rosemary confessed later that she thought we were lost. Made it back after several hours of trekking, in desperate need of beer and pastis.

Wind still blowing hard, as we prepared for another night of being buffeted in our tent.

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