Category Archives: Travel

Avignon Travel

French fantasies

In the foothills near Tarason (between Avignon and Arles), 5,600 square metres of land with 138 olive trees (“138 pieds d’oliviers” – sounds grander in French) with a little house. About £100k.

Sounds perfect – the agent says “a place for you to de-stress”. From which I read there’s no phone line or electricity, or reasonable economic possibility thereof, and probably no mobile phone signal.

The house looks exactly like an Australian farmhand’s shack, with a verandah out the front – ahhh.

No, I’m not serious, just fantasizing.

But should you be captivated, the agent’s number is 04-90-43-59-73

Avignon Travel

A digestif to watch out for

Vieux Marc de Chateauneuf du Pape, made by the Legats.

Since last night was my last in Avignon, thought I’d indulge in a digestif, and the waiter persuaded me to try the local speciality. It is very strongly flavoured – reminded me of Chinese fortified wine with its complex combination of herbs – and very strong.

I drink much less now than I used to in my misspent youth, and I don’t have the tolerance for alcohol I used to have, but I’m still not a cheap drunk. However, my head remained in the clouds for several hours afterwards.

I’m thinking of buying a bottle just in case I should ever need to have an operation without anaesthetic – you wouldn’t feel a thing…

Avignon Travel

Approaching Ancient Glanum

If you can tear yourself away from modern Saint-Remy-de-Provence* (and the ice-cream shop just into the old town from the Republique bus stop (the terminus) is highly recommended) – then you head due south, up a busy road with little provision for pedestrians, past the tourist office. I provide these directions because this is a town astonishingly lacking in signs and the street maps that most French tourist centres are liberally sprinkled with – and the tourist office is usefully closed on Sunday.

It is uphill all the way, which at least means a downhill run “home”. And just when you are starting to wonder if there’ll be sufficient reward for this hard work, on the right the official entrance to what was ancient Gallo-Greek, then Roman, town of Glanum.

It is a fitting introduction, for it marks the moment that the town changed hands – the astonishingly intact (and it doesn’t look restored) mausoleum is that of the family Julii, who took their name, of course, from Caesar, when they fought in his army against those dreadful barbarian Gauls. (Although when you get into Glanum you’ll find they were pretty damned civilised for barbarians – indeed with buildings scarcely distinguishable from the Roman.)

mausoleum

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Avignon Travel

Observations on the roundabout

In the Place d’Horologie, which is the tourist centre of Avignon, with at least an angled view of the Palaise des Papes, is a roundabout that inevitably, with its lights and music, attracts the eye (and today, particularly, floods of small children).

I was watching the fun – it seems there’s a gender split. Wheneverthere was a male present, he got to ride with the children too small to be left on their own, while mum waited with stroller and waved at each pass. Not sure which is the preferable job really – one child was bellowing its lungs out with fear…

And I was watching a girl of eight or so, far too fearful for her age. Unable to find the stirrups on her own, obviously worried about losing her balance, she reminded me of myself at that age – totally physically inept through lack of exposure to physical activity.

Later, wandering along I was thinking about trying to learn French by reading books (I’ll be telling you soon about the first book in French that I hope to read all the way through – not counting 10-page guidebooks), and reflecting that this was how I learnt at least the more sophisticated corners of English. There are still words that when I go to say them I realise I don’t know how to pronounce because I’ve only ever read them.

It is that time of year when one tends to reflect on where you’ve come, and overall, I’m pretty happy with the progress from the suburbs of Sydney thus far.

Avignon Travel

I defect to the French

A gorgeous day yesterday, too nice to be spent in museums, so I started out at the famous Pont Saint-Benezet, famous chiefly, I gather, for a rather irritating children’s song, which was anyway factually incorrect, since in the 19th century they danced under, rather than on, the bridge – probably safer. But still the 19th-century did save four spans of the rather remarkable structure. It was built in the 12th century – what was described as the “first bridge” – although archaeologists have found it had a Roman predecessor, and the medieval constructors used its foundations, at least in part.

bridge

But the Rhone was still a big challenge – and it was beaten – the legend says by a God-inspired shepherd boy of 11 who came down to the town and told the people to build the bridge, laying the first, impossibly large, foundation stone himself. That was of course Benezet – who is buried in the lower of these two chapels – well he was, until his body went on one of those inevitable medieval wandering courses.

That first bridge was pulled down by the nasty French, after the Avgnonaise, an early independent Republic under the suzerainty of the Count of Toulouse, were so unwise as to side with the Albigensians (believers in Manicheism). (The walls, and the merchants and nobles great defensive tower houses went too.) But the bridge soon went up again and continued in use until the 17th century.
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Travel

Pride cometh before a fall

I’ve been feeling rather good about my French this trip. Not that I’d claim for a second that any French person doesn’t know I’m an Anglo as soon as I open my mouth, but increasingly I’m finding that the tourist office answers my questions in French, in French, which used not to be the case, even if the nice lady on the TGV buffet did explain her French for “you’ve got to stir the hot chocolate a lot” in English as well – but it is not a phrase that immediately leaps to the comprehension, so I might have been looking a bit blank.

I even spent quite a bit of time last night shamelessly evesdropping – well the rather loud man was giving a lecture to the waiters rather than holding a conversation – on French national politics, and following it quite well. He was laying into someone, I think Sarkozy, for being a marionette of George Bush, and about the Iraq war generally. But he was also saying, more or less, that France needed a Napoleon, so I feared I was listening to the National Front, but eventually he did say he was for Segolene Royal.

I was going to go over and ask him what he thought about global warming but got distracted by a British couple who sat down beside me – the classic hapless Brits – not a word of French between them, and they are planning to buy a “big block of land – 100s of acres” somewhere wholly French. And they were taking sips of Coca-Cola in between the wine – mon dieu!

I even spent an hour chatting to the hotel porter in French about life, feminism, green politics etc – well OK it might not have been the most philosophical level of discourse, but I sailed through with only the occasional resort to “say the English word with a French accent and it might even be right” approach. (OK< he speaks English as well, which helps.) But then, the letdown. I was in the camera shop buying some batteries, when a Mormon missionary from Nevada who's been here for two years (yes he told me his life story) came straight over and spoke to me in English. Sorry to the French proprietor, to whom I didn't exchange the customary pleasantries as I fled - but I suspect she understood.