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Caussols: Walking on the Moon

(Photos by Esme)
The Caussols Plateau
stretches across the top
of the hills -- kilometers
of open, scrubby,
moonscape with troglodyte
caves, fossils and rock
formations that resemble
the mysterious Hoodoos
of the western U.S. You
expect a dinosaur
to show up, like the
tarrascoaurus salluvicus,
who roamed these parts.



The Police wrote about walking in the footsteps of the mighty brontosaurus, but I had another of their songs
in my head.


We could walk
forever
Walking on
the moon
We could live
together
Walking on,
walking
on the moon

Police, 1979, Reggatta de blanc




To complete the surreal experience, the plateau leads to a collection of buildings, telescopes, and moon lasers that look like the place where Luke Skywalker grew up.
The CERGA Observatory, perched on top of the hill, collects data about asteroids (thousands have been discovered there) and tracks the rotation of the earth using massive beams aimed at pieces of equipment left on the moon by U.S. and Russian astronauts.






(I don't know how this squares with my mother's theory that the moon landing was a hoax, but, "they" could definitely have shot the entire alleged moon footage right here on the Caussols Plateau and none would be the wiser.)

There were danger signs as we approached the observatory, mostly to warn about the sharp drop over the edge. Not that that stopped our photographer from going closer to take a look, and a few more shots. But she's got her mother's eye for beauty and her father's doggedness (not to mention an amazing sister and friends), so I guess we don't have to worry too much about her.


The Best of the Rest of 2010


"If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life, it stays with you, for Paris is a moveable feast."
Ernest Hemingway

Our holidays included much moving and feasting, but I'll just share the highlights here.

1. Meeting Dr's friend Mike W. and Laurie and son (Photos above and below by Jacqui)
If you're reading this blog, then you know I want all of my friends to be friends -- and I'm not just talking facebook. Jeff was subjected to this early on when he met me for a date, and there were a dozen other people there. Two happened to be associates at the law firm where he'd just caused a major scandal. Oops.

I've learned (really!) that just because I enjoy spending time with B as well as C that it doesn't follow that B and C will necessarily enjoy spending time together. But it's a great thing when it works out that way. With Mike and Laurie, it worked out that way.

2. Running through Paris with Luke.
Am not much of a runner, never have been. But when Luke suggested that we go for a run one morning, I put on my track shoes and followed. I'm a convert. (Photo by Esme)

3. Walking in the rain to the novelty shop by the Centre Pompidou with Dr.

4. Christmas shopping with Jacqui while Jeff
and Dr took the kids for a walk along the elevated
Promenade Plantee.
(Photo by Esme)
5. Dinner at the bistro on the corner of the Place des Vosges.

6. Traveling by train to and from Paris. I love the train -- a good place to think, a rollicking limbo where there's not much to do but look out the window... read your Kindle, check your Blackberry, surf the Ipad. And, yes, they serve wine.



7. Decorating our Christmas Tree








8. Christmas Eve at Michelle's
We went, we drank splendid champagne, we ate delicious fois gras.


9. Christmas Morning


10. The arrival of Laura H, Jake & Olivia
Luke, Esme, Adri and I headed to Nice to meet them. I circled the terminals twice, then three times before conceding I'd have to park the car. (To be fair, I've only been through this routine about 20 times so far this year.) And there they were! "People must have thought we were celebrities," Laura H. remarked about the exuberant shrieks that accompanied the reunion. Either that or an attack of wailing banshees...

11. Cap D'Antibes













12. Matisse Chapel in Vence
Matisse called the chapel his "masterpiece." Peace and beauty reside in those walls.





















14. New Year's Eve Day Lunch
We hadn't had much luck with restaurants between a few being closed when we wanted to go, and another actually refusing to permit Charlie to dine with us. (The only restaurant I've encountered in all of France that wouldn't allow dogs, by the way.)
We planned to go to our favorite bistro in Mouans-Sartoux, but when we arrived, they didn't have the tables configured the way we wanted. Despite my initial dismay, we ended up having a lovely girls' lunch, and they enjoyed their boys' lunch.

A good way to end 2010. Not a bad year.



Paris Rocks



A grey day in Paris, a drizzle of snow turned to slush by the constant rain. We waited...
We were afraid they wouldn't come at all. Jacqui had had a rough week. Your health matters most, is what we said.




Please, please come to France, is what we meant.



[Photos above and right by Esme.]

The travel will be the worst part, Dr worried.

And travel, with an assist from weather, lived up to its reputation. Their first flight was delayed so long that they took another the following day. The next morning, assured by the Air France website that they'd landed, Luke and I waited in the damp of a cafe on Place des Vosges and warmed our hands on a cappucino and a cup of hot tea. Charlie warmed our feet. The waitress turned on the outside heater as we scanned the corners for arriving cabs. Instead we got a text message -- Landed in Pau.

Are they in Asia? Luke asked. Their flight was diverted from Paris to Bordeaux, and then finally to Pau in the southwest of France. Too far away to rescue them, plus, they weren't allowed off the plane because the airport didn't have any customs facilities. "We were a jet-age version of the Gar-barge," Dr lamented. While they waited on the runway for hours, he asked a flight attendant if they were going to have to stay in Pau forever. "I hope not," she replied. "I've been here before." To their relief, the captain eventually announced they were heading back to Paris again.

Finally the long-awaited taxi emerged from the gloomy mist, flashing headlights just in case we mistook it for some other ordinary cab. And in a rush, doors flung open, and out spilled suitcases, long curls, blue eyes, mile-a-minute chatter, and the impossibly beautiful faces of our friends.

It was finally starting to feel like Christmas in France.






Avignon





Avignon's history spans more than 2,500 years.
The Popes held title to the city from 1300s through the French Revolution, and for 70 years, Avignon was the seat of Papacy -- instead of Rome. The Popes added walls around the centre, and built a grand palace on the rocky hillside above the Rhone River, the Palais des Papes. Natually, bankers, builders, and merchants quickly followed and Avignon became a thriving city.

My favorite part is the famous Pont d'Avignon, actually the Pont St. Benezet, a bridge originally built between 1171 and 1185, inspired by a simple shepherd boy, Benezet, who claimed that angels had ordered him to build a bridge across the river. Floods destroyed parts of the bridge by the late 1600s, but you can still visit the impressive remains, and, if you want, you can dance. The famous song about the bridge goes like this:

Sur le pont d'Avignon
L'on y danse, l'on y danse
Sur le pont d'Avignon
L'on y danse tous en rond
Les beaux messieurs font comm' ça
Et puis encore comm' ça

On the bridge of Avignon,
Everyone dances, everyone dances
On the bridge of Avignon
Everyone dances in a circle
The handsome men go like this (they bow)
And then they go like that.

The verses of the song go on in the same fashion to include the beautiful ladies, the soldiers, the gardeners, the tailors, etc. each adding a particular act to symbolize their status so we have ladies curtsying, soldiers saluting, etc.

They (meaning the hotel clerk, taxi drivers, and, of course, Wikipedia) say that the fine citizens of Avignon actually danced under the bridge and not upon it, but details of reality have never bothered songwriters. I would like to contribute one more verse to the song based on our experience.

On the bridge of Avignon,
Everyone dances, everyone dances
On the bridge of Avignon
Everyone dances in a circle
The happy tourists go like this (click)
And then they go like that.




Greolieres les Neiges



"Where is this?!" Dr asked, (a probing freelance journalist in his heart of hearts) when I tried to persuade him there was fine skiing to be had in the hills behind our house. As the map above illustrates, the ski resort of Greolieres les Neiges is nestled in the Maritime Alps to the northwest of Grasse. Our house is about about halfway between Grasse and Cannes.


We're surrounded by the Maritime Alps. During my parents' visit in October, we discovered there's snow in them thar hills! Last weekend Michelle and I rounded up ski gear, loaded up the kids, and made the windy, sporadically nerve-wracking drive, past medieval ruins, hilltop towns and incredible views to Greolieres les Neiges.


There are 22 runs -- 4 greens, 4 blues, 12 reds (our double blues in the U.S.) and 2 blacks, and by some fluke, we practically had the mountain to ourselves.

The only thing I wasn't pleased about was the plethora of ski tows, otherwise known as the dreaded pommel tow, and, as Michelle explained, known in French as tire-fesse which means, most aptly, a buttocks-pull. I've had bad luck with the similarly designed T-bar in Breckenridge -- two falls down a steep hill, once with Val, once solo, and both times pulled back up the hill in a most appreciated but undignified manner by Dr and Menno respectively.

Luke and Damon thought it looked like fun so off we went with the round-shaped seat between legs and the strong pull of the wire yanking us upwards. Luke rode behind me. "Hey, Mom! I wanted to see what happened if I didn't sit and I almost fell off." "Luke! Don't do that!" "Ha, ha ha! Hey, Mom! Look!" Silence. "Hey, Mom... I fell off."


I couldn't stay mad.. Damon and Adrienne, who hadn't skied in years, went to take a lesson, leaving Luke and me to explore. Sun shining, snow glistening, my heart sang as I followed the boy down and around the mountain. When we rejoined our friends, Adrienne impressed with graceful steadiness and Damon barreled down the hill -- not one to let a few tumbles interfere with the adrenalin rush of skiing fast. Apres ski crepes and gaufres with Michelle ended the day. We got back in the car for the drive home, dubbed our scouting expedition a success, and made plans to go back --next weekend.