Author: Kathy

  • Every twentyfour hours 7

    Every twentyfour hours 7

     

    Could it be number seven already? Thank you for all the likes and comments. Its hard to believe this is being read in India. It gives me great encouragement to continue the blog which I love doing anyway. It’s a real plus to see people picking it up. I hope it inspires some of you to take the plunge and follow your dreams.

    It feels like I pulled out of Rosslare yesterday.

    I made it to Bourges today from Sees. And Mon dieu, the French know how to celebrate.

    It appears La France is in to the next round of the World Cup – the semi final.

    I am at the municipal campsite which is close to the town centre. The Robinson Campsite – The noise is deafening. Continuous car horns sounding and it sounds like all the fireworks will be used up by Saturday the Quatorze Juillet.

    The gendarmerie will have their hands full tonight getting order back in to the roaring crowd which is quite audible from here.

    I broke the journey up today between Tours and Bourges, by going to Chateau Villandry on the Loire.  It was a small detour but took me down some minor roads that were challenging with the van in tow. Still it looked so interesting that I felt it would be worth it. I was right!

    The back story to this incredible castle is that it lay abandoned at the beginning of last century. It is a vast sixteenth century renaissance masterpiece, briefly owned by members of the French royal family. About this time, Anne Coleman – and yes there is an Irish connection – had married one Joachim Carvallo and they were looking for a family home. You can guess the next bit. While carvallo was a penniless Spanish scientist, destined for a great career, she was the youngest daughter in a dynasty based in Lebanon in Pennsylvania who had made great fortunes in mining. Ann had taken a degree in science in Bryn Mawr, the only college open to women in those days in the USA. She was greatly talented and fell for Carvallho when they shared a professor at college.  Their forebear was from Donegal, with the surname Hanlon and he actually took his wife’s name when he married Ann coleman’s grandmother. He had come over in the late seventeen hundreds, well before the main wave of Irish emigrants in the eighteen forties.

    Carvallho made it his life’s mission to renovate the chateau and gardens. They had six children who all grew up in the chateau and it was the heart of a warm and loving and large family. It is now owned by Henry Carvallo, great grandson of the original couple.

    The gardens are what are most remarkable about the chateau. They are not very extensive, but are laid out in meticulous patterns. Since 2009, the organic method has been adopted so no artificial fertilisers are used. Rotation planting is part of this method, but they not only rotate the classes of plants such as Brassica (cabbage family) and Solanum (aubergine, peppers) but the colour is coordinated to give contrasting stripes in between the box hedging which is used to separate each type of plant, interspersed with all of this are roses such as Rose Marlene Dietrich, and deep red and others with wonderful scents and vivid pink colours.

    The white wheel turns to place a new plan on top of the garden. You can identify the plants using the colour coding

    The flower beds have a love theme, the hedges shaped in hearts in one part and in a topsy turvy pattern in another to signify the ups and downs of love affairs.

    My camera was almost down to no battery when I got there as I had been using Google maps, but I actually felt relieved that I did not have to record everything. It reminded me of my mother so much – gardens always do, but as I sat in the water garden I though this is where you are now at this moment in your life. I know I will look back on this trip with great fondness. Memories of the past do enrich the present but they do not define it. We all have our moments. I do remember my grandmother having prized Malmaison carnations which smelt of aniseed. They were reputed to have come from the gardens at Malmaison in Paris where the wives of the ill fated French royal family lived. I can still see and remember the smell in her old fashioned greenhouse.

    The castle floors were tiled upstairs and downstairs in terrazzo tiling – very cool in the summer but it must have been a freezing place to live in the winter. The dining room was particularly well thought out – looking out over the gardens and with a medium sized oval table in the middle. There was a water fountain at the end of the room, continuously bubbling quite loudly reputedly so there would be no awkward silences while entertaining. Again the floor was tiled, giving it a wonderful solid feel.

    The day was not without its challenges as I missed the turn onto the Autoroute for Le Mans so I ended up on some minor roads- much harder work than the wide motorways.

    On the motorways, being overtaken by a large artic is a bit nerve racking. However I have developed a habit of moving to the right hand side as they pass. I have noticed that you are drawn towards them as they pass. When you understand this, you can counteract the force.

    A car crossed the overpass in front of me seeming to be travelling away from me. It had a long white trailer with what looked like a boat upsidedown on it. It was three times as long as the regular motorhome, but only half as high.  Next thing, this vehicle started overtaking me out of nowhere. All I could think was damn, this will go on forever. As it moved ahead of me on the autoroute, I noticed it swaying towards a car that was overtaking it. So it happens to all vehicles. It must have come on to the same route as me from another direction.

    The Aires run by Vinci are very clean with great facilities for recycling etc. The big ones cater for trucks of which there are thousands over here. Other Aires are very basic with only fairly rudimentary  toilets ( I won’t go into details) and a few benches.

    Others still are designed for caravans and motorhomes to overnight.

    I am torn between getting to Italy by Thursday or staying in France for the Quatorze celebrations, maybe in Chambery. With the World cup excitement it could be worth being in France.

    I am taking heart from progress to date. Corfu is within my sights. The Italian roads are said to be quite a challenge. But I was told not to go into Naples too years ago when I was in Sorrento. I would be robbed blind. I thought it was totally illogical to miss an opportunity to see the Bay of Naples. Santa Lucia made a deep impression on me as a child. So in I went on my own leaving the others safely in Sorrento. I ended up taking the wonderful Via Vesuvio railway and taking the funicular up and down the streets of Naples. I even visited the Cabinet Segreto which is part of the museum and contains sexual objects collected from Pomeii. It was locked for reasons of prurience for many years.

    Just a load of Phallic symbols and some naughty pictures that had been painted on the walls of the Pompeian villas.  So it is important to not always go with what ‘they ‘ say – ‘They’ are not always right. I also made a point of climbing up to the top of the fort overlooking the Bay in the blistering heat just so I could have the experience of seeing the historic and celebrated Bay of Naples for myself.  What is the point in being some where if you are going to be put off by talk of crime or bad reputation. Travel is all about being curious and driven to see for yourself what some where looks like and feels like.

     

  • Every twenty four hours 6

    Every twenty four hours 6

     

    Some days you just need to kick back and relax. I find that incredibly hard to do and I found myself telling myself – you have a lot of relaxing to do today- typical that I would lay out the agenda even for me to relax.

    I started by taking the curtains down in the caravan. They are green faded velvet and I gave them every chance. The transformation is dramatic. I did say I would only do one pair, but I worked through four of the windows, leaving only the front window decked in faded finery.IMG_5742

    Once I had picked shopping up – the messages- as we say in Ireland, I did some enforced relaxing.  I sat outside the caravan. There is a glorious warm breeze so the only sound is the trees rustling and the birds singing. I abandoned all plans of travelling today to give myself a chance to savour this lovely place, along with a cheeky robin who thinks nothing of flying down right next to me to pick up crumbs. The breeze has brought down some premature hazel nuts which appear out of season. Technically, next month is Autumn but we will not dwell on that.

    I wrote postcards, cleaned the caravan and strolled down town for stamps and coffee.

    During my strolls, I have noticed little statues on pedestals above the streets, set into nooks on buildings. They appear to be religious. Extremely beautiful in their delicate, miniature way. Typical of this town which speaks renaissance from every angle. With detailed cornicing and delicate detail on every building, the temptation is to take a thousand photos.

    The afternoon found me in the deckchair again, knitting and feeling really together and relaxed, and now I can hardly get out of the chair.

    I am getting used to living in the caravan and have managed to get it organised at last.IMG_5720

    Bring it on tomorrow travelling south!

     

  • Every Twentyfour hours 5

    Every Twentyfour hours 5

     

    This is a long blog so I have headed up some sections that you may wish to skip.

    Woke with a slight headache which I put down to anxiety because it went as I relaxed during the journey.

    The range of patisseries in France is incredible. Imagination, variety and low price.IMG_5734

    Technical stuff:

    I had a couple of problems before I left Tourlaville and Camping Cotentin.

    1. Lowering the stands – the wheel brace is inserted into a hole in the fibreglass rim, but the fibreglass had risen above the actual screw so it had to be put on at an angle. This had worsened so I could not get the wheelbrace out. I eventually got it out and had to file the fibreglass to make sure it came out again. I had noticed this before and forgot to remind Newbridge caravans to fix it before I left Ireland.
    2. The jockey wheel came off in my hand after I had successfully put the trailer on the towbar of the car. I could see the handle to attach it but could not see the corresponding part. At this stage I just sat down on the grass and said Kathy you are an eejit to think you can do this. Then I saw that the metal part attaching to the trailer had just flopped out. I clamped it back in again and screwed it tight.

    Off I went, not at all sure of myself. Then I saw the boot was open from the dashboard although it had not flopped up. I found the first parking bay and closed it.  Forgot to mention that in France, the contacts to open barriers, tolls etc are all on the passenger’s side, so I had fun at the campsite swiping the card and dashing around to the driver’s side before the barrier came down. The tolls are similar although they give you enough time to get back to your side of the car.IMG_5729

    My eyes were sore and watery and I felt tired after about 75km so I watched for somewhere to stop. At this point I was nearly in Caen, so I made for the centre and drove around there not finding anywhere decent to stop, I found myself coming back up on the main road and suddenly feeling much better. My eyes stopped hurting and I felt more sure of myself. I could see the direction I should be going as I had studied to map fairly well. I think it was also that the sun had risen in the sky and was not blinding me so much. Also the change in focus in the smaller street of Caen probably gave my eyes a rest.

    I stopped at a small aire where I had a coffee and felt I was really beginning to enjoy the journey.

    My destination La Chappelle Pres Sees (Sees) was 100 km beyond Caen and as I approached it, I felt like continuing driving.

    Driving with a caravan:

    While towing a caravan is daunting at first, you do get used to it.

    I had a nasty experience going up to Dublin when a truck passing me caused a huge air surge and put me off course. The trailer started to sway and I veered into the outside lane trying to regain control. I dropped my speed immediately and it came back to normal.

    This caused me to be nervous of trucks passing. However, the air surge will not cause swaying. It is your reaction that causes it. If you stay on course with a steady hand, the caravan will keep straight.

    It is a bit like riding a horse, if you turn your head, the horse feels you want to change direction as your whole body follows your head. Only it is not anything as sensitive as that.

    What I do know is that if you feel you are losing control at all, slow down. Like skiing, if you’re going too fast you will be out of control. The only way to regain it is to slow down.

    My driving, even without the caravan has been transformed. I am more aware at corners and more vigilant in general. I am no expert but I am certainly learning.

    I realise I can probably do more than 200 km a day. It took me 3 hours without stops and Three and a half with.

    Sightseeing:

    I passed a camping Aire on the way in to Sees which I did not use although it looked great. Camping in France is so well catered for. There is a whole world of possibilities

    As I drove towards Sees, I noticed signs for the caravan site which took you on the perimeter of the town. It was incredibly easy to find and is within easy walking distance of the centre.

    I parked at the train station before going to the caravan park and walked in to the town. What a treat was in store. It is a warren of ancient streets with every building preserved and ornamented from every angle. An enormous cathedral dominates the town.

    The square at the centre is flanked by the Mairie and the museum, all beautifully preserved and decked with flowers.

    The museum had an exhibition of photographs of a Buddhist temple in Java – Borobudur and its regular exhibition of religious artefacts dating back to the 12th century. Entrance was only €2 and well worth it.

    I could hear organ music as I approached the cathedral. There is nothing nicer then relaxing in a stone church away from the bustle and heat of the afternoon. But I was not prepared for the vastness and antiquity of this structure. With the organ music billowing around me I was quite overwhelmed and emotional by the beauty of it all. A few other tourists had wandered in out of the heat and we all stood spellbound as the organ rolled and rose to a crescendo of lower and yet lower notes which thundered inside the echoing walls of the church. I thought it has to be over, but then I heard the turning of pages in the perfect acoustics of the church. The music began again and I understood the true meaning of the phrase ‘pulling out all the stops’.

    Camping Le Clos Normand:

    Getting here was so easy- leaving here will be the more difficult task. Grassy large pitches, with all the amenities you expect from a French campsite. Tariff was €11 including electricity. The weather is so balmy that the breeze blowing through the trees is very welcome.