Showing posts with label Arles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arles. Show all posts

June 14, 2015

Arles

A month has passed since my plane left the Marseille airport. That morning in the courtyard of an airport hotel, nondescript, international, but efficient and oh so convenient, I carried my breakfast coffee to a table where I  sat in the warm Mediterranean sun and hoped to soak in enough sun, and to embed enough memories of Le Sud, to last me until my return, and not to be too sad. Well, truly, not to weep. Odd, because I love it here in New England. I also love it there, in Le Sud.

Spring has truly arrived here, lilacs gone by, peonies in bloom. Though the threat of frost has disappeared, the cold weather continues to take its toll, with beans and squash just germinated. Hillsides are lush, covered with multiple shades of green, the forest full of birds returned now from the south, the sky sometimes blue, more often grey, with nights in the 40s. After all, this is New England, with our frequent rains and cool temperatures. Late spring is lovely, and a good time to put in miles on a bike. Also, spring here is short, can be heart-breakingly beautiful, and is always fleeting.








I missed Arles from the minute I was sitting in its train station, waiting with Papillon, my bike, to travel to Bedoin. Bedoin turned out to be a fabulous place to ride a bike, surrounded by beautiful, often challenging cycling, including most notably Mont Ventoux. For me most enjoyably, Gorges de la Nesque. Still, it is Arles that I miss.

Just now I remember the patina of color and texture that 2000 plus years of history have encrusted. For it is an old city, settled before the Greeks arrived, hundreds of years before the Romans. A UNESCO world heritage site, internationally known for its historic Roman ruins, the town retains also its medieval flavor and character, with narrow, curving streets, and 3-story homes. I don't see the influence  of Hausmann here, see no broad avenues lined  with 5-story residences linked by terraces. Instead, everywhere there is color, texture, variety, attention to detail.

Color and texture and sunlight, for it is a southern city, near the Mediterranean. The colors are similar, but without the garish quality that newly painted, prosperous seaside towns can have. The Rhone passes through Arles, and its waters have preserved untold numbers of Roman artifacts. Within the past few years an entire Roman river boat, now on display in the Museum of Antiquities has been found and brought to shore. Those extraordinary antiquities have a patina of their own, which, safely housed in this wonderful museum, both reference ancient history and enrich life here.










This house facing the river and these boats is eccentric, beautiful and atypical. What a place!










To describe the rain that day, in English, I would say something like "the skies spit," I have no idea how to describe that in French. Help, anyone? Perhaps made more poignant with the intermittent rain, the wisteria blooms were lovely.



And that French blue. Except in the Basque Country, where household shutters and doors are a dark rich red, I see this blue across southern France. It derives from woad, a common plant, a brassica, which is to say related to broccoli, brussels sprouts and cabbage. Though now largely replaced by chemical dyes, Pre-hellenic tribes used it to make body paint; since, then it has also made textile dyes and paint. Woad was so common, in fact, that the word is the origin of our word weed.








This color might be a younger, less faded version; I don't know.






This corner makes the elbow of rue de Pilotes, where (my sources are good) rumor has it that my friends here at Cafe Bizalion will be renting their house sometime before too many months pass. Just how is it that these colors sit together with such ease and grace?




Many years ago, when a much younger woman, I returned home from visiting my brother in Coconut Grove, Florida, where the colors are not unlike those in Arles, and inspired, I tiled and painted my bathroom in similar colors. Let me be the first to tell you it doesn't work in my climate. Colors, textures, patinas, are deeply embedded in their own place and cannot simply be picked up and moved around.





I am not telling you that all is a medley of pastels or bright colors, but that so much has a rich, provocative patina, built by human hands, the sun, and centuries.



Embedded memories of such a different place enrich my world here, with its diverse green forests and fragrant peonies.




January 1, 2011

May 30| Arles: Les Baux

We spent most of our second day in Arles visiting Les Baux-de-Provence. We expected more climbing to get there, but it turned out to be steady, but not hard. The site looms over the valley below. Today it is a preserved site, with various exhibits, encompassing many old ruins.

The castle emerges out of the rock almost imperceptibly. For about 400 years, this huge medieval fortress was occupied by a powerful family, who controlled much of the land in southern France.








Some walls remain in the castle itself as well as surrounding buildings. In 1632 (the same period when Fort Buoux was destroyed) when the King in Paris was consolidating his power, Richelieu ordered the village and castle destroyed. It is a huge site, with long, wide views of the valleys below. It was quite windy and a storm blew up while we were there.





Medieval siege weapons such as these were used to hurl stones and other missiles at forts. Sometimes churches and Roman ruins were demolished for stone to use. We watched one of these in action.

59 miles. Route: D17 / D24 / D453

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Prologue, Planning, Packing

2009 was my first visit to France, to Europe actually, and my first cycle tour there. Oddly enough, this text is written after my 2010, second, solo trip in the Cevennes.


Luberon landscape
My husband Roy wanted to go too: he cycles some and it would be his first cycle tour anywhere. I spoke a bit of French and thought I could learn enough to get by, but he wasn’t interested in learning any. I wanted to see the country, its landscapes and cities, but the details weren’t important to him. It was my trip to organize and plan. I needed to define the route, improve my language skills, and accommodate our tight budget and my limited vacation time. 

Street scene Aigues-Mortes
Memoirs and the little bit of history I’d read easily decided me on the south of France, but just where? I wanted to see the land that produced a cuisine I am so fond of: Provence, with its olives, fish, wine, almonds, cheeses, fruit. I wanted to see a much older history than we have in the US: Roman and medieval France. I wanted to see the Mediterranean. Of course, I wanted to see Paris, but that was not a part of the bike trip.

French training: having no intention of being one of those visitors who expects everyone they encounter to speak English, I studied French daily: working with CDs, beginning with Lesson 1, CD 1. Unhappily I remembered only the most basic of basics, as I had never used the language outside of a classroom setting. It wasn’t rusty, it was next to non-existent. Cycle training: the New England winter with its icy roads and frequent snowfalls demanded that cycle training start indoors, in January, on a stationary set-up. By mid-March enough ice was off the road to move outside.

White horse in the Camargue
In planning I read journals posted on Trento and Crazy Guy on a Bike. For a specific route I relied on Michelin 300 series (Local) maps, and referred to Google Earth. This would be essentially a visit to several very famous, old cities, linked together by rides through the countryside. I wanted to visit Avignon, Orange, Aix-en-Provence, Arles, the Camargue and the Mediterranean coast. Catherine, a friend here in the Berkshires, grew up in Toulouse. Her description of the city, along with cycling journals of the Canal-du-Midi, led me to finish the trip in Toulouse. This was a good decision, but it meant less cycling in the Luberon, and missing Nîmes, Narbonne and other places I’d love to see someday. Another trip.

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