Monday, 25 April 2011

Missing the bus

I missed the bus the other day by a whisker. It was waiting at the bus stop across the road at the top of our street but the crossing lights were against me. I waved but to no avail. The bus must meet its target times. UK, take note.

I say “missed”. I was actually in good time for the bus I thought I was going to catch. This is because there are two timetables in this part of France - one for weekdays in during the “Periode Scolaire” and the other for Saturdays and school holidays. I was mistaken in assuming that because all the children I know at the Church in Luxembourg are already cooling their heels in preparation for Easter, and those who go to school in Belgium have nearly finished their Easter break, the schools here in France would also have broken up. How is a girl to know?  There are only so many timetables I can hold in my head at one time, let alone cross boundary variations.

Be that as it may, I didn’t fancy hanging about for another half an hour nor did it seem worth my while walking back to the chateau. I thought that, if I was smartish, I could nip down the road and catch the bus further on as it looped round the town to pick up other shoppers for the supermarket complex. So I walked down Mont Saint Martin’s steep narrow main street, where I haven’t been since the heavy ice and snow at the beginning of the year. There was a surprising amount of traffic, with drivers jostling for places to park by the side of the road. But where do they all go? I could see that only the florist and the chemists were open. There are plenty of shop front windows along this road, but like the “Poterie Maeva”, they are now either whitewashed and advertised for sale, or covered with net curtains and made into dwellings. The couscous restaurant at the bottom of the hill near the former railway station is still carrying out its renovations, the friterie next door is not set up for mass catering on this scale and Snack Antalya was not yet open as it was only 10:30. There was no evidence of any mobbing of either the chemist or the florist.  So I can only assume that everyone was making their way either to the hospital or the old people’s home that is attached to it. Like most hospitals, it suffers from insufficient and expensive parking and so my guess is that the frantic driving into recently the vacated positions along the high street was to avoid charges and still be within staggering distance of the doctor.

I very much wish it were different. I accept that the supermarket at the top of one of the hills and its smart complex of stores represent the march of progress and, more to the point, attracted valuable funding to an area so hard hit when the steel world collapsed,  but I regret the loss of the domestic community. Mont Saint Martin was evidently a thriving little town. I walked past large villas in the high street with their many gables, massive wooden shutters and elaborate brick work. I almost expected to go round the corner and see the sea. There is a small terrace on the corner where I imagine a café once put out its tables and chairs to catch the sun and to watch the world go by. A shop now up for sale used to promise books, gifts and flowers, presumably once successful because of its proximity to the hospital. I yearn for the boulangerie, epicerie and charcuterie. But they are gone, all centralised in the plastic fantastic world of international supermarkets, their former presence now only evident in the faded paint on lintel beams.

 I found the bus stop, and waited another half hour for a bus. An elderly gentleman clutching a large white envelope nodded at me, we exchanged bonjours and he inspected the timetable. I moved along the seat and he joined me. He told me his story, starting with the fact that he had an “infiltration” for screening, had been on the “scannaire” and was feeling pretty ropey. I expressed the hope that he would be able to rest that afternoon, and he assured me that his wife had been warned. Did he live locally? Yes, in a nearby suburb.  He is 80 years old, you know. His son lives in Luxembourg, his other son is handicapped and his daughter is 52. He has 8 grandchildren I am sure I have had this conversation on the bus from
Broad Lane
in Coventry. And on the train to London. And probably on a dolmush in Turkey.

When the bus came, it set off, completely ignoring the turning towards the supermarket. It is a circular bus route and I was on the wrong side. Too proud to get off at the next stop and cross over, I sat tight, went the full circle and went past the original bus stop I had failed at an hour earlier. But I enjoyed the tour of the towns with the lilac and flowering cherry in bloom and urban gardens bursting with this years’ bright orange tulips.

A peculiar anomaly this year is the swirling of pollen. We all thought we were seeing spots before our eyes, or imagining a fuzzy horizon. Too many Cremants perhaps.  Bu this year, it is exceptional. The cars are covered in the yellow dust and the house is full of seed heads, which irritatingly enough, have gathered in little webby pockets giving the lie to my premise that I am constantly dusting and polishing.


Dish of the week: Asparagus is now in and, encouraged by a meal in a brasserie in Belgium last week, I consulted Mrs David again. She was not very encouraging, and somewhat dismissive of white asparagus, of which there is a lot in the supermarkets at the moment. Undeterred, I boiled the fat white stems for a half an hour, and served it with home made mayonnaise and wrapped in Lorraine ham. Verdict: quite nice. Wait, as Mrs David suggests, for the tender green stems.

Tuesday, 22 March 2011

Highs and Lows

“Oh good,” said D, when I brandished my trekking pole. “You can fight off the wild boar”.

It wasn’t quite what I was expecting when three ladies from church invited me to join them for a Saturday morning walk. But then  nor did I expect to be sitting on the top  of a double decker train speeding past sparkling streams, craggy rocks and downy hills studded with broadleaf forests and charming farmsteads, let alone sightings of storks and working horses the size of Suffolk Punches. And, please note, I exceeded  12,000 steps on my pedometer.

We set quite a pace on this walk, a section of the Sentier du Nord which stretches 65 km from Weiswampach to Diekirch, and completed the 9 km stretch from Drauffelt to Clervaux in about two and a half hours. Consequently, I am sorry to say, I did not have time to fumble in my backpack amongst spare socks and unneeded waterproofs for my camera. When we did stop, it was because I was rather red in the face and breathless at the top of a number of steep hills and far too exhausted to even think of taking photos. But hills make for splendid views and shaded leafy valleys. And luckily, no wild boar.

I shall return to this part of the world to show dearly beloved who manfully stayed at home battling with flat pack wardrobes. And I shall ensure that we take loads of photos to show you all.  I am told that one of the towns, Wiltz, has an annual festival that is well worth making the train trip for, so watch this space.

Inspired by my walking endeavours, we set out the next day to try out part of a similar network of French footpaths, our immediate section being “Sentiers de randonnee de trios frontieres” It’s those frontiers again! We headed towards Villers-La Chevre, about a ten minute drive away, intending to find the Sentier du Bois du Pays Bayard, a walk of about 6.5 km. It was at this stage that we realised and missed the excellence of the Ordnance Survey maps of the UK in which you can pinpoint a small mole hill. We had evidently driven too far along the way looking to park, although it seemed to correspond with the map. We could not find the start of this particular walk, which, we were assured, would be marked clearly en route.

We parked and walked, and walked a little further peering into the forest for signs. Eventually we found a board displaying information about the Sentier de Minieres, which, for want of any other direction, we followed. This path takes the route of the mining works that took place a few hundred years ago. Good iron ore is, apparently, rare in the Lorraine regions, but this particular seam at “St Pancre” produced a rich malleable iron. The miners worked in deep “ruelles” or lanes, and the path was set out along the crumbling banks of these steep deep ditches.  The trees have all grown over now, and the rocky clefts are covered in moss. Some of the works had been further exploited as quarries for the lovely yellow sandstone that I have mentioned before. Boards along the way described the miners, their lives, the geological nature of the area and how it was formed, as well as describing the flora and fauna of the land. I grasped my wild boar stick tightly.

The way was marked quite clearly with little white signs tacked to trees. This worked well generally apart from the fact that only the previous week, in the first spell of sunny dry weather, the foresters had been out and thinned a lot of winter damaged trees. Friday evening had evidently fallen before they had the opportunity to move said trees which stretched their lengths across the Sentier des Minieres. I am sure the miners would not have been fazed but we were a trifle disconcerted. Ralph’s binoculars proved useful in spotting signs further along the way, and we traversed along and up and down various ruelles and ditches to find our way back to the track.  It was worth persevering. A break in the trees at the side of the forest gave us a glimpse of the distant Lorraine countryside: a small hamlet tucked into the folds of the fields and hills, wood smoke drifting and a church bell sounding the end of Mass. It was good to be in the open air.

Later in the week, L, one of the ladies I had walked with earlier suggested a walk in Ernster in Luxembourg, again following one of the set walks. All we had to do was to find the start and follow the “three trees” logo for a brisk 5km stroll. Some work men mending the road after the winter’s ravages, directed us with confidence away from the village and we thought they might know what they were talking about. However, the three trees failed to present themselves and we found ourselves on one of the cycling tracks. But as a circular walk, it would never have worked as that circle continued for about 12 miles. Excellent cycling track, though, and if I still had the knees and the puff for it, I’d be there, despite the hills.

Ernster is a pretty village built in the traditional Lorraine style. A number of small farm houses or “fermettes” are clustered together, with thick rendered painted walls, deep window sills and, dearly beloved’s passion, huge barns under one half the house. I am not sure if I can take dearly beloved there, however, in case he insists that the local residents move out to make room for our ambitions to live in such lovely surroundings. They are very attractive solid looking houses, much sought after. Sadly, they can no longer to be picked up for a song as they used to be a couple of decades ago when the first Eurobods came over to work for the Commission and the Parliament...

We have continued our zeal for walking this weekend with our temporary house guest, Jack. Jack is always very keen to walk although his habit of sticking his cold wet nose up one’s trouser leg or running off with a shoe to encourage us on a trip out would not endear him to everybody.  He took us on a fantastic walk only minutes from Le Chateau at the weekend, through a small village and into the hills behind and on through to Belgium. We seemed always to be walking up hill however, and while Jack’s little legs would have been happy for the walk all over again, we spent the afternoon in a stupor, with a fine Belgian beer, slumped in front of the rugby.

Dish of the week: Coq au Vin. Mrs David let us down a bit here. We tried her instruction to warm through a glass of cognac and set light to it. Pouring it, still alight, over the coq proved to be incredibly exciting.  It flamed magnificently in the saucepan and set light to the extractor fan over the cooker.  And we were not that happy with the sauce…perhaps less flambee would have been the answer.

A bientot.


Monday, 28 February 2011

A Walk in the Parc


Last week I hinted that I might tell you about our mini break abroad when we covered four countries in our two hour drive to Germany. I still marvel at our position on the frontier here; I shall probably keep mentioning it.

It was time, we felt, after months of living apart and all holidays having been focussed on the moving and saying goodbye, (and it did take a long time, didn’t it?) that we had a proper break and time together. We particularly focussed on finding a Center Parcs not too far away. In the past, we have much enjoyed the accommodation and Aqua Sana, our routine being to walk all morning (well alright, for an hour or so after a late breakfast) and then to recuperate with fluffy towels, robes and books in the sybaritic delights provided. We found the Parc Eifel, which boasted a sauna and spa near Gunderath, set in the heart of Volcanic Eifel, a region about which we knew nothing. I speak German, but it was learned a long time ago, when there was a still a German O-level. I can pretty much order a newspaper, request a room with a shower and state that the weather is inclement.

We were lucky setting off, after such a long grey winter, to have a beautiful day, crisp, and sunny. We saw exciting signs telling us that we were now in Vulcan Eifel. One imagined great Mulciber raining down fire and forging great swords. In reality, the country side is similar to anywhere in Northern Europe, with its mixture of broadleaf and evergreen trees on rolling heaths and downs. Indeed, it could have been Ashdown Forest.

I must say now that there was absolutely nothing wrong with anything. The staff were pleasant, pleasant friendly and helpful. Everywhere was clean and the chalet had everything we needed, with a pretty view over fields and hillside. You can sense a “but” coming? Yes, it lay with us. We have been so spoiled over the years by the CPs in the UK, which are apparently, all “5 Bird” parcs. This was a “3 Bird” parc and had only recently been taken under the corporate wing; it all looked a bit tired and it was very small. The walk around the parc and its amenities took barely half an hour. We found the spa at the far end of the swimming pool. There was a suspicious sign on the door stating that it was textile free zone.  I despatched my beloved to find help; a jolly young life guard explained that one took one’s costume off before going into the spa area, but you could wear robes and sit on towels, especially necessary in the sauna area. “Right”, said dearly beloved, “Get your kit off.”

To cut short a long and excruciating story, I hastened in, quickly donning one of the robes hanging on the hooks. There were no towels, and no water fountains. The young life guard called us into the sauna, adding aromatic herbal essences to the water she was pouring onto the coals, flapping her towel at us to create more heat; she chatted jauntily about her long held wish to visit Scotland with all its mountains and castles. She could afford to be jaunty – she had her costume on. In fact, I wanted to be in Scotland – nobody ever takes all their clothes off in Scotland. Thankful for my beach towel, I scurried into the cold shower, and then wrapped myself in the robe; at which point a man loomed, very naked, out of the mists of the steam room and said that it was his wife’s robe. Unrobing, I crept, ashamed, into the comparative modesty of the Jacuzzi. Not long after, we were in the bar, with very large strong beers.

But in the night, I woke with steel bands, studded with carpet tacks, tightening around my head. I do not believe I have ever had such a bad headache. Dearly beloved, discovering that for the first time in written history he had not brought a medicine cabinet, went through the frosty night to the 24 hour shop to forage for pain relief, or perhaps a guillotine. In Germany, neither is sold except in the appropriately licensed shops. We would have to wait for paracetamol until we found a pharmacy. I drank copious amounts of rooibos tea, and slowly re-hydrated. In the morning, I felt well enough for a gentle trip out as long as no-one expected me to nod my head, or open my eyes.
So we set off for the healing properties of Wallenborn which promised a sight of mainland Europe’s only geyser. The sat nav took us to a small quiet field within a small quiet village. Railings and an attractive display of rocks were arranged in a circle around a small, quiet pool of water. Disappointed, we turned away just as the water offered up a few bubbles. And then with a rush and a strong smell of sulphur, a column of water gushed high in the air above us. It lasted for a couple of minutes before subsiding and retreating. Truly magnificient. The information boards stated that it was powered only by CO2 and that some considerably deep engineering works had taken place to concentrate the underground springs towards the one in question.

We walked around for a while, admiring a bold chaffinch hopping within six inches of our feet, while we waited again for the geyser to appear. It seemed to spout every quarter of an hour. But it did not have the curative effect I was hoping for and we went in search of lunch and an Apotheke for drugs.

You will be pleased to know that drugs had the desired effect. We did not go to the spa again and the parc refunded our booking fees for the remaining four sessions.

The highlight of our trip is probably best described by the pictures attached, showing our walk around the deep volcanic lakes or “Maare”.  Again, beautiful weather made this excursion a real joy, with the sun on our faces, and the wind at our backs. In fact, we just kept walking until we ran out of Maare to walk round. The pictures show only two lakes, but there were also a marshy Maar and a dry Maar; and one of the lakes was in fact two, merged together. So we in fact achieved a walk around 5 Maare, a first in the Birch family.

The next day, dearly beloved expressed a wish to walk by the Rhine, and that he felt Koblenz was the place to do it.   Koblenz was under siege, however, by road works and pedestrianisation schemes, and the river that we walked by, albeit for only five minutes, was the Mosel. Well, we can walk by the Mosel any time we feel like it back home. But later, looking at a map, like we should have done, we saw that we were in the wrong part of Koblenz, and that indeed it is also on the Rhine. But no matter, in recompense, we found Cochem which is all a German town should be, with its steep crooked narrow streets, haphazard roofs and buildings. And a fine hot chocolate in the tea rooms by the river defrosted us and made it a perfect ending.

You will note there are no culinary musings this time. Sadly the best meal we had was at a little delicatessen, selling home cooked ham hock. Man food, and certainly not fine dining!

Auf wiedersehen!






Saturday, 19 February 2011

Beating the blues


It took a meal out last Sunday to lift a touch of the blues.

We could not really put our fingers on why we had the blues; perhaps it was because of a spat with the landlords over flowerpots and ceiling tiles; or maybe because for the first time in 26 years, I was not near enough to celebrate Catherine and Oliver’s birthdays; or because our holiday the week before did not quite provide the rest and relaxation we were expecting; or maybe it was because after the first excitement of being abroad and the adrenalin rush of moving in, things have started to become ordinary. Then again, it's February.

We headed south to Metz. But road works sent us out of our way, and, for once the sat-nav could not cope with the diversion. “Just keep driving,” I said “and take the next left.” How fortuitous. Just ten minutes from home we found ourselves in an ancient village, Cons-la-Grandville, complete with Renaissance period chateau, priory, river walk and, of course, a listed 19th century blast-furnace. Many of the buildings were built in the local butter-yellow sandstone, (pierre de Jaumont) and in the pale sunshine, it was glowed gently. Being Sunday, everywhere was shut, with no evidence of an open restaurant. But it whispered of the promise of future excursions, to walk round the parks and gardens of the castle to faire le picnic, when the weather improves.

Our drive continued through farmland back on to the motorway, happily taking in towns whose names we would have loved to have on our address cards, such as Ugny and Woippy. By the time we got to Metz, we were famished, and so, ignoring signs to the Centre Pompidou de Metz, we headed straight to the centre of town.

I was more than agreeably surprised at its charm.  Imagine a French Oxford, in that same sandstone, with covered walkways round cobbled market squares. We dallied with the opportunity to eat in a couscousserie, and hastily walked past three pizzeria (the pizzeria in this area are, however, generally authentic and pretty good, tending to be independently owned, due to the huge influx of Italians ove the last 100 or so years to work in the steel industry) heading on under the colonnades to Place St Louis. A small restaurant, “La Marmite”, offered a Menu de Decouverts at 24,90 euros which we thought was stunning value, as were its two other set menus at a similar price for three courses, all promising local food (it was a restaurant du terroir).  In the spirit of Winners Dinners, my charming companion chose a biere piquante and I had a white wine flavoured with a sirop de mirabelles (a Lorraine speciality), while we drooled over the menu. After much discussion, we chose from the Menu “La Marmite”. I had a local pate de foie gras with quince jam, to be followed by saumon en champagne, while my charming companion chose potage de coquilles St Jaques and maigret de canard. My dear friend, every mouthful was meltingly heavenly; cooked to perfection and portions were just right, leaving us wishing for just a teency weency little bit more. And the pudding, the “Assiettes de Gourmandes”, included profiteroles filled with ice cream topped with a rich chocolate sauce, a chocolate mousse and a blackcurrant sorbet – the latter was the best I have ever had, fruity without the bitterness. I felt at last that we had found a touch of the real France. The service was friendly yet discreet, the meal was beautifully presented and the atmosphere was that of a roomful of contented diners. It seems daft that a meal should make one feel at home, but there we are. We felt better. And next time I shall consider telling you about our holiday in VulcanEifel which we took the week before.

Elizabeth David Dish of the Week: Saumon poele au vin blanc. On a Friday evening after a hefty week, fry  seasoned salmon steaks on both sides briefly in butter over a high heat, add a wine glass full of Muscadet, simmer for seven minutes only; serve with potatoes au choix and the rest of the bottle of Muscadet. Relax on the sofa in front of the fire with a dvd. Do not rise on Saturday morning until at least ten o'clock.

Sunday, 6 February 2011

Keep on Troc'ing

Keep on Troc’ing

Probably an unoriginal pun, I am sure, amongst local expats, but it serves to introduce a shopping experience without equal.

“Un Troc”, by its dictionary definition, is a barter, exchange or swap. The chain of shops of this name, supplies, apparently throughout Europe, a vast assortment of household goods no longer wanted by their original owners. And when I say vast, I mean overwhelming.  There are a number of stores near us, and like any second hand store, the quality of goods supplied is very much dependent on the wealth of the immediate neighbourhoods. So the smaller stores on the borders in Belgium and France seem to stock more tat than those on the Duchy itself.

Imagine, if you will, all the furniture you ever used on your gite holidays: the massive dark wood, ornately carved sideboards and dressers; refectory style tables and chairs that only Hagrid would ever find comfortable; the wardrobes with their creaky, ill fitting doors and mysterious stains; the array of cooking utensils and foot spas; all found their way to the gites along with sets of coloured wine glasses and salad spinners; hundreds of the hard leather sofas beloved by the dentists of my youth. They have all come home to roost in the Troc. We imagine that across Europe, scores of great grandmothers have died leaving their estates to their many children and grandchildren, now living in their sleek apartments with no room for furniture that is larger than a child’s bedroom. Where else to send it, in the hopes of making some cash, but Le Troc? Who would buy such monsters? If we were setting up in our own chateau and were keen to fill echoing spaces, then, bien sur, these would be useful et charmant - but not for us at the moment.

Then there are the real treasures: a pair of red leather chairs shaped like stiletto shoes; “lits de bateau” (or sleigh beds), intricately carved or smoothly polished, all deposited when 1.6 metre beds became more fashionable than the usual 1.4m; an adorable high chair, dating from the 50’s – varnished wood and decorated with delightful scenes of children playing; model sailing boats, fully rigged. And of course the tank sized yello ochre model of a French Bulldog. But we resisted.

Our quest was for a sideboard or dresser. Although we got rid of so much “stuff”, we still needed a place to put glass and china. We also wanted a pretty piece of furniture (not flat packed) as a memento of our time on The Frontier. In the Troc in Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg’s second largest town, was the perfect piece. Made entirely in oak, and not a splinter of mdf or chipboard in sight, it sat in the window as part of a smart salon set, and we loved it.  There is a little damage, apparently caused by the men removing it from the owner’s home, which caused much chagrin, but did not lessen the price. Could they deliver? Of course, they could bring it on Wednesday.  Much excitement, some hasty calculations and it was ours, at apparently a tenth of the original price. Bargain.

We went to lunch to celebrate, a rather nice little Italian place where the menu of the day included a cheese and ham parmentier (basically a triangular cheese pasty) and braised beef so tender, you could eat it with a teaspoon, produced by a spherical jolly chef. And then we went back to the Troc to buy four oak dining chairs for 20 Euros – and some webbing to ensure we do not disappear through the sagging seats. A successful day followed up by two very polite young men delivering the sideboard  on the Wednesday as promised.  All glass and crockery now installed, it is just perfect, and a little polish seems to be treating the damage splendidly.

No Troc’ing for a while now. But watch this space.

A bientot.

Wednesday, 26 January 2011

Out and About


We have not just been strapped to the cartons. We have, in fact, been fairly intrepid and have seen a few Places Of Interest.

Our first weekend was in danger of being totally absorbed in the Zen of Unwrapping, so we decided to just head south for no more than 20 minutes and to see where it led us. We found ourselves in Longuyon, on the southernmost tip of the Department responsible for our well-being, Meurthe-et-Moselle. It did not take long to leave the industrial and commercial landscape of our home town and find ourselves driving through fields and villages, still covered with the icy remnants of the deep snow that fell at Christmas. We had not researched where we were going, unlike our normal nerdy selves, so we had no expectations. There were signs announcing the nearness of the Maginot Line, although I suspect there are a number of these dotted about locally. Possibly in a line. After about twenty minutes, we found the above mentioned Longuyon, advertising the Fort du Fremont. But having parked, and wondered round the town, we realised why there were so few people about; it was freezing. And a fort viewing did not hold sway in our list of needs. We found a café, ordered tea and coffee and enjoyed the feeling of almost being on holiday.  Longuyon promises to be a little more interesting in good weather, especially as it has, in the scruffy area by the station (as opposed to the scruffy area in the middle of town, and the scruffy area where we parked) a Michelin starred restaurant with a reasonably priced Menu du Jour. First visitors to join us out here get the privilege of testing. As the café filled up, the town became more and more deserted. It was nearly midday and we needed to buy food for the rest of the weekend, especially if we were to prevent our first Sunday lunch in France being something from our On Toast repertoire.

A small supermarket on the high street, about the size of a "Spar", had fresh vegetables and fruit displayed outside. Inside, the meat counter was disproportionately large with a tiny weather beaten butcher greeting us with an accent you could only cut with a freshly sharpened Sabatier. I greeted him with my desperate standby phrase “Je viens d’arriver en France”. It doesn’t make anyone speak any more slowly or clearly but they all smile, look delighted and say the phrase again, only louder. I smile too, pay too much money and walk out with something about which I have no clue and more of than I could ever possibly consume. Yes, it is just like being on holiday, but I promise I will get better. Note to self: learn to count in high numbers.

On this occasion, we staggered out with a “Feuillete de saumon et epinards” promising portions for 4, and two entrecote steaks, dark red, marbled with fat, each about a foot long, having shaken hands with the butcher and the proprietor who was delighted to practise his English and who bemoaned the fact the youth of today do not pronounce their words properly. Plus ca change…Needless to say, both meals were excellent, with the meat tasty, tender and so much nicer than the lean, pale meats on offer in Canley. We are slowly paying the mortgage off on the entrecotes.

The following weekend found us still somewhat weary, with Mr B having gone back to work. The boxes were pretty much under control but their contents were not. Rebelling, we headed north, past the shopping malls of Messancy where we seemed to have spent every other evening, towards historic Arlon, in Belgium. Again a cold wind ensured that we walked briskly and being totally unsure of where to go, we followed a general crowd of about three people towards the centre of the town. Popping into the local Wiltgen Boluangerie et Chocolaterie with its bright pink leatherette seats and chrome trim, Mr B looked particularly at home as we ordered two petits dejeuners a deux croissants et des chocolats chauds. The chocolats chauds arrived in two parts: one cup of steaming hot milk and one sachet of powdered chocolate. Stir it yourself.

Arlon is a medieval town which again holds great promise once the weather warms up. It has a bastion and a fearsome knife shop so I think Mr B will be more than happy to explore while I and any passing visitors check out the cafes which by then should have their chairs out on the terraces to bask in the sunshine. This is how I imagine it. Whether it will be realised thus, remains to be seen. It has charm; it needs sunshine. And, dear reader, we stopped off at IKEA on the way home. I need say no more.We are still talking.

Last week was a great leap forward. I braved the public transport to Luxembourg Ville. I have already conquered the buses in town and have sussed the short use ticket (two hours, anywhere for e1.50) and the website for the local buses promised something similar for e1.30.  But you can never be sure. I caught the bus at the end of the road, in something of a fluster because it hurtled down the hill 5 minutes early just as I was finding my purse. I remembered to stand on the right side of the road too. I conversed with the driver: would this ticket be valid in Luxembourg? Of course, but only for the one hour. Even on the train? But yes, but only for the one hour. Or was it two? I wasn’t sure.

So the bus arrived in Rodange at the station; everyone got out. There was a train waiting on the opposite platform, ready to go to Luxembourg. It was a double decker, first class upstairs, and still very neat and comfortable downstairs. No one had checked my ticket and I worried that I might not have understood properly and that I would be ejected at any of the ten stations en route. But the nice young man in a peaked hat admired my ticket and said it was very good, thank you. How simple was that? I feel so liberated now that I have cracked the system. It is also 20 cents cheaper to travel towards Luxembourg than the other direction. But only for an hour.

Monday, 17 January 2011

The real thing...

We arrived here for good in Mont Saint Martin just behind the removals van on the 6th January with ice still on the ground, adding a certain excitement to the procedure of moving in. I don’t think I have been so exhausted since the children were small. Having had a week of entertaining at Christmas (and the week before that of preparing food, shopping and catching up with old friends), and then the constant packing into boxes and the agony of decisions to keep or throw, even at that late stage, I don’t think I had much in the way of physical emotional or even spiritual reserves for the long drive south and then opening up the apartment ready for the reverse process.

Our removal men could not have been nicer. Cheerful and resourceful, they made no complaints about bringing everything up the dog-leg stairs to our first floor apartment. They even brought in bacon for lunch while Ralph went to forage for baguettes and pains chocolats.  It made a very cosy picnic round the kitchen counter.  

Thanks to the help of friends in the UK, our breakables were well wrapped and cared for; the only breakage so far seems to have been a garden pot.  All the Edinburgh crystal is now carefully placed on various shelves and in cabinets. Fantastic! All that remains to unpack are the dozen large boxes in the second bedroom. I am in denial about these; they all seem to contain large items and I cannot imagine anywhere for them to go. In Coventry we had an attic, five sheds and a greenhouse. Amazing how much those held. We gave away so much and yet we are still overwhelmed by “stuff”. The temptation before moving was very much to throw everything away and start again, but now that I have found some old treasures in books and photo albums, I am glad I didn’t. I have unearthed some Gothic novels from university days, some F Scott Fitzgerald paperbacks and pictures of the children playing with their Nana. I have also found the Elizabeth David classic, Provincial French cooking and in the spirit of the film “Julie and Julia”, am attempting to cook my way through a number of the recipes. Yesterday, a lovely “Poulet roti au beurre” accompanied by “navets a la Bordelaise”. both of which would have had the fat police after us with a big stick. Yum. Ralph says that a hot topic for debate at work amongst his Belgian colleagues is the preparation of food and its sourcing. I take notes.

Last week was wet, cold and overcast and I did not leave the house except for one incredibly cold and rainy walk around the roads across the field from the chateau.  But brighter weather is here this week. I may even be tempted out to the Mairie to register my existence, although I feel a little rebellious at remaining an illegal alien ad infinitum.

It takes a while to get a feel for the rhythm and character of a place. Who comes and goes? When does the place wake up?  And how much should I stare out of the window? We overlook some of the other apartments, so it isn’t easy to look out without seeming to be peering into other people’s homes. But there is also a pretty view over the park and the lakes that used to belong to the chateau before the owner had to sell up following the collapse in the steel markets in the 1980’s. The town council bought the property, intending to turn it into a retirement home;this never happened and a local farming family bought it up and restored it to its current glory.

Today I watched the cat belonging to the people in the old carriage house. It leapt into the air over and over again batting something with its paws. It is too early in the year for butterflies so I watched more closely. The cat threw a small grey object (could have been a dead mouse) into the air, playing “keepy-uppy” with it, suddenly stopping to look round to see if anyone was watching its return to kittenhood. Charmant.

I have given in to internet radio to enjoy my daily fix of Radio 4. Disappointingly, two of my treasures, my DAB Radio and my atomic clock radio do not work here. Well, the atomic clock radio works, but has not adapted to local time, and I can only get medium wave UK radio with lots of squeaks and whistles. So, I shall have to practice my French more to understand local media.  This moves me on to my next obligation, the “Rosetta Stone” language course, which I am working on from the beginning, and which calls me now.

A bientot.