Thursday

Our Lives in Sunrise Cottage


September 23 - September 30
Our trip was long but pleasant to our new place, "Sunrise Cottage".  First, we stopped by the supermarché in Ruffec for a few food supplies. Linda and Rod the owners who live in the middle of the building (lovingly referred to as the 'barn') met us, gave us the key and a few tips then we unpacked the car. Thank goodness we have a bigger vehicle as we seem to have accumulated more 'stuff'! Along with the purchase of the car (remember when you got a toaster if you opened a bank account?) we were given two portable DVD players and a 12 volt cooler. Sweet!


What a lovely surprise to find a welcome basket with food staples  and a bottle of Charentais rosé in the kitchen. So thoughtful.
Web link to the cottages

In a European Internet newsletter I had read about a photo festival being held at a small village in the Ruffec area during the month of September but had discounted it as we were not going to be there until October first. But, as we had arrived a week early and Linda reminded me about it, we said Let's Go.  It was a serene 6kms (4 miles) drive through the countryside. What luck to be so close! What an exhibition! Photos everywhere, some blown up to over 5 feet tall (top left in collage), others tacked onto wood attached to  hedges, more hanging from tree branches, some on stone walls. 100 professional French photographers displayed their work.
                     A selection of photographs                                  

There was food, wine and beer served from an old caravan, tables, chairs and odd furniture set up under the trees. We enjoyed a well deserved relaxing afternoon watching 
people of all ages partaking of the photo displays.


The weather has been perfect - blue skies, puffy white clouds, cool breezes and cooler nights.

We have looked at quite few houses during our stay but nothing that really interests us yet; we continue searching the Internet.

On the following Saturday we went with Linda and Rod to a big building with all sorts of second hand items for sale and then on Sunday to an open air village "boot sale"/"flea market"/"yard sale"/"vide grenier".
   Whatever term you use,  I call it
Same Sh*t Different Country ! But what fun we had looking at the bargains. Some of the old furniture was very impressive and reasonably priced.

Colorful   stalls
Potimarrons     (Is there a pumpkin under his T-Shirt?)

October - Autumnal days

The cottages set are amongst corn (maize) fields with possibly five vehicles, including farm equipment, passing by down the lane per day.
However... 
The first Sunday of October  - Great Excitement!



The Hunt Was On!
The hunters put up signs warning the general public that they are out in full force to kill anything moving......
They park their white vans, some with decals of hare or wild boar on the side panels, in a certain area then let the dogs out. They wear safety orange vests (the hunters, not the dogs), blow their horns, shoot off their guns then break for lunch.  A few glasses of wine consumed with their meals and they are ready to continue the ritual in the afternoon.

This was all together too much for Angus. He began running around barking with the dogs and at the vans as they were driven up and down the lane chasing whatever was in the dried out maize fields.
So, ever after Angus has taken it into his head that all vehicles traveling the lane are hunters with dogs and therefore must be barked at. Le chasse takes place on Sundays, Saturdays and Wednesdays with varying numbers of vehicles, dogs and men from September 1st until March. They cull the deer, wild boar and hares and occasionally but not often shoot a domestic animal or a human. 
Dangerous times, these hunting days.
On their early morning walks Brian and Angus have spotted deer on two occasions and a hare, but thankfully no wild boar (sanglier)  has come rushing out of the underbrush !

 We knew that 'Sunset' cottage was going to be occupied by an English couple (Roy and Susan or Sooozan as Roy says in his Yorkshire accent) and their black Labrador retriever  Breagha (Bree-a), Gaelic for lovely and that she is.
But, what we didn't know was now delightful they would be. Along with Linda and Rod we have happy hour on the gravel terrace every evening each bringing drinks and 'nibblies'. Then we part ways to have dinner in our own places. Linda and Rod give us insight into living in France (where to purchase the least expensive wines), imparting local knowledge while Roy and Susan regale us with stories of life in the frozen, rainy north of Scotland (5 months winter, 12 months bad weather). Susan must be one of the very few English persons who speaks and has taught Gaelic.
Each week Linda provides us with a list of available organic vegetables then she emails our orders to the farmer.

  Natalie the farmer, Linda, Susan, Roy and Brian 
(Just what IT was that Roy said to Brian, we do not know.) 

  Oh how life has changed from the years of tradition enjoying drinks and dinner with friends every Friday night to last Friday night, at six, picking up our "Bio" (biologique) still-in-their- dirt vegetable orders at Natalie and Pascal's outbuilding. 
But then we merrily set off home, to our new tradition of happy hour on the terrace.

The corn fields are being harvested now. How enthralling to watch the big equipment thresh and strip the cobs of their yellow kernels all in one step. Once the hopper is full it is emptied into a trailer hooked up to a tractor. Everything else is left in the field. We went walking after the harvester finished and I picked up some of the naked cobs and husks. These will decorate our table at Thanksgiving. But,  for now the wee animals have fewer places to hide from the hunters... however, lots of loose kernels for the taking. 
The leaves are changing colors and falling, falling; the shadows becoming longer the days shorter, chimney smoke in the air and warmth in the hearth. Aaah, fall is arriving.


ps please check out the blog CA2Brittany by David Thompson listed in "My Blog List" underneath.
He and his wife left the USA two months before we did. His blog details their journey and adventures in France. Worth the read!  Enjoy.
       



Monday

House Hunting republished by Blog Ghosties Oct 3/2011

This was republished October 3, 2011 - I was only making corrections to text which had become distorted.  Hmmm...blog ghosties ??  Please see the most recent post on October 2nd entitled Before moved to Poitou Charantes. Thanks for following our blog!
                                  Sorry for the inconvenience

House hunting has become a full time job. There is no Multiple Listing Service as there is in Canada and USA. We are on our own. We have to search the Internet for a property, contact by email the Web Site and they then put us in touch with the owner or the "agent". Or sometimes we find properties on an agency's website. They all act independent of each other, so we can't use the same person to view each property. This means explaining our wants each time. Also, there is never a "For Sale" sign on the property. Why it is this way is not a mystery. Traditionally French properties have been passed on to the next generation with the wife not having equal rights - Napoleonic Law (and you think it hard to change your government???). However, that has changed somewhat with documents which can be signed prior to purchasing. The Brits and other Europeans have been buying up the older (ancienne) properties and restoring them. If it wasn't for the Brits many old properties would have been left to rot. So thanks for the Brit invasion! The French prefer the newer styled villas (cookie cutter bungalows) with all the modern amenities. So, to fill the demand for houses changing hands more frequently and a way to make money, "immobliliers" offices

Sunday

Before we moved to Poitou Charentes on September 23rd.


 The Food

Pan Fried Saumon å la Chef Brian
   To describe the difference in the taste of food I would compare it to when we quit smoking. The flavors are enhanced and magnified: roasted chicken, pan fried Norwegian salmon, lamb kebobs, salads: all mouth watering. “Petit pois” (peas in a pod)  were available into August.  Almost every night we have salad, for two reasons. One, it is extremely tasty using soft buttery lettuce and the other is practical. The fridge does not keep the vegetables fresh very well which then demands that we  eat them quickly! Of course, none of these dishes would be so tasty if were not for Brian's cooking skills, for which I am daily thankful.   

 

The Tourist-y Thing


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/fc/Carcasssonne_vieux_pont.jpg

We visited  Carcassonne, Europe's largest fortified town still standing and just a couple of hours south of us. This was our fourth visit because it is such an amazing place, but this was our first visit this year.  Unfortunately, we have never been there at night. Looks spectacular, doesn't it?  The bridge is built over the Canal du Midi.  A perfect medieval cité. Link for more information:    http://www.beyond.fr/villages/carcassonne.html









We strolled through the cobbled streets, had a  bit of lunch then visited my favorite gargoyle.


I first fell in love w with him in 2005.
Such an expressively tortured /tortured-ly expressive face!






                                                 

      Angus and Jo in the CIté                                





 The work of navigable waterways linking the Mediterranean and the Atlantic through 328 structures (locks, aqueducts, bridges, tunnels, etc.) is one of the most remarkable feats of civil engineering in modern times. Built between 1667 and 1694, it paved the way for the Industrial Revolution. The care that its creator, Pierre-Paul Riquet, took in the design and the way it blends with its surroundings turned a technical achievement into a work of art.  Sadly, most of the 200-year-old plane trees which were planted on either side are diseased and will have to be cut down.
                                                                                         LE CANAL DU MIDI  241kms/130miles long





Thomas Jefferson visited the Canal du Midi in 1787 (He lived in Paris as Minister to France 1785-1789) with a mind to taking plans back to America which would connect the Potomac River in Washington D.C. and Lake Erie. . A plaque was placed in 2009  (220th Anniversaire de la Revolution Francais) near the bridge (A Bridge for  Liberty)  by the lake. I have no idea where this is on the Canal, we just stopped to take in the scenery. I stumbled upon this plaque but was not tall enough to take the photo at a decent angle but it states Jefferson was a "great guy" and played a key role in the draft of the Constitution of France.
                                                                           So there you have it!

                                                   Views of rural Southwest France