I found a couple more places
frequented by Brits where I could rattle my British Legion Poppy
collection tins, and this year we managed a very healthy 315 Euros.
We have carried on trying new
places to eat, and we found a lovely little restaurant in a village
about 30 minutes away over the border in the Dordogne. It's called
the Auberge de Tilleuls, and I think we'll be going there a few
times this summer.
This does not mean we have
neglected our culinary visits closer to home – heaven forbid!
On Christmas Day we had a superb
lunch at the Auberge in our village. Absolutely delicious. We had
friends over on Boxing Day for lunch too.
Christmas mostly involved the
swapping of Amazon vouchers with family. Why is it that when you have
a goodly sum of vouchers you can't think of anything to spend them
on, as soon as they are all gone you remember something you have
always wanted.......
Just after
Christmas we were invited to a neighbor's house where we were
invited to share the Galette des Roi
with them and some other neighbours. It celebrates
Epiphany, and deep in the cake is a small model of a king and whoever
finds has to wear a cardboard crown.
I was asked to do some English
conversation classes in the village. These are not as easy as I
thought, and I ran out of inspiration after a couple of months. Pity
as they were good fun.
Lots of days out as the weather
improved. The plan is usually to buy some sandwiches and drinks for a
picnic, and then hope that a tempting restaurant lures us
in....sometimes works.
We have had days out in the Dordognes, and in the last few week the Lot, which is the department south of us. On one trip to the town of Figeac we did succumb to the attractions of a very nice restaurant...
On other trips we have had lakeside picnics and the dogs have had a great time. We have seen chateaux, churches and lovely villages. It's a great area with so much to see. Finn even made a new friend.
Limeuil in the Dordogne
Judith Margaret in the Dordogne
Assier in the Lot
Fortified Church in Rudelle, Lot
Chateau near Gourdon
Picnic Time
We have had
the Gilets Jaunes in our area as well. They
have been congregating near to motorway junctions, and we were
initially held up a few times. They are still around (end of March),
but don't seem to be stopping traffic any more. However the speed
cameras they torched are still a testament to the strong feelings
they have.
We applied
for our Cartes de Sejour last August and we
were told that we would get a text message when they were ready. As
the end date of our receipts approached we asked a friend to contact
the Prefecture in January and chase them up. They assured him it was
all in hand and we would hear soon. A friend who had applied at the
same time as us asked someone from his Mairie who had contacts at the
Prefecture to try – and after some pushing we found all three cards
had been issued in October and were waiting for us. A couple of weeks
after we collected them I had a text message to say my card was ready
– with a totally different reference number....
We seem to
have had a pretty good winter – we had a little bit of snow
which cleared quickly and for the last few weeks
we have had a number of lovely sunny days. This encouraged me to do
some more of my “Then and Now” photography – results on my
YouTube Channel – just search for CliftonDJ.
At the end of
January we went to a Burns Night, held in
our village Auberge. A friend organised it and the great Fabio,
proprietor of the Cadran Solaire, learnt how to me a haggis – and
very nice it was. There was a god mix of expats, older French and a
a number of young French people, and everyone seemed to have a great
time.
Modern
technology is wonderful. I discovered I had mislaid my mobile,
then remembered I had installed a a “Find my
Mobile” app on my Ipad. Two minutes later I had the exact location
and could pick it up the next day.
A couple of
RAF Association events so far this year. Once again we attended the
memorial service in the village of Grun Bordas for
the RAF crew who crashed after dropping supplies to the Resistance.
As it was the 75th
anniversary it was very well attended, including Australian relatives
of one of the crew.
A couple of
weeks later I went to the RAFA SW France
AGM in Bordeaux. Great meeting people and
much swapping of stories. The actual AGMs can always be a little dull
– and when everything is read out in English and
French it can definitely drag. Great
meal afterwards though!
Now that
Spring is definitely here, and the central heating is about to be
switched off, I'll stop and get on with gathering some more stuff for
my next missive.