And a very full week, including the local parents’ association sports day and Mommy leaving after spending 2 months in France!
And a very full week, including the local parents’ association sports day and Mommy leaving after spending 2 months in France!
I was invited to join the Monday walking group. A friendly group of lovely people, enjoying life and fresh air. The walk started at about 10:00 and we were back in town by 16:00.
The scenery was lovely. Small field flowers – pink, yellow and white in abundance. Butterflies and bees and blue, blue open skies.
We stopped for picnic at noon and to rest the tired legs. Wine, bread, fruit and some chocolate were shared.
And a few more photos from our weekend, this was of course the last weekend before the kids headed back to school, but unfortunately the weather did not permit too much beach time.
Well what do you do when you cannot go to the beach? You have soup……
So sibling rivalry does get put aside every now and again!
You buy groceries for the week, this photo was taken en-route….
We were invited to have a peak at the bottling at Trois Angles, a wine producer in Cazouls les Beziers, next door on Saturday. Vincent showed us around and we got a few glasses of wine as well, including a dry muscat, very interesting!
And Sunday, after the usual market at St Chinian, we visited our first ever “Vidi Grenier”, literally translated attic sale.
And what would I have bought out of the numerous items on display? A proper, rusted Paella pan! Watch this space!
And as it was Mother’s Day, the two mothers of the house were spoilt with lunch, here they are having their starter of watermelon, sliced mushroom, tomato and mozzarella cheese!
“A thousand apologies” as the old carpet salesman once said.
Activity on the blog has been slow, is has been due to 2 main reasons:
Ok a few photos of the last week or so to keep very one up to speed with what we have been doing, enjoy!
The Beziers Cathedral (also called St Nazaire Cathedral, but actually more correctly: Cathédrale Saint-Nazaire-et-Saint-Celse de Béziers) is located on the South Western part of the old town and overlooks the Orb River.
The cathedral was rebuilt after the sacking of Beziers on July 22, 1209. In this part of the world a search for aspects of military history are quite thin, after the crusade against the carthars very little happened; with Languedoc fortunately avoiding the napoleonic wars as well as the first and second world wars.
The sacking of Beziers included the looting of the city and the slaughter of nearly the whole population (20 000 people), including numerous Catholics who lived in the city. After this battle most other cities surrendered rather than suffer a similar fate. The Spanish Inquisition and 100 years later Catharsism was no more.
So on Tuesday the 29th of April it was off to see the cathedral. Our visiting friends led the way to a hobby shop first, but after driving past waved us on to lead the way. At this point in time I am quite comfortable with some geography around Beziers and without having GPS guidance (apart from viewing the map) got us to the cathedral, and after a tour of all available parking areas we even got free parking for the morning, a short walk away. Only minor mishap was driving up the wrong way of the Madeleine parking and getting a friendly head shake from a Frenchman who had to reverse to let us out.
The walk was as always fun, between sulking, running, road crossing, walking on walls etc. we arrived at the cathedral at about 11:30. The cathedral, like most tourist attractions and shops, closes from 12:00 to 14:00 for lunch (some sites are open in peak season during lunch).
Pieter was not too interested once he heard we cannot go up on the cathedral tower (we did not enquire, but decided that it was not the best idea), but after showing him some goblins and dragons in the architecture of the convent building we managed to spend 10 minutes more while looking at lions, dragons, angels and demons, all part of the buildings architecture.
After finding a play area for tea time, juice and wine, we found lunch and the girls all went into the cathedral, but Pieter declined, so us men waited outside. I had a quick look, but we returned 3 days later without the children and this time had a thorough look. The religious art in the building is really something special! We also managed to find a way to the tower and have promised Pieter we will return.
If you ever find yourself in Beziers pay the cathedral a visit, but only go up the tower if you are not afraid of heights!