Thursday, 31 May 2012

Canal du Midi by Bram


I visited Villesèquelande, viewing a 500-yr-old tree planted during the reign of Henri IV—a good thing for a king to be remembered for.
Then the village of Bram, which had a circular wall defending the church and some houses, then an outer wall defending a greater area. Now it doesn't have walls but a great ring road system. Sadly, at bicycle level, there's not much to see, and I didn't bother to charter a helicopter. 

In Bram church was a lovely statue of St Roche, displaying his sore leg. He has been a great support this year, because Mathilde had a sore foot, since fixed, and Mr Pither (pictured) had two flat tyres, also now fixed. The saint's dog also brings him food--unlike any dog I've known, including Inspector Rex.

 A peaceful bedroom for Mathilde.

Monday, 28 May 2012

Back to Carcassonne Citadel






Strolled to Carcassonne Citadel, scene of much fighting over the centuries but retaining some glorious architecture. The medieval depiction of Noah's Arkin a stained-glass window appealed to me--five oars per side, plus a rudder.
Returned to Mathilde via the central square of the “new town” of Carcassonne (meaning 13th century), where the central square has a plaque commemorating events including devastion by the Black Prince in the 14th century. At that rate there'll still be plaques about Nazi atrocities in the year 2,745.

Sunday, 27 May 2012

Back to Carcassonne






Mathilde has returned to Carcassonne with its stunning citadel. We'll spend a couple of days here provisioning and then head to Toulouse, where she will rest while I fly north.
We've seen a lot of beautiful canal and met some pleasant boats along the way. I've seen some beautiful villages and lovely old bridges and other 17th-century structures, dating back to when the canal was built. We've gone through many locks. Normally Mathilde motors into a lock, stops near a ladder of 3 or so metres height, which I climb, holding on to her mooring ropes, which I then make fast, whereupon the lockkeeper closes the gates through which we have entered and opens the sluices so that the lock fills—sometimes with quite dramatic splashing and turbulence. The upper gates then open and we go on our way.
This procedure (which is for heading up, i.e. towards higher ground) can go wrong when I overshoot the ladder and have to manoeuvre to get back to it, or people who know less about boating than I do (there are a few) let their great heavy boat swing alarmingly close to delicate little Mathilde—or when there is no ladder at all, just 3 or 4 metres of lock wall. It's all fun—well, mostly.
A switch seems to have been thrown, and summer—or something like it—is here. I have packed away my jackets and long-sleeved shirts and have started hitting the iced coffee and the rosé wine. Very pleasant. I've also discovered Olives Artisanales du Languedoc, varieté Lucques. Yummy, plus cheese, French bread (what else?) and pâté.
Life is not without setbacks. In Argens-Minervois I promised myself a cup of coffee and a glass of wine at Le Sourire de la Grenouille, where I dined hugely on cassoulet last time I was there and also enjoyed the wifi. It was closed. So was the general store opposite, because it was Wednesday afternoon. Poor me. So I consoled myself at the café at the port, which has no wifi but does run to French cappuccino and a waffle. Oh, the suffering. Plus I looked at a tourist booklet about the South of France, with motto: le vrai luxe c'est d'être là, the true luxury is being there. Fair enough.

Saturday, 19 May 2012

More Dordogne












In the Dordogne I visited St-Cirq-Lapopie, reminiscent of the village in Hot Fuzz: it is publicised as one of the Most Beautiful Villages of France and doubltess has an efficient service for keeping itself pure. It was charming if also a trifle overwhelming.
Back near my base in Montignac, I visited the village of Fanlac, which is advertising a “world fête” on 26 May 2012—reminiscent of Billy Connolly's World Tour of Scotland. There were fresh flowers on a memorial to members of the Resistance shot by Nazis.
Inspired by Jack Aubrey, I took to the waters again, this time in a hired canoe on the River Vézère. Among others I passed the Château de Losse.

Tuesday, 15 May 2012

Dordogne


Montignard, Périgord, Monday 14 May 2012

Checked into Hotel le P'tit Monde, in beautiful Montignac on the River Vézère in the Dordogne region, with charming hostess and hopefully charming wifi. Yes, it works.
It's now late afternoon Tuesday 15 May and I have booked a visit to more palaeolithic paintings; this time at Pech Merle. I must be hooked.
I'm used to arriving at places by water, which is often much the best way. Driving hither I passed through towns which I had previously visited by water: the road led me to supermarkets and petrol stations but water has regularly brought Mathilde and me to the old town centre, with pretty squares, restaurants and old buildings. Boating in France is recommended.
So I came to the Dordogne Valley by road. One says valley, but from the highway the area is a plateau with scrubby vegetation, interrupted by sudden deep valleys cut by the River Dordogne and its tributaries. It looked pretty lousy hunting country for a Neanderthal or Cro-Magnon man: I didn't see a single mammoth, though I did cross some spectacular viaducts from one stretch of plateau to another.
The valleys are quite different, green and fertile, and I did see a mammoth.
This morning I visited Lascaux II, which is an incomplete but otherwise claimed accurate replica of Lascaux, a cave with a slew of paintings from around 17,000 BC. I had read about Lascaux paintings and looked at pictures in books, but there's nothing like entering a cave, even an artificial one, and seeing paintings in their true size, around and above one. No print on a flat page can equal the impression of a painting of an aurochs three or four metres long, looming above and fitted to the curves, colours and irregularities in the rock.
I prepared myself for a sort of shamanistic or religious by reciting the prayer of humble access and other such while waiting but in the event I was more struck by the beauty and impact of the paintings than by a meaning that I had read about, namely that the animals are not meant to be depictions of physical beasties but evocations of the spirit world, which is reached through the cave walls, which serves as a membrane between the two worlds. The spirit-world thesis points out that the animals generally don't seem to have their hoofs firmly on the ground but are depicted floating, as spirits would. On the contrary, I was struck by how often an individual animal or a series would be placed on a ledge, so that they did seem to have something to stand on.
There is only one depiction of a human in Lascaux—and he has a bird head. The guide made a joke of the evidence that this ithyphallic figure was obviously a man, as her torchlight travelled down his body highlighting his great big—feet, she said. One of the tourists was less subtle, asking whether his erection meant anything. Another woman in the group said, “it usually does,” which raised a laugh. But we don't know. The paintings, with their accompanying markings, evidently meant something, but we don't have the translation.
The paintings have been interpreted as relating to hunting magic, but the guide said that the diet was 95% reindeer—but this animal was never depicted. I'm prepared to stick with the spirit-world theory, though that still leaves many questions: why were the horse, the ibex, the deer (not reindeer) and the aurochs so important?
Later I went to La Roque St-Christophe, a settlement used by Neanderthals 55,000 years ago and practically everybody else since. Built into a cliff face, it is good for defence; it was fought over in the Hundred Years War (which started in 1337 but was such a success that it went on for more than a century). Sort of hobbit-holes arranged vertically.









Most attached photos are self-explanatory, but a map shows, in orange, where the ancient caves are. The other map, of waterways, has Mathilde in the bottom right, near the Mediterranean Sea.

Monday, 14 May 2012

Southern Canal: Embranchement


Narbonne, Saturday 12 May 2012

We're back in beautiful Narbonne in the far south of France, pretty much in the town centre, moored by other boats in the canal; all we lack is electricity, which means that this computer will soon join my cameras in being exhausted. But I was able to photograph the Archbishops' Palace, with French railways, and a bit of Roman road exposed in the main square.
Spent last night by the Île Ste-Lucie, some 17 km and one lock downstream. It is a couple of kilometres from the Mediterranean Sea (which I could have reached, but didn't, as I preferred to spend my available time here—anyway, Mathilde cruised on it last year). I pictured the island as flat and sandy, surrounded by lagoons previously used as salt pans, but it was an outlier of the rocky ridges visible around here—not high, but dramatic in an otherwise flat landscape.
I came to moor at the island, but saw one of Adam's friends and relations on the mooring post, so I moved on slightly (a photo, repeated, shows Adam on the flagstaff). I then went for a walk, with reasonable footwear to cater for Adam's friends and relations, and with insect repellent, as it was obviously mosquito country. Over the centuries the island has hosted barracks for customs officers collecting salt tax (very big in the 14th century) and, after the Second World War, piggeries. Now it is a nature reserve, but clearly olive trees count as nature, as many have been planted recently. According to the guide book, “traces of wild pigs and dear are also proof of a rich animal life.”
I headed past water-reeds into gently rising ground, with cliffs to my right. Buildings had been constructed against and partly in the rock; these included what I took to be a windmill, presumably for grinding corn or pressing olives. There were oleanders and many pines and hence a heady atmosphere. I heard many birds calling but saw few.
I reached the top of the island, a plateau, and manoeuvred carefully for the perfect shot of the canal snaking between lagoons to my island and, beyond it, the sea. That was when my camera battery went dead.







This morning we made our way back, past the territory of the Narbonne rowing club; a chap at the lock warned me: beaucoup de bateaux. I proceeded carefully and slowly, making little noise, which meant that people kept on sculling as they approached me at collision speed. I tried to attract attention by revving the engine in neutral, but one boat just kept coming, so I began to reverse slowly—then, fearing the fate of ships sunk by Captain Nemo's Nautilus, I reversed rapidly, in fear and trembling. At this stage the scullers heard us, and all was well.
I didn't photograph the boats, which would have been hard while steering, but I felt the strong westerly and tried to photograph that—or at least the bending reeds and trees. For the first kilometres there were seabirds.

Port la Robine, Dimanche 13 mai

We are now in Port la Robine, where Mathilde is to be operated on tomorrow, Monday. The wifi code is 19651965 but Fievel, my laptop, has not succeeded in connecting. Perhaps I didn't clean the shower properly. Madame la Gardienne told me what to do, demonstrating with the mop the while. In the loo there was a sign explaining the dreadful penalty imposed on men who did not point accurately; to emphasise the point, a row of little wizened objects hung from the ceiling. Well, at least I had a good shower.
And I have electricity, so that I am now charging a laptop, an iPod, two cameras, a Kindle and a phone. Most of these things had run flat, which was very uncomfortable.

Wednesday, 9 May 2012

Beginning Slow Travel on the Canal du Midi






Enjoying slow travel on the Canal du Midi, heading east. Now we are at Argens-Minervois, where Kirsty and I dined at La Ginguette last year. This year I'll have to make do with Froufrou's company.

Monday, 7 May 2012

Prete-a-Partir?



Mathilde and I are just about ready to depart, bearing in mind that tomorrow 8 May is a public holiday, for the armistice of the Seconde Guerre Mondiale.
Yesterday I came across a boat named Indiana Jones swinging on a single mooring and blocking the canal. I think accident rather than George Owden. I did my good deed and rescued her.
Then I wondered how to put up the awning on Mathilde.
Finally I took many photos of the fabulous citadel of Carcassonne. Sights like that are a reason to be in France.