Monday, December 20, 2010

Missive 25 ~ Count our Blessings!

rogerhiggs@hotmail.co.uk

Mes chers amis

Count our Blessings! ~ Missive 25

“One of the greatest mistakes of our time is to act your age”
Billy Connelly

“One sees clearly only with the heart. Anything essential is invisible to the eyes.”
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.

“There are aristocrats and the riff-raff” (I think we fall into the former – see below!)
“Like God, I give you my blessing to stay here for ever!”
Monsieur Le Comte

Sorry, there are four quotes this time and there could be, and indeed may be below, many more, when you read on about a summer of eccentric madness, during which at least for much of the time “acting your age” was out of the question, whilst trying to maintain an aristocratic bearing, often in very difficult circumstances!!

If you haven’t twigged already, this missive isn’t going to be yet more of “How lucky we are,” but will, largely relate to a friendship made during a quite remarkable summer which went by almost too quickly in a whirl of excitement, exhilaration, jollity and merriment, with nearly our youngest visitors to date and our landlord back from Spain, although for the first week he was back we saw nothing of him and were beginning to think it was something we had said. We were relieved to find he had been busy cleaning the house and getting it ready for the summer, and what a summer it was to end up as. I recently, part way through the summer you are about to read about, came across the following passage in an article, by Alan Franks, about Ray Davies, songwriter and member of The Kinks: ‘ “I’m sorry” he (Ray Davies) says again. “I’m a lonely adult. I was a lonely child. When I’m busy I have tunnel vision. I give off signals that I don’t want to see people, but all they have to do is knock on the door. That’s what they should be doing. They think I don’t want to talk to them, but they’re wrong.” He’s right.’ It sort of struck a chord, and I’m so glad we “knocked on the door” metaphorically speaking, as to get to said door would require going through two large gates with pointed tops and crossing a water filled moat, not to mention getting past the large black dog, but there were other ways and the dog proved very useful – read on!! I also sense that although this is going to be a mega-missive, there will be lots left out; as I have said before this one man and his dog are worthy of a whole book, let alone the bulk of one chapter!

Something missing and it wasn’t the sunshine!!

The something missing in our lives was quite simply Max, he had before he died got used to having us around, but it also worked the other way, he was always there for us, although towards the end we might have had to whistle a little louder as he had gone completely deaf, but surprisingly it was selective total deafness as he didn’t hear us calling him for a stroll on a hot day, but always heard the French stick slip out of the soft material of the bread bag!!

But, by and large as the weather set fair and the sun shone we forced ourselves to continue our nightly after dinner walks, paddles in the lake and had to lick out the last bit of the yogurt cartoon ourselves, we still felt something was missing!!

In the nick of time Monsieur from the chateau, forthwith simply to be referred to as Monsieur or even M, at least for the time being (!), returned from Spain, for his normal summer in the Vendée, and initially more importantly his dog, Toutoune (note we now know the correct spelling!!) came around to renew the friendship of the previous year. She didn’t obviously seem to notice Max’s absence, or was perhaps just too polite to say anything, but I suppose the previous year they had got on fine, choosing largely to accept each other, but as Max was old and slow and Toutoune younger with much more energy on our nightly walks they rarely met each other, unless it was a there and back walk, as Toutoune liked to lead from the far distance, and Max trailed behind, until he knew we were heading for home and a comfy bed, then led just far enough ahead to make sure we went the quickest way back!!

But there was something rather comforting when sitting outside for our evening meal, silently the big black shaggy and at times quite pongy Toutoune would appear and keep guard whilst we ate, occasionally chasing things that passed on the distance road, which was much better, because she never got to them, had it been our road we might have had to explain that she wasn’t our dog, despite her sitting quite “at home” on the gravel at the front of the house! Patiently waiting for the evening stroll, and like her master adept at languages, knowing “walk” in at least English, French and Spanish, and with the most alluring eyes you have ever seen – almost out of keeping with the rest of the shaggy mutt, to the manor “born” (well adopted!) but certainly with no airs and graces! The moment we had finished and cleared the plates away she would be ready for the off and willing us to go for a walk!

Or, if the people in the gîte were more generous and slipped her the odd morsel – we, as they were, were under strict instructions not to give her titbits, but as you know

when on holiday standards slip and even with us; our missing bread dancer, the fact that she lodged with us a few times and those eyes made it difficult if not impossible at times!! – then having finished supper a loud whistle of two and quick as a flash there was the thunder of hooves, well pads actually, on the chateau drive and she was round the corner and raring to go! In case you’re wondering she’s a Griffon Vendéen, and from the picture you’ll see what I mean about the eyes, or “eyeses” as Monsieur refers to them – an English word he just doesn’t seem able to get his head around!! This picture is supposed to feature on M’s Christmas cards this year, but ours hasn’t arrived yet!!

Sometimes, if dinner went on a bit and the evening stroll got late, and as she now seemed to treat us like a second home, particularly after she had stayed a couple of nights when Monsieur had to go into hospital for a small op, and came back with us after the walk, rather than going home as she had done the previous summer. Knowing that Monsieur kept different hours to us, early to bed and early to rise, we were worried that if she didn’t get home she would be locked out so I started to walk her to the front chateau gate, and say “Bon nuit” to her, and reluctantly she would go home, but with never a backwards glance, she seemed to know that the time had come and that was that! Mind you as the summer wore on and I started to walk down the drive to send her home, she sensed it like a recalcitrant child would drag her heels all the way to the gate, before realising the game was up and she’d be under the hedge trotting down the drive and home to bed!!

But, she was only ever going to be temporary therapy, as when she was left with us on a few occasions, when Monsieur left she would always go looking for him, on the first occasion sitting forlornly on the steps of the chateau’s front door, until we whistled and promised a walk and used a couple of dog biscuits as a bribe. Then, when M returned the warmth of her welcome for him and the subsequent staying close to check he didn’t go off again, certainly reciprocated Monsieur’s oft to be heard “She is my partner, my wife, my daughter, my princess, my everything,” or variations on a theme. When my parents were staying my mother complimented Monsieur on his lovely dog and said that perhaps she would have to smuggle her home when she left, to which with that faraway twinkle in his eye, he said “you can have all my jewels, all my money, everything, except my Toutoune!!”

The little house at the end of the drive

Having broken the ice the previous year with a couple of tea parties, well “real English tea, made by a real Englishman” and a piece of cake; you may remember a previous story about how, after the tea he was going to go home happy, sleep soundly and get up in the morning and stand by his bed and sing “God Save the Queen!” Well, although I say it myself I do make a “damn fine cup of tea!” although never before causing a reaction quite like this. But, it did mean if nothing else our shared love of a good cup of tea in the afternoon, was an opening to use and knowing Monsieur better, and his worries about intruding, meant that now instead of asking him if he would like a cup of tea, more often than not, I would say “You’ll have a cup of tea won’t you” or “I’m just making tea I’m sure you’re ready for a cup” and I would see that glint in his eye and know that a cuppa and a chat was just what he could do with and he knew I wouldn’t take no for an answer!!

As the summer progressed, we started to see much more of Monsieur and found many interests in common. He loves nature and his garden (Over tea one day he said “Your garden is so ..... so ..... English, the English have the best gardens in the world – little did he know most of the flowers and plants are cuttings and transplants from the park and verges around!!), surfing the web, eating food and collecting quotes, each of us having a notebook to hand, where we jot down any sayings and quotes that appeal. Indeed, eventually, Monsieur decided that he and I “were like twins,” except, as I pointed out “No you live in the big house and we live in the little house at the end of the drive!” But still he pronounced that “Like God, I give you my blessing to stay here for ever!”

The only problem we really encountered during the summer was how to communicate as Monsieur is not always good at answering his telephone and can be a little forgetful. So when we made an arrangement to call at the chateau for tea, he said “Give me a trumpet call to remind me!” In the absence of a trumpet I decided that Toutoune would make a good messenger service and attached a picture of a trumpet to her collar with a reminder of the tea appointment. As with much that happened during the summer he found this hilarious, put the message in pride of place on a marble statue in the hall, where it stayed all summer and he said he was going to phone his sister and tell her all about it.

Having on numerous occasions spend many an hour putting the world to rights, tea at the chateau above went on for four hours, he announced one day that “The world is made up of Aristocrats and Riff Raff!” Politicians definitely fall into the latter, but I’m pretty certain that we’ve been elevated to the ranks of the aristrocracy!! Thought it must be something to do with us becoming Computer Technician and Official photographer to a Count, but the difference is apparently down to honesty!

Oh no! Children on the horizon, and they speak a funny language!!

In catching up with old friends from when we lived in Huntingdonshire, as it became part of Cambridgeshire, only to revert once more to Huntingdonshire – hope you’re keeping up, but that’s to show it really was a very long time ago!! – we made two new friends – Kirsten and Hannah, youngest daughter and her cousin of the aforementioned friends. Friends who we last saw regularly around the time that Victoria was born – yes that long ago, and too far back to have met Kirsten (12) and Hannah (10), and although we heard quite a lot about them, most of it true I hasten to add, I’m not sure if our little sleepy backwater was quite ready for them.

What we had got wrong about them, was their age and Linda had spent some time worrying what two 14 year old girls would find to do in these here parts, as well as us both worrying about language difficulties, after a phone call to George, Kirsten’s Dad, when after all the intervening years we had forgotten just how difficult he is to understand, particularly when he becomes animated – did I mention they’re from Scotland! So it was a bit of a shock when first two much younger girls got out of the car, and second that the intervening years simply fell away and we found ourselves picking up where we left off and able to understand our visitors – well most of the time and where spoken language was concerned; there were to be times when we didn’t understand the “girls,” as I shall refer to them as from now on, but then people say women are hard to understand!!

We had just a couple of days before had a conversation with Monsieur, who despite arguing to the contrary, is a superb master of six languages and is learning Czechoslovakian, to be able to speak with his brother in law, who appears to speak French, English and Monsieur’s language of choice – Spanish anyway!!, about how difficult it is sometimes to understand people with regional accents. He had found it difficult to understand some of his guests in the gîte despite them speaking English and his amazing command of the language. It had worried him, he said he must be out of practice despite often speaking with English friends when in Spain, until we explained it was a little like the patois that the locals slip into in many parts of France and then he felt better! But, it was noticeable that having mentioned our Scottish visitors and the trouble we might have understanding them, he kept out of the way, was it his deep seated worry about intruding or concern about the language!?!

We ended up having a riotous couple of weeks, the girls mostly managing to entertain themselves, with a bit of help(!) and I was reminded of just how untidy young girls can be; losing everything usually somewhere in the piles of assorted clothes, cosmetics, shoes, towels, sweets, presents, books, games, bedding that adorned the once tidy guest room!! They even managed to change into clean clothes just before they knocked over the drink or split the pasta sauce down their fronts!!

Then, there were the evening walks, the girls at an age where they were glad to join us, rather than whining – “Do we have to!?!” Mind you there was plenty of other whining, particularly when asked to tidy their rooms or finish the food piled onto their plates. It was good to see that they enjoyed their food, but sometimes their eyes seemed bigger than their bellies, until they were told the house rule!! “Clean plates – if you put it on your plate it means that you want it!” There were some exceptions to this rule when they were trying something new, which to their credit they did do sometimes and even occasionally found something they liked!!

But the whining reached a new level, when on one of the evening walks we went along the avenue, only to discover that when the cows had been moved earlier, they had appeared to quite simply poo all the way down the road and we had to try and avoid it as we walked along. So was born the first of several little ditties, modelled on two girls who tiptoed between the piles whilst whining “Err, we can’t walk down there” Well, they do live in town and weren’t too familiar with farm animals or indeed the proliferation of creepy crawlies that seem happy to share our living accommodation with us, even if at times the feeling isn’t mutual!! The ditty, with suitable mincing actions, went along the lines of “A one, a two a one two three. A one, a two a one two three. It’s the walk of the POOOOOOO!” Repeated several times, as loudly as possible!! I know, little things please little minds, it was a bit like being back at school, but it was just as well we live well away from civilisation and, so we thought, out of earshot!!

So I was a little surprised when several days later, having really perfected the Poo Ditty the previous evening, and our visitors had gone off to the seaside for the day, giving us a chance for some peace and quiet – we tried to explain that where we live that’s what we get most of the time, but it did give us a chance to catch up on a few chores in the house and garden, we met Monsieur checking his mail and despite his deafness he had obviously heard our singing, as he asked me if I had heard the singing beyond the woods the previous evening?! Well, I had to come clean and explain that it was our visitors, well the younger ones practicing a song I had taught them, to make the evening walk more enjoyable. I should have know that being an inquisitive sole, and enjoying a wide and at times surprising repertoire of music he was bound to ask, and ask he did in all innocence (his hearing definitely isn’t that good) what the song was about. Well, as best I could I explained (thinking that if I didn’t tell him for real, he might want to come around for a sing song!), that the cows had left their deposits along the road – saying that I believed in French slang it might have been called “merde,” to which he responded yes, but there is another word for it, but fortunately when I clarified the origins of the ditty, saw the funny side and was glad that the youngsters were enjoying their stay!!

But, the two weeks just flew by, and we couldn’t believe how quickly departure loomed, but were once again amazed at how quickly you pick up on friendships, even when for many years contact had been the occasional telephone call and cards at Christmas. It was surprisingly quiet after they left, and even after all the intervening years Mary and George, Kirsten’s Mum and Dad and Hannah’s Auntie and Uncle, were not particularly noisy!!!

Sophistication and naivety!

Monsieur, in some ways leads a privileged life – chateau in France, penthouse flat in Spain and various other properties, but although the Chateau and estate and other property has been inherited, he has had to do his military service (ending up as an aide to Charles de Gaulle) and work for a living, earning money as opportunities arose – in the distant past he was, at a time when he was a big whisky drinker, on a TV advert extolling the virtues of bottled water (the irony certainly wasn’t lost on him). But, having inherited what he has, he feels it is his duty to maintain it and improve it, as he sees fit, using his own money and very aware that when he passes it on to the next generation, when he “finally goes upstairs” it will duly be sold. But, whilst in his possession he remains very firmly principled, that despite not being a millionaire, it must be looked after out of respect for those who left it to him.

The idea of being a millionaire quite appeals to him, see Dreams and Schemes below, and having got on so well during the last summer, several times when conversations turned to the fact that it was unlikely that we would stay where we are for much longer, he would wistfully say “If I was a millionaire you could stay here for nothing for ever!!” and I would, when he was out of earshot say to Linda, what a pity he isn’t, because although we love his “little house at the end of the drive” it’s not ours and therefore we can’t do things to it that we would like – not least, with the current cold weather prompting this, fit a wood burning stove. If we were able to have one, unfortunately the chimney is condemned; there would certainly be no shortage of firewood, in “our” 12 acre back garden!!

But money aside, Monsieur is an extremely well read and informed eccentric, fluently speaking about 6 ½ languages and able to talk very knowledgeably about a very wide and diverse range of subjects, including rather to our chagrin, English history and particularly politics and the monarchy, to the point that he often looses us completely. There was however a thread immerging in his interests: The Shakespeare debate, Francis Bacon, Rose-Croix (accounting for his teetotal and vegetarian Lifestyle), Science of the Sacraments, Astrology and elements of the occult, that direct him in life and the way he lives it. All very sophisticated and at times rather heavy stuff, particularly when discussing “Life after Death” or topically for this time of year “The meaning of Christmas.” But, apart from the odd dark days when lamenting the state of the world; it’s inhumane occupants, rogues of politicians the world over, poverty, cruelly to animals etc. etc., things that he claims to think about everyday and says “It’s terrible, it’s terrible, I will thanks (sic) God when I finally go upstairs!”, he more often than not quickly regains the twinkle in his eye and quickly concurs, that really he is nothing but “A dictator, scoundrel and (always bringing up the rear!) ...... a gentleman!” One who at 70 remains quick witted, keen to learn and with plenty of energy, last year he took up kite surfing!!

However, I guess it’s something to do with the eccentricity, there remains a certain naivety that at first can be quite disconcerting. Three things stand out, the first when having admired our solar lights felt he must get some to put in the border in front of the chateau, so that it “seems like the stars had fallen from the sky and twinkled amongst the roses!” Having dutifully purchased four from the local town, several times he expressed his disappointment that they didn’t work, and blamed the fact that they were made in China and were obviously shoddy – did I mention he is very out spoken! – and would I mind having look at them as he couldn’t figure out the problem. I returned with him and Linda came “on call” for another computer problem, and on removing the top of one of the lights pointed out that the switch marked “On – Off” and set at off just might explain the fact they weren’t working. I went on to test them by putting my hand over the light sensor and the light twinkled into life and from the look on Monsieur’s face you would have thought he had seen the light!!! He did see the funny side of it however, and blamed not having his glasses on. I’m more inclined to blame the time he spends reading learnèd texts and doing astrology readings, making no time to read instruction manuals, which was certainly the case with his car radio!! He had to have a new battery and when he got the car back the radio / CD wouldn’t work, it needed the code putting back in. Panic stations and thoughts that it would have to go back to the garage to be fixed, until Linda asked if he had the manual, which he found and Linda was able to understand sufficient of it, it was in Spanish, to point out to him the short passage that explained what needed to be done! No it would have to go back, in the morning at great inconvenience to the garage; he had hoped to go to the seaside for the day! Linda ended up with the manual, translated the relevant short passage and was quickly able to reset the code on his return from the seaside, after a minor mishap, where against strict instructions he turned the engine off and had to turn it on and wait for half an hour before it would accept the code – just long enough for a calming cup of tea!

Finally, one day whilst having another cup of tea, and Toutoune sticking close to M, partly to have her ears tickled, but also to receive a fairly regular supply of titbits, the end of each biscuit or scone seems the order of the day (he once asked Linda if it was better to give her sugar or candy!?!), he asked us in all innocence – what does it mean when a dog licks you? He almost seemed surprised when we said it was a sign of affection, “Yes, I suppose it must be,” he said!

One day we told him we had had a dream, and although in many ways we never expected it “to come true” it had and we were now living in France, with time to do what we want and not to be constrained by work and deadlines. It happened to be another of the “well it was like that for me moments, making us twins once more. Yes, he said it was like that for him too and his life as he now lived in, part in France, but mostly in Spain.

This led on to another scheme, which in turn came out of one of many conversations, that started very seriously and earnestly, about the state of the world and in particular, on this occasion how many European countries were suffering from serious financial problems and were in some cases in danger of going bankrupt. In all seriousness Monsieur, with one of his worried expressions, asked me what would happen then, if a country simply ran out of money! I said that they would probably just print some more, and his response to this was “wouldn’t that be great, just to be able to print money when you needed some!”

At the time we were standing outside the front of our house, next to Monsieur’s derelict barn, which needs serious attention to avoid the roof falling in (see other schemes below!), and I suggested that perhaps that was an idea use for a counterfeiting operation, under the cover of a semi-derelict barn. He bit on the idea and as always at such times we were on a roll!! His excitement at such times is like an excited school boy, and it’s a case of “Yes let’s!!” “Why not, underneath I’m nothing but a scoundrel!” “You’re in it with me!” However, it transpired that he’s what they might call in Yorkshire “A canny scoundrel” as before I knew it I was to be in the barn, sleeves rolled up running the press and doing not only the hard work, but the illegal bit, whilst he reverted to his “gentleman” status and provided the “folding screen,” just occasionally his English lets him down, he met cover!! “Well, officer there must be some mistake, the barn is nearly falling down and hasn’t been used for many years, can’t think what’s given you the idea that it’s being used for criminal activity!!”

As he claims to be deaf and consequently speaks several decibels louder than most people, hence warning us in the barn of imminent danger and could also, no doubt, keep the conversation going for some time, along the lines of; didn’t you know my father, how is your father, didn’t I go to school with your brother, basically anything like that to buy a little time for incriminating evidence to be disguised and the operation temporarily shut down!! I couldn’t help but feel that what he wouldn’t do was to turn me in and claim no knowledge of what was going on, but rather admit it was a “fair cop,” even if then he were to drop various names into the conversation, as I’m sure he must have a cousin high up in the justice department, as well as family links with most, possibly all of the European Royal Families, or what is left of them!!

Other schemes along the way have been to; bottle and sell his personal spring water and make a million, hadn’t thought of it before but the advertising could include “As passed by the Count!”, to flood a daily current affairs programme on Spanish TV with choice political quotes and statements, which they then broadcast on a running banner along the bottom of the screen, with a view to bringing down the Spanish Government and a Roofing Party to re-roof his dilapidated barn, that he was worried was going to cost too much money to save! As the local farmer, family and friends had recently re-roofed their own barn just across the road and done a very professional looking job on it, I suggested having a party, inviting everyone on the proviso they did the roof first and then he would lay on the drinks. At this suggestion, his eyes lit up and he said: “If they mend my roof I’ll provide enough wine to fill the Seine!” I couldn’t help but think it might have been cheaper to pay a “Macon,” but this section is called “Dreams and Schemes!!”

One dream of a scheme that failed miserably, was to persuade Monsieur that there is more to cooking than omelettes and mashed potatoes, as he leads something of a frugal life in terms of food, mainly because he sees its preparation as a waste of time: “you spend ages preparing food and its gone in an instant!” Now we see eye to eye on many things, although I have told him that although he firmly believes certain things like “The great Shakespeare debate,” I will make up my own mind and when it comes to food I’m firmly with Harriet Van Horne (feted American journalist) who says “Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all.” And just to make sure, I’ve made the point forcefully enough, a couple of quotes from Julia Child (celebrated chef who introduced French cuisine to the Americans!): “Always start out with a larger pot than what you think you need.” and “In France, cooking is a serious art form and a national sport.” So feeling that a Frenchman, albeit one who regards himself more as a Spaniard, should have a better attitude to food, during one of a couple of dinner parties during the summer, when Monsieur informed me that he couldn’t cook anyway, so it was silly to try, I rather unnerved him by saying “You can read, you can use your hands, you can cook!” First there was a slightly puzzled look on his face, until I explained my point, that his personal abilities made it very easy to read a recipe, manipulate the utensils to concoct a sumptuous supper, even if only for one. However, the look of puzzlement was quickly replaced by a look of sheer panic, but I wasn’t sure if it was because he was worried I was about to give him a cookery lesson, or I was expecting him to invite us to the chateau for said sumptuous supper, in the not too distant future. The look of abject horror was sufficient for me to let it drop; otherwise it might have spoilt the evening!!

Monsieur becomes Madame ~ Le coqueluche du village!

At the second dinner party, a curry evening towards the end of Monsieur’s summer stay, hatched as he informed us that he “adored” spicy food, when we told him of our love for Indian cuisine. It then came as something of a surprise as we sat down to start the meal, which included some seriously spicy dishes and he told us that he had never eaten Indian food before! Fortunately, he loved it and his healthy appetite did the spread justice, as he kept coming back for just one more little bit, but only if I would keep him company!! I ended up eating far more than I needed and out of courtesy there was no beer, or indeed alcohol, to wash it down!!

Conversation flowed about the summer and Linda’s help with his computer and my photographic endeavours of his family portraits and more, and he asked just one more photographic favour, if he put the floodlights on the chateau tomorrow evening would I take some photographs, as he had always wanted a floodlit photo. I was only too pleased to agree, as we had never seen the chateau lit up before and would therefore be a great photo opportunity, so it was fixed for 21.00 hrs the following evening, just as darkness was beginning to fall.

Talk then moved on, as always covering many subjects, some revisited such as politicians and rogues being largely one and the same, but then we got on to first impressions and how important they can be and also how when talking to someone on the telephone, you build up a mental picture of how you expect them to look. Sometimes then, the reality can be quite a shock! It was the opening I had been waiting for and grasping the bull by the horns I said “Well, actually when we first met you we had a terrible shock!” This was met by one of Monsieur’s best quizzical fronds and the question Why? I then explained that when we first saw the house and decided that we wanted to rent it, we were told by the immoblier, estate agent that he would have to check that Madame, who lived in Spain, agreed to our tenancy. So, the long and short of it was that when we first met Monsieur, we were very surprised because we had been told he was Madame!!!

He was hugely puzzled, but more importantly highly amused but this and for the rest of the evening slipped into a female persona, ending the evening by saying how much Madame had enjoyed herself, and was looking forward to seeing us the following
evening, when Madame would have a little surprise for us!! So, the following evening, punctually, at nine with camera and tripod, we presented ourselves at the chateau, somewhat surprised not to be met at the gate by Monsieur, who is a stickler for punctuality. The normally locked gate was open and as we approached the front door, loudly greeted by Toutoune, noticed the hall was in darkness but the door slightly ajar, but no sign of Monsieur. I knocked on the door, and a squeaky female voice bade us “Come in” and as we entered we noticed that the sitting room light, to the left through the library, was on and started to head that way thinking that was where the voice had come from. Here, perhaps it is worth reiterating that Monsieur lives in the chateau all alone save the dog!!

Well, a couple of steps across the hall and the same squeaky voice wished us a good evening and welcomed us, a voice altogether closer that the illuminated sitting room! Then, we saw half hidden behind the giant fern in the middle of the hallway, back lit by a small table lamp, an old lady in mop cap and white pinny, who started giggling and revealed themselves to be none other than Monsieur in drag!! From then on, for the rest of the summer, Monsieur was usually Madame, in name if not in dress! But I’ve the pictures to prove it, but that’s perhaps just a shutter click too far!!, and emails where Madame is delighted by the photographs and refers to me as the as the “Cecil Beaton of the Vendée,” praise indeed but I guess lost on anyone under a certain age!!

Once he had returned to Spain, after a short break we received an email from Monsieur about some maintenance work that was due to be carried out, and subsequently several emails have gone back and forth, and those from him are now signed “Madame, le coqueluche du village!” Coqueluche? Take your pick, as the dictionary lists the following translations: the rage, darling, favourite, reigning fancy or whooping cough!!! Somehow don’t think it’s the last one, but have settled myself on “darling!” But, I haven’t managed to bring myself to start my emails to him with “Darling!”, I’m sure in times past addressing a Count like that could have led to a “rendez-vous avec Madame Guillotine!!”

Adiós mis amigos

As I said before it had a been a summer of excitement, exhilaration, jollity and merriment, but was rapidly heading towards the end, which in many ways fortunately, more or less coincided, with our first proper trip back to the UK since our “Pet Shop Boys” and “Babysitting Experiences” back in February. It would mean that we had our trip to look forward to, at a time when we might have once again felt lonely, the population of our road plunging once more down to two, from the dizzy heights of as many as 11 if the gîte was full and of course no dogs. We don’t really have anything to do with the gîte holiday makers, but we can sometimes, when sitting out in the sunshine, hear them splashing around in the swimming pool, or screaming as it can be quite cold as it is fed directly from the spring!! I know this as Monsieur invited us to use the pool before his first visitors arrived, which coincided with Hannah and Kirsten’s visit, even they found it cold, particularly on the first day, when the farmer had just finished filling it and getting it ready and kept incredulously telling us it would be freezing as it was filled from the source and hadn’t had time for the sun to warm it up – his laughter when the hardiest, or should that be most foolish of us, finally got in, together with the look of utter amazement, would I’m sure be understandable in any language as “I told you so!!”

But back to our soon to depart new found amigos, and the irony wasn’t lost on me that one of our aims of our move was to improve our French, and I had spent quite a bit of the last few weeks conversing in emails and snatches of conversation with a French aristocrat and his dog IN SPANISH!! On the last afternoon we had invited Monsieur to a cream tea, combining his passion for food with that of “real English tea made by a real Englishman,” who had earlier in the summer had to explain, sailing quite close to the wind as I wasn’t totally sure about my answers, as to why it was preferable to serve your tea MIF – Milk in First!! That said, whatever the scientific, or otherwise, explanation – I do think it makes the cuppa taste better!

He had told us a couple of evenings previously, realising that “the end was nigh” and he was going back to Spain just after we left to go back for a visit to the UK, he and his dog would be gone when we returned, that we were the first tenants that he had had a relationship with! He lingered over the tea and scones, dragged his feet a little like Toutoune as he made his way down the drive, with us seeing him to the road as he always sees us to the gate, and still the conversation flowed, none of us wanting to finally say good bye, although the previous evening Monsieur had said that all good things come to an end and if we never saw one another again we would have many happy memories of the summer of 2010. Finally, in true gentlemanly fashion he clasped Linda’s hand in his two hands and came as close to kissing her hand as he had all summer, her hand had been getting closer at each parting!! Then, turning to me he firmly shook my hand, looked me firmly in the face and said “Thank you for everything, for the conversation, the photographs, the food ..... it has been ..... fantastic!” to which I replied “Yes, it has been great!” his response, before heading off down the drive throwing back the odd Goodbye, ¡hasta la vista!, ¡adiós! and more in Spanish, Italian, Czech and who knows what!!, was “No, not great, FANTASTIC!”

As we walked back to the house, we had to agree, but also knew that on our return from England, our little house at the end of the drive, would seem very lonely again for a while, particularly as the summer visitor season would also be over!!

But, there was one other final farewell, a final walk with Toutoune (Monsieur often calls her Manoose, he says it doesn’t mean anything it’s just sweeter!) and perhaps sensing the moment Linda said “You’re not going to get all sentimental are you?!” After all these years she can read me like a book, I’d already slipped a couple of dog chews into my pocket, as we set off around the “block!” As we walked it turned into the most staggering sunset I have ever seen, it wrapped around all 360˚ of the sky and the colours intensified into the most remarkable finale, to a most astonishing summer, and yes the final pat, the dog chew and the “Adios mon amigo, au revoir et à beintôt,” was not without a little emotion, as she waddled down the drive of the chateau, as always without a backwards glance!

“Ici devant nous!”

I’m going to go off the theme of the natural world this time and turn instead to the supernatural world, and like many good stories there’s something of a cliff hanger in this one. On that first meeting, when Madam became Monsieur!, we talked to him about how he lived most of the year in Spain, only visiting the chateau in the summer to be able to welcome his guests to the gîte. We asked if the house was therefore empty during the rest of the year, to which he replied it was and if we saw or heard anything, it would be his long gone ancestors. Funnily enough on several occasions we have heard voices or music, when nobody has been anywhere around, remember our nearest neighbours are over a quarter of a mile or heading towards 500 meters, and when we told Monsieur this rather light heartedly, he was at first quietly surprised, until he first occasion when having a cup of tea at the front of our house he also heard the voices ...... , and on another occasion the music ......!

My original “thought!”

“This has probably gone on long enough!”

But hopefully, you’ve had at least a small flavour of our wonderful “summer relationship!” we just seemed to hit it off and I’m sure there will be more along the way.

Kind regards, Best Wishes and Love, Roger and Linda

And, next time? Maybe a report of all the festive fun, who said they don’t celebrate Christmas in France, and also we’ll have been back in the UK for a couple of weeks collecting even more stories! But, also watch out for “Frog vs Rosbeef!”

Monday, November 29, 2010

Christmas Missive 2010


Happy Christmas and a Great New Year or Joyeux Noël et bonne année, as they say in these parts!!

Dear All

Once more an early Christmas Missive for 2010!!

Well as for our move to France, we’re still here, don’t let the English stamps confuse you, we planned ahead purchased them during our last UK trip and a friend travelling back to the UK has posted them for us and saved us some money along the way!! Yes we’re still in France, still renting La Loge and not much further on, but I do officially become an early pensioner in February, so who knows!! This is a brief Family Christmas Missive for “more” visit the blog http://ithappenedonethursdayinfebruary.blogspot.com/

It has been a bit of a year of ups and downs, the downs to start with; both Linda and I lost an Aunt (Linda’s Auntie Phyllis and my Aunt Marg) as well as a couple of dear good friends and as many of you will know, Max our faithful brown hound went to the kennel in the sky, even now some months later we still almost expect him to be there – certainly when the French Bread is on the table. Also, the house in York was sold then wasn’t and remains unsold– hence the limbo we are in regarding long term plans. Also, on our main visit to the UK in the summer the car had to have some expensive major work done – thank goodness for a mechanic in the family!!

As for the ups, we have once again welcomed many of you to our wonderful part of the Vendée, where although this year the sun didn’t shine quite as much, the ponds did all dry up and the veg needed lots of water, and shorts and tee-shirts were the order of most days. Hopefully, the visitors will continue next year and maybe once again see some new faces! Perhaps the funniest visitors were some friends from Stroud, who unannounced popped in for a cup of tea!! They were en route from the Dordogne to Brittany where their daughter lives!! It was great to see them and luckily they caught us in – it is however best to let us know you’re coming, and it’s a good place to break your journey if travelling up or down France – about 35 miles inland from La Rochelle. We have also made some good English friends and so have a slightly greater social life, but although slowly learning the lingo and making sure we go to as many local events as possible, socialising with the French is more difficult, but has gone past the commenting solely on the weather stage – although living in a rural crop growing area it is a common topic of conversation amongst the French, not only an English phenomena!!

We also had a fantastic time getting to know our absentee landlord who spends the summer here and the rest of the year in Spain. Linda became his IT technician and I became his official photographer and we have very many happy memories of a truly gracious gentleman and eccentric – you’ll find much more about him on the blog, suffice to say here, he now signs his emails “Madame, la coqueluche du village!” Yes – “Madame!!” the rest meaning the rage / darling / favourite (take your pick!) of the village!!

Now for the family news: Linda as well as various work around the house and in the garden, walks in the countryside, weekly trips to the swimming pool and shops, has continued to fill the store cupboard with tasty jams and preserves and gone into furniture restoration and upholstery in quite a big way – it’s amazing how with a lot of elbow grease, and not a little huffing and puffing, some of our more jaded pieces of furniture have been rejuvenated!!

Daniel and Lisa continue to make improvements to their house (with a bit of help from his father!!) and by Christmas will both have newer cars, Lisa because her old one needed replacing, Daniel because some bright spark recently ran into the back of him and wrote his car off, fortunately he was alright – sods law though he had just spent a lot of money on it sorting out the brakes. They both remain very active in St John Ambulance, Lisa running the Stroud Badgers and Daniel the adult division as well as being involved in the Child Protection Team, and doing duties and training courses, he is now qualified to be an Ambulance Attendant and next step is to be able to drive the ambulance with “blues and twos” as they say!! Daniel has just been up to St James Palace to receive his Gold Duke of Edinburgh Award from the man himself, usually now the awards are made by Edward who is taking over from his father.

Victoria meanwhile, has done her 6 month stint in China, had a great time not only teaching English to children and youngsters, but also making the most of her time off to see lots of China, sometimes alone and sometimes with new found friends. Unfortunately, Dermot found he was unable to travel to China, due to his job, so they ended up meeting in Singapore / Malaya for a few days. They had a great time, including Gin Slings and a meal in Raffles Hotel (following in her father’s footsteps, but I was too young for the gin so made do with a coke and the family too poor for a meal so had to make do with a stall quite literally on the side of the road at Bedo Corner!). She also seems to have had two or three cars this year, after a false start with the first that had to go back – long story!!, but now has a small runabout to get her to college / placements. She was thrown straight into her Teaching Course on her return from China, with hardly time for her feet to touch the ground, but it is all going very well and we keep getting excited Skype calls – as a friend said the other day (she is also a retired teacher!): “She is so enthusiastic about her teaching. I think we could all suddenly see ourselves 40 years ago when we were just beginning.” Another recent excited call was to say she had just heard that she, through St John, had been awarded a “Sovereign’s Award,” one of only ten awarded annually, the excitement only tempered a little as she found out that it was Princess Anne again (She has met her on several occasions!!) and not the Queen herself making the presentation.

Linda and I have not returned to the UK so much this year, but have managed to fathom out the French Tax system, and beaten the bureaucracy and managed to register the caravan in France, allowing us a couple of short breaks to Saumur by the river and Royan by the sea. Plans are now afoot to look for some better weather early next year and head south for three weeks or so. As for me I continue with my cooking, writing, photography and have taken up sculpture!! Reviews to date range from “Well it’s interesting” to “C..p!!” Then there’s the garden, walking etc. etc. As I’ve said before “I just don’t know where the time goes!!”

Lots of love

Roger and Linda

Missive 24 ~ Did I ever tell you how lucky we are?

rogerhiggs@hotmail.co.uk

Mes chers amis

Did I ever tell you how lucky we are? ~ Missive 24

“Just tell yourself, Duckie, you're really quite lucky!”
Dr Seuss, American Writer and Cartoonist

“Name the greatest of all inventors: Accident.”Samuel Langhorne Clemens, better known as Mark Twain; Author and humorist.

The first of these quotes is from Dr Seuss’ small cartoon book entitled “Did I ever tell you how lucky you are,” about an unfortunate man who has to spend his life sitting on a cactus!! Yes I’ve pinched the title (nearly) for this missive, but it’s also a book that brings back happy memories of my early teaching career, and is worthy of mention here by way of celebration! Firstly, as luckily I have never had to spend my time sitting on a cactus, despite some prickly moments along the way, but more importantly as we reach with this missive a milestone; no not quite two years of missives (that’s next month!), no not finally being able to be retired early (that’s February), no the writing of this missive will take the grand total or words to over the 100,000 mark, or indeed a medium sized novel – so all of you who complain about the length of these monthly epistles, it’s only been like reading a book over the last 23 months, if you’re too busy for that you need to look at your work – life balance!!!

That 100,000 words is just the missives, there has been plenty of other writings along the way and with a quick bit of maths, works out at approximately 4348 words a month or nearly 145 words every day!! To put that into context or “column” space that’s a little less than the paragraph before this one!! Which neatly brings me back to the theme of “How Lucky we are,” firstly to have the time to spend writing these words and perhaps feeling that a small paragraph a day is an achievement!, but also to have had the experiences we have along the way to share with you, or the time to think about issues that we deem important and sometimes impart these to you!!

Indeed, rarely does a day go by when I don’t open the shutters, look at the view and having pinched myself, go on to realise just how lucky we are, and also how right we were to make what at the time was a very difficult, and in other people’s minds perhaps brave or even foolish, decision. But as my brother said at the time “Life isn’t a dress rehearsal, you only get one chance” and although maybe it hasn’t all gone too smoothly, certainly with some hiccups along the way, nearly two years down the line I’m glad we took the chance!

So I guess no apologies for this missive once again focussing on “the good life,” after all it could have been a seat on a cactus, and then I’m sure the tone of any missive I felt inclined to write would have been altogether more prickly!! And to put the record straight, the writing doesn’t tend to be just a short paragraph each day, no it comes in fits and starts, and I’m just starting this missive (which may run to over 4000 words) with just a couple of days to go until the end of the month deadline!, with lots of other things to fill the time in between. During the rest of the month there are obviously other snippets and ideas written down ready for the mad rush near to the deadline, often just scraps of paper with a hasty note, that are later shuffled into some semblance of order!

Also, I’d like to say that I write in some sort of writer’s garret, overlooking the open fields and chateau parkland that surround us, with clear views of the weather sweeping in and the stunning flora and fauna that abounds and features frequently in the missives. But unfortunately, initially it was quite literally on my laptop on my lap, but more recently spread out on the dining table and needing to be cleared off before we can eat – that explains any parts that suddenly seem disjointed in some way –dinner was ready!!, although this doesn’t happen too often, as much of the writing is done late at night or in the early hours of the morning – I’m still something of a night owl, made all the easier as getting up early in the morning isn’t necessary!

There’s been a murder – Watch this space!!

OK a little melodramatic, and maybe not the right sort of section for a missive on “Luckiness” as obviously the victim was far from lucky, but it did happen in 1984 and at the moment for us at least remains something of a mystery. How do we know, I hear you say and that’s the interesting and indeed mysterious bit!!

We have recently had a spell of very wet weather, not always particularly cold, but those damp, miserable days that seem never to get properly daylight, punctuated with heavy showers where the sky goes black and the wind builds and buffets the showers that sweep across the fields, better for us if they come from the south, we’re a little sheltered by the chateau and its avenues of trees. Days when it is difficult to get out of the house as by the time you have togged up after the last shower, another one is bearing down on you. The sort of weather there may well have been in February 1984, when Joe ..... was arrested for homicide, and again I hear the cry going up “But how do you know!”

Well, I’m coming to that shortly, but in good time! Having been cooped up in the house for too long, watching the clouds scudding across the sky and sensing that there just might be a bit of a break in the clouds and a chance to take the air and maybe a good opportunity to take some dramatic cloud shots as the next angry mass bore down on me. So off I go, coat “in case” and camera slung over my shoulder, over the terrace, across the yard and down the avenue in front of the freshly painted chateau gates, the brilliant white standing out starkly in front of the menacing black clouds that would soon be upon me, then there it was!

At this point it would be much more theatrical to say there in front of me was the body, the heavy rain having washed away the thin covering of soil from the hastily dug grave, but actually all that was there was a small piece of yellowed paper, lying by the side or the road covered in spidery French style handwriting, looking for all intent and purpose like someone’s discarded shopping list, blown on the wind to where I now found it. But two things were interesting that made me stop and pick it up, not simply in the call of litter clearing and to put it in the bin. First, it was relatively clean and not too dirty or wet, despite the weather and secondly it had not been there when I had managed to venture out very briefly earlier in the day, so had only fairly recently arrived!

Picking it up I looked at the writing and was drawn to the first word that followed a date – 7. 11. 81: Crimes, and there in front of me it became quickly apparent, was a list of crimes dated from November ’81 to April ’85. And then through a little bit of dirt in the middle of the page the word “homicide” jumped out. Closer examination revealed that the crime sheet contained minimal details – date, crime and names – of nine arrests for a total of six crimes: felony, possibly evading arrest / escaping from custody, forgery, raid and dealing (I guess stolen property - 3 villians!), theft and dealing (possibly a brother and sister) and the homicide.

And that, I’m afraid is where the trail goes cold; where it came from remains a mystery, it’s a little old I would have thought to be out of a passing policeman’s little black book, not that they pass very often, but then I guess if they wouldn’t need to if there had only been six crimes over a 3 ½ year period! My research to date, following up the dates, names etc, and unfortunately the one word I can’t really read on the piece of paper is Joe’s surname, has got nowhere, so it’s a case of “Watch this Space!” and maybe one day all will be revealed!!

The hunt is up, down, here, there and everywhere – Duck!

When we returned from the UK and turned off our quiet road and onto our yard, it was very early in the morning, still dark and something was wrong! We were not met with the blinding flash of the outside security light that usually picks up the car half way down yard. We hoped it was simply that the bulb had blown and not the main fuse that had tripped during a power cut of surge, as having been away for about a month the freezer could have been in a sorry state. We do however, have some good friends who live in the hamlet at the end of the avenue and were keeping an eye on things, including checking the electricity as there was work scheduled to be done on the supply whilst we were away.

So it was with relief that we opened up and found the lights and everything else working and indeed the house much as we had left it, although with that unlived-in slightly dampness that often prevails in houses that have been shut up for a while.

The next day, on removing the bulb, one end, it’s one of those long thin halogen style bulbs, came away in my hand, obviously the bulb was defunct! When we next went shopping we bought a new bulb and as always when buying bulbs in France marvelled at how expensive they are, that’s why whenever we return to England a nothing can get in the way visit, to a Wilkinson’s, there just don’t seem to be shops like this in our part of France and even those purporting to be discount shops often aren’t that cheap – except dear old Noz, a local seedy “end of line” free for all, with whatever happens to have come in recently into the enormous, and at the moment freezing hanger of a building, filling the shelves of whatever has recently sold out or been thrown away having collected too much dust or in the case of food stuff run out of date. They get everything, including Tesco rejects (we recently bought a couple of rolls of Tesco Value wrapping paper!), but you can never guarantee they will have what you want, but often you find something you must have and then it’s usually very cheap!! If we come up on the Lotto they even have a motor cruiser, worth well over €1,000,000, a snip at €850,000!! It’s not actually in the shop, but on a large poster by the cash desk, streaking across a very blue Mediterranean, that’s the sky as well as the water I hasten to add! Despite the chic appearance I may give of luxury items, it’s the sort of place you feel you need to wash your hands after sifting through the merchandise!!

But, you might be forgiven for thinking that the hunting mentioned in the title is about “bargain hunting,” but nothing of the sort, it’s more about that most manly of activities that is something of a national pastime, and certainly around here, although not I believe elsewhere in France, exclusively a manly pursuit, the woman being allowed to bring the food at lunchtime to the nearby barn used as a hunting lodge!! For fear of upsetting my feminist friends, I make no further comment!

But having got said bulb, come home and fitted it, and being daylight and needing the hand over the sensor to check it was working, all did not seem to be well, it wasn’t working, but as the light fitting was back together and access wasn’t very easy, I went for the easy option of waiting for night fall and then doing the walk test – which of course didn’t work either!! So, the next dry day, a few days later, I needed to investigate if we had been sold a dud bulb and if so work out the French for taking it back! But closer examination revealed that the bulb wasn’t sitting properly in the connectors and suddenly to dramatic effect sprang into light, becoming very bright even in the light of day and nearly toppling me off the chair I was standing on! And, before I get flooded with emails about Health and Safety, the proper way to change a light bulb, safe ladder usage, risk assessments etc. etc., this is France and if I fell off it was my fault, nobody else’s!!

Well, it was also suddenly very hot, not unfortunately a sudden heat wave, but rapidly heating halogen that made it very difficult with both the heat and blinding light to put back the fiddly glass front without being able to see and whilst burning my fingers!! So, with a blinding flash as it were, and a nostalgic thought about safe lone working, as Linda was somewhere else, I decided to trip the fuse whilst I sorted it out!! It certainly made it easier as I could see what I was doing, although as there was a chilly breeze I did miss the heat!! But job done, fuse reset and I came out of the cave (cellar) where the fuses are and turned the corner by the light just as there was the most almighty explosion, which initially I thought was mighty loud for a blowing light bulb, but as it was followed instantly by three or four more and accompanied by a loud rattling of lead shot on the roof of the house, that proceeded to roll noisily down the tiles and ping into the metal guttering, I realised I was under siege from the hunters in the walled garden behind the house.

With racing heart, I ducked quickly into the house, hoping that when the coast was clear perhaps together with the shot a duck or partridge might have dropped in for the pot!! Looking out of the back windows the hunters, accompanied by the local farmer went past, and they were certainly looking and pointing our way! There was never any sign of any supper, so they either missed or it was a case of “Les Anglais – ha ha!!”

The unhappy and the happy huntsmen

Once upon a time some days later, well the title does rather smack of a fairy tale!, there was a hunt in the park behind the large Chateau that seems to grow out of the lawn outside our back windows. The chateau is quite small but elegant – well proportioned you might say, and monsieur l’exploitant agricole (officially the French don’t use the word farmer!), or to be more precise agriculteur mixte, as he is both a céréalier et éleveur bovins (cereal and livestock farmer) – who said the French language was easy!! – was having one of his hunting parties. Part of the deal seems to be that for helping to maintain the estate the farmer has hunting rights, somewhat against Monsieur le Chateau’s principals as he is vegetarian, but out of sight out of mind and as he keeps reminding us when the cats away the mice will dance!

Well, they had been out for two or three hours, with lots of shouting, horn blowing and generally rushing about, and not just the dogs. Funnily enough as I said before the locals seem to be very sparing with their actual shots, preferring the social side of la chasse and only bagging the odd dead cert for the pot.

On this particular day I had decided it was safer to work in the garden than to wander in the woods, as despite not shooting much they do have large well oiled guns and I didn’t want to be on the small, but significant casualty list that was discussed recently in the French Paper, a very informative paper available across the whole of France, and I must say all the more appealing as it is written in English!! I know I should be struggling through Le Monde or Le Figaro, but the news would be so out of date by the time I got to the end, I wouldn’t feel suitably up to date and informed!!

Then, as often happened, there was a rush of dogs of all shapes and sizes, each hunter seeming to have several, along the road and always straight in through the open garden gate, obviously sensing something was there, but usually giving me little more than a casual look having run around me and decided I wasn’t a sanglier and running off again, noses on the ground ever hopeful for a more promising scent. The first time it was a little disconcerting, but they seemed happy enough with my slightly hesitant “Hello nice doggy!” in my best French of course – Bonjour, le chien beau, just in case you’re wondering, sounds better in French doesn’t it!! They were followed up the road by a fairly motley group of hunters, also in various shapes and sizes, and in the front actually looking quite resplendent in obviously brand new camouflaged hunting gear from head to toe was Alain the local fouchage man, who works hard keeping the village and the surroundings spick and span. I gave him a friendly greeting and received a friendly word back, but on enquiring if it had been a good hunt I got back a very terse and anglicised No! Further enquiries to the unhappy hunter, about what they had been hunting for today, informed me that today’s lucky prey had been partridges and pheasants and although they had put up a deer it had got away. As for hare, he seemed to tell me that it was the close season for them – perhaps they were still breeding?

The rest of the group trundled by, looking ready for a cup of coffee or something stronger, but mostly managing a reasonably cheery response to my greeting, and hobbling happily along at the rear was the old farmer who suffers badly with arthritis and walks quite slowly, but certainly it doesn’t stop him doing things, despite being long retired, after the winter storms we came across him, on his own, wielding a chain saw and chopping up some of the casualties from the gales!! However, when the family et al. recently re-roofed one of their barns, he was itching to get up on the roof and do his bit, but the sons banished him to a cage, sounds a bit harsh doesn’t it, but it was on the lift at the front of the tractor, they let him do the tiles around the edge without having to set foot on the roof!!

I got a very cheery greeting from him and when I commiserated with about the poor hunting, with a shrug, a roll of the eyes and a broad smile he said “Mais c'était une bonne marche en la nature!!” “But it was a good walk in the countryside!!” and strode, on as best he could, with his broad rather cheeky grin thinking perhaps that there was always next time! Then, just as I had finished this I had to pop out and as I was about to pull out into the road the hunters, this time in a grey car followed by two white vans were speeding up the road and there at the back, broadly grinning and waving frantically was none other than the aforementioned exploitant agricole!!

So what do we do all day?

You often hear people say that once they retired, they didn’t know how they found the time to go to work and it’s much the same with us and with no television we don’t even sit and watch the box day and night. This year’s Christmas missive touched on this, informing you that over the summer Linda became IT Technician and I became Official Photographer to Monsieur from Le Chateau, but more of that another time.

Linda, as well as some of the normal household chores, can often be found up to her elbows in the preserving pan, making the most amazing and extensive array of jams and chutneys and spends time on the scrounge for jars to put them all in, as we are constantly running out. Our cave now has one side with the drink and the other with the preserves – get locked in and you could be in a total pickle!! She has also worked very hard restoring a number of items of furniture that were looking quite jaded and now would grace the pages of Homes and Gardens!!

We both also garden, walk regularly, although on the longer ones Linda finds something else to do, she never was one for a good long walk, unless there was a reason – like a good pub at the end, she is also continuing to have some reoccurrences of her plantar fraciitis, a painful foot condition that flairs up from time to time. We also venture out about once a week to the shops (about 12 miles away) often combining this with a swim in the local pool, and in the summer go further afield for the odd picnic, vetting spots for the many visitors that are very welcome; gives me someone else to talk to, even though they keep us busy!! And then there’s the national sport of “bureaucracy bashing,” I thought India took the biscuit, usually in triplicate and repeated several times over to several people all doing the same job, but France – they want the crumbs as well, and each biscuit has a different name!!

As for me, there are the creative urges that have grown since moving here; writing, photography, singing again around the house but looking for opportunities to frighten the locals, doing lots of cooking particularly trying to perfect some of the wonderful French cuisine around us (visitors make great guinea pigs and usually seem to come back for more – one old boss who will remain nameless but is Welsh, even enjoyed a sauce so much she said she was going to lick the plate, and she did. Have you noticed how much standards slip when the British are on holiday!!), and I’ve taken to the odd bit of sculpture made mostly out of the natural things we discover around us. A bit of fun, not in the Henry Moore or Barbara Hepworth league just yet, but who knows, critical acclaim so far: “Thought provoking” “I was rendered speechless” “C_ _ p” “I’d say it was a piece of wood stuck on some dowel, but you may have made it!” And these are supposed to be my friends!! Mind you my No. 1 Critic, who being a Yorkshire girl doesn’t mince her words says they’re better than much she saw in the Tate Modern in St. Ives – mind you, you should hear what she says about those, certainly not repeatable for my sensitive readers. I’m working on a number of other Arty Projects at the moment – so watch this space!

Basically the time just goes and there’s never a dull moment!!

With apologies to the prudish amongst you - How can you tell a Great Tit?

The yard was a mass of birds, all shapes and sizes, with possibly a number of Great Tits (did I mention the birds were of the feathered variety), robins, chaffinches (a whole host of them that only the other day I had read were probably all single sex!) all swooping around and pecking in the shallow puddles. I suppose the wet weather had caused the ground to become saturated and forced the insects to the top as easy pickings.

But certainly one of the features around here is the wealth of bird life, including many of the smaller species that we so often hear are threatened and declining in numbers. It doesn’t seem to be the case in these parts and the birds sing all day, not just during the dawn chorus, and maybe early evening as seems to be the case back in the UK. At almost any time of the day and sometimes into the night, except on the very hottest of days when temperatures make any activity draining, we can go about our business, unmolested save for the barracking of the birds.

I was briefly reminded of when I used to walk down the High Street in Stroud and be regularly mobbed by flocks, or should that be cackles, of young birds!!

Oh, and the ornithologists amongst you – how do you tell a Great Tit from a Blue Tit? Answers without any mention of the current freezing cold spell, would be welcomed!

We had a vote!

We recently had an invitation to the AGM of the local Leisure Society, and in keeping with our plan to go to as many events as possible we decided to go, but gave each other strict instructions to keep our heads down and look at the floor when it came to the election of the committee, that came after the Bilan moral and Bilan financier, the first of which appeared to be the Chair’s report rather than anything to do with our ethical or honourable well-being!!

The reports were as always at breakneck speed, which made following them difficult, but we managed to pick up one or two things, particularly about events that we had attended as well as that the financial position wasn’t great, particularly as the clown for the children’s Christmas party, provided by an Art’s Group based in the commune, was likely to cost €800, and so now I’m waiting for a report on value for money and frantically polishing up the juggling and custard pie throwing, there’s obviously money in them there red noses!! Just found out he was very good and ONLY €500!

It was then time to vote for new committee members, so keeping our heads down we tried to hear what we had to do as this was to be a secret ballot!! The committee sitting at the front proceeded to tear up a sheet of paper into enough pieces so that we could each have a vote, these were passed around and taking instructions from the lady in front, who happens to be the chairman’s wife, we wrote the names of the four potential new committee members; Edith, Line, Valerie (one of our new English friends who speaks French very well) and Laurence. These pieces of paper were then collected and the number of times each person’s name appeared counted, recorded and all were duly elected. In our quest not to be noticed during the voting we had managed to help vote Laurence on to the committee and we didn’t even know who he was!! It even transpired some days later that in fact, Laurence wasn’t a “he” at all, but in fact a woman – it’s good to know that democracy is alive and well in rural France!!

Fortunately, the last item on the agenda Questions diverses, was short and not at all diverse, just one enquiry as to when the club de retraite was going to update its image with a name change to club de troisième âge? Unfortunately the chairman slightly misread the seriousness of the request by the small, rather severe lady, and an ugly scene nearly developed when the chair laughed it off, but had enough sense when he realised his mistake, to recover the situation, just in time!!

“Ici devant nous!”

Sorry for any arachnophobes amongst you but I’m going to continue on the theme of spiders. Whilst researching last month’s piece I happened upon an article about the small bodied, long legged harvester-type spiders, entitled “ARE THESE THE MOST VENEMOUS SPIDERS IN THE WORLD!!” Shock horror, as we share the house with a multitude of these, with several permanently resident in the “salle de bain,” yes the room with the shower where one’s most tender and normally covered bits are regularly exposed, just a short drop from the venomous fangs of the Pholeus phalangioides – cellar or daddy longlegs spider. But further research revealed, as luck would have it that a) possibly our eight legged lodgers aren’t said Pholcus phalangioides, but do bear an uncanny resemblance b) if they are, then they aren’t apparently the most venomous spiders in the world, although some researchers would say they come a close second to the likes of Brazilian Wandering Spiders or Black Widow Spiders that vie for first place, which may be little comfort should the fangs find a soft bit of flesh, but c) rumour has it that the fangs are too small and weak to be able to penetrate human flesh, even the most sensitive parts!! However, I’m now somewhat more careful when I try to get them to perform their defence strategy – blow on them gently and they drop a short way on their web and “twistle” around at breakneck speed to confuse the enemy, but there again they may just be trying to hypnotise you before dropping further onto some protuberance below!!

But don’t put off from visiting us as if you go on Wikipedia and follow the link from Pholcus phalangioides, it may all be an urban legend. There is also an interesting link to a MythBuster episode “Daddy Long-legs,” which almost has a “sting in the tail” as it were!!

My original “thought!” or two!

It happened one night, at the end of the summer in September when we were visiting Daniel! I had a dream and it was in French!! But, as with most dreams on waking up I could only remember the bare bones of the “story” and a strong feeling it was in French, however what I couldn’t remember was what the words were, or indeed whether they really were in French, “pigeon” or “double Dutch!!” They do say that when you start dreaming in French, you’re on the way to learning the lingo, so “s'agit-il d'ou devrai-je continuer à essayer?!” Réponses par courriel ou sur une carte postale s'il vous plaît!!**

And a second thought, on the theme of “being lucky!” When I went with the Archway School trip to India and we went Tiger “Hunting,” (spotting would perhaps be a better description), after several very long and hot cantor trips into the Ranthambore National Park we had managed to clock up a total of 4 sightings, 3 really good ones and 1 hard to see camouflaged beast. Well, the recent fantastic series of three programmes put on by the BBC called “Lost Land of the Tiger” reported several times that there are only an estimated 3000 wild tigers left in the world – and I’ve seen 4; how lucky is that!

Kind regards, Best Wishes and Love, Roger and Linda

And, next time? The next missive will probably come under the title of “Count our Blessings!” but there’s a twist!!

** For those busy souls without the time, knowledge or inclination: “Does this count or do I have to keep trying?!” Answers by email or on a postcard please!!

Monday, November 15, 2010

Magic Mushrooms ~ Video

A musical fungus foray, to give you a "flavour" of the amazing variety of "Champignons" we have all around us. Many we're told are "bon comestible" but unfortunately often bear an uncanny resemblance to others that are "tres toxique" or even "mortel!," and as the nearest "Centre Antipoison" is at Angers - over 150 km (nearly 100 miles) away and at least one and a half hours drive the "flavour" will have to remain in the viewing!!!

Click on the link below and you will quickly play a small version of the video. However, to enjoy it at its best, click Download above the video screen and either OPEN or SAVE and be patient!! I promise you it is worth the wait!

https://cid-42bedc71a8702824.photos.live.com/self.aspx/Magic%20Mushrooms/My%20Movie.wmv

Friday, October 29, 2010

Missive 23 ~ The Summer of Our Content

October 2010

Dear All

Hopefully you will find Missive 23 attached. But, oh dear after the mini-ness of the last one this has broken all records and is a truly mega-missive.

However, the covering letter I will keep short and reassure you that the attached missive is at least broken up into plenty of easy to digest pieces.

Also, I guess in part it is therapy, as despite contracts nearly being exchanged on the York house and us being able to think towards the future, we heard a couple of days ago that the prospective buyers have pulled out ............ arrrrrrrrrrrrrgh!!!!

Lucky we love where we’re living, even if it is not our own!

Love

Roger

rogerhiggs@hotmail.co.uk

Mes chers amis

The Summer of Our Content ~ Missive 23

“The Queen of Hearts, she made some tarts, All on a summer day:
The Knave of Hearts, he stole those tarts, And took them quite away!”

Lewis Carroll; author, mathematician, logician, Anglican deacon and photographer.

“True contentment comes with empathy.” Tim Finn; New Zealand Pop star.

I’m all sixes and sevens, after this missive was high jacked by last month’s mini-missive!! And, also as temperatures plummet here in the Vendée, but not quite as much as in the UK, contented summer living seems a long way away, so it will be a case of wracking the recesses of the brain, well trying to make sense of the variously scribbled notes. As I’ve said before, there is a good degree of planning, as well as thought, goes into these idle ramblings – it’s a bit like the Dolly Parton quote “You’d be surprised how much it costs to look this cheap!”

Campsite Capers ~ Holidays and People Watching

I hear you say that life must be one long holiday, and certainly the joie de vie felt when opening the shutters each morning has not diminished, so I would have to concur. But as they say a change is as good as a rest, and certainly the couple of short caravan breaks we have had this year got us away from watering and tending the garden for a little, but also provided some interesting “people watching” along the way! The first four during a heat wave, when staying near Saumur on the Loire the others later on at the end of the summer, down the coast a little from us near to Royan.

It was another “Maud moment!” Many of you will have heard me tell of “Maud” a fictitious character who has manifested herself – in different guises – in several of my writings! She’s a type; be it the sad lonely lady in the bar in Malta with the gold lamé handbag, the strong silent type with the strong thumb many years ago at a French school social or as in this instance – the good woman all but ignored by her other half, even when she delivered his food to the table, and who then reciprocated by doing her own version of looking right through him! - all very different but somehow in each case the name seems to fit!

I christened this “Mr Maud” as Mr Sourpuss, a small man with a very large caravan and enormous four wheel drive, who was pitched the other side of my mum and dad who were pitched next to us. He was together with his slightly oriental looking wife who he never seemed to speak to and who appeared always to walk one step behind him and be constantly at his beck and call, and with a small furry dog who was obviously like it’s owner feeling the heat and unable to cock a leg, let alone lift a finger – or maybe just pain lazy!! I surmised that there real name might have been Martin as the dog was rather grandly called Remy, but certainly not, in my humble opinion, one of the finest of vintages. On the other hand it might simply have been pretentious! The dog spent most of its time sitting on the man’s knee being preened, and certainly received far more attention than the lady in the ensemble, who on second thoughts might have been a paid employee and was certainly expected to be seen and not heard at times watching the man eat at the outside table from behind the plastic strands of the fly screen in the caravan doorway. As you know I’m usually a tolerant sort of fellow, but this rather aloof and stand offish “gentleman” brought out the worst in me not least as when anyone tried to make conversation, including another couple who were staying close by and had obviously been neighbours for some time came to say good bye, as they were on the way back to England, it was all too much for him and more often than not he simply ignored you and looked straight through you as though you weren’t there!! Fortunately, he moved on a couple of days after we arrived, without so much as a wave or a nod, and apart from making sure that Remy was comfortable on his padded back seat bed, did little to help pack up ready for the off. In fact it won’t have surprised me if he had driven off leaving his good lady behind; well he hadn’t acknowledged her the whole time we had been there! The departure fortunate, as the more I was ignored the more incensed I became and the more likely it was that I would say something, if not directly to him, certainly loud enough for him to hear!! A case of people watching at its worst!

An autopsy and birth or two in the pool! Swimming is a great leveller, tall or short, fat or lean, when swimming it doesn’t matter as it is largely your head that shows! “Does my bum look big in this” doesn’t need asking, as long as you can carefully slip into the water making as little fuss as possible, so as not to draw attention to yourself.

Also when swimming people’s inhibitions appear to plunge and you end up making friends, in whom you seem happy to confide your inner most thoughts and feelings, and also seem to think that none of the other swimmers can hear a word you say despite talking in a voice little short of a shout! Perhaps they’re ended up with water in their ears!!

So it was that gently and quietly swimming up and down in the Loire Valley sunshine, I was told in graphic detail all about an older gents arthroscopy and subsequent complications, which were in fact being told to a younger lady who he had only just met who, not to be outdone, was motivated to recount the intimate details of a little operation she had had, and due to the volume of their voices, I didn’t miss a word, even when at the far end of the pool!! But that was nothing, I was then told by a group of young mothers, with their toddlers in tow, all about their various confinements, labour problems (as in birthing rather that working) and their preferred methods of contraception, and they weren’t even in the same pool, they were splashing around, in the baby pool, with the very offspring that had caused them so much grief, that now they wanted foolproof contraception to avoid it happening again!!

Strange noises in the loo! At the same campsite, whilst making a late night call to the loo, I was preceded into the ablution block by two gents who had obviously had something of a skin full and needed to consign some of the excess in the direction of the porcelain! They were talking excessively loudly at such a late hour and this together with an obvious “belching and farting” competition, meant they didn’t hear me slip into one of the nearby cubicles. There followed a long conversation, they obviously had much to get rid of, that rambled around almost incoherently, but kept returning to the same theme, which produced further loud guffaws (from both ends!) every time they mentioned that they had lost count of the number of times one of the females in the company, who was obviously well oiled, had enquired as to whether one of the other men had found his boules yet!!

As they noisily departed, it came as no shock to hear someone in Reception the next morning asking to move – because of their neighbours! At least with neighbours like that we would have been acknowledged, even if we couldn’t get any sleep and if you can’t let your hair down when on holiday - when can you!?!

World Cup! I wasn’t going to mention the World Cup, as I know it’s a long time ago and quite probably, whether wearing my English or French hat, best forgotten, but it does add a multi-cultural element to the people watching and the missive as a whole!

Well, after France and England’s dismal performances I had lost what little interest I had had in the World Cup, but found myself drawn to the loud cheering in the campsite bar, where the final stages of the World Cup were being played out. The big screen rather unhelpfully told me that the match was between PB and Brezil, the latter easily translated possibly accounting for the loud cheering, I thought, until events told me differently. So PB, or as I discovered by a little research Pays-Bas, had me initially flummoxed! But, to put you out of your mystery, unless of course you are initiated, this country is better known to us as Holland or the Netherland (Pays – land and Bas – nether!), and as there were many Dutch visitors on the site, including one very excitable oriental looking Dutchmen and a number of equally lively middle-aged females obviously knowledgeable about the “beautiful game” and who on every Dutch attack jumped up and did a little jig complete with pumping arms, this explained all the excitement! The initial excitement was nothing compared to the first goal when PB went one up against Brazil and the reaction echoed around the campsite. The celebrations were short lived as Brazil soon equalised, so at one all the tension was palpable, and emotions running high, so when with just ten minutes to go, PB took the lead the cheer this time echoed around nearby Saumur and beyond!

What a last ten minutes it was, me doing more people watching than football spectating and finding out into the bargain what “I’m desperate to go to the toilet, but I’m not going at the moment!” is in Dutch. Additionally, I learnt the word for “Rubbish” when the Dutch squandered a chance to go further ahead, as well as some rather colourful language, not for polite company, when the Dutch team fluffed a few breaks and half chances. Then with just a couple of minutes to go, Brazil won a free kick just outside the Dutch box and the two French barmen, who had been harmlessly winding up the Dutch supporters, started very pointedly to remove anything from the bar that could be used as a weapon – bottles, cutlery etc. and took cover under the bar!! Fortunately, the free kick went wide and was quickly followed by the final whistle and much Dutch partying, and I was reminded of those famous Dutch sayings “It hangs upon a silken thread” and “He who waits long enough the world will be his own!!” At least until the next game!

The sun sizzled down into the sea - twice! Amazingly, with all the sky watching I have done I only recall two
previous times when I have seen the setting sun slipping and sizzling into the sea. Both interestingly enough in Cornwall, one at Sennen Cove and the other over the Western Rocks, part of the Isles of Scilly archipelago, viewed from my island paradise – St Agnes – when the children were young enough to humour me, and we listened for the sizzling steam as the hot sun touched the surface of the Atlantic Ocean! Any other time, the promised hiss has been thwarted by a thin band of cloud building up and getting in the way at the crucial time!

But with the beach just a short stone’s throw from our caravan and largely days of unbroken sunshine, even through the hot summer sun was beginning to fade as we were into September, it made for great sunset watching. We were not alone either as each evening after dinner with the things cleared away there was a steady procession of watchers, some armed with chairs, cameras and jumpers at least over the shoulders, as when the sun finally dipped so did the temperature, although we did still have shorts and sandals on and on one of the days I was wearing my swimming costume and had a great time leaping about in the ever increasing breakers as the sun sank slowly out at sea beyond me. After two magical nights where there was barely a ripple, the sea had started to get up and the sun competed with more clouds and on the day I swam with the setting sun, I competed with some really quite large and powerful waves, body boarding and being thrown around completely powerless again the mighty ocean, and on one particular wave, having not quite ventured out far enough, I was mercilessly picked up and deposited on the beach, the wind quite knocked out of me but thankful to avoid the many shingly beds largely made up of empty and broken oyster shells. It was certainly a reminder of how you need to respect the amazing power of the sea and this was on a relatively calm late summer evening!

But, as the pictures I took, quite literally in there hundreds, bear testament that the colours were stunning, different each night and enhanced by the boats, shipping, clouds and bicycles going past! Confused well you’ll have to wait for the posting of some of the pictures on the blog, when all will be revealed!! No, the waves weren’t quite powerful enough to strip me of my cossie, but they had a damn good try! And, yes on two of the nights the sun slid and sizzled down into the sea and it was quiet enough to hear the hiss as it went!!

Is it art!?! It was these rather superb pottery fish that had attracted me initially to the poster and had then persuaded me to seek out the exhibition, which it transpired was in a large well spread out college campus, comprising of a number ,of large deserted terrapin light buildings some for teaching and others used as sleeping accommodation, with the associated canteen, laundry and the like. Deserted save for the one building that housed the exhibition, which also spread out around the grounds, the wonderful fish flying in all directions.

Entering the exhibition, the first thing that struck you was the vast space and the plush interior filled as it happened with a somewhat eclectic if not esoteric collection of largely strange pieces of art. Of the many pieces I was only moved to take photographs of two, apart from those fish swimming around the field, one a glass panel painted with a swirl of many falling people, reminiscent I suppose of wind-blown leaves – well I did tell you it was eclectic!

The other is reproduced here,
but was it art? Well actually no, it was the silhouette of the window frame on the blind pulled down over the window to give some ambience to the gallery. My accompanying critic was heard to think that it was about the most artistic thing around, and I almost found myself agreeing!

Flapping bird! They arrived part way through the afternoon and he had obviously been holding on for some time as on finding the route to his newly acquired pitch, he abandoned his outfit (car and caravan for the uninitiated!) and tried not to appear in too much of a hurry as he hurried off in the direction of the gents! That’s when she started flapping, his wife had got out of the car and whilst looking around for the owner of the vehicle that was preventing them from getting onto their pitch, appeared quite agitated and the lower part of her arms flapped quite simply like a young bird that had fallen from the nest too early and although trying could only flap their wings ineffectively. As she strutted around flapping, I began to wonder if it was in fact her that was desperate for the loo, but didn’t want to leave the outfit in case it got pinched whilst she was away!

But no, on his return he was greeted by renewed flapping and what could easily have been excited squeaking in anticipation of a juicy worm, but was actually squeaks to the effect of “They’re still blocking our way and I’ve no idea who there are or where they have gone and I been flying up and down looking ever since you left!” Further frenzied flapping had me looking around for the other parent with a tasty morsel, but in fact announced the arrival of the offending driver, who without so much as a conciliatory squeak drove off leaving the new arrivals to set up camp. Whilst the man reversed the caravan, to frantic flapping, into the allotted space and proceeded to meticulously set up camp, he was followed, albeit surprisingly silently, around accompanied by much flapping, the intensity increasing when tasks were perceived as being more difficult, such as checking levels or positioning the jack pads (the blocks of wood under the caravan jacks to spread the load and stop the jacks sinking into the ground!).

The flapping continued unabated throughout the setting up, until it all became too much for the lady and she stood dramatically hands on heart, when it also almost became too much for the French couple next door to us, who were obviously also doing some people watching and could barely contain themselves – I certainly didn’t at the moment try and make eye contact!!

This year’s holiday coincidence! We all have them don’t we! Strange and varied coincidences that happen on holiday – meeting someone we know, or someone who comes from the same town, or a group busking, who you subsequently meet again some weeks later when back from holiday busking in your home town, and what is all the more amazing is the frequency with which they happen, rarely does a holiday go by without one!

So it was that we got talking to an Englishman, purporting to be puzzled as to why we have an English car, with a French Plaque, or number plate, and a GB sticker – easy really, living in France when the car insurance needed renewal, meant that we had to re-register it, and the GB sticker has stayed in situ as a subtle pointer that our steering wheel is on the wrong side of the car, at least whilst in France. I say “purporting to be puzzled” because I actually think he thought we were on a scam to avoid UK Road Tax and annual MOT’s, supposedly a growing problem as in France there is no Road Tax and biennial Control Technique’s or MOT’s. We have even been advised to retain proof of our fairly frequent ferry crossing to the UK, in order to prove we are in fact resident in France with just the occasional UK holiday. Who knows perhaps said gentleman actually worked for the DVLA in the UK and was on an undercover mission to trap unsuspecting and unscrupulous holiday makers!

Well, having explained things to him, he was joined by his wife who wanted to know what he was doing, so he had to explain the above conversation, I guess so as not to blow his cover! We then chatted about caravanning in France and, as you may remember from a previous missive or two, how difficult it is to register an English caravan in France. One thing led to another and they said that following an accident some years earlier, when they were unable to take their caravan home, they had put it into storage in the South of France and subsequently found it beneficial for this to become a permanent arrange, the storage facility, each year towing their van to the chosen site, leaving them only a ferry crossing and drive through France with their car. It’s actually a very common arrangement and extremely cost effective.

They then went on to tell us that in order to see different parts of France they had now move the caravan into storage in the Vendée, and what a coincidence that’s where we live!! But no!, that’s not all, it transpires that their caravan is stored with Tom and Eleanor, the Irish farming family whose caravan site we first stayed on when we initially arrived in the Vendée!! What’s more the fact that Eleanor has become pregnant, given birth and now had a 10 month old son, made us realise just how long we have lived in the Vendée, because when we left Tom and Eleanor’s she wasn’t even expecting!

More from “Our patch!”

As you will have gathered from previous missives during the summer, events are plentiful with every commune or village holding a fete or music festival, with not a little good natured rivalry I’m sure! The other amazing thing is in the majority of cases, at least part of the proceedings are gratuity or free!! Here are just two such events.

Music dans la Rue de la Loge You would be forgiven for thinking that with time on our hands we had decided to plan a street party and, as the French have a habit of doing, close the road and party! But no, this Rue de la Loge is in nearby Fontenay le Comte, but does indeed have connections with “our chateau!”

The poster about this event looked enticing and so as we had visitors, friends from Scotland who we hadn’t been able to catch up with for years, a music festival and a stroll around the market and old quarter of the local town seemed a great way to while away a Saturday. Indeed, Fontenay bathed in hot summer sunshine was at its best full of happy contented people going about their weekend chores in the bustling market, and we were even greeted by a bagpipe troupe (not sure of the collective noun for a group of bagpipes!) who were to process down to the music festival, acting quite literally as “pied pipers” to make people head towards the music festival. Booked to start at midday and go on until the early hours of the next day it could have been a long haul, but as our visitors had their twelve year old daughter and ten year old niece with them it was a case of seeing how it went.

Immediately on entering the street it was obvious that there had been an amazing transformation from the rather dreary and run down street I had first discovered over a year previously, whilst wandering to pass the time when Linda was at the Coiffure or Hairdresser. At that point the Rue de la Loge that runs parallel to Fontenay’s main street Rue de la Republic, had certainly lost out in the battle to be top street. In the intervening time, not only was money being injected into restoration project, but also new premises were opening and the street was becoming quite a cultural and alternative area of the town; bars with music, galleries, brocante (antique shops), music shops and the like, quite a rebirth.

We proceeded to spend a very enjoyable couple of hours mingling with the happy crowds, who were being entertained by a variety of folk style acts from a number of different countries, performing at various small stages, no more than a thick sheet of 8 X 4 plywood, and rotating on a carefully planned programme. Arriving at the main focus of the evening performance, the square at the end of the street, an elaborate “meccano-like” stage was still being assembled together with a number of buskers providing entertainment to the throngs of people sitting on the multitude of long trestle tables and benches, owned by the community and always part of French partying.

Over the months we have been here and as we have explored it more, Fontenay has grown on me. It is certainly a very vibrant cultural centre, and on this particular day, for the first time reminded me of Stroud and its various festivals, carnivals and celebrations. It was once more this summer, really rather a contented feeling and the large portion of moules frite (amazingly just 3€50) washed down with a glass of beer helped considerably.

Luçon night This was all the better as we stumbled across it both by default and unexpectedly. By default because we had decided to have a day out at the seaside for Linda’s birthday, but as the weather forecast was, as it happened erroneously, not too good, we decided to go the next day and if we hadn’t we would have miss this “One Night Only” event completely.

Well, setting out in brilliant hot sunshine, we decided to head towards Les Sable-d’Olonne, on the recommendation of Monsieur from the Chateau (there you didn’t think I could go a complete missive without mentioning him!!, but that’s the lot this time, but maybe a book to follow – The Count of .....!!), and a splendid typically French seaside town we found, busy as it was August but fun just to soak up the atmosphere and know we were not a million miles from home and there weren’t in any case the traffic jams of St Tropez and Cannes.

We settled on a “picnic” lunch overlooking the sea and decided to head south towards our normal haunt – La Tranche sur Mer for an early dinner. But with the long hot summer afternoon ahead of us and despite a sea in the languid Atlantic, we got ahead of ourselves and ended up with time on our hands, so decided to head inland and dine somewhere at Luçon, a charming small town that we had visited once or twice before.

Arriving in the town, we were surprised to find the whole of the centre of the town closed, with “Route Barré” signs everywhere and as there was something of a carnival feel to the place, complete with a fairground set up in the main car park, felt it safe to investigate. What we found was that there were three free stages being set up for an evening of live music and a real buzz about the place. Having wandered for a while we settled on a hotel restaurant, well it was Linda’s birthday treat and had the fixed menu; three delicious courses for 17€, vin et café compris!

Then it was out to see how the setting up was going and we were just in time to see the start of a fantastic, professional and very energetic group called Mélisse, who were quite simply superb, playing a wide range of material including many rock standards and looking as though they were enjoying every minute of their set that just seemed to go on and on, with little in the way of introductions between the songs. After over on hour we felt we had to drag ourselves away and go and see what the other stages had to offer, but they would have been hard pushed to better Mélisse.

The second stage we encountered, a smaller more intimate affair had a group called La Marguise we recognised as being at one of the other tables in our restaurant, and consisted of three young men and a slightly older lead singer, who were all giving their all and although not at first seeming as professional as the first group, were actually very accomplished at what they did best – protest songs and I re-christened them “The Angry Young Men – with a smile! As they were obviously thoroughly enjoying themselves, despite having been on stage for what must have been over an hour and a half of high octane dissent!! When they finished we wandered up the road to stage three to be confronted by the local high school band – average age 16, with a much younger lead singer. Called Sex Fesst, as I guess would seem appropriate at 16, they were not at accomplished as the others but obviously had a large following and would certainly be one to watch in the future!! They were having some sound problems but when they sorted them out, they belted out a great “final” encore, although I think their groupies had other ideas and we left them to it and went back to Mélisse, who we could just hear were still performing, between the songs of Sex Feest!

Back at the main stage, Mélisse were indeed continuing unabated and didn’t even seem to have had a break. By the time they finished it was gone midnight and they had been on stage, performing brilliantly for at least three hours. We drove the few miles home buzzing, after what had been an amazing and unexpected end to a great day, and the music festival was gratuit or indeed free!!

Visitor Numbers

The visitor count for this year is down a little on last year, perhaps the novelty has worn off I hear you say, but no all those visitors who came last year have, where circumstances allowed, returned this year. Last year’s numbers were also up a little because we had our annual “Family Weekend” at Chez ‘iggs, which meant not only a large influx of visitors, but also several repeat offenders!! In real terms we had 20 individuals visit us last year, some as I said more than once, and this year to date we have had 22 individuals, with two more to come – Daniel and Lisa have finally managed to find some time and are spending Christmas with us; flying out and then hitching a lift back just after Christmas, in time for our traditional seeing in of the New Year in York.

Of this year’s visitors, at the moment by the end of the year, 8 will be first-timers but that’s not to say that it’s not too late to get yourselves in the Visitor Book and have a stone added to the Visitor Cairn, Autumn is lovely in the Vendée, indeed we have just sat outside in warm sunshine having our lunch, although the nights are closing in and becoming colder. Although flights become less during the winter months, they do still fly from Stanstead to La Rochelle, with some great offers if you book early, or there are some great ferry offers for short breaks or on the Dover – Calais route, which although a good drive from us, could see you meandering through Northern France, soaking up the sights for a couple of reasonably leisurely days on the way here and back, making for a great out of season break!!

Blanket of Night or “Dog’s bark changing to a howl in response to the owl?”
Thoughts from a balmy, or should that be barmy evening at the very end of July!!:

Night falling like a blanket, as the blanket gets heavier
The night becomes darker,
And the different layers of stars become “uncovered!”
With the darkness come the sounds and sights of the night –
A loudly croaking frog on the edge of the water trough,
Doing its best to drown out the other sounds.
The dog barking at the end of the road, urgent and incessant.
The water cannon, cutting through the field edge trees
As it waters the riot of maize in the distant field.
Far distant drone of a lone vehicle,
Blocked by the harsh hoot of our neighbourhood owl.
The flapping of the bats in the still of the night,
Hopefully keeping the “biters” at bay!
The strange and ceaseless unidentified squeak from the flower border.
On the table the flickering citronella candle,
Losing the battle to keep the high pitched whining “mossies” at bay.
Low rumbling of a far-away aircraft, high in the darkening night sky.
Something rustling over the wall in the fallen leaves
Of the chateau garden, and not yet August, but autumn on the way.
The nearby mooing of a cow causing, or coinciding with,
The jump of the frog into the water.
The metallic clacking of the cockchafer beetle
Drawn relentlessly to the shade of the outside light.
Dog’s bark changing to a howl in response to the owl?
Drawn back to the stars, as the settling blanket uncovers
The “plough-handle” and the North Star, before
The light dips to reveal Ursa Major, that Great Bear in the sky.
That dog would annoy me if I lived closer, far more intrusive
Than the quiet drones of the remote car and noisy aeroplane.
Shimmer of the candle on the side of the house,
Further flickering of moths in the candlelight.
Clicking of the cooling down sides of the caravan.
Further rustling in the border, Shouting at a distant party with music pulsing
Seemingly in time with the relentlessly marching water cannon.
But, I’m off in as the candles and bats don’t seem to be doing their jobs
And the blighters have started to get me!!

“Ici devant nous!”

The “ditch food” has once again this year been plentiful, as I believe it has in the UK, and we have found supplies of apples, pears, chestnuts and blackberries to date. It was whilst picking blackberries close to the nearby village of St Cyrs de Gâts, which I came across a fearful looking beast, on the lookout and guarding its particular part of the hedgerow.

At first I thought it was a large hornet, quite common in these parts and when we first arrived we were warned to check when taking in the washing that there wasn’t one trapped amongst it. The consequences of slipping on a pair of freshly laundered underpants and ..... ouch!!, it doesn’t bear thinking about!! But, back to the beast, having realised it was not a hornet but a large spider doing a very good impersonation! Indeed, research told me this was a Argiope bruennichii, simply called Argiope in France but commonly known as a Wasp Spider in England, where it can be found very rarely in the south. It is a spider that makes an orb web, with a very noticeable thick zig zag pattern under the entrance, that gives it another common name of Writing Spider (of Charlotte’ Web fame for the teachers amongst you!). The purpose of this “writing,” web decoration or stabilimentum to give it its proper name, is unclear but may serve to attract insects or as the webs are rarely more than a metre off the ground, be a warning sign to prevent the web’s destruction by animals walking into it.

As is the case with spiders the female is much larger than the male, in this case by as much as 5 or more times, with the male coming in at 3 – 8 mm and the female 25 mm, so not providing much of a meal after doing the business!! However it seems, as is often the case in our part of the world, the female that I had spotted came in larger than the normal maximum, a good 30mm or more! A common question is “do they bite!” to which, in this case is yes possibly if grabbed, although they are regarded as harmless to humans and won’t attack. But further research tells me that their venom is a “library of polyamine toxins with potential as therapeutic medical agents” However, I didn’t feel the need to go back to check!!

And, just to prove that life here is a bit like an ongoing Nature Watch, I’ve just been disturbed by a commotion outside the back window and on investigating it, there not more than four metres from me a large buzzard had come cautiously but noisily to ground, obviously having just caught some prey, which the long grass was hiding from me. After a couple of minutes, during which time I was able to quietly call Linda in from the other room for her to see, and when it was sure the coast was clear, it lifted of carrying its prey, in order to dine in a safer place. This afternoon, the unfortunate meal turned out to be a green woodpecker!

My original “thought!”

What does my scribbled note, attributed to a good friend (name to follow!!) who visited in the summer, mean? When visiting Ile de Ré, Dorothy, when in the back seat of our car, was heard to say “I’m not stroking your bottom, I’m just holding your thingy!!!” Just goes to show what a exciting and fun summer we have had, as the above hopefully testifies! Thinking back, long and hard, I don’t think I’ve ever heard it called that before – that’s the catch for the seat belt, before you ask!!

Kind regards, Best Wishes and Love, Roger and Linda

P.S. The jam tarts et al. (see the top) weren’t half bad as well, the kitchen working overtime during the busy summer season!

And, maybe to come next time? Quite simply this time “Who knows what tomorrow brings!” and as the nights draw in and the weather turns cooler, what adventures lie ahead! But whatever, the title will come from Dr Seuss’ little book – “Did I ever tell you how lucky you are!”