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February, 2011




Vitre Castle
Located in the central part of the medieval city,
construction was started at the end of the 11th century.
We visited it while returning from Paris


Note:
If the Epistle seems a little long in the tooth this month it is only because there are a lot of pictures. There is the same amount of blah,blah, blah as usual.

Concarneau



Earlier this month, we jumped in the car with a couple of friends and did a day trip to the medieval town of Concarneau on another part of our coast. The walled section with its ramparts is on an island in the bay set to defend the city from marauders.



The surrounding towns are among the most traditional in France, one with a few older ladies who still sport their ‘coiffe’ in homage to the areas notoriety for their skills in the art of embroidery. When you come across these folks, you know you are not in Kansas anymore…


A tiny project

Last winter, I started phase two of our kitchen renovation by hand adzing 3 ceiling beams, including shaping them with a draw knife much as was done in the day. In fact all of the logs in our cabin at the island are hand adzed as electric power was not yet invented when it was built. I had to stop when Janice received her Cancer diagnosis and we were on the next plane out of here.

Hand Adzing

Shaping with a draw knife

Early this month, we got the New Year off to a productive start by smashing our kitchen ceiling. Gee, does that make me passive aggressive? [In my wife’s world, all play no work makes you not earn your keep]


John helping place the beams

The finished product

Forged beam supports

Carved trim

Removing all the hideous Styrofoam ceiling tiles, repairing huge holes in the ceiling and texturing between the new ceiling beams I hung, punching a small hole through the roof for a light well, hand forging the beam supports, hanging some carved hardwood trim pieces, a little paint and boom-ba-ra-boom, the transformation was done.

Next! Bring it on, baby.


Road trip!

Taking a much needed break from …eh …I dunno… -well anyway, we packed our bags and took a little road trip. After each of Janice’s treatments at the hospital, we have exactly 21 days to do as we please, go where we want until the bell rings and she needs to be back at the hospital on time with no ifs, and's, buts or coconuts.

This time we drove to the town of Jublains, visited the Roman ruins and went on to Paris where we spent the night. The following morning we flew to Athens Greece in an early celebration for Valentine’s Day. The first time Janice was diagnosed with breast cancer was on Valentine's Day 14 years ago, and it has been an ongoing effort to try to re-associate the day with some positive experiences as opposed to doom and gloom.


The Parthenon on the Acropolis in Athens

Delphi

Once landed, we rented a car and hit the deck running. This being our first trip to the country we covered all the mandatory ‘must see’ sites, you know the BTDTGTTS places (Been There, Done That, Got The T-Shirt), as well as a number of lesser known but very impressive archeological locations. We spent the first few days in the heart of Athens before touring the southern part of the country.


Olympia

First Olympics were held here in 800 BC

We visited 5 new [to us] World Heritage Sites (The Acropolis, the fortress and theatre of Epidaurus, Mycenae, Olympia and Delphi) Olympia was the location of the first Olympic games in 800 BC. As women were not allowed to view the games I hesitated taking Janice, fearing she might then be privy to all our secret ‘men stuff’ there. She said that I should not worry because she already knew all about the scratching and spitting.


Can you spot Janice?

She is the speck below the flag


Athens Olympic stadium

Capacity 68,000 and home of the ‘modern’ Olympics. I was sure I came in first but by the time I completed a full lap, everyone was gone!

Lesser known but of great importance to believers was Aerios Pagos. Located within yards of the Parthenon, it is a rocky hilltop where the apostle Paul preached and converted the masses.

Aerios Pagos.

Delphi, was said to be the earth’s navel (the center of the world) as was determined by the god Zeus. That was a welcome change from our visit to Morocco 2 years ago which was clearly where god inserted the world’s suppositories.

As far as lifestyle issues are concerned, we found that Athens like many European capitals appears to be about to cross a tipping point. Twice we entered or left the city and took an hour to travel 1 mile (2Km). The traffic gridlock is so pervasive that many common traffic laws are blatantly ignored with no pretense of trying to enforce them.

It is simply the law of the jungle, with people parking on all four corners of the crosswalks in the intersections, double parking and following an ‘everyman for himself’ approach to driving. I simply cannot imagine what these places will be like in 10 years when thousands of new cars are added to the mix.

Highway driving is a good example. Slower vehicles drive with half the width of the car in the emergency lane and half in the driving lane proper. The rest of the lane is for cars to pass you. This in effect turns the emergency and regular lanes into two lanes going the same direction. Ditto for oncoming traffic.

How to turn 2 lanes into 4.

This is all unofficial mind you but is the accepted practice for all including cement trucks and 18 wheelers. It took me about 48 hours to become a Greek driver, flying along at up to 2 ½ times the posted speed limit (ridiculously low) and passing like a maniac, once in full view of a policeman. It was as if someone had said “forget all the laws, just go have fun!” I drew the line at passing on blind curves on hills.

Trying to fit in with the locals is one thing but I still have things I want to do and for that I need to live. By the way, I have whined before at the price of gas in Europe. Well, here we go again with Greece now holding the record for our travels. 1.92 Euro a liter ($11.00 a gallon)

Finally, the other item that caught our attention was the number of buildings, either homes or businesses that are abandoned. We have all seen buildings that for whatever reason were started and never completed. Here, we guessed that 10 % of all buildings we saw were derelict empty shells. Some, as in the photo, are occupied on one of the floors while the remainder is but a raw concrete frame. 10% may not sound like much but look down your street and imagine how many of these you would see in your neighborhood.



At least a third of all buildings, even if they are completely finished, have steel rebar sticking out of all the rooftop corners (also seen in the photo) as though another floor is intended to be added —but it is not. While not entirely sure why, the explanations we heard ran from ‘the economic crisis’ (many appear to have been in this condition for decades) to a tax policy that said that until your building was ‘finished’ you didn’t have to pay taxes on it.

To be honest, it gives the entire country a general run down, dilapidated, derelict look that does not indicate pride of ownership. It might also explain the pervasive graffiti seen everywhere.


La Tour Prend Garde

Returning to Paris we settled into ‘La Tour Prend Garde’, a 5 bedroom villa on the outskirts of Paris we had exchanged our home in Brittany for. The dining room which sat 16 was in a glass enclosed sunroom overlooking 3100 sq ft (350 sq meters) of tiled terraces including a swimming pool and a hilltop view of the city below. An interesting place with lots of history, it was used by the French underground in WWII to sheltered British officers caught behind the lines.


Plaque on villa wall.

“Here, during the German occupation, English officers and parachutists were hidden, including Sergeant Serge Boldrini who was shot on July 19th, 1944”


We were there to meet up with daughter Mandy who was also in Paris for the week to compete in a university legal mediation event. She was representing her university in Stockholm Sweden, one of 60 schools from 35 countries that were attending. While this was not open to the public, Mandy was persistent and persuasive enough to get us cleared. It was a real treat watching her in a pseudo legal setting, negotiating a complex business dispute. She was born to do this!

In her free time we visited the medieval city of Provins outside of Paris and finally got to check out the Catacombs we have been wanting to do as a father / daughter thing for years. Ok, so it may not be at the top of your list of Parisian sights to visit but you can only climb the Eiffel Tower so many times and this is a one of a kind sight.

There are six million skeletal remains of Parisians in 1 mile (2 Km) of limestone caverns below the streets of the city that were interred over a period of 100 years starting in the late 1700’s. The skulls and individual bones are artistically stacked along the sides of the corridors. The catacombs were also used as the headquarters for the Paris underground (no pun intended) resistance group in WWII.


Mandy and her guy Markus at Notre Dame

Mandy’s intended Markus joined us for several days and we enjoyed our time together. Meanwhile, when we were not with the kids, Janice and I would waste away the hours by having lunch in some downtown café after taking romantic walks along the Seine or l'Arc de Triomphe and re-visiting old favorites like Notre Dame, Montmartre, Sacre Coeur or hanging out in the Latin Quarter. Sure beats working…


Lafayette department store in Paris

It reminded me of GUM in Moscow or Harrod’s in London.


Thousands of padlocks line the handrail of this entire bridge along the Seine near Notre Dame. Parisians do this to symbolize their devotion to their love interest.

Returning home, we visited the cathedral in Chartre (large enough to fit 2 Notre Dames in it) and the medieval castle in the city of Vitre as seen in the pic at the opening of this newsletter. Gosh, I sure hope we didn't use up all the fun and there is some leftover for next month.



January 2011





Chateaux du Taureaux
(Castle of the Bull)

Built in the mid 1500’s as a military defensive position within sight of Morlaix

Turned into a prison in mid 1700’s and remained so for 150 years

Political prison in 1800’s

Germans took it over during WWII

Now open for visits and no, I did not take the picture


And we are off!

Well, happy January to you. Another year, another .50c after taxes. Life just doesn’t get much better than this. We had relatively quiet holidays, hanging out with the locals and doing all things French. It’s like, so retro.

Janice is back at her art classes, where she attends 4 hours a day, 3 days a week. The yearly after Christmas sales are in full swing and she is doing her best to single handedly keep the French economy afloat. After all the years of saying no to herself because kids shoes and orthodontics bills had priority, she is out to make up for lost time and buy what she refers to as 'grown up' clothes. Goodbye Wall Mart, hello 'La boutique de Francine'. She makes me look like a cradle snatching old fart.

I have started hanging out at our village blacksmith's again, hand forging some items for a project I have going here ( which I will show you next month) and some items I want to take back to the Island when we return in June. As always, I will have to be careful to keep it under 50 pounds (23 Kilos) so I can get it aboard the aircraft as they are beyond persnickety about that now.

I had a couple of friends drop by the forge recently -to watch a real man work- and had that 'you're out of your ever loving mind' look in their eyes as they watched me beat some metal to death with very little result. Unless you have tried your hand at it, it is hard to wrap your head around just how much work it really is. This is work that is more suited to a young stud with rippling muscles than...hey wait a minute...that's ME!

One of the bonuses is that I get to breathe so much coal dust, I might as well be working a mine. My kids aren't worried though, they figure I will be pushing up daisies before black lung disease sets in. [ To see pics forging, see The Epistle, March 2008]

I can spend days creating something that can be machine made in minutes and would look better in many peoples eyes. Some blacksmiths will purposefully leave some unevenness in their work so that it is evident it was 'hand made'. I need make no such effort. I don't particularly enjoy all the work but I sure do enjoy the result and this is the only way I am going to get it.

This is also the time of the year when we bottle our wine. Just like last year, a friend with connections ordered 1254 liters (a mere 300 + gallons) of premium Bordeaux white and red wine directly from the vintner, who by law is only permitted to sell a limited amount of his wine under his own label. What remains can be sold but not under the house label. We buy it in bulk and bottle it ourselves. [ For pics of the bottling process, see The Epistle, January 2010 in the archives]

This makes almost 1700 standard sized wine bottles which are divied among family and friends who partake in the adventure. Our take? A mere 132 bottles, priced at less than a similar quantity of Coke (Coca-Cola) All that forging makes a guy pretty thirsty...

Otherwise, the news from this side of the pond is that while real estate values on homes in America continue to decline or barely hold their own, home prices here are rising an average of 10% a year and 20% in Paris last year alone. Property in Paris this coming year will run an average of $750. per square foot. How’s them apples? This mind you, in a middle of a recession. How sweet it was to diversify.

So what else is new? Well in our ongoing effort to make it easy to keep in touch we now have—yet another new phone number! [Kids, call your father now!] This one you might be interested in… Over the years we got a local phone number where ever we were, and we got a US based phone number where a message could be left on an answering machine for us to retrieve.

It was handy for US based businesses like our bank or the insurance company to contact us as they could not call Canada or Europe. Short of Skype-ing us or making an expensive call to Europe, friends and family were pretty much out of luck…until now. [Well? Have you called your father yet?]

Now, you can reach us anywhere in the world or in outer space if we can get a signal, and actually call us direct for the cost of a call to California. Sorry, but that is the best we can do. If we are anywhere near where we can hear it ring, even while traveling, we can chat. It is a number available to family and friends alike, so make a note of it: 805-762-4646 Add it to all the other numbers and addresses you have next to our name in your address book. So the only question remaining is... why oh why have you kids not called your father yet?


Callot Island


Callot island in the background
Hurry honey, the tide is coming in!


We recently jumped in the car to explore a new place in our area and came across “Callot” island. It is just a quiet place to take a Sunday walk and it is within spitting distance of the ‘Castle of the Bull’ below (right side of pic) but it has a quite unique feature. We drove across to it but signs warned to be mindful of the tide schedule as the road is ‘submersible’.

Chateaux Du Toreaux
(Castle of the Bull) and yes I did take the picture


Twice a day the area where our car is in the photo would be completely under water when the tides come and go. Brittany has the greatest tidal high’s and low’s in Europe and they are quite impressive. We have another similar submersible road that crosses a bay near the house but you can either cross if the tide is out or not if it is in. The difference is that here you can no-fooling-around get stuck on the island until the next tide if you don't pay attention.

Another one of our favorite beach walks is at the "Port Blanc" [ White Port] This time I shot a 20 second video to let you get a glimpse. Depending on the time of day, 2/3 of the water you see is either in or gone with small boats lying on their sides on the bottom of the bay in the mud until the tide returns. It looks just like a drained bathtub with all the toys lying on the bottom of the tub.

Port Blanc
(If you are not familiar with You Tube,
just click on the right pointing triangle. If you are
familiar just keep your wise cracks to yourself please...)


After many winters of coming here you have to wonder just what the attraction is. No place holds the same emotional tug for everybody but the photos of our neighborhood below either tell the story or it is simply not for you. There is no doubt that the cultural aspects are significantly different at times, in ways that can be taxing. Again, I think it's the kind of thing you either bend and sway with the currents or you can't bring yourself to ever feeling at home with. My limit is several months a year, then I need to get back to the real world.

Just click on any picture to enlarge.


Sometime when we walk these streets
I wonder if we are on a Universal Studios back lot



I am NOT writing about the plane

A couple of months ago, I told you I would not be writing about my plane for another 7 months when we return to the Island. So I won’t.

Sort of.

I won’t say anything about really missing working on it although what I really miss is getting closer to the launch date. The reason I am not even bringing the subject up is because recently I was sent a link to a You Tube video that was shot some time ago. I have, from time to time, given you links to photos and such of the Thousand Islands that I believed were spectacular enough to be worthy of your time in viewing. But now, I am giving you the best link yet.

This is a video of the exact plane I am building, with floats and all, being filmed all over our neighborhood in the Islands. All the footage is shot within a few miles around our island. This is by far the best footage of our area and of the model of airplane I have that I have ever seen. It’s a two for one! It is only 7 minutes long and the last half has the must see footage. l will be checking and if I find you have watched it, your subscription to 'The Epistle' will be automatically renewed for another 12 months, free of charge. If not, then it's "Hasta La Vista, baby".

Go on. Humor me and just click on the link. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=crzDrDL7GDE