Wednesday, 15 March 2017

the day revealed


When the fog lifted, a bright, warm day was revealed.

We took our new bikes onto a familiar path, by the Lot, towards Fongrave, past the stately Chateau Caillac, past some stone ruins part-buried by blackberry, past the dream-house whose manicured grounds slope down to the shimmering river, past a fruit and vegetable farm, through a glade where tall, mature trees shade a manor house, an oasis in the vast, open cropland.



In the village of Fongrave, there is a tiny, 18th century church. 1749 can be seen on the lintel.









There are ancient half-timbered houses.




In a chair by the river's edge, a patient man sits with a long fishing pole.

He looks up as we pass and upon  my greeting of "Bonjour" he asks if we are training for the Tour de France.


Tuesday, 14 March 2017

Wondrous sights


Last night produced a full, blood-orange moon.

This morning, dense fog.

The first is something I've never witnessed before, awesome.

The second remains impressive, though a fairly common sight now I'm living in France.








Monday, 13 March 2017

Hoopoes not Woodies


More of these beautiful, exotic birds have come foraging in the colourful lawn-weeds in our front yard.

But I was mistaken, they are not woodpeckers. Thanks to a reader who corrected me. 


Apparently they are Hoopoes ... 


According to Wikipedia: The hoopoe (Upupa epops) is a colourful bird found across Afro-Eurasia, notable for its distinctive "crown" of feathers.





This one came quite close to the house.




At one point, he actually splayed his crown, but my shot was out of focus thanks to a tuft of grass in the foreground.

About the same time, another colourful bird made an appearance.






We looked it up ... it's an Eurasian Jay.

And to our delight we also spotted this character making his way quickly across the front yard, disappearing into a neighbour's property.

I don't know what it is. Any suggestions?









Saturday, 11 March 2017

Woody Woodpecker


To our great joy, we spied two woodpeckers feeding in the grass at the front of our house. I had to shoot them from inside, for to open the doors would've spooked them away.

Click on the images for a bigger, better resolution photo.



I love its crested, tan-coloured head and the zebra markings on its back and wings. This was probably the guy who gave us a start at 6.30 one morning when we were rudely awakened by a knock, knock, knock at the front door.

Half asleep and rather apprehensive, I opened the door to ... no-one there. But still the tapping continued. I stealthily walked around the house and disturbed my little mate on one of the garage window shutters.






Two holes pecked in a first floor shutter show Woody's work, one on the lower left and one on the upper right. Don't know why they are next to the brickwork.





Unfortunately my long lens is not long enough to do justice to the subject. But it is the best I could achieve.


Thursday, 9 March 2017

Age and beauty


One of the joys of living in France is the opportunity to regularly indulge in the beauty of medieval architecture, of ancient villages so wonderfully preserved.

One such village is Pujols, atop a high hill overlooking Villeneuve sur Lot.

We took our friends Kerry and Graham there today. It was delightful to walk through the streets, admiring the houses, shops, restaurants and churches.













Pujols is in the "Les plus beaux villages de France" club.


Wednesday, 8 March 2017

An electric shock!

I made another trip up into the hills behind Castelmoron to see Monsieur Rigo this morning.

Our wood supply, which was supposed to last all winter, had dwindled to almost nothing.

This was because we had turned off all heating in the house and relied solely on the fire insert.

The reason? An electricity bill for just two months of 870 euros. Yes, 870 euros. You'd think we were running a foundry.

And, we thought we'd been using the power judiciously, nothing was on in the unoccupied rooms. The insert augmented the electric heaters, which were turned off through the night, except for our bedroom.

The bill was such a shock that EDF suggested we get an electrician in to check the house out.

Everything was working fine. Our electrician was bemused by EDF's suggestion, pointing out that any leakage would've activated the circuit breaker on the fuse board.

And here's me thinking South Australia's electricity supply was inefficient and expensive!

I wondered if maybe EDF needed the revenue to keep its infrastructure in good shape. After all, you wouldn't want to cut maintenance corners with nuclear power plants.

How people can afford electric central heating is a puzzle. Just another French mystery.






Friday, 3 March 2017

Retrospective

Reading Ken Broadhurst's latest post in "Living the Life in Saint-Aignan" has prompted me to go retrospective ... and put some photos up of my one-time South Australian hobby, growing oysters.

My old mate Steve Bowley, whose farm is on the Yorke Peninsula coast at Stansbury, gave me one of his lines to grow my own oysters, in return for helping him out from time to time.

I put about 3000 oyster spat in the water in 2012. By the time I left for France they were pretty much all gone. I'd eaten them or given them to friends.




Six months old

A little beauty


A back-yard operation


Harvesting





Captain Bowley

When I started out, Bowley told me that oyster farming wasn't hard work, at least no harder than gardening. Over the years I came to learn that he was a joker.