Thursday, April 22, 2010

Progress

Progress!!!!!!

The builder's arrived and I am happier than one ought to be to welcome someone who is making such a mess. Paul is English, comes highly recommended and is very particular about keeping things swept and tidy. I have threatened to buy and chain and padlock to keep him here for a couple of months but I fear a month is the maximum he can stay before he goes off to another site. For the moment there is a large opening where there was once a door into the new rooms. On Saturday evening I arrived home to find Skeep, one of the Village Labradors inside the house eating the cat’s dinner. It is a little strange to go to bed knowing the house is totally unprotected. It is one of the joys of living in this area that even so, I feel completely safe in my “open house”. No need for a cat door for Matilda now.
Monday morning is my regular time for calling all tradesmen who failed to arrive as scheduled last week. This week it’s the jackpot. Nil has arrived to build the new staircase and dismantled the old one faster than a speeding bullet. Fortunately there is an entrance to the house on the second floor or it would be parachute time. The made to measure Armoire is installed and looks better than the photo in the design magazine we copied. Clothes are now hanging in orderly rows instead of being squashed in assorted suitcases and hanging behind doors where they have been for the past four months. Last but not least, the odd job man is coming next week for two days. Progress at last.
But, it is mixture of good and not so good. Yesterday, after my morning shower I went downstairs to find everything is the pantry in pool of water. It seems a dodgy seal on a pipe broke in that room when the new pipes were being laid in the new room. The shower water went sloshing straight into the downstairs room. The terrace resembled a bazaar of wet belongings for the day. Then a fountain gushed forth later in the when the builder accidently broke through a plumbing line. Fortunately it was a dry sunny day. As I write, a loud expletive from downstairs fills the air as more water gushes from the ground!!!!!! Another break through??

The previous owner who now lives next door finds this wreckage all too much and averts her eyes when she passes.

Food Glorious Food

Food Glorious Food
France, Fetes, Food …. a Holy Trinity to be celebrated with the abundant sacramental bread and wine of each region. The annual Fete de Responchons was held in Cordes sur Ciel today in warm sunny spring weather. This festival celebrating the arrival of Spring and a wild asparagus. It is found growing along the roadside and collected by the country people. Lunch for a couple of hundred people was served in the covered market in the old city. This asparagus is weedy looking with a bitter taste and needs to be boiled before adding to any dish, usually eggs. Not only have the asparagus arrived in the market but I have decided to plant a little bed of this delicious vegetable for myself. For me it will herald the arrival of Spring each year as surely as the first cuckoo I heard this week.
My new abode has the tiniest of gardens so I decided that everything I plant must be either edible or fragrant. After much strenuous digging and considerable time spent on eliminating all the roots of couch grass, the previous occupants of my patch of land, my trench was ready. Following the internet instructions for filling the trench with rotted down manure I then drove up to the dairy nearby, braved the three barking dogs and asked if I could take some of the same. I’ve planted Argenteuil plants or Griffes as they are called, advertised as the “the ultimate white French” variety. If the information given by the experts is reliable I can now look forward to a generation of asparagus each spring.
Baking "The biggest Croquant in the World" is also an integral part of the celebrations at the Fete de Responchons. The cooking takes place in the Place de la Bride, the highest point in Cordes. This local biscuit is baked in a homemade thermometer-free oven using the embers from a huge fire lit by a couple of intrepid locals who then supervise the cooking.
The oven, about three meters square is constructed by first shoveling and spreading coals on the ground under a huge tin biscuit tray. A chef in white coat and toque pipes about five hundred biscuits on the tray while the fire is being prepared. A Second tray or lid is then placed over biscuits. More hot coals are heaped on this top tray which is then covered with corrugated iron and the whole thing is left for about an hour while the biscuits bake. The aforementioned locals take a peak at the biscuits from time to time and adjust the coals accordingly to ensure they are cooked evenly. The biscuit mixture runs and spreads into one big lovely mass and even if it is not the biggest croquant in the world it is enough to feed the few hundred people who have been hanging around waiting for it to cook. It costs only a euro for a generous plate of the yummy warm pieces of the croquant. Usually eaten cold they are very crunchy but eaten this way, straight for the big "oven" they are even more delicious.

Dawn Chorus


Dawn Chorus
I bought a house in this village after five years of being a carefree tenant with no responsibility, and fell headlong with eyes wide shut into an unheated house in coldest winter for decades. Once upon a time my house was insulated on the upper level with bales of hay and warmed on the ground floor by the cows brought in to live with the occupants in winter. It was restored and used as a summer house by two intrepid English women, so although there is a wood burning fire upstairs, downstairs was sans chauffage, no heating at all. The thick stone walls which help keep it cool in summer also ensure that without heating it is arctic in the winter. I ate upstairs and then waited for it to be late enough to jump into my warm bed with electric blanket which was truly my saviour. Then I slipped in the snow and was certain I had broken my coccyx and had a sprained wrist in a cast for two weeks. The builders never arrived; the water and electricity authorities likewise, which along with the non arrival of various other assorted artisans, made life difficult. The climax was a fire in the chimney. I was terrified of losing my new house, even worse, momentarily I could not remember the emergency number. While I waited for the firemen I put Matilda, my cat, outside for safety if the worst happened and quickly packed a small suitcase with warm clothes, computer and passport. I kept a close eye on the chimney expecting it to explode or burst into flames at any moment. After what seemed like an hour, five handsome firemen arrived in a big red truck, lights flashing, fortunately no sirens. I could write one of those books about living in France on no subject other than France Telecom and Orange. Suffice to say I had no telephone for a month and no internet for two months. I felt very isolated from family and friends.
Well you get the picture; a “Winter of Discontent”. Just as I reached an all time low the birds returned and now I wake up to the Dawn Chorus, magic. They have returned from wherever they fly in the winter and I’ve discovered some of them fly a long way. In the last three weeks they are up early singing and letting us know something out there is still alive and spring is here. It is wonderful to just listen to them as one goes about the daily routine. I recently placed an old nesting box on a wall of my house high up under a roof so they are not in the direct sun and where they are safe from Matilda. Now I am anxiously waiting for a little bird to set up house there. Because it is so quiet and unpolluted in the Tarn they take centre stage for entertainment. In Sydney where the winters are milder the birds, including the noisy parrots, seem to sing or crow, all year round. Here seasonal changes and the departure and arrival of the birds are important and significant events
Late last year I went to Marrakesh with a friend, my first visit to Morocco. The Riad Menzeh where we stayed was just wonderful with the added attraction of local birds called tibbibts in residence, nesting in a chandelier. They were extremely tame and came to sit with us at breakfast. Their song is only three notes, repeated endlessly. One guest thought it sounded like his name fred-er-ik. I recently wrote to Bernard the owner of the Riad and asked if the birds were still there. He replied they are happy “it is the love season”.
At coffee this morning a friend said that two hoopoe birds have built a nest near his house. Next month the nightingale will return and then it will be birdsong all night long as well. I am interested in finding a group of people near here in the Tarn whom I might join to listen, watch and learn about the birds in France. Even if you live in a city where the traffic drowns out birdsong you can listen to the Dawn Chorus on www.birdsongradio.com Happy listening.