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Wednesday, August 31, 2011

The Bourgogne

First of all, thanks to you who have dropped a line or two to tell us your news.  Its so comforting to have a touch of familiar and to know that you think of us too.

The weather has done everything in the month since leaving Paris from unrelenting heat to booming storms and days so glorious you wish you could bottle them.  I don’t handle the heat well.

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We are currently traveling the Canal de Bourgogne, southeast of Paris.  It is said to be the most most beautiful of all canals, but one of the least traveled.  The reason…there are 189 locks.  I’m the first one to whine when things get too hard and I have no complaints as the scenery is so lovely.  The countryside is green with forested rolling hills.  On the valley floor and up the hills are many farms with grazing cattle and fields of grain or corn. 

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By car, we are about two hour from Paris.  As it’s also one of France’s prettiest parts the whole area is scattered with old country homes and grand chateaus.  We are limited in the number we can visit because they have to be close enough to walk or ride our bikes.   We’ve seen three so far and have been astounded by the amount of wealth there was to indulged in these showplaces.

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We have seen 100’s of villages up and down the hills.  When I say small I meant 10-30 houses all built between the 13th and 19th century.  They are built of a beautiful limestone.  The method is called “dry stacked”.  The walls are about 20 inches thick with stone on the outside and inside then filled with dirt, water and rock.  There was no mortar used originally.  But in the last fifty years, as they’ve been renovated, it’s used.

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As with the villages we saw last year in the northeast of France most took a huge downturn after WWII.  Since then things have only gotten worse and now with the recession, more than 40% of the old homes are falling into ruin with not much chance of ever seeing new life.   70% of the small cafes and groceries stores in France have closed in the last 20 years.  Poor old France is going through a very rough period and yet the people have never been nicer to us.  Once they find out that we are American/Australian, and not British, they are even more happy.  Strange, but true, the French seem to like Americans very much now. 2011-08-967

We visited Alesia, the ruins of a Roman hilltop town that seemed quite sophisticated.  There was a amphitheater (that sat 5,000), a large meeting hall, many cobbled street with two story houses, gardens, orchards and more.  They had basements, so to speak, where they would keep fires in the winter to warm the stone floors of the home.    2011-08-937

The highlight in the last few weeks was the Abbaye de Fontenay, “a superb example of a 12C Cistercian self-sufficient monastery nestling in a lonely but verdant valley”.   The Abby was sold during the French Revolution and became a paper mill.  In 1906 a prosperous French family bought it.  They spent a fortune restoring the original buildings, built a very tasteful large home within the grounds and created simple gardens that create a wonderful atmosphere.  The church and cloisters are elegant and. for us, more moving than any of the many Cathedrals we’ve seen.  We loved it.

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The month in Paris and this last month have been so special and interesting and all we had hoped for while on our boat.  Now that we are in a more popular area of the country we have been able to enjoy many meals off the boat.  Most cafes do a lunch meal of three course tasty meal for 11-15 Euros ($16-23).  It includes a starter (entrĂ©e), main dish  and dessert.  Sometimes a glass of wine and coffee are included.  Other times they will have a cheese course as well.   We never need big dinner in the evening and will usually have soup, bread/cheese/pate or leftovers.  I love not cooking!  By the way, the stone fruit here is soooo good this year.  Is it the same where you are?

Books:  I can not recommend Erik Larson’s, “In The Garden of Beasts.”  I found it wordy, tedious and dull.  I can recommend Jane Kirkpatrick’s, “The Daughter’s Walk”, fiction based on a true story.  I was given a paperback by Anita Shreve, “Fortune’s Rock”.  An ok book for the ladies who want an easy read.  As always, I’m looking for book titles.

Just so you know not every minute is bliss.  There are times when I am just plain bored.  I really miss being able to see a movie, driving my car and a nice glass of Californian Chardonnay.  

Terry

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

The back of Bourgogne.

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Well summer seems to have arrived! We have had several days in the 30s (90s  F) that have sent us out to sit under trees and caused us not go very far each day, which has resulted in some very quiet and rural moorings. 
Although we are not that far away from Paris it has felt like we were really in the back of beyond.  For several days there was no cell phone service and we found a big hole in the internet.  One evening we were musing on what would happen if we needed emergency medical attention.  Then the TGV whizzed past on the other side of the valley and we remembered the modern hospital in the last town that was days away by boat, but probably 15 minutes by car – not really so isolated after all.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Armida’s Log–Start of the lock staircase

Date: 28-Aug

End Location: Marigny-le-Cahouet

Weather:  Sunny with a cool breeze – perfect

Journey Time: 6 Hours 25 min (including lunch stop)

Distance Travelled: 10.4 Km

Number of Manual Locks: 28 (uphill, our most so far)

Number of Lock keepers accompanying us:  4 (students)

Other boats passed: 1

Scenery: Bucolic

Rating: ***

Notes: This canal is so delightful it is a mystery  to us why there are not more people travelling on it.

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Thursday, August 18, 2011

Is it summer yet?

Tanlay, Canal de Bourgogne.
Summer in France.  Hot, lazy days, warm nights, time to look for a tree to moor under and stay cool – oh yeah.  Where is it?
Earlier I posted about the stinking hot days in Paris and worried that we would have to high tail it to the country to stay cool. Well that lasted two days and that was back in June.  Since then has been a succession of cool grey and often gloomy days with glimpses of sunshine and a couple (literally) of lovely sunny days that made us think summer had finally arrived.  Perhaps our summer was in May and June which were delightful, but we want more.  Actually the weather was a blessing in Paris but now we are cruising again it has much more impact on our experience.
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We enjoyed the Yonne as it had a succession of interesting towns (Joigny to the left) and pleasant cruising with the exception of the excruciatingly slow locks - but the rivers are not as intimate as the canals.  2011-08-211_thumb1They are wide, have more trees and you can’t tie up when you feel like it. They are at the bottom of the valley so you don’t get to look out over the fields, only up.
Our domestic battery bank (the other bank is for the engine and bow thruster) wasn’t holding charge so it was time to replace them.   The sticker indicated they were installed in 1994!  It was certainly time.  The guy at the marina said that may be a record.  Not cheap though.  $1,000 (BOAT= Bring Over another Thousand) and they weighed about 150 pounds each.
We are now on the Canal de Bourgogne which climbs over the hills to Dijon with more locks and the highest elevation of any canal in 2011-08-327_thumbFrance.  Since commercial freight traffic stopped a few years ago it has been neglected; there is a lot of weed and the depth is not good. On the canals you can supposedly stop anywhere but when the depth is a challenge you can’t always get to shore.  So you get the bow in and then pull the stern (with the sensitive parts) in gently as far as you can.
Now the canal is starting to wind more and get prettier. The villages are quaint with many of the buildings made of stacked limestone.  No mortar. 
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Although there are signs of the decline that seems ubiquitous in rural France, there is still life and we can always find the morning pain au chocolat and frequent little restaurants.
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Tanlay, as well as having an astounding Chateau, is the starting point for some of the hotel barges that frequent this canal. We were lucky to get the only free spot on the quay.  As they move slowly and take up a lot of mooring space we will be trying to avoid them.
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Internet is sparse or  non-existent .  Even our 3G dongle only crawls along.  Seems that everything is slow in the countryside, so it might be a while before this gets sent.
This afternoon we set off to go one lock to a nice small village but the mooring was too shallow.  We nearly got stuck in the mud, so we went two more locks and stopped just before a fantastic thunderstorm.