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Monday 4 December 2017

Count Down



Three days before we depart for Paris and then home on Sunday. Where has the time gone? Today we are rushing about trying to figure out how many bottles of wine we can safely carry (4). How we will pack certain Christmas items in the bags which are tiny and still have room for a few clothes. We could, I suppose, do what a storied aunt of ours apparently did during the war. She worked in the USA and was returning to Canada for a visit home, and, as she had several sisters, decided to bring dresses. Well she wore them all layer upon layer and as the story goes a slender girl she was, but her size just seemed a bit odd to Customs who caught her out. We never did learn, or I do not recall, what happened. Did she get to pay duty? Did she lose the dresses? Which sisters received them if she did get to keep them? All family lore. So, we shall not be "wearing" anything extra just stuffing the bags as full as possible. Deciding what to bring is really the issue. There are so many treats here this time of year from foie gras to severely alcoholic cherries, every kind of mustard from every AOC as well as candied fruits and my favourite French walnuts in the shell.
This week we held a small soirée for the marina owners and staff as they are very accommodating on most things and a bit of Christmas cheer is always a good thing for everyone.  Local cheeses and wine were the backbone as one cannot go wrong and as a result we now know the favourite cheese… Époisses de Bourgogne is a cheese made in the village of Époisses and its environs, in the département of Côte-d'Or, about halfway between Dijon and Auxerre. And maybe I can just squeeze some into my bag. (If cheese is commercially packaged it is acceptable to bring it in.) When ripe you can simply spoon it up and according to our guests I had ripened it perfectly. No small feat.
 Our neighbours visited the celebrated Strasbourg Christmas Market this week and came back with wonderful photos and many parcels and a great deal of gingerbread! With too many things to accomplish here and a case of the double sniffles we decided to plan for next year.

The Captain is hauling white diesel today using the electric bike and a borrowed cart. All the boaters go through the same chore here as the Leclerc diesel is .33 cheaper per litre than the pump on site. Everyone shares diesel containers, bikes and carts to haul it about 500 metres all the while thankful that it’s not further.  

And we must mention the Auxois Men’s Choir…it was simply beautiful music. They joined the Alexandre Nevsky Choir from St. Petersburg who sang liturgical & traditional ancient chants some as early as the 8th century. Their baritone-bass was incredible. We could hear the voice but were a bit uncertain which singer it was. After a solo we all new! The Église St Eusèbe was packed, the concert began an hour late due to the volume of attendance, and of course it was cold, but it was our best music of the season.

Onward to home adventures in Canada and Christmas with a very special family in Lewes DE.


John calls it Ballast


Using the 'Good" Glasses for Company

Époisse at its Best


French Walnuts are the Best as are the Crackers













Wet Snow Dec 1st!



Every Variety of Edible Treats for Christmas



We Arrived Early and Heard the Practice; We Definitley Stayed for the Concert
The Auxois Mens Choir




Truly an Excellent Concert



Our Christmas Light Contribution to Auxerre and some Frost. 




We Thought This Display Lovely. In the Background are the Natural Trees placed Everywhere


Hanging Trees and Overhead Lights Strung Awaiting Evening


Beautiful Florist Shop



Trees Ready for Homes: Note the Trees Stands...they work perfectly with no hassles 


The Christmas Rose; a Real Favourite


Someones Idea!


These Are Everywhere


Puffy Brioche



Stroll Under a Full Moon

Lion of Character


RoofLines


Saint Nicolas..placed in 1794


Mistletoe Thieves Bouquet


Annabel's Art: Joyeux et Libre


A Captains Work is Never Done!


Tim, our Across the Canal Neighbour Aboard Randall


Que Sera Sera, Our Neighbours


Home Away


Our Little Bit of Christmas Cheer




and soon to Skootamatta, Lewes etc!


Monday 27 November 2017

Reaching for Mistletoe

Les Lumières de Noël will be lit 6th December, or so we understand. There has been a great deal of work going on, installing the lights in the old town. We are looking forward to the spectacle, as last year when we were living in Lille for Christmas, it was a wondrous sight. Each little winding street seemed to have different overhead light combinations and Auxerre appears to be no different. Thus, our minds have turned to this happy season and we struck out one day to gather hedgerow “stuff”. In my walks this fall, north toward Gergy, I could see many huge balls of mistletoe hanging at great heights from certain trees. My mission on each walk was to locate mistletoe that was reachable without climbing or a ladder. This was a difficult task as it seems that mistletoe only grows at great heights.
The name mistletoe originally referred to the species Viscum album (European mistletoe, of the family Santalaceae in the order Santalales); it is the only species native to Great Britain and much of Europe. European mistletoe has smooth-edged, oval, evergreen leaves borne in pairs along the woody stem, and waxy, white berries that it bears in clusters of two to six. The Eastern mistletoe of North America is similar, but has shorter, broader leaves and longer clusters of 10 or more berries. And both varieties are poisonous, so no leaving it for little people or cats or dogs to eat.
Until we cut some from a host tree I did not realize that it appears to be a bright green branch growing directly out of the host tree. When a seed is dropped on the bark of a host tree it sticks as the seeds are very viscous and birds wipe them from their bills or deposit from droppings. As soon as the seed lands it begins its parasitic work and drops a tiny root into the bark eventually meeting the host trees nutrient system. Usually once the plant is firmly connected to the host it relies totally on the host for all nutrients and does not photosynthesize itself.  
Large infestations of mistletoe attract birds and animals who can eat the berries or pollinize the flowers and have a positive impact on biodiversity. Hefty clumps of the so called “witches brooms” are shelter and home to numerous bird species.

So, we risked a dunk into the canal by cutting mistletoe from a large clump that I found growing well out over the water but at a low level. My trusty Mistletoe Thief who has a longer reach patiently joined in the venture, and threw a line to pull the branches toward the bank so I could cut. It was close but we did not catapult into the canal.  We now have a large wintry bouquet sitting on deck. Along with Norwegian spruce branches with cones and rose hips it will look rather nice once my Christmas lights are on.

And, in tune with the season we attended a Concert de Trompes in the Cathedral…it was not what we expected but worth it. These were hunting trumpets and the “music” was the chase calls for woods and forest and fields during the hunt. There are no stops on these horns so it's all a matter of skill with about 5 notes.  From the 6th century and passed down via these trumpet clubs…I love it. . .shades of Martin Walkers “Bruno books”. And they would need a hot meal post-concert because the Cathedral was colder than a tomb.







Caught: A Falling Leaf



Hazardous to Reach Mistletoe


Thickets of Mistletoe in High Branches


Got Some!


Beautiful Green and Berried



Annonymous Mistletoe Thief and Carrier



Charlie


Welders Handiwork. . .take note DC!


Blue Eyes


Watson  getting Warm after a Bath

 

Stack of French Lesson Books. Will I Ever Get the Verbs?


Always Something to Catch Your Eye

Concert Notice


A Different Experience!!