Wednesday 22 July 2015

La Buanderie progress

Unedited photos of La Buanderie.. end of Phase One! Once just four walls now one wall has fitted kitchen cabinets which are the recycled brown ones from the kitchen! BRILL!  I have been very impressed by the look which is admittedly a bit glossy but that's 'cos I have used up the paint I had from five years ago! Quartz Grey.  There is space for a dishwasher. Above the sink will go another 70 x 40 cupboard.
 I'm a Persil Girl!
The thermodynamique boiler is supposed to absorb heat from the room,  but since October it has made gggrrrrring noises waiting for an electrician. One arrived and changed a valve as water was escaping out of it... and he never came back... so now I am waiting for another electrician and he hasn't turned up when he said he would!
Moving anti clockwise round the room is the door to the kitchen and a window to the atelier which can be opened... the other window cannot be opened for ventilation. 
Look at this huge machine for the central heating system. Now if I could get the last three radiators back on the walls and the plumbing for them finished then I could get the machine verified by an expert (it was working when I bought the house), order fioul and be tickety boo warm in winter!!

On this wall is now food storage ... picture later...
I would like fixed floor to ceiling shelving! I have to leave a door width space on the wall to open the vacuum storage cupboard door. As you can see by looking at the floor tiles the wall is off square!
Look behind the machine. The EXPERT man needs to fix a wire that for some reason goes across it!
I am indebted to the volunteer man who five years ago was and is my former partner. He who made the room dry and who recently has prepped and installed the recycled units. The hydrofuge worktop was from Bricodepot and good value... better than LRM!  It's nice to have a sink in this room!  Now I need the kitchen to decide which crockery and cutlery I shall keep as basics and keep to display as special crockery because I have some very nice things in boxes. Then I must sell what I do not need!!! Oh that will be hard!

Sunday 19 July 2015

Yesterday, rock

a french rock concert  was held at La Salle des Fetes. I was glad I stayed and learned a lot by asking questions and talking in French and English... ah... a new association in the village to promote artistic events!  Ah, a breath of fresh air!!!!
Then I drove to Lurais for superb young modern / hip music concerts!!!! Nice evening it was!!!!!
I quite liked the shadows on the church wall. Can't quite imagine a rock concert being allowed next to a UK church!
 There was a brilliant female singer in one group...and then the next used cine screen footage and typed message. However, after five or six of their pieces I though the music was same same same!
All musicians were brilliant but the violinist, clearly the leader, stole the showw, which was a shame i some ways, because I wanted to hear more from each talented artist and especially the accordionist. Great dancing music! I think the violinist certainly had eastern european violin culture in his blood.
 My digital camera produced this of the violinist. I quite like it!

Saturday 18 July 2015

Food and Garden

Pear cake made in the makeshift kitchen.
The Garden is as dry as a bone.. akin to an Autumn clearance of weeds.. and this is only one third of the unwanted growth removed.
I plan to plant roses instead of herbs. Sage spread to kill thyme and marjoram. It was vigorous but now it has gone.
Mashed potatoes with bashed carrots created tuna potato cakes, served with a melange of green beans and an extra half an egg for protein, served on small to medium plates.

Friday 17 July 2015

Midsummer morning


It was Midsummer. An incandescent summer’s night and day. She’d gone to sleep with a full moon spreading its light at midnight. She rose with the morning lark, which she could not hear.  Six in the morning. Day had been awake for some time!

With the rising sun behind her she strode full of energy.  Overjoyed she always is to see her sweetpeas there at the roadsidc where they grow every year.   Stepping down ‘The American Way’ named after someone who used to live in that secret house hidden from view of the single-track footpath. There, with a full view of the sweep of the river, aloft on the cliff, his house stood without water and electricity. Owners have fought to have both installed. It is a protected heritage house.

Careful she was not to slip on the dew-laden rocks and roots forming the well-trodden descent to the river’s edge. The flowing current could be heard magically in the morning magnificence before she caught a glimpse of shining water. Step around ‘Le Moulin de Merle’, a watermill where she noted the growing sandbank. Above the dam the waterlily pads conceal frogs which ribbet and croak amongst those green plants. All this has been witnessed during the passing of time, the thousands of years since an Ice Age formed vast cliffs called the Roc of Sorciers. Majestic, they look down.

At the road bridge she decides upon an extension to her walk. All is unplanned. She is free to respond to a moment, a whim, an immediate choice for her and for no one else. It was joyful to be alone at last and able to move her legs and arms to and fro in a rhythm of a roaming rambler. Her mind is excited at this unusual event to be out and about when no one knows where she is or what she is doing for she has seen no one.

Along the banks vegetation encroaches upon the one-person track towards absolute primeval stillness, though she knows that the sun moves as it rises in the sky stretching shadows along the ground. Miniature flies float in morning sunrays as gossamer spiders float their webs preciously. Along and along, as birds sing-a-song and flutter tree-to-tree, leaf-by-leaf, woodpecker taps a different rhythm. Cuckoo calls, still singing in tune at the end of June, for July it will fly. By August it must be gone to Africa.  Woodpigeon rool-rool---coo-coos reflecting the languidity of a hay-mown scent of summer.

Darker it gets. Trees reach for the light above the canopy. Moss hangs on every branch above rock and stone where ferns, bracken and other humid hugging plants thrive.  In dappled morning light, She feels safe not seeing a soul in the Devil's grotto.  Ah, unexpectedly, she hears a cough!  A trace of humankind. Is someone wild camping?  No, ‘tis a jogger!
How dangerous to be moving quickly across such rugged rocky ground, where footfall or rainfall dislodges crumbly, gravelly stones even though larger and heavier boulders dig deep. Tread carefully. She has learned by experience.
'Bonjour.. fait attention!'  but she hears no reply and suspects he is not French and thinks they would be too sensible to be running in that place in such early morning warmth.

The land is rising upwards out of woodland which has been like that since probably the Magdalenian era. Rising upwards into agricultural land where the single track opens to allow tractors to travel along the grassy chemins.
Again she delights in looking at hedges and trees of walnut, holly, oak and beech.  A sign says ‘Private’ but she ignores it as she has always walked by here around the Pigeonnier and indeed has seen French persons doing likewise. Out onto the road, feeling the morning heat rise from the tarmac. Let her cut across another chemin and another harvested field and wend her way back along lanes to the village where people are queuing at the boulangerie. Everyone shares happiness. Then to discuss with a fellow inhabitant what is to happen to that huge acacia tree at the end of her garden.  She shares her concern about the ever-increasing number of acacias popping up in her garden. There are more than ever before. Clearly they enjoy the drought and heat.  Autumn will be the time when the woodman will arrive to cut it down but how will he and she poison the roots left in the ground in her garden. They have drained the goodness from her potager and caused much extra labour.  She will wait.  She can wait.

With cheerful pride and self-ennoblement she breezes home for coffee and croissant at half past nine, breakfast time! What a wonderful three hour walk!


Wild sweetpeas at the roadside verge
Under the bridge a new sculpture has appeared!
Wall art!
Garden art
I still haven't returned at an appropriate hour to dig up this mystery.
River art


Moulin du Pré has a new owner and is being renovated.
Natural art!

Thursday 16 July 2015

A while ago

Lunch before guests visited
...the current Workawayer who is actually my former partner... how weird this all is... told me that his English hosts from Cyprus were going North to England in their camper van...and so we agreed they could visit. They came to lunch and then I managed to out together an evening meal as well!!! Fortunately, there was a contribution to costs!
Salmon, lentils and salad for lunch. Salad and roast chicken for evening meal. Wine!

The two weeks before that he converted the kitchen cupboards  and did a difficult task of making the worktop fit the space perfectly when every side was at a different angle!  I wanted the cupboards and line of the worktop to follow the line of the floortiles in a room where every corner of the four walls is at a different angle to every other!
 Naturally, work stopped for the weekend and with our guests we walked around the village.
 
I started to think camper van kitchens for my own house kitchen! Nifty use of space in their four wheeled van!
And on the walk back to my house after a cup of tea, after a walk in the village, I looked upwards to the sky, as I often do!