Oz 2018, part 2 – South to Tasmania via Sydney and Melbourne

As much as these two rain-deprived Californians enjoyed the constant cloudy wet weather that greeted us during our first week on the inaptly named Sunshine Coast, it was almost a relief to be back on the road again and heading south to different climes. Cescy and Richard joined us in their car for the first part of our journey, so they could show us the village of Iluka where they lived for ten years before deciding to retreat north again. The drive there, going down the two-lane A1 highway in heavy rain with 34 wheeler juggernaut trucks like small trains – locally known as “B-Doubles” – breathing down our necks, was fairly fraught, and we eventually lost sight of our companions, not catching them up again until we found them exercising the dog in a small park on the outskirts of Iluka. But by then the rain had stopped, the sun was peeking through the clouds, we easily found The Iluka Motel, and we were able to relax and enjoy this little settlement well off the beaten track.

Sedger’s Reef Hotel – posh dining Aussie style

Richard told me how they originally found the place when, many years ago, their sailboat developed engine troubles as they were working their way up the coast against the prevailing wind, and they were rescued by a passing local fisherman who towed them into the harbour for the price of a round of drinks. This, we are coming to realise, is fairly typical of the neighbourly attitude of the ordinary Aussies who are always ready to stop and have a friendly chat. For supper that evening, we ate one of the dozen or more variants of the good old fish and chip supper offered at the same bar, Sedger’s Reef Hotel, where that salvage bill had been settled, and my bro’-in-law assured us it had not changed much over the years; the raucous chat among the fishermen was still fairly unintelligible as the beer flowed freely and the customary odour of deep fried food floated through from the kitchen. The building itself that looks like it was once a warehouse or similar, had seen better days, but the atmosphere of bonhommie was thoroughly beguiling and the schooners (half a litre or about a pint) of Toohey’s New also went down pretty well!

Known for their sense of humour, this kookaburrah laughed so much he nearly fell off his perch!

This land is full of new and for us unusual birds, and we are constantly grabbing for camera and camcorder. One unfortunate consequence of this occasional frenetic activity was the loss of a very nice lightweight pair of sunglasses as we took our early evening stroll around the village, partly to see the house Cescy and Richard once lived in. When we realised they were missing, we immediately retraced our steps along the well manicured grass verges quite confident in their retrieval, but it was not to be. As we had seen hardly anybody else around, we had no reason to suspect a felonious local and can only assume that one of these exotic birds we had been photographing had jackdaw-like instincts for shiny objects lying on the ground – a “laughing” kookaburrah perhaps?

Celine meets Russell, a genuine “Aussie Hippie Surfing Dude”, taking time off from tree-trimming.

The next day we said our adieus to sister and bro’-in-law at the Main Beach, and as I walked across the finest sand ever to dip my toes into the incoming surf, Celine chatted up a “Genuine Aussie Hippie Surfing Dude” – his words – named Russell, an arboriculturalist by trade when not playing in the waves. Soon we found ourselves on the road heading south again towards the strangely named town of South West Rocks. We started back on the A1, which is undergoing major roadworks to bring it up to near-motorway standards. Much of the land it crosses is floodplain territory and the work involves trucking in enormous quantities of ballast to provide a stable base for the roadway, plus the construction of numerous bridges to cross the many waterways running down to the sea from the nearby Great Dividing Range (the many estuaries of these same waterways also make for a wonderfully diverse coastline.) As a consequence of all this work, the A1 is a mixture of country lane, diversions and part-finished dual carriageway; so in many ways it is much more interesting to drive along than the new fast open motorway it will probably be one day, though not for a good while yet it would seem! When we reached the old town of Grafton, historically the first river port on this part of the Australian coastline, we turned inland, and after a pit stop at biker-friendly Coutts Tavern in Coutts Crossing to satisfy the inner man and woman with a couple of rather sloppy Harry’s Pies, we headed towards the hills.

From then on, the drive was sublime. Lots of cattle farms slowly gave way to sub-tropical forest as the road twisted and turned up the hills; eventually, at its highest point we came to more open farmland and pine forest. Everywhere it seems, the ubiquitous Eucalyptus grows in one of its many variants. We crossed a bridge of rusting reinforced concrete beams across the pretty Nymboida River. At Dorrigo we stopped to look more closely at an enormous collection of soot-blackened steam engines and old rotting railway carriages waiting for the proposed Railway Museum to see the light of day; a collection like that would be the envy of many a steam train enthusiast! Coming back down towards sea-level again, we happened upon a small-holding where the owner had a small flock of sheep, and, joy of joys, a half dozen emus in a paddock beside the road – more photos for the album!

Arriving at South West Rocks in the later afternoon, we checked out three or four inns before settling on the very historic Heritage Guest House, right on the waterfront. The next morning, we took our breakfast outside on the verandah overlooking the neighbouring cafe, making us feel like Lord and Lady Muck keeping an eye on the hoi polloi below. We walked out to the headland enjoying the sweep of the ocean rolling up the beach, dodging the drizzle as we walked the strand chatting to locals walking their dogs, and examined the few remains of the many wrecks of ships that mistook the bay for a safe haven.

The strand at South West Rocks

As the drizzle turned into real rain, we drove a few kilometres to Arakoon National Park to visit Trial Bay Gaol, to learn about the harsh life of the convicts that were taken there to construct a long breakwater that would make the bay into a safe anchorage. Luckily for the beauty of the bay, the idea was a failure and little remains of the construction; however, the gaol itself is an interesting bit of Aussie history, made much more acceptable by the herd of kangaroos that now call it home, keeping the lawns trim, and, unlike the convicts, staying inside or outside the gates at night as they please.

Our first close encounter with kangaroos at Trial Bay Gaol.

Nelson Bay was our next two night stopover, where we woke up yet again to the sounds of birds chattering in the garden outside and breakfasted long and slow as we chatted with our hostess about local attractions and discussed the vagaries of welfare states and the problems with spoilt modern kids! This B & B was built on a steep slope with parking spaces atop a driveway that tested our SUV and challenged my driving skills as the acute angle meant I could hardly see over the bonnet.

Our first koala, the only one in Tiligerry Habitat!

Desperate to see our first koala, we went first of all to Tilligerry Habitat, a volunteer-run nature centre, where our guide, Sam, directed us to the tree where the one and only bear in town was resting, a female, he said, that was probably resting after an encounter with the dominant male that was no doubt somewhere close by. Multiple photos later, we finished our wander along the boardwalk, having searched unsuccessfully for the errant male but instead enjoyed the nature and the bay with the receding tide.

Lookouts with fine views were on order for the rest of the day and the first was Gan Gan Lookout on the way back into the town. We were able to drive up to the top and park next to the mobile phone antenna mast, a short walk around which gave us a good view of the estuary and the town below, but not much else. Tomaree Head Lookout on the other side of town was another matter altogether.

Another Australian exclusive, an echidna snuffling in the undergrowth for ants and other insects.

Parking the car at sea level, we commenced the 1.5 km hike to the top of the 161m high peak, and fairly soon we were greeted by snuffling sounds as an echidna shuffled into view. Looking somewhat like a cross between a porcupine and a hedgehog, this unusual creature is actually an anteater, and as we watched him (or her?) absolutely fascinated, it stuffed its beaked face deep into the piles of dead leaves and undergrowth beside the path and continued to snuffle up insects. The footpath was well constructed with a mix of rocky steps, steel staircases and platforms, taking us eventually to the remains of the WWll radar station right on the peak, the views from which were breathtaking. The headland guards the south side of the entrance to Nelson Bay and we had a full 360 degree panorama of the sea, the coast and the bay.

The golden sanded trio of Zenith, Wreck and Box Beaches, seen from Tomaree Head Lookout, Nelson Bay NSW.

Looking south we had the most beautiful view of our trip to date, the golden sands of the trio of fairly inaccessible Zenith, Wreck and Box beaches, and further away, Fingal Spit and Shark Island with Point Stephen Lighthouse thereon. It was quite breathtaking and well worth the fairly tough climb to get to the top. The end of the afternoon was not so special as, tempted by the view across the harbour, we chose a lousy restaurant for an early dinner of the most awful seafood spaghetti, that totally shattered our hopes of light Italian pasta with fresh-off-the-boat shellfish.

‘Roos love golf courses and make excellent lawn-mowers!

Luckily we still had ahead of us the pleasure of watching a large group of kangaroos as they congregated on the local golf course at dusk for their evening meal of tasty well-kept grass. We kept on watching until it was nearly too dark to see anything any more, and we retired happily to our digs.

The next morning we started our final drive into Sydney where we were going to stay with my eldest niece Nicola and her family; it is certainly a great way to travel around a continent as large as Oz, having family to visit in so many great places! It was a fairly short drive compared to the previous hops and we opted to follow the Pacific Highway for much of the way, making sure we avoided the many toll roads that we had been warned about on the approach to the city. However, our hosts of the previous evening had said we mustn’t miss the “spectacular” dunes along 30+ kilometres of the Worimi Regional Park coastline, and we duly turned east at the signpost for Stockton Beach, where we were faced with a sign advising us that one had to have a permit to drive on the beach. Interpreting this as being the limit we could take our admittedly fairly competent Nissan X-Trail, we parked and set off on foot towards the distant piles of windswept sand. Then we saw a very ordinary saloon driving towards us, the driver of which suggested that we go back and get our SUV as there was quite a long walk, “. . . though just be careful of the big dogs that are protecting their owner’s truck in the little parking space at the end”.

Typical fine, clean Aussie sand in the dunes at Worimi Regional Park.

Gladly we followed his advice, found the aforesaid vicious dogs to be really quite friendly, and tramped up the side of the hot sand dune till we could see the sea.

Fairly impressive but not really “spectacular”, we appreciated the excuse to exercise our lower limbs, and soon returned to the highway. We skirted around Newcastle which looked fairly industrial and eventually arrived at Nicola’s home in Middle Cove, an up-market waterfront suburb of Sydney.

My first swim in Australian waters – wonderful!

We have now learnt that what we have been doing is “relly-surfing”, taking advantage of the hospitality of your family connections, something that the locals seem to be quite familiar with. For starters we had a busy long-weekend exploring bits of Sydney and some of it’s outlying suburbs. Nicola took us on a hike in Ku-ring-gai Chase NP showing us some of the beautiful local scenery that makes Sydney such a desirable place to live; and there at last I was finally tempted in for a swim.

Looking towards Pittwater, part of the Hawkesbury River estuary, just north of Sydney

Pittwater and Avalon, nearby both of which my sister lived for several years when her family were young, were both very enviable, lots of sheltered sailing waters, little coves with boats on their moorings, and all within easy reach of Sydney’s “CBD” or central business district. We took a ferry to Manly which gave us great views of Sydney Harbour on the way. We enjoyed a Saturday morning visit to the produce market in the old railway sheds in the Burlington district, and a walk around much-gentrified Paddington where very small two-storey row houses, the main visual virtue of which was their very ornate cast iron balcony railings, sold for upwards of two million Aussie dollars.

Paddington, a district of Sydney, goes upmarket!

We strolled through the Botanical Gardens, wonderfully situated on the waterfront close by the famous Harbour Bridge, where we discovered the true character of kookaburrahs. As we drank our coffee on the cafe terrace, we watched one of these “sweet” birds suddenly dive down from a nearby signpost and grab a piece of cake out of the hand of a young lady as she was about to take a bite, and carry it off to share it with its mate waiting on the nearby lawn.

A couple of thieving kookaburrahs feeling well satisfied with themselves after eating homemade cake!

And of course, not wanting to miss out on Australian culture, we went to a performance of La Traviata in the Opera House. But best of all, it was a real joy getting such a warm welcome from Nicola and Robert, being fed so well and meeting all the family.

Lunch with some of the Sydney arm of the family at Henry Lee’s Cafe.

Our next relative that also made us feel very welcome was my nephew, Alistair, who along with his partner, Jo, and their two children, had moved to Margate in Tasmania about eighteen months previously. To get there we opted to follow the coast to Melbourne, making overnight stops at Bateman’s Bay, Pambala Beach and the strangely named Lakes Entrance. We used AirBnB for all three places and were more than satisfied with all of them, especially as they all provided rooms within the family home, the original concept of AirBnB before it became the glorified holiday-letting agency it is now. Booking wasn’t always plain sailing with poor internet connections, and a stop for lunch at Bodalla Cheese Factory one day provided us with very good wi-fi  when we were having difficulties with clarifying a couple of reservations.

Typical of the scenery south of Sydney

The countryside was mostly rolling hills and open farmland with lots of happy-looking cattle chewing the cud in green pastures. Lakes Entrance was probably the least attractive of the three towns but the flower-filled garden in which we ate our breakfast more than made up for the character the town lacked. And just a few miles further on we arrived at Paynesville where we took the chain-ferry across the narrows to Raymond Island, having learnt that there were a few koalas there. We followed the “Koala Trail” carefully scrutinising every gum tree until we found ourselves in a bit of scrubby parkland where suddenly it seemed that every other tree had one of the cuddly bears taking a late morning nap. What a koala bonanza to enjoy just before we arrived in Melbourne!

Mother koala and a not-so-little baby koala, resting in the fork of a eucalyptus tree. What a wonderful sight on Raymond Island.

Before getting the overnight ferry to ‘Tassie’, we decided to use our Air Miles to give us a couple of comfortable nights downtown – or “CBD” in local parlance – staying at the Mercure Melbourne Treasury Gardens Hotel. Melbourne is a very elegant city being an eclectic mix of late Edwardian architecture and ultra-modern skyscrapers.

Melbourne, a beautiful eclectic mix of old and modern architecture

It is a beautiful city, and, indeed, it does have a lot of fine buildings. We spent our time there well, starting with a quick visit to the very enlightening Immigration Museum where amongst other things, we learnt about the ever-changing immigration policies, and interestingly, how the Chinese immigrants had yo-yo’d between being very welcome and despised for taking jobs from white Australians! The Opal Museum turned out to be not much more than a sales outlet for Australia’s favourite gemstone so we quickly moved on, taking advantage of the ‘free CBD tram zone’ to ride the No.35 around the perimeter of the downtown area and out to  Harbour City, a complex of very modern apartments, hotels and offices by the waterside.

Harbour City, Melbourne

We had a light lunch of good old fish’n’chips, sitting on bolted down chairs as we watched the seagulls and the large power boats moored nearby, all of which reflected no doubt on the clientele frequenting the neighborhood.

“City-beaching” on Federation Square

It was damned hot, so we took the soft option of the tram back along Flinders St, and then spent a contented hour or so “city-beaching” on Federation Square, that is relaxing in deck chairs in the contemporary urban surroundings and watching city life go by. As the sun went down, we took a walk into China Town looking for a particularly nice-looking cafe we’d spotted the previous evening called “Ca de Vin” in a small alley off Bourke St, only to find it was incredibly popular and fully booked. So we ended up slumming it at “Ajisen Ramen” where we ate bowls of kimchi and pork ramen soup. There are lots of Asians in Melbourne so it was no surprise that the restaurants in China Town were so busy!

“Cook’s Cottage”, brought over from Yorkshire, England,  by Sir Russell Grimwade in 1934, as a set of numbered bricks packed into barrels!

As the ferry didn’t leave until 10pm, we had a second day to enjoy the culture of Victoria’s state capital. Fitzroy Gardens, across the road from our hotel, is the final resting place of the Yorkshire cottage that Captain Cook spent his youth, and thus Cook’s Cottage was our first stop of the day. Amazing to think someone thought it worthwhile dismantling the cottage brick by brick and transporting it half way around the world, but the end result is very good and does look quite authentic, even down to the vegetable garden. But as always, art galleries were our objective for the day, starting with the Ian Potter Centre – part of the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) – where we were happy to find some excellent aboriginal art, as well as an eclectic collection of art, both old and modern, from Europe and Australia.

Yep, this is modern art – well, all except the old codger sitting on the loo!

The other main part of the NGV is inside the impressive stone edifice across the river on St Kilda Road. My goodness, what an extraordinary collection of modern art and art projects that building contains, some of which was totally outrageous; as we both agreed afterwards, it was probably the most original art collection either of us has ever seen.

Buddah and friends, resting in the entrance hall of the National Gallery of Victoria.

 

 

 

But like all cities, Melbourne was too busy for me and I also tend to agree with the person who said something along the lines “Sydney has the most beautiful location that is spoiled by a poorly designed city, and Melbourne is a very fine city built on the most uncompromising site imaginable”! So it was a relief when we got back into our car, drove down to the beach at St Kilda, and watched the kite surfers playing the wind and waves in the early evening as we enjoyed our beef sandwiches and waited to spend a wave rocked night aboard the “Spirit of Tasmania”.

And so to Tasmania, aah . . . beautiful Tassie, an island so different from it’s mother country ten hours sea-time away to the north, that it would seem to be on a different planet. In the early morning sunshine, we drove south across the centre of the island through wonderful countryside, very green hills and farmland with sheep and cows grazing everywhere.

Launceston, a historic town in northern Tasmania.

We made a couple of stops on the way, at Launceston, to take the chairlift and stretch our legs on the Gorge Walk, and then later on at the charming old heritage village of Ross, where we grabbed coffee and scrumptious cream-filled eclairs, and picked up one or two gifts at the old Post Office.

Ross Post Office

In so many ways the island immediately reminded me of New Zealand, a feeling echoed by a couple from those enchanted isles that we met one day as we visited Eagle Hawk Nest, the narrow isthmus that connects the infamous penal colony of Port Arthur to the main island.

With savage beasts such as this guarding the causeway, convicts rarely escape.d

The man’s opening remark as we regarded the statue of one of the “ugly and savage” dogs that once guarded the isthmus was “This must be one of the most awful things the Brits ever did”, referring of course to the transportation of so-called convicts, some of whom were guilty of such petty crimes as stealing a loaf of bread. But having established we both had the same UK heritage, the encounter became more friendly, and when I told him of my past, selling Hamilton Jets to Canadians, he most effusively declared me to be “an honorary Kiwi”.

Re-enactors leaving us wondering if maybe it was the warders who went mad, not the convicts!

The history of Tasmania closely follows the rest of Australia regarding attitudes to both convicts and the original inhabitants. However, Port Arthur was certainly among the most severe penal colonies and the settlers’ attitude towards the aborigines was also simply appalling. Surely the worst incident was the so-called “Black Line”, which attempted to drive every single native Tasmanian onto the Tasman Peninsular – where Port Arthur is situated – shooting any who attempted to escape and keeping the main part of the island as a completely white-only community!

Still, if one can blank out the horrendous past history of the island and concentrate on the here and now, it is a truly beautiful place and it was very tempting to immediately start searching for a house – our regular weakness when travelling! We were also very lucky in having such a comfortable place to stay, and in such a wonderful location. Margate is a small town about 20km outside Hobart, and Alistair’s home is in a quiet valley about 6km inland from the town centre. They have a spacious house sitting on about five acres of land which they are slowly making productive. Alistair is a commercial saturation diver but between contracts he and Jo work towards their long-term dream of one day achieving that age-old ideal of self-sufficiency, as their two children, Jessica and Archer, enjoy the freedom of an idyllic life in the countryside.

Snug Falls, at the end of the dry season.

Our first foray the next morning was a wonderful hike down to Snug Falls and back, before exploring further along Channel Highway, winding along  the coast  as far as Nine Pins Point, at which stage we realised we had better retrace our steps to get home in time for dinner with the family. One week in such idyllic surroundings was really never going to be long enough.

Downtown Hobart, a small friendly state capital that would be easy to live in.

 

 

 

As well as our ongoing discovery of Australia’s convict past, we took a trip into Hobart, a very liveable small city, and visited Tasmania’s other main tourist venue, the Museum of New and Old Art (MONA) housed underground in an old stone quarry. The main collection there is  The Museum of Everything, an eclectic private collection of what is best described as “primitive art”, now donated to the state. Though definitely not the efforts of the Great Masters, the works on view are indeed quite eye-opening and thought-provoking; for instance, a mechanical working model of a cow’s digestive system, and a long wall full of plaster moulds of vaginas, are not things one comes across in the average art museum!

Nature frozen in time! Sometimes the most enjoyable art is found where it is least expected.

Another day we took the ferry from Kettering to Bruny Island, a 50plus kilometre long archipelago that shields Tasmania’s south-eastern coastline from Hobart southwards against the wild weather from Antarctica. The ferry lands on North Bruny and we immediately headed south along a mix of tarmac and gravel towards Cape Bruny Lighthouse, stopping on the way to climb the 250 steps up to Big Hummock Lookout halfway along the Neck, the narrow isthmus between the north and south portions of Bruny. There we also read a very moving memorial to Truganini, an aboriginal lady who was the last surviving member of the Nuenone tribe who had been raped multiple times by white settlers, and whose family had also suffered terribly at the hands of the white immigrants. Once on South Bruny, we paused briefly at Captain Cook’s landing place on the cove of Adventure Bay and ate fish and salad at the little cafe nearby, run by the local cruise company who operate boat tours along the coast.

The rusting remains of a boiler that once powered a log mill, deep in the forest that is now the Mangate Forest Reserve.

Still hoping to get to the lighthouse before the end of the afternoon, we took a short cut along Coolangatta Road, a “4WD-only” trail across the centre of Mt Margan Forest Reserve, where we came upon the remains of an old steam-driven timber mill. Nature had done what it always will do eventually when man moves out of the way, and taken back control of the forest. All the same there was a simple footpath for us to follow, with a few faded information boards telling us about the tough life these early lumbermen led in the early 1900s, as well as one or two rusting artifacts such as an old scotch boiler and the steam-driven winch they used to haul the logs up out of the valley. Moving quickly on, we eventually arrived at the lighthouse just in time to take the last tour to the top where we had great views of the coastline all around and were regaled with tales of lighthouse keepers of the past.

Beautiful coastline of Bruny Island

Realising that the day was passing quickly, we opted to drive the 66km to Dennes Point at the far north end of North Bruny, and then make a quick U-turn to get back for the 6pm ferry. Alas, after a fun rally-style drive, we arrived at the terminal to see the ferry pulling away and we settled down for an hour-long wait for the last ferry of the day. For our entertainment, a local guy was wading in the water off the rocky beach, picking up large stones covered in oysters which he smashed and fed to himself and his little daughter. Another local, along with his son, was jigging for squid to use as bait on his next fishing trip. Having last eaten around midday, we were also rather glad of the tasty loaf we had bought earlier at Bruny Island Cheese and Beer Company, and munched on it to keep the wolf from the door till we could find an open eatery back on the “mainland”.

Picnic with the Tasmanian branch of the family

Our final full day on Tasmania was a Saturday and with everyone at home we went out for a family picnic at the Huon Valley and a stroll along the Tahune Air-Walk.

Tahune Forest Air Walk

 

 

 

 

 

 

This well engineered construction takes you among the tree-tops of a handsome pine forest, which includes a few remaining examples of the huge Huon pines that were so valuable to the “tree-getters” (=lumbermen) of yesteryear and are enormous, almost as impressive as our Californian sequoia trees. The walkway ends up cantilered outwards, high above the Huon River, where a few logs still remain caught along the riverbanks, having failed to reach their destination at some lumber-mill far downstream.

Log jam on the Tahune River

On Sunday morning, we sadly had to say farewell to our lovely hosts and set off on our drive to Devonport to catch the overnight ferry back to Melbourne. It was a damp grey rain-sodden day, the island seemingly also saddened by our departure; however, it did give us one last delightful surprise. We opted to take a more westerly route on the way back across the island, and after a couple of hours of driving up into the hills through some fairly wild rugged countryside, we had stopped for lunch and a warm-up in front of the blazing log fire at The Great Lake Hotel, a couple of kilometres outside the small village of Miena. Suitably revived we drove on, and as we started to descend from that stark plateau country, we came across a sign directing us to “Liffey Falls, 6km”.

Your intrepid travelling duo enjoying Tasmania’s parting gift, the Liffey Falls in full spate

With plenty of time on our hands, this seemed like a good way to pass the rest of the afternoon and so we set off along the dirt road which wound down around the edge of a steep-sided drop to the valley in the forest far below, slightly to Celine’s occasional concern as she was on the outside of the extremely narrow track. From the car park at the end of this precipitous descent, we had the most beautiful walk further down the hillside through a wonderland of enormous ferns among the giant trees of a thick sub-tropical forest, with the sound of falling water getting louder with every step, until we finally got to the upper shallow cascade, and then a bit further on we arrived at the falls proper. Suddenly we were thankful for that day’s non-stop rain, as the swollen River Liffey was in full spate, making the falls extremely impressive.

Our surprise gift fully appreciated, we drove the final miles through farmland with contented black Angus beef cattle munching the fresh green grass everywhere, eventually joining the queue for our return voyage on “Spirit of Tasmania. Nine hours later, after a slightly choppy crossing which half way through the night caused the skipper to slow down from his usual 28knots, we arrived back on the Australian mainland a couple of hours after sunrise, and thus the second stage of our Aussie adventure was over. Now all we had to do was a leisurely drive 1800+ kilometres across country back to my big sister on the Sunshine Coast.

Unmentioned above, but these fine craft, hand-built in the Wooden Boat Centre on the banks of the Huon River delighted your scribe, and Frank’s Cider House across the road was pretty good as well!

 

Oz 2018, part 1 – Our 2018 tour down-under begins here

A new adventure begins as this enormous silver bird carries us across the ocean towards the Land of Oz. Never flown Qantas before and, after the first hour or so, I can’t say I am over-impressed. The entertainment system is not very friendly, and the seats are as cramped as any we’ve ever been squashed into. I’ve managed to create a music playlist and now have no idea how to control it; it’s on ‘shuffle’, so I guess I’ll just let it carry on till dinner arrives; the smell of food is making us both hungry . . .

Eleven hours later, and I’m sorry to say that my opinion of Qantas, at least on this flight, has only improved slightly – we found that the movie selection was pretty good, and the food, though crassly served, was quite edible – even tasty! Celine experimented with Dramamil and slept surprisingly well, while I dozed on and off; perhaps I should get onto the drugs myself on the way home.

“So what is the idea of going to Australia?” you may well be asking if you have been following our travels over the previous twelve months. The call of family is the main draw plus our ongoing curiosity. No nest hunting intended here, though who knows . . . !!

Enjoying our first day on the beach with Cescy and Richard and Suzi the puppy.

My sister, Cescy, with her husband, Richard, and their young family, arrived in Australia about fifty years ago, taking the Ten Pound Sterling offer that attracted so many migrants to the country in the fifties and sixties. They started out living near Sydney and over the years, while their family grew larger and older, and eventually moved out from the happy homestead, they have slowly migrated northwards, finally arriving in Bli Bli on the Sunshine Coast north of Brisbane, our starting point for this “Tour Down-Under”.

A typical Sunshine Coast beach, not bad eh? (apart from the encroaching high-rises!)

Celine has never been to “the world’s largest island”, and I only paid a fleeting visit when I took my own young family there as part of a business trip to New Zealand about twenty-five years ago, staying with Cescy and Richard who were then living near Mooloolabah. I gather that the region has changed a lot since then, with development all over the place, so any past memories are probably pretty irrelevant; Cescy tells me that even the totally crazy Ettamogah Pub, where the boys and I enjoyed beers and something pretty tasty off the “barbi”, has lost much of its outrageous Aussie appeal. Oh well, time changes everything, and not always for the best it seems.

As a Canadian, I tend to think of Australia as a rather brash, slightly less capitalistic version of America. After two weeks in New Zealand, a country where people seemed very relaxed and slightly old-fashioned in their ways, its comparison with Australia was similar to that between my adopted homeland in Niagara-on-the-Lake and everything American just across the border. After five years living rather too close to Los Angeles and witnessing the hedonistic lifestyle of many of the wealthier residents of Southern California, I am hoping that my assumptions about Oz are misplaced. I guess we’ll find out in the next few days as we get ourselves acclimatised and prepare for our road trip.

Happy to see my big sister again.

It is now Sunday afternoon, and we are preparing for a big family party with two of my nephews, David, who is also my godson, and Giles, coming round with their families. Cescy and Richard’s house has a large shaded patio where, Mediterranean style, we will all be sitting round a long wooden table, this one being made from three planks of eucalyptus, many different species of which make up more than 70% of the trees in the country.

Refreshing cane-juice based passion fruit, pineapple and lemon slushies were on sale at the sunday market in Dilillibah.

This morning we walked to the local Fishermans Road Sunday market in Dilillibah, a rather pleasant two-plus kilometre stroll in the morning cool. We had fun chatting to the locals who were selling everything from bric-a-brac to freshly squeezed fruit-juice slushies, bought a few essential groceries, and then started the walk home. By then the sun was high in a nearly cloudless sky, the temperature had risen to the low thirties, and even the dog decided the walk home was not going to be anywhere near as enjoyable as the stroll there. We are just south of the Tropic of Capricorn here, so six or seven weeks ago the sun was right overhead at midday, and today’s heat is hardly a surprise; but it still takes it out of you when you experience it after such a long time in slightly more temperate climes.

A sculpture on a roundabout in Bli Bli, celebrating the cutters who harvested sugar cane, the main crop of the area for many years in the past.

Yesterday, as we determinedly ignored the effects of jetlag and losing Thursday the fifteenth of February altogether, we strolled along the local beach at the mouth of the Maroochydore River, where “unrestrained dogs” are allowed to run free. Six-month old Suzi certainly has no self-restraint and had great fun meeting other local canines; meanwhile, the sight and sound of the storm-tossed waves pounding against the shore with its wild green backdrop of reeds and small trees, totally reinvigorated Celine and me.

Celine being re-invigorated on the local Maroochydore beach

That ‘yesterday’ was in fact three days ago, as it is now Wednesday and it is a whole week since we left home, if you ignore the day we lost on the way over here. We have toured a bit further in the last couple of days, first going on a glorious drive through the countryside inland from Bli Bli, to the sub-tropical rain forest of Kondalilla State Park. There Celine had her first snake encounter, narrowly avoiding stepping onto a black snake, probably an Eastern Small-eyed, that was basking on the footpath in a small patch of sunlight that filtered through the thick forest ceiling; it shot away into the undergrowth as Celine yelped while doing a neat pirouette that brought all of us to a sudden halt. Other local fauna was happier to see us!

A large* lizard happy to pose on the footpath (*about 45cm from head to tail).

We walked down the steep path among the grass trees and the stag horn ferns, to the pool at the bottom of the small upper falls, but decided that another hundred metres descent, followed by the climb all the way back up to the car park was a bit more than any of us wanted to do on such a hot sweaty day.

Grass trees, with eucalypts in the background.

So, once back at the car, we continued our drive along a ridge road among the rolling green hills, stopped off at a cafe in Montville with beautiful views towards the coast, and then cheekily turned into the driveway of C & R’s old house in the woods above Mooloolah, rekindling memories of my family’s stay there all those years ago.

Well decorated ginger latte coffee from Elixiba.

Then – the real – yesterday, Celine and I drove down the coast, stopping in Maroochydore for groceries at Woolworths – no relation of the Woolworths of my English childhood – and a couple of tasty ginger latte coffees at a very green-minded cafe called Elixiba. Further on we arrived at Point Cartwright where my boys had their first taste of surfing as young Canadians in their early teens; the recent stormy weather was still kicking up the waves and we had a healthy, blustery walk along the steeply shelving beach of clean golden sand, till we got to the steps and footpath up to the lighthouse on the point. Two kookaburras very obligingly posed on the top of a sign beside the path to have their photos taken, as some less photogenic brush turkeys scrabbled around in the undergrowth.

These two kookaburras were happy posers.

We had some specific shopping to do and found the what we wanted in BigW, a KMart style store in Kawana Shopping World, where we also chanced upon Jamaica Blue, a local restaurant chain named after the eponymous coffee from said island’s Blue Mountains. Their salads were delicious and fortified us well to as we continued our drive to Caloundra; there, in spite of the cool damp breeze, we enjoyed the spectacular antics of the kitesurfers braving the wild winds and waves across the bar at the mouth of the shallow estuary, our only fellow spectator being a young woman with a very oversized backside sporting a very undersized bikini, not a pleasant sight at all!

Great kite-surfing in Caloundra.

It seems that seaside Australia is much like coastal Southern California in having persons of all shapes and sizes, of whom many more than we had expected are overweight .

So, one week gone and our acclimatisation process is proceeding well. Today we woke up to the beating of heavy rain on the indigenous, “colourised,” corrugated tin roof and, as I looked out of the patio window, I could see the water being blown horizontally off the roof of the garden shed. This was a delightful sight to a couple of drought-worn Californians and, apparently, quite a surprise even to the locals. A few more days and we start our travels proper as we drive south into New South Wales on our way to Sydney. So, as the saying goes, “Watch this space . . .!!”

A final stop in the ancient city of Poitiers

“So, let’s go to Poitiers on our way back to Paris”, suggests my beautiful wife one day. “And why would we do that?” I ask. “Simply because I went there back in 1982 and remember it being a very nice old city!”

That seemed as good a reason as any. We wanted somewhere within easy striking distance of Paris CDG and Poitiers was a name I remembered well from my schoolboy history classes as being the site of a key victory for my English ancestors during the Hundred Years War. So, having established there were no undesirable motives for visiting the place, such as reminiscing over a long-lost love on the part of either party, we got busy on the AirBnB website once more where we found Phillippe and his “B&B Chambre élégante, spacieuse Poitiers centre” on rue des 4 Roues, overlooking the river Le Clain.

The fresh, clean waters of the River Dronne in Brantôme

It was a lovely sunny spring day for a drive through the countryside, so we took a detour into the Perigord region to visit Brantôme, a small town on an island in the river La Dronne. Spring flowers were poking up in flowerbeds around the village and the river-bed was alive with bright green grasses. The Dronne river takes an abrupt U-turn around Brantôme, after meeting the limestone cliff that has been the home to many peoples in the past who took to the troglodyte lifestyle in the natural caves worn out by the river over thousands of years. We stretched our legs awhile, taking a few more photos for posterity to add to our already enormous collection from the trip (only to lose them all when we got home as a result of our HDD disaster!). Then we stopped for a coffee at a café beside the river where the poor old waitress seemed to be totally discombobulated, as if the dozen or so customers she had to look after were way beyond anything she had ever experienced before! The Perigord looks very beautiful with it’s rolling hills, woodlands, open farmland and river valleys, and it is easy to understand why so many expats from all over northern Europe have gravitated there over the years.

Phillipe welcomed us warmly on our arrival in Poitiers at the appointed hour and, after giving us a hand with our well stuffed suitcases, showed us around his little ‘jardin biologique’ with its neat raised-beds full of herbs and vegetables and introduced us to his small flock of chickens. The garden backs up to a small limestone cliff into which an old troglodyte dwelling had been carved, similar to those we had seen in Brantôme earlier in the day. Later in the evening we took a short walk to get our first view of the old town centre, and had a tasty supper at La Bonne Quille, the “Veggie Experience” for my health-food loving wife and a tasty piece of monkfish for me.

There is certainly a lot of old architecture to feast one’s eyes on in this very historic city. During our drive there we had read about at least five or six old churches that were worthy of a visit, though having visited, entered and photographed in one way or another, nearly every church, chapel, abbey and cathedral we had passed, or stayed near to, over the previous six months, I felt pretty well ‘churched-out’; so the thought of dragging our irreligious, symbolically near-drowned, brains around yet more such edifices on our last day in Europe did little to excite me. But when we finally returned to our comfortable, warm, five-star digs after nearly five hours plodding around this amazing medieval city on a grey, drizzly day, I can honestly say that if offered to be shown another hundred ‘houses of God’ that were as beautiful as the five or six we saw that day, I could, perhaps, be persuaded to do so, though all in good time of course.

Stain-glass windows in Église Notre-Dame la Grande in Poitiers. An oak tree symbolized strength, authority and longevity, and it was a meeting place in many European countries

Our first stop was to have been at the fourth century Baptistère Saint-Jean, but due to poor research, we found it was closed until 2PM, and thus it ended up at the end of our list for the day. But our walk there had not been without its pleasures, first along the grassy bank of the Le Clain river, past ducks, drooping willows and weirs, and under the over-pass of the Voie André Maisaux, with its two fine examples of street art on the concrete supporting pillars, across the little footbridge, Passerele de Montbernage, and then weaving up through the narrow streets and into the south-east corner of the city. From the closed Baptistère, we carried on upwards towards the pedestrianised city centre, stopping briefly at Cathédrale Saint-Pierre, Poitier’s twelfth century cathedral, then Église de Sainte-Radegonde dating from the sixth century, and so to Église Notre-Dame la Grande, the oldest Romanesque church in France, on Place Charles de Gaulle, amusingly still better known as ‘Place Notre Dame’ by the locals. (This name change had actually led to one rather embarrassed church warden at the door of the cathedral the previous evening who, when asked where we would find our restaurant on Place Charles de Gaulle, had sent us off in completely the wrong direction; for this he later apologized to us profusely, as we bumped into him again after our dinner, explaining his use of the old name for the square and consequent misdirections!)

The Church of Sainte-Radegonde is a medieval Roman Catholic church in Poitiers dating from the 6th century. It takes its name from the Frankish queen and nun, Radegund, who was buried in the church. Considered a saint, the church became a place of pilgrimage. The current church, constructed from the 11th to 12th centuries, was built in a combination of Romanesque and Angevin Gothic architectural styles.

The cornucopia of Romanesque magnificence we had viewed so far in just three churches actually had me almost hankering for more and so we walked yet further along the local streets, all of which are named after persons who are of French historical significance, and have very informative street name-plates with dates etc.; streets with names such as ‘rue Gambetta’, named after Léon Gambetta, a French statesman who came to prominence during the Franco-Prussian war, and ‘rue de Théophraste Renaudot’, a physician, philanthropist and journalist. And so we arrived at the most wonderful church of all, the almost totally Romanesque, Église Saint-Hilaire-le-Grand. The interior of this superb eleventh century example of very early medieval architecture is a glorious feast of stained glass windows, very old murals, beautiful mosaic floors and Romanesque arches, large and small, seen from every angle and from every visual vantage point. It was a wonderful climax to six months of dedicated study of religious architecture by a couple of non-believers!

But we still had one more architectural treasure to visit, the Baptistère dating back to Roman times, although to get there we had to pass through yet another visual surprise, Le Parc de Blossac. Established in 1770 by Paul Esprit Marie de la Bourdonnaye, Count of Blossac, as a private garden on 9 hectares along the ancient city ramparts, it has fine views over the river below and, joy of joys, we saw our first crocuses of spring pushing up through the grass at the foot of the proud beech trees. Even on this dreary grey day the park was a happy place to be, so one can only imagine how pleasant it would be on more clement days.

The Baptistère Saint-Jean (Baptistery of St. John) is a religious edifice in Poitiers (VI century). It is reputed to be the oldest existing Christian building in the West and one of the most prominent examples of Merovingian architecture.

Finally, we arrived at the last destination of our whistle-stop tour of this fine old city, the Baptistère Saint-Jean, a small, unimposing building at first sight after all the grand churches we had visited throughout the day. The central part of the building which dates from the middle of the fourth century, stands on top of the original Roman foundations from a hundred years earlier. The building has undergone many good and bad phases over the years, from its initial designed use as a centre for full immersion baptisms, to severe neglect during the occupation of the Visigoths in the fifth century, through its religious heyday in the late middle ages, to its sale for use as a warehouse after the French Revolution, and on into the twentieth century when its true historical importance was finally recognized. Although over the years it has undergone partial demolition, several additions, and numerous rebuilding projects, when one enters inside it still retains the feel of its Roman origins. There in the middle of the main chamber is the original baptismal tank, and the remains of many beautiful frescoes adorn the walls and the ceiling of the small chapel at the back of the chamber. It is considered to be the oldest existing Christian building in western Europe and is a fine example of Merovingian architecture, that is the period in France’s history from the fifth to the eighth century.

That evening we again followed our host’s recommendations and ate another good meal, this time at La Gazette. But with flat camera batteries and exhausted bodies too tired to write my daily journal, I have no memory of quite what we ate! Back in our comfortable digs, we fell into the sleep of the gods, though which gods I am not too sure, and awoke late the following morning to find Phillipe had left our breakfast for us, laid out very artistically on the dining table downstairs, plenty of fresh croissants, pastries, home-made jams, small cups of fruit, and a large thermos of piping hot coffee, just what we needed to prepare us for facing the harsh world of modernity that awaited us at Paris CDG that evening. We really were going to be on our way home very soon.

An Epilogue, fit for the end of a six-month travel saga!

Arriving back in Paris after a long and generally uninteresting drive from Poitiers culminating in the usual rush-hour traffic-jam going around the Péripherique, we handed in our very enjoyable Peugeot 308 lease car, and took the courtesy bus to our Hotel Mercure, deep in the heart of the Paris CDG airport complex but also very convenient for our 5.30AM check-in the next morning. The hotel was everything you would expect from a business traveller’s perspective, a clean comfortable room, an overpriced buffet-style dining room (no choice, €33 a head to eat all you like, or nothing), and a large bar area populated noisily by the denizens of whatever conference was being held that day. A not-so-nice welcome back to the grim reality of the modern fly-anywhere world! We spent most of the evening re-packing our suitcases yet again, jettisoning various non-essentials such as half-used bottles of skin care products and a pair of very warm, cosy old slippers, to satisfy the 23kg weight limit. Lights out early, we slept fitfully and woke up at the ghastly hour of 4.30AM, dressed, grabbed our bags and went down to our waiting “coach and four”, the courtesy coach which we had all to ourselves. The very modern new terminal 1 was also similarly bereft of the usual travelling crowds and soon we were close by our departure gate in time to grab coffee/tea/tarte aux pommes/croissant at Brioche Doree for the usual high airport price, none of which bore much resemblance to our recent delightful ‘café culture’ experiences, except for the people-watching component of course. Eleven hours of easy flying later, courtesy of Lufthansa, and we were once more on the last leg home, driving along the 405 towards Long Beach, Belmont Shore and home. It was good to be back to reality and ‘normal’ life once more . . . well for a few months anyway!

So what did we achieve during this epic ‘holiday’??!!

We had an absolutely wonderful six months, we saw so many places, big cities, towns, and villages large and small, countryside wild and rugged and farmland that is in places manicured to perfection, vineyards with rows of pruned vines stretching into the distance reminding me of the lines of gravestones in one of those many sad Great War cemeteries around Ypres, forests where wild boars roam and where we heard the depressing sounds of gunfire from the ‘chasseurs’ in action. We witnessed simplicity in small French country villages where only hippy foreigners choose to live the alternative life-style among the few ancient locals who hang on to their agrarian way of life. We experienced in a small way, the sophisticated lifestyles of the rich and famous in posh Riviera resorts and Victorian seaside spas. In several cities we walked through beautiful old town centres, full of renaissance, neo-classical and medieval architecture. We drove through, but rarely stopped, in small industrial towns squeezed into narrow valleys, packed with high-density housing. We saw sheep on hillsides, cows chewing the cud on mist-covered, rich green meadows, we have befriended and been warmly greeted by donkeys, been followed down country tracks by goats, barked at by village dogs and have stroked cats everywhere. We have met with friendly locals in town and in country, we have learnt how to greet and say our farewells in four different languages. We watched families meeting and gossiping in squares and market places while their children played on their way home from school. We have drooled at views of high snow-capped mountains on the far side of green valleys and been awed by standing on high cliffs, rocky outcrops and even balconies high above sea and ocean, as waves crashed against rocks and beaches far below.

The lives of both town dwellers and village folk have been ours to experience, and we have purchased our necessary groceries at street markets, smart ‘Halles’, hypermarkets, supermarkets, local grocers and specialty ‘Bio’ stores. We drove 11,000 kilometres on autoroutes, cursing the tolls, on beautifully maintained national roads with very little traffic, on nausea-inducing winding roads through the hills, and squeezed through narrow village streets, laid down in the days of carriages, carts and wagons, when ‘high horse-power’ meant at least ‘four-in-hand’. We have seen many places that we would never consider living in permanently, and a few, very few, that have enticed us to get into serious conversations with local ‘immobiliers’. However, we have not yet found anywhere that was simply the ‘most perfect’ location to plant new roots, as to defy due care and diligence, though we did get dangerously close a couple of times! Our shoes have tramped through city streets, along cobbled lanes, up and down ancient stairways and through marketplaces thronging with shoppers hunting out both quality and bargains. We traversed pedestrian crossings on busy main roads, dodging speeding scooters and the occasional mindless driver, but more often than not we have appreciated courteousness behind the wheel. We stopped in cafés to watch, enjoy and participate in the café culture, and also enjoyed too many sweet patisseries as a result. We have people-watched, contemplated our surroundings and happily absorbed the culture we found everywhere.

In so many ways we have tasted, experienced and enjoyed the European way of life, a style of living we both grew up in, in one way or another, and find we have missed in recent years. Whether or not that life proves to be the answer to our dreams, should have become clear once we returned to terra firma across the pond, and to our American life. But, alas, we remain undecided. Of one thing we can be absolutely sure, we will return ‘ere long and once again go free-wheeling along those roads, discovering yet more “views to die for”, visit some more places that I will declare to be “perfect”, and continue the “thrill of the hunt”. And one day, one fine day, we’ll know we have found the right place, where we will both be equally happy to spend the rest of our lives, and we’ll be able to hang up our spurs and riding crop, once and for all. Till then . . . a little side trip to Australia to visit my sister and her family. . . !!

PS I am thankful to Celine’s love of Facebook, something I never thought I’d be saying! The pictures in these last two posts would have been completely lost as a result of our disc-drive debacle but for her diligence in keeping a Facebook journal of our travels.

Our journey home begins in Bordeaux

As we prepared to leave Getaria and say “Agur” to Euskal Herria, or Euskadi, the Spanish Basque Country, we realised what a lovely place we were leaving behind, a ‘country’ full of contrasts, surprises, elegance and history, a landscape that offers mountains and valleys, farmland and forest, vineyards, sheep and cows, secluded beaches and golden sands, rocky promontories and wide inviting bays. And yet this is also an industrial area, where steel production was once of prime importance and still leaves behind a legacy of small industrial towns squeezed into valleys between steep hillsides where sheep graze and the countryside prevails. These same small towns are also full of six, seven, even eight storey apartment blocks, the archetypal architectural feature of so much of the Spain we have seen on this trip. The housing style is also a feature of many of the little coastal towns and villages that still support fishing fleets, the other primary industry of this part of Spain for many hundreds of years. Getaria, with a fleet of a dozen or more modern fishing boats, is typical of these communities, though without having lost the charm of its location that continues to make it such an attractive proposition to prospective new residents such as us. Others, such as nearby Orio, make no pretence of their industrial heritage. And then there are the blatant tourist towns and cities, San Sebastian being the most impressive with the charms of its old town, and the splendid beaches around the Bahia de La Concha; and on a much smaller scale, there was our local town of Zarautz. Bilbao, the first great Basque city we visited, is a fine mélange of fading industrial city, seaport, culture, attractive old town and elegant new town, and is in the midst of beautiful rolling farmland, forests of eucalyptus and Spanish oaks down steep hillsides towards the ever-changing and never dull seas of the Bay of Biscay.

And leaving behind Basque Country, also means saying “Au revoir” to Lapurdi or Labourd, the coastal region of Le Pays Basque Français, wherein we discovered the charms of Hendaye and Saint-Jean-de-Luz, together with their hinterland of yet more green, rolling hills and the well-groomed villages of Urrugne and Ascain. And then there is the spa city of Biarritz on the extreme northern edge of Basque Country, where rocky shores give way to a seemingly endless sandy strand, renowned as a seaside resort since the French Revolution when sea-baths became fashionable. Even Napoleon Bonaparte broke long-standing social prejudices to bathe in Basque Country’s coastal waters. And today Biarritz continues to be a fashionable resort for holidaymakers from all levels of society, even if it is not a place that we would choose to plant our roots anew.

So many lovely locales and so many potential nest-building sites to consider on both sides of the French-Spanish divide, ensured that we were going away from Basque Country with a mass of good memories, and at the back of our minds the knowledge that this is one region we could certainly consider as a place to spend our future years. However, we still have to explore La Bella Italia . . . and give Italy a chance, and nor should we dismiss the claimed virtues of a life in little Portugal, bravely facing the enormous Atlantic Ocean along the western edge of the Iberian peninsular!

Canèle, a Bordelaise patisserie, a bit like a mini treacle pudding!

Our visit to Basque Country brought the nest searching aspect of our journey to an end. But never wishing to be in too much of a rush at any time in our travels, we had given ourselves just over a week to make the 850 kilometre drive back to Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris, and decided to take a couple of breaks on the way to see more of France’s historic gems. Our first stop was at Bordeaux, famed for canèles, as well as the eponymous wine region. Once again through the services of AirBnB, we had found a small studio apartment right in the centre of the city, also with the all-important parking space; remember, we were driving a brand-new, short-term lease car from Peugeot, and, remembering our experience in Montpellier, had no wish to expose it any more than necessary, to the risks of overnight on-street parking in a large city.

Grande Théatre of the Opéra National de Bordeaux

Arriving in the early evening, we were slightly delayed by our GPS, which, seemingly unaware there is a wide city-centre boulevard called Allée de Tourney, had directed us to Passage de Tourney in a much scruffier part of town; still eventually, the correct address achieved, we were met by an ‘agent’ of the apartment’s ‘owner’. As we later came to understand, we were about to experience the not-so-desirable ‘commercial’ side of renting through AirBnB, where you are not staying in somebody’s home, but rather in a purchased-to-rent property, managed by a rental agency. That became even more obvious as we entered and found ourselves in a starkly furnished studio, with a pull-down bed that occupied most of the ‘living area’, and a TV fastened securely to the wall in a position where it could not be viewed comfortably from either the bed or the couch. Unfazed by this slight disappointment, we were, however, delighted to find ourselves staying in a fine old building on the corner of Place de la Comédie and opposite the Grand Théatre of the Opéra National de Bordeaux; we really could not have been better placed to explore this city that proved to be elegant in a Parisian sort of way. Actually the other way around, it is Paris that is elegant in a Bordeaux sort of way, for Baron Haussmann, an 18th century mayor of Bordeaux, supposedly used the city as a model when Emperor Napoleon lll asked him to re-design medieval Paris into the beautiful city we know today.

People and trams share the pedestrianised streets

We had given ourselves four days to ‘do Bordeaux’, thinking that would be plenty of time to also include an out-of-town drive to get a taste of the wine growing commune of Saint-Émilion. Which just goes to show how wrong one can be, for Bordeaux is chock full of stylish streets, museums and historic churches, being home to some 360 ‘monuments historiques’, as well as some fairly smart shopping, had we been so inclined. The city is spacious with lots of broad open Allées, or boulevards, and large plazas; it is also well pedestrianised which always adds to a wanderer’s pleasure, though one does have to watch out for trams, as they still share the roads with pedestrians on several of the main streets. Hardly any of the city is really, really old, with many buildings being in the Neo-Classical style popular in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; the UNESCO World Heritage List credits Bordeaux as being “an outstanding urban and architectural ensemble”.

Cathédrale Saint-André de Bordeaux

For our first day, we chose to head towards Cathédrale Saint-André de Bordeaux, consecrated by Pope Urban ll in 1096. Very little remains of the original Romanesque structure, but the early thirteenth century Portail Royal with its beautiful stone carvings around the portico, is a striking testament to the stonemason’s art of that era. Even in such elegant surroundings, walking the streets is always a tiring process, especially for me with my deteriorating knee joints, and so we made a couple of rest-stops along the way.

Porte Cailhou, one of the few remaining signs of the city’s original fortifications.

The first stop was at a café near to Porte Cailhou, where we sampled our first ‘canelés’, a sweet Bordelaise speciality, a bit like a small suet pudding with a rum flavor and burnt sugar coating; we were only mildly impressed, though your sweet-toothed scribe did feel it necessary to ‘try’ a second one a few days later – and, since getting home, has discovered them being sold on a small scale in our local Peet’s Coffee and Tea! And to complete the day’s peregrinations, we stopped by ‘Any Teas’, a salon de thé hidden in the smart little Passage Sarget, where we whiled away the rest of the daylight hours supping our tea and coffee and enjoying their delicious apple tart and chocolate truffle with strawberries.

Coffee, tea and patisseries at “Any Tea”

Our second day began somewhat frustratingly, as we were unable to unlock the front door, the door handle being about to drop off and the key seemingly jammed into the lock. So we waited awhile for our agent to obtain the services of a locksmith and an hour later we were gratefully on our way. We did have the last laugh however, for when we got back in the evening and found a fine new lock installed, I realized that the problem with the key was actually partly of my own doing; I had got so used to the horizontal orientation of the keyhole in our previous abode that I hadn’t noticed that in this door lock the keyhole was oriented vertically, in a quite normal fashion if I’m honest. Still our landlord can be thankful to us in one way, as the new door lock was a much more substantial affair, offering the sort of high security we had seen in many French city apartments during our travels in the past, and the new door handle showed no more signs of wanting to drop off the door.

Rue Saint Catherine in Bordeaux is a 1250m long pedestrian shopping precinct.

Undeterred by this delay, we still managed to see a lot, starting with a walk along the kilometer-long pedestrianised shopping precinct that is Rue Sainte-Catherine, towards our first destination, the very elegant fifteenth century La Grosse Cloche.

La Grosse Cloche is attached to l’église Saint-Éloi, and it is very handsome! Built on top of the medieval wall, It consists of two 40-metre-high circular towers and a central bell tower.

This impressive bell, weighing 7,800kg, is housed in a belfry built on top of the remains of the thirteenth century Porte Saint-Éloi; on each side of the tower is a clock face, one of which includes a strange semi-circular dial, and the other, the phases of the sun and moon [to find out more about this interesting time piece visit www.invisiblebordeaux.blogspot.com].

Churches always seem to be on our daily itinerary, for even though neither of us are the slightest bit religious, we do appreciate their beautiful architecture. So Basilique Saint-Michel, said to have a splendid, flamboyant Gothic interior was our next planned stop; but we arrived at Place Meynard to find a rather unimpressive, grubby exterior and the doors firmly closed to visitors for some unstated reason. After a consolation ‘café’, we continued our quest for religious splendour along rue Camille Sauvageau to Église Sainte Croix, annexed to a Benedictine Abbey founded in the seventh century. There it seems our luck would fare no better, for we were greeted by the following handwritten note attached to tape across the front of the open doorway, “Fermé: car il y avait eu un incendie dans le batiment”. Luckily the fire had not spread to the outside of the building, so we did get a good look at the very impressive portico around the front door.

The intricately sculptured facade of the Église Sainte-Croix (“Church of the Holy Cross”) built in the late 11th-early 12th centuries. Wow!!!

Built in the eleventh and early twelfth centuries the stone carvings are a mass of intricately carved figures of artisans at their trades mingling with religious characters; yet another feast of the stone-mason’s art.

Vegan dining at Munchies

Our fervor for religious architecture only partially satisfied, we decided to take a different tack and visit what some guides reckon to be the best museum in town, the Musée d’Aquitaine. We were passing through the “garment district” at the cheap end of rue Sainte-Catherine at that stage, when we happened upon an interesting-looking little ‘vegan’ café called Munchies [Facebook page: “@munchiesbordeaux”] on rue des Augustins. I have to admit I approached the fare with some skepticism, but our meal of a large bowl of four or five different salads with sesame rice, washed down with a fiery ginger beer for me and a kombucha for Celine, was one of the tastiest meals we had purchased during our entire six months of travelling! Thus well fuelled up for our museum tour, we arrived at what was indeed, a superb display of the history of Aquitaine, and of Bordeaux in particular, from Paleolithic times – think Lascaux Caves – through to the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. French museums seem to have a special knack for excellent presentation and easily assimilated, detail of information.

The Bordeaux merchants developed trade with the colonies, particularly slave trading in French Guinea which made them very rich!

However, we were surprised to see so much space devoted to the history of slavery, and, indeed, rather shocked to learn how much of the city’s wealth came from it’s ship-owners’ participation in the Atlantic shipping triangle of the 17th/18th/19th centuries, and the all important slave trade that made those voyages so profitable; fascinating yet very disturbing, even though the concept of slavery itself was not new to either of us.

We saved Saint-Émilion for our last day in Bordeaux and the weather gods saved a damp, foggy, misty day for what should have been a sunny drive in the countryside, for we had, of course, ignored the fact that it was still winter.

The charming village of Saint-Émilion was named after the monk Émilion, a travelling confessor, who settled in a hermitage carved into the rock here in the 8th century.

But what better way to spend a grey day than a visit to a UNESCO World Heritage Site – granted in 1999 to both the village and the surrounding domaine of vineyards, as being “cultural landscapes”.

It is a charming village, sitting on top of a little hill in the middle of fairly flat, uninteresting countryside, unless you like the view of never-ending vineyards; it has lots of old buildings, and has been completely spruced up and the cobbled roads relaid; indeed, everything has been done to make the place pleasing to the thousands of tourist eyes that must view it each year.

One of the steep little streets in Saint-Émilion

Except that every other shop is a ‘wine-boutique’, there isn’t a typical French café or even a salon de thé worthy of the title, the Hotel du Plaisance at the top of the village on Place du Clocher is ridiculously expensive (entrées starting at €65 and above, main courses in three figures and rooms costing around €500 per night), and the whole place seems ‘Disneyfied’, totally twee and rather false, having completely lost the charm of a typical French village.

It does however have one redeeming feature, the hour-long guided tour of the monolithic church and the hermitage of the monk Émilion, a travelling confessor who lived in a cave carved into the rock in the eighth century; it was the monks who followed him who started up commercial wine production in the area, although the first vineyards there were planted by the Romans as early as the second century AD.

The monolithic church in St. Émilion was carved out of ONE solid rock at the beginning of the 12th century. From the outside, it is impossible to imagine the volume of this church.

The hill on which the village is built, is on an outcrop of relatively soft limestone, and the very impressive monolithic church is carved directly into the rock. It is the largest such church in all of Europe, being 38m long, 20m wide and 11m high, and was an important factor in the village gaining its UNESCO recognition. It was therefore somewhat surprising to learn that the whole underground complex is privately owned, in spite of the National Heritage signs everywhere, and disappointing to be told that, as a result, photography was not allowed.

Our ‘Cook’s Tour’ of Bordeaux coming to an end, it was soon time to try to re-pack our suitcases in suitable fashion to satisfy airline weight and size restrictions, something we had enjoyed being without for so many months of travel, and to get on the road again for our last stop, the medieval city of Poitiers.

Discovering the Basque Country – part three – French or Spanish Basque?

During the planning stages of our trip we had made firm accommodation bookings for little more than half of our stay and decided we would wing the rest as we travelled, hoping that something suitable would turn up either through Home Exchange.com or Trusted Housesitters.com. With our trip’s emphasis on all things French, our first plan for the Basque Country, our last main locale to be investigated, had been to stay north of the border for six weeks or more in or near Hendaye, Saint-Jean-de-Luz or even Biarritz, and then take the occasional trip across to the Spanish side to sample the tapas scene in San Sebastian, and perhaps explore a bit beyond. Fortune had other plans for us however, and luckily, we only succeeded in finding accommodation along the Spanish Basque Coast, where we discovered all those beautiful places that I have already written about, and would have otherwise probably missed. Thus, eventually, as the end of our journey got ominously closer, we took the plunge and did exactly the reverse of our original plan and made one or two forays across the border in a northerly direction, and again we were delighted by much of what we found there. But sadly, with time running out, we really didn’t give ourselves enough time to explore as thoroughly as we might have wanted.

So, one fine February day with sun and clouds but no rain and 14oC forecast, we took the now familiar N-634, snaking through the countryside towards the hinterland of San Sebastian and thence to the frontier at Irun, and across the Franco-Spanish border running down the middle of the river Bidasoa. Immediately we were in Hendaye, initially driving past the vast complex of sidings of Gare de Hendaye railway station; it is there that long ago in the days before the freedom of movement across borders that came with membership of the EU, all train traffic between the two countries would stop for border controls, and to get the carriage wheels adjusted for the different gauge tracks on either side of the border. And now that so many tourists arrive by plane rather than train, the station’s more modern opposite number the Aeropuerto de San Sebastian opposite the station across the estuary in Spain, takes most of the tourist load.

Looking west from Hendaye towards Hondarribia in Spanish Basque Country.

Once past this industrial zone, we found ourselves driving north alongside the estuary and looking west across the large Baie de Chingoudy at the mouth of the river, the beautiful setting that makes Hendaye so special for many people. Eager not to waste too much time on being tourists yet again, we soon found a place to park near the Moorish architecture of the original Casino building on the sea-front and wandered back a couple of blocks to make casual enquiries at an ‘Immobilier’, Agence Doribane, where the staff greeted us like old friends, and very quickly had arranged to show us four properties a few days later. So that was good; we immediately had a reason to make us come back and not simply spend our last week staring at the beautiful sea-view from our lofty apartment in Getaria! We then went back into the old town, which we found to be simple, quiet and friendly; but sadly, it was without a single, really old, historic building on which to feast our touristy eyes, the sad result of the military bombardment that effectively leveled the whole community during the War of the Pyrenees at the end of the eighteenth century.

The town hall, or Mairie, in Hendaye

After a nice bowl of soup at a little café across from the Mairie on the Place de la Republique, we continued our drive up the coast towards Saint-Jean-de-Luz, stopping first in the outskirts of Hendaye to take a quick stroll around the gardens of Chateau Observatoire Abbadia. Situated high up on a hill overlooking the lush green woods and farmland that lead down to Pointe Sainte Anne, the elegant chateau, built between 1864 and 1879, was designed in the neo-Gothic style, and incorporates many mysterious features, characteristic of the enigmatic nature of the owner, the explorer Antoine Thomson d’Abbadie.

Celine sits surrounded by strange stone animals outside Chateau Observatoire Abbadia

Rejoining the Route de la Corniche, we followed the rocky coastline to Socoa, a small seaside town nestling in the southwest corner of the bay that is the estuary of the La Nivelle river separating Ciboure and Saint-Jean-de-Luz. Once a fishing port, Socoa’s small harbour built in 1624 is now mostly occupied by pleasure craft and is guarded by Fort de Socoa that was built on the point and then rebuilt many times over the ensuing years, generally, as a result of being sacked, burnt or destroyed in some way during the many conflicts that it witnessed right up to the end of the German occupation in WWll. A long breakwater stretching out from the fort and partway across the bay has an interesting design being concave on its sea face. This feature which very effectively catches and dissipates the power of the waves without receiving a damaging direct impact, creating a wonderful wall of spray as the larger waves arrive and are thrown upwards like the ball out of a pelote basket (‘xistera’).

Together with two more sections of the breakwater, one in the middle of the bay and a second reaching out from Pointe de Sainte-Barbe on the far side of the bar, all three sections contribute to protecting the fine beach in Saint-Jean-de-Luz and the houses beyond, which in past years have been subject to some severe floods when the Bay of Biscay has been at its most savage.

Basque corsaire with his admiring ‘groupie”!

The now famous resort of Saint-Jean-de-Luz started its journey towards prosperity in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, partly from its association with the fishing industry, but also from the activities of its own Basque corsaires or pirates who attacked and captured passing vessels, resulting in the town being nicknamed the “Viper’s Nest” by English sailors of the time. The wealth that was brought about by these activities led to the erection by local shipowners of two handsome palaces overlooking Port de Saint-Jean-de-Luz. In 1640, Joannot de Hareneder constructed maison Joanoenia, which some years later was to become Maison de l’Infante, and in 1643 Johannis de Lohobiargue built the house now known as Maison de Louis XlV. The event that led to these donations to royalty took place in 1660, when the Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste was chosen as the venue for the marriage of King Louis XlV to Maria Theresa, the Infanta of Spain, fulfilling a consolidating clause in the Treaty of the Pyrenees. This solid-looking fifteenth century church, on rue Leon Gambetta, hides an unusual but truly beautiful interior with five galleries across the west wall, fronted by the organ, three handsome wooden galleries along each side of the nave, and a choir and transept wonderfully decorated on a blue background with many carved statues and architectural details picked out in gold leaf.

The beautiful interior of Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste

And hanging from the rafters over the centre of the nave is a model of a sail and steam-driven paddle boat reminding the worshippers, and others, of the town’s rich maritime heritage.

Nowadays, the corsaires are but a memory, though the locals still know how to extract a few euros from the pockets of passing tourists, and not just the English these days, for it is a very cosmopolitan resort.

Chic shopping in Saint-Jean-de-Luz

Taking a stroll along rue Leon Gambetta, people-watching on the way, we saw many very chic, well-presented, elderly couples among the crowds window-shopping the large selection of smart boutiques, as well as other shops with windows full of delicious looking local gourmet specialities, wines and chocolate truffles. There were plenty of cafés and tea-shops, and we stopped for some afternoon sustenance at Pâtisserie Etchebaster, which has been in the same place since 1909; they served us patisseries and coffee as good as any we’d found in France, but that was not enough reason for them to be almost twice as expensive! So Saint-Jean-de-Luz is not a cheap town, but it is a delightful, elegant town to walk around.

Sea front apartments well protected by the substantial sea wall.

We took a stroll along the seafront looking into the first floor windows of old, three or four-storey apartment buildings strung along the water-front, many sporting a delicate wrought-iron balcony, with their ground floors slightly hidden behind the high seawall. It was easy to hark back to the life of a well-heeled visitor there in the Edwardian hey-days when travel was a more luxurious pastime of the few, rather than the mass tourism of today.

But dreaming of the past wasn’t what we were there for, and as we drove away from Saint-Jean-de-Luz back towards the sun setting behind the Spanish hills in the distance, we carried with us a supply of  much-needed organic staples from an excellent Bio store we found on the outskirts of town. We also had a second date arranged with yet another agent immobilier, this time to view properties in the villages in the hills inland from this lovely piece of French-Basque coast. So we would be back at least twice more in our eight remaining days which was a lovely prospect!

And thus it was that on St Valentine’s Day, guided by the very helpful though slightly disorganized and rather rushed Jara, we fell in love with an almost perfect house on top of the hill behind Hendaye, with views towards the Pyrenees in one direction and the Bay of Biscay in the other. Beautifully appointed and ticking pretty well every box on our must-have list, the only reason it became only ‘almost perfect’ in our critical eyes was the oversize chimney of the house just below the property which neatly split the wonderful view in two.

Unfortunately, Jara had not followed the realtor’s mantra “Save the best to last”, and the next two homes we viewed that day were not in the same league.

This slightly quirky house wasn’t very practical, but . . .

Mind you, one of them, a wonderfully quirky, though rather dark and impractical house in the shadow of some very tall overgrown leylandii cypress trees, owned by a very elderly couple who sat quietly in the kitchen during our visit, was packed to the gills with antiques, had a better garden than the ‘almost perfect’ house, and had wonderful views in a north-westerly direction over the harbour towards Hondarribia on the Spanish side.

. . . . it had lovely views of the bay and beyond.

And the third house can only be described as ‘a dog’, with apologies to all our canine friends!

Thus armed with some ideas of what could be found in the area, we explored further inland and visited the villages of Urrugne and neighbouring Ascain. Urrugne was a tidy little town more than a village, with a large church that was a smaller edition of the Eglise Saint-Jean-Baptiste in Saint-Jean-de-Luz that we visited earlier in the week. Continuing our house-hunting, we visited a branch of Carmen Immobilier where we picked out a couple more homes to view in another two days time.

Children singing and dancing in the village square in Urrugne

On the way back to the car across the square, we stopped to watch a display of singing and dancing by a group of thirty or more local primary school children, all dressed up in home-made peasant outfits. It made us think how lovely it would be to watch our own grandchildren perform so charmingly in a pretty little town square in the midst of such attractive lush green countryside!

We arrived in Ascain as the sun was starting to go down and saw the village only briefly. Then we had a very congenial drive back towards the Spanish border through more verdant countryside, rolling hills and small valleys, green fields and woods, dotted here and there with typical Basque houses, their exposed wooden frameworks picked out in red, black or green.

With only four days to go before we started our drive back towards Paris and our flight home across the Pond to sunny southern California, and with two of those days already earmarked for further house-hunting on French side and a last visit for more pintxos in San Sebastian, we decided to investigate the local ‘homes-for-sale’ scene back in Getaria. Single-family, detached homes are a rarity in that part of Spain, for, as we had already discovered, the planning regulations are geared towards concentrated developments of high density high-rise apartments, with severe restrictions on the development of agricultural land.

A good looking single-home on the hill above Getaria; good views out to sea but very expensive apart from anything else

However, we found one home on the hills behind the village with fine views out to sea,  surrounded by vineyards, though with the undesirable possibility of lots of chemical spraying, plus an unfortunate view of the roof of the rather ugly factory building owned by the landlord of our apartment block by the sea. These negatives added to make the prospect of the much-needed refurbishment work a less than attractive proposition in view of the rather high list price, the latter, no doubt, a consequence of the scarcity of such homes in the area. So then we thought, well why not have a look at one or two of the magnificent apartments for sale in our building; after all, the views over the Bay of Biscay are indeed spectacular! And that was when we very nearly took another snap decision to purchase a wonderful, three-bedroom, penthouse duplex, with a verandah facing the sea and a large terrace with views over the hills above the village and the fishing port and the main street five storeys below. But, lovely as it was, it left far too many of our boxes un-ticked, and we, probably very sensibly, decided to calm down, think rationally and wait a bit longer. After all, we still had two more countries to visit before such decisions should be made, and we had vowed to follow that sage advice to ‘rent-before-we-buy’!

Thus we spent our last day relaxing ‘at-home’, enjoying our view of the bay one last time, and taking a last walk up to the top of Roche San Anton, so quiet and peaceful at that time of year even on such a fine day. It was enjoyable just watching far below and out on the sea the movements of the fishing boats coming and going from the port, and, as we descended, watching the activities of the fishermen safely back in the port, cleaning, mending and folding the enormous nets, piled on the jetty beside their proud vessels. Then one more delicious home-cooked meal, using up all the leftovers in the fridge before our departure the next morning, and we were ready for the next and final stage of our six month’s exploration.