Monday, 28 August 2017

St. Florentin, Thursday, 24 August 2017


Lost Vikings, Welsh Australians and Wily Bisons, plus 3G pitch

Yes, we’re still here in St Flo because the world comes to us and brings us all sorts of fascinating people who arrive at the end of a rope. It may sound obvious but it’s customary if a boat comes into port that the nearest person on land hovers nearby to take the rope as there are a lot of old crocks like us who cannot leap like springboks anymore and are glad of a helping hand to get the boat secured so that they or their wife can descend in a more stately manner (or otherwise) to shore. Then it takes a while to establish their identity. I go through French, then German then if that fails they tell me they’re Flemish or Faroese, as happened the other day. I stood there, mouth open, as I told them I’d never ever met anyone from the Faroes (I’ve no doubt met Flams before, but they’re Belgian, so they don’t count) as I struggled to remember just where, and how remote, they were. I gave up and shook his hand wished him bienvenu and pointed him to the boulangerie.

We’re in a central position here so we can sit on the boat with a view up and down the canal and watch passing boats and new arrivals.

7pm a week or so ago the buzz of a small outboard engine heralds the arrival of 4 men dressed all in black sitting in 2 rows on an open boat, with a Swedish flag. Nothing like this has been seen here for some time, if ever. Like an SAS (or SBS) raid.
The boat also is black, a large inflatable on a kind of steel hull below the waterline. They moor opposite us, about 50 yards away. We all stare as these 4 big guys climb off the hard moulded seats and disappear into the port office.
Later we’re supping wine on the back deck when we see them walk off in the direction of St.Flo town centre.
“They’re off to find a meal and a hotel” I say to Sue.
“No, they’ll sleep on the boat”
“No way. They’ll want a meal and a comfortable bed after a day on that thing.”
Later they came back and slept on the boat, with a white sheet hanging over the side. Oh, well.

Next morning I wander over while they are yawning and stretching.
“We are the Lost Vikings” one of them says, pointing to the logo on their black T-shirts. “Where are we?”
“On the Burgundy canal. Where are you going?”
“Marseilles. We sailed from the east coast of Sweden down through the Baltic and the Kiel Canal past Denmark then Holland, Belgium and France. All in 2 weeks!!We can do 100 kilometres an hour.”
(The Kiel Canal has 2 locks – one at the beginning and one at the end)
In addition to the little outboard they had another massive 300 HP engine clamped alongside it.
“It will take you another month. There are 189 locks just to get to the bottom of the Burgundy canal so you’ve around 180 to go and there’s a speed limit of 8kms. Would you like some breakfast – I’m driving up to the supermarket now?”

And so one of them came with me and came back clutching some salami and cheese. He hesitated before the checkout and then doubled back and picked up the essentials – a 12 pack of Heineken. On the way he told me they were 4 friends from different backgrounds: Navy SEAL, Parachute Regiment, I.T. specialist and Teacher/ round the world sailor. They were drinking beer at the Stockholm boat show last year and decided to have an adventure, and bought the boat which they would sell once they got to the Med. They were filming and posting on Facebook and had to be back for a presentation at the Gothenburg boat show in 2 weeks, followed by Stockholm the week after.

They could not speak French.

A re-think was needed.

Vincent, the Port Manager, put them in touch with a local haulage firm who would supply a mobile crane and a truck to take their boat down to Chalon sur Saône from where they could reach the Rhône, and eventually the Med. 

So for the next two days I ferried them to the supermarket, the bank, the transport Company and eventually the railway station in the nearby town. Sue fed them lunch and I helped them with their communications. They slept without complaint either on the floor of the port office or on the hard boat seats and were constantly good-humoured and full of fun (and Heineken). 
The lift-out and subsequent loading on to the truck provided entertainment for a couple of hours on what was otherwise a plain old boring day here in the Burgundy sunshine imbibing cheese and wine.

I had my photo taken with the Lost Vikings and when I looked on Facebook there was a lovely picture of ……………..Laddie. Cheers guys, I hope you made it.

For some reason Sue was not keen on my proposal to fly to Gothenburg (or Stockholm) to meet them at the other end. Oh well…

BISON FUTÉ (pron. Beeson fewtay)
As any Parisian resident will tell you August is the month the boulangeries, and other small local shops close for 3 or 4 weeks, stick a notice on the door saying when in September they’ll be back, and disappear on their holidays.

Along with thousands of other French, British and Dutch the majority of the traffic is on a North-South Axis down the A6 motorway to Provence and back.

As the busiest times are weekends, this allows the authorities to predict the traffic black spots and on which particular weekends this is most critical. These are called chassée/croisée weekends when those returning from the south pass those still on their way down, and detailed maps of France are printed in the newspaper with various regions marked in ascending levels of horror from ‘very busy’ to ‘don’t even consider it’. Anywhere around or south of Lyon can be a nightmare.

If you’ve ever been stuck in France and seen a roadside picture of a bison and wondered what the hell it was all about, it’s a ‘Wily Bison’ who will guide you away from the traffic jams. Apparently. There must be a Big Chief Wily Bison somewhere sitting in his Parisian lair directing his minor Bison dotted around France, desperately trying to be wily in the face of millions of angry motorists. Don’t blame me if you get lost on a Bison Futé……..but at least you now know what it is.

Just had a busy week with our daughter Caroline, husband Gaz, Jake12 and Ollie 10 staying on board and cruising with us, including 3 bikes, an inflatable kayak and a football. The football seemed to be surgically attached to the boys’ feet night and day such was their skill in keepie-uppie (or whatever it’s called nowadays) and absolute passion for the game.

We moored alongside the park in Auxerre, near the football stadium and the outdoor/indoor swimming pool complex, complete with big water slides which I felt sure would be a big attraction. However the sports facilities are nothing short of superb for a town of 40,000 population and the enclosed, but free for all, training pitch sported a 3 or 4G pitch, which I am told is a 3rd or 4th Generation development above the original Astroturf, and much sought-after. The boys had the treat of one of the Auxerre squad players who was training alone, having a kick-around with them. I had told him that the older boy was on contract as a goalie with Sheffield Wednesday a Championship club, so he obviously wanted to rub shoulders with a rated English player.

When I asked the boys what were their highlights of the week, number one was ‘Dad falling into the river trying to launch the kayak’, followed by football, the crêpes at Vincelles and the fabulous ‘feu d’artifice spectacle’ or firework display with music which went on for a full 15 minutes on the eve of the national holiday for the 15th August. We had a grandstand view from the deck of the boat as this took place on the pitch at the side of the canal. It was genuinely stunning and must have cost a fortune.
We cooled off with a swim in the river that day which was wonderfully refreshing, and Gary did spectacular dives off the side of the boat. The fish remained unimpressed, but everyone else was.

Question: What do you do in France if you get 12 points and lose your driving licence?
Answer: Buy a little car with 3 cylinders and keep on speeding and drunk driving as before. 

You don’t need a licence, only insurance. I swear this is true.

They are called voitures sans permis and made by Ligier, amongst others.

When I first heard one of these little runabouts it was rattling so loudly that I thought it must be about to break down as the big end bearing was gone, but it turned out they are all like that. I asked a French colleague yesterday what these cars were and got the unbelievable truth. They are specially designed for people either incapable or unwilling to pass a test, or banned from driving. Is this an EU directive? I think not. There are loads of them around – you can hear them before you see them.

“What about the Welsh Australians” did I hear you ask?

We helped a nearby barge owner from somewhere near Wagga-Wagga (honest) between Sydney and the Snowy Mountains (really). He and his Welsh-born wife had left the rat-race to open a little bakery in Oz and buy a huge Dutch Péniche to cruise the French waterways for 6 months or more but needed to get a residence permit as he was technically an illegal immigrant whereas she had a European passport.

The forms were available at the préfecture in Auxerre, 35 minutes drive away.
They were going to go by train. As I knew the local station was about a mile away and the same at the other end, and the temperature 30 degrees Sue and I volunteered to drive them there and have a day out in Auxerre for a change.

When we found the préfecture they were very polite so we asked if we could fill out the application there and then, and submit it. Sorry, it’s Wednesday, and it’s closed on Wednesdays. But we’re here now and you’re open. Yes but it’s closed you’ll have to come back tomorrow. The same office processed the application the next day and we had another day out and a nice bottle of Burgundy as a thank you.

Our new-found friends sailed off happily into the sunset. It was an echo of 1966 when I helped a Czech dissident student escape from Yugoslavia to the west, but without the armed guards patrolling the boat.

We’ve now added fermé le mercredi to our regular fermé le lundi vocab. It’s a total lottery. Some also close Tuesdays because the market day is Monday and the surrounding population surges into town centres to snap up cheap food (note from Sue – not that cheap) and catch up with all the gossip. Laddie gets so much attention on these occasions it’s almost embarrassing - kisses and hugs right left and centre (that’s the dog) while we stand there lapping up the praise and confirming his age, and yes, it’s a boy. We love France!

If you do, I can’t praise highly enough the books by An Englishman, Martin Walker, set in Perigueux (the Dordogne region) in the South West of France. about Bruno a village policeman.

Coming home in September so this may be last message this summer.

Au Revoir mes amis.

The LostVikings (well 3 of them)



Loading the rib onto the lorry

 
John never takes his hat off !

Stunning sunset





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