Sunday 13 October 2019

15, 2019, last blog, Winding down at the end of a long busy great summer.

Well its been a great summer,  and now we head on our last journey from Beziers to Agdee, where  Kiwi Rose will stay for the winter.
Went for a cycle ride along the Canal du Midi to Colombier where we stayed back in 2007. This was after finishing our hire boat holiday on the Midi with Colleen & Terry and Bob & Heather which started the ideal of this whole boating life for us.
Even managed to find the same gite that we stayed in during the Rugby 
World Cup. (picture from 2007)
Then off to stay overnight with Alan & Shelia (Scottish boating friends) in a little Village called Azille. This is the local wine cave,where the locals were in full flow delivering their grapes. 


And of course Max found the price very reasonable.

So we leave Beziers and head on our last journey down The Canal du Midi to Adge and the boat yard where we will get taken out of the water. (Canvas and glass down.)


And we continue to see some unusual sights!!  Love the hat.

Arrive in Allemand Yard and Kiwi Rose gets taken out of the water.
 And we are so close to going out to sea.!!!

                              So we stay in a Air bnb for a few days while we packed  up the boat and Max 
still managed to watch the World Cup Rugby on French TV. 

AND SO TO BED.


Its been a long hot summer, starting from St Jean de Losne, travelling down the Rhone via Lyon, Avignon, and down to Montpellier and the South of France.  
We had a great time travellng down, spending time with lots of old friends and making new friends along the way.  

As we drove back home across France we stopped in St Jean de Losne catch up with John & Michelle, and Tony & Kay for a good pizza and a few drinks. 
Then onto to Brugge where we stayed with Aileen & Graham overnight before tackling the Euro tunnel and the M20 & M25 back to Chichester.


SO
Au revoir
for another year..




Saturday 14 September 2019

14, 2019. Early September, Aigues-Morte to Beziers.

Steph Janes arrives for a holiday and first night out we get started in Aigues-Morte.
Mooring at Aigues-Morte.
New bar table and chair sets,, we think it could catch on!!!
Finally on our way towards Sete we spied the elusive Flamingoes!!!
 Having a suspicious crew is always entertaining especially nosey ones.
Here in Sete it was the 3 young men who were diving along the side of the entrance of the harbour, and then the crew noticed that someone had driven their car off the wharf into the sea.
So rescue truck etc etc.
We had a fun packed 10 days with Steph,, doing/seeing new things, like finding ourselves on a beach where everybody ( nobody seeing 60-70 again),  was actually stark bollock naked ( we now understand that saying!!!), and we were nearly the only ones wearing clothes😁😁😁😁.
Had a nice quick day trip by train to Montpellier and had a small salad lunch.!!!!!!
 
 The Saint Clement Aqueduct, built in 18C to provide water for the city.
And of course another statue of Louis XIV.





Montpelleir has this thing with bicycles and we found these two, just
hanging out of the city walls.


Another first is that Kiwi Rose threw down her anchor and we swam off the back of the boat in the SEA. Nice clean warm water.

Steph, Max and I also biked to beaches, up/down the canals, shopping, and then did lots of relaxing drinking and eating on the back of the boat. 
The little town of Meze on the Etang.

Dancing girls joining in with the flavour of the night.
 

Evening drinks on the beach.
The beautiful serene Canal du Midi with some Plaine trees left.
Arrived at this bridge, and we had a couple of days while we contemplated taking the windscreen glass down.
A well deserved beer after a 20 km round trip to have a great swim in the sea at Portiragnes-Plage from our mooring at Villeneuve-les-Beziers.
New friends playing on the bank by the boat...., the Coypu.
Then on to Beziers.
OK, First test was actually getting under this bridge.... so canvas all down , , and then the glass!!!!!
WE ARE THROUGH,,, EASY PEASY!!!!


A short cycle ride around Beziers and up to the 
9 Fonceranes locks at Beziers. 
Pierre-Paul Riquet built the locks between1 666-1681, during the reign of King Louis XIV.         
 These locks allow boats to cover an elevation of 13.6m over 300m on the canal above the river Orb. It earier times there was a lock connecting the canal to the river Orb, depth  of 21.6m .


Found this couple doing the Canal in this rubber ducky. They took the seat out at night and unloaded their belogings onto the bank. They then blew up their double air bed and camped under a tarp on the boat. 
Just shows you don't need a fancy boat to do this canalling business.

The magnifent Cathedrale Saint Nazaire overlooking the River Orb and the valley below.



And last tuesday, the first rain we have had on Kiwi Rose in 14 weeks !!!! Great for the French land,  but not quite the same for the hire boats on a 7 day misson.



And so we start winding to a close for this summer on Kiwi Rose.
Just packing and cleaning and catching up with freinds, and collecting the car before we go back to the UK.



FOOD FOR THOUGHT-






Sunday 8 September 2019

13, August 2019, Sete, Frontignan, and back up to Aigues-Morte.

We pottered about between the beaches of  Les Aresquires and Frontignan for few weeks as various friends came to catch up with us. Rob & Sue Cooper, having sold their boat a few months ago came  to visit us by car on their way to friends at Marseille.
What a difference a night makes as we make our way back to Frontignan.

We met 2 new kiwi boats, and Fred & Zoe from Portsmouth. (friends of mutual American boating friends). The Kiwis had managed to find a bar where we could watch The AB's playing Australia. 
 Its serious stuff at 10 am in the morning!!!!
Rob and Sue arrive to stay for a couple of nights, and we do a day trip to Marseillan, 
a delightful little fishing port on the Etang Du Thau.  


The Etang du Thau is a vast lake of brackish water, whose main activity is oyster/mussel farming.It produces more than  20,000 tons annually and it is only linked to the sea in 2 places, Sete and a small canal at Marseillan. As there are no real tides and little water renewal it is a delicate ecological balance and boaters must take extra care with their waste. 
The Etang is classified as maritime waters and there are buoyed channels and markers when crossing, and if the winds are high above force 3, they advise you not to cross. 
The Etang is 16kms long and 2-4 kms wide, with huge areas of oyster/mussel beds. 

Had a surprise from Robin and Denise, who after cycling from Chichester to near Clermont Ferrand, (I think over 800kms), they decided to continue on down to the south, (more kms) and joined us for an overnight stay.

 Did some cycling back to the beaches from Frontignan and watched the kids jousting....not sure health and safety in NZ would allow this at all..!!!!
At least the kids have outboards and there are no rowers like the adult men.





And THEN THERE ARE the French cakes...... couldn't resist trying this delight.