Showing posts with label Montcaret. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Montcaret. Show all posts

September 25, 2013

Montcaret to Les Eyzies

L'Arc en Ciel

Last night's bed and breakfast, L'Arc en Ciel in Montcaret was extraordinary! My hostesses Sue and Catherine, couldn't have been more welcoming and gracious. Their house is old ... the first recorded inhabitants lived there in the 11th century. The hamlet was certainly occupied long before that, and still contains many structures dating from that era, including the building used for baking. Of course, the buildings have changed a great deal ... gotten higher, added wings, added electricity. But the history remains.

Sue and Catherine sent me off with lunch ... for two, as it worked out. Thanks!

My bedroom, and all of the guest quarters, were comfortable and beautiful. I didn't get in the pool, but did have a bit of time to enjoy the views. Dinner and breakfast were both delicious. They packed lunch, unasked, and that kindness was a lifesaver because stores here are closed on Sundays, and I was not well prepared.

The calm Dordogne

This was some of the prettiest riding near the river.The D130E7, I think


Matthew at a snack break we took

Today's ride brought me from Montcaret to Les Eyzies, about 65 miles, mostly flat, long enough for me on a loaded bike. I was lucky to meet up with Matthew, an English cyclist going the same direction. We had met briefly yesterday at the Roman ruins in Montcaret. Again luckily, we ride at a similar speed and rode together for almost the entire route, until he reached his hotel. It was fun, chatting and trading opinions, the miles went by quickly, and the ride was very enjoyable. He had done some serious route planning, and led us through beautiful, tiny little roads that I never would have found. Thanks to him also! Matthew's trip report can be found on Crazy Guy on a Bike, where it is called Gorging on Gorges and is in progress.

Cosmos, in front of the vines, in front of the chateau at or near Monbazillac. Perhaps these are AOC Bergerac vines.


Immediately across the street from the chateau above

Matthew led us across an intricate path of little roads.

Recrossing the Dordogne

I don't know what's inside, but that is a lot of greenhouse space


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September 1, 2013

Wine and Church ... Church and Ruins

Vineyards were first planted here by the Romans before the 2nd century AD. 



Bordeaux. St. Emilion. This is serious wine country, the source of what I refer to at home as "St Emilion - the - never - to - be - afforded - French - wine." The landscape is filled with vineyards, as far as the eye can see.The grapes are close to ripe, and soon to be harvested.

I saw many more red grapes than white

St. Emilion is, of course, a town as well as a wine. That town, historic as it is, now obviously caters to a wealthy tourist market (I am told American, Chinese and Japanese, in who knows which order, and I certainly saw a lot of Germans) and it is end-to-end full of wine stores. Wine is as important, as much a part of its very essence, as pepper is to Espelette, where I visited last year. The stores reflect that culture. One of the many things I love about France is that foods are a part of the terroir, the food reflects the soils, exposure, water, temperatures of the specific land they grow in. And so foods vary, from valley to valley, ridge to ridge, town to town. A Bergerac wine is not a St. Emilion wine. The two towns are less than 35 miles apart.

A particularly attractive wine shop. 



But there is more history here: a collegiate church, founded by monks in the 8th century, reformed in the 12th century, still containing medieval art on its walls, including I think, these frescos and reliefs. There are Roman ruins that I did not see.


Fresco detail from the Collegiate Church
Not only is Eleanor of Aquitaine often close by, so is Joan of Arc


Built as an abbey church in the 11th century, it is now the collegiate church.

Fire and warfare destroyed much, though not all of the old walls and gates. The oldest now extant dates, I think, from the 15th century. If you look carefully you may see the carved dolphins. We are not far from the sea here, nor far from Pays Basque, and by the middle ages, Basque sailors had been traveling the seas for many centuries. Bordeaux was a major port in Eleanor of Aquitaine's time, exporting the red wine of Cahors to England, among other goods.


Town gate. Walking in bike shoes with recessed cleats, this was steep and slippery.

The oldest existing house in town

These are dolphins swimming. Perhaps the original owner went to sea with the wine trade.


After St. Emilion, I rode quickly to Montcaret, for the Gallo-Roman ruins found at the Site Archeologique de Montcaret, there are not to be missed. Well, I rode not so very quickly, because I always choose the little white roads on the map. That doesn't mean much if you haven't seen the maps, but these are local roads, often only one lane wide, and sometimes unmarked. Not all are included on the maps. So, I had a lovely tour of several of them, as I made the wrong turn, or unanticipated turns anyway, probably more than once, until arriving at the main road that I wanted. I ended up a mile or so further north than I aimed for on the D road.

What's a D road? A departmentale road, marked on my Michelin maps either by red or yellow lines, thinner or thicker. Red lines are more travelled, yellows usually less congested. A thinner line means a narrower roadway, whether red or yellow. When possible, I ride on the little white roads, sometimes departmentale roads, sometimes local roads.

Once in Montcaret the first thing I saw was the church, not what I expected. It turned out that this 11th century church was built on, using stones from, the Roman villa.

The 11th century Romanesque church was built with stones from the Roman villa


Remains of the Roman villa, with the hot bath under the structure to the right

The church was built right above and onto the ruins

Some of the original stones remain today, along with this carving

The Roman villa here was large, and the mosaics must have been breathtaking, because the remains of them are beautiful. I am told that the Romans were still in the area (though not I think, with a vibrant intact civilization) in the 8th century. By the 10th century, this magnificent complex was partially ruined, and Benedictine monks built a romanesque church on top of part of it, using (one could say recycling, though it largely destroyed the Roman site) its quarried stone.

Tile floor from the villa, which was occupied for 400 years, from the 1st to 5th centuries AD.

The mosaics are strikingly complete. I asked, and was told the archeologists are no longer finding tiles.

Later Christians used the site as a burial ground. (By then, the Roman ruins were well underground.)

It was used as a Christian burial site. Did they not see, or ignore, the mosaics they  dug through to bury the corpses?

It was discovered in the 20th century and painstakingly uncovered. A treasure of a site to visit.




At the ruins I met an English cyclist, also touring, who was staying in town, and also riding up the Dordogne tomorrow.


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