Thursday 29 December 2016

Reflections on cruising



For the Annual ramblings , click on the link

Saturday 17 December 

Off at a decent hour after Martyn had checked tyre pressures.  Plug broken on electric pump N°1.  Electric pump N°2 not working.  Sainsbury’s air line out of service: ça commence déjà bien, said I to myself.  Patchy fog en route, despite which countless kamikazes were hurtling into the gloom at 80 mph with no lights on.  Still, the M25 was a bit  less busy than the last few times we used it, so we were at Mr & Mrs Engineer Smith’s place by 11:00 as planned to deliver their Christmas present.  

We were at Southampton a good hour and a half before our due time, but despite injunctions to arrive no earlier or later than the stated hour, we were quickly parked, relieved of luggage and through the check-in process.  It’s all a bit airport-like these days, but at least the staff were all mature, pleasant and just witty enough.  

 The ‘stateroom’ is clean and well-appointed, with adequate if not generous space, and provides a small sofa and a hard chair at the desk.  There’s a pleasant little balcony with a couple of armchairs and a table, though I doubt we’ll be basking in the sunlight at this time of year!  The power supply is not generous, though: there are four US-standard 110v outlets, but only one European 16 amp and one UK 13 amp outlet.  There are strict injunctions not to use irons or kettles in cabins (OK, the former scarely figure in my vocabulary, but deprived of tea without a long walk or hefty outlay, I become fractious!  I gather that the next refit will include tea kits in cabins).  We were also instructed not to leave things on charge when we left the cabin, nor to leave them on overnight.  Owners of Samsung spontaneous combustion phones were told to power them down and lock them in the safe!

As I write, we’re coming round the Isle of Wight and progress is quiet and smooth, quite unlike any other motor vessel I’ve been on.  But then, we’re doing a stately 18 knots or so, and have the joys of the Bay of Biscay to come…

We are definitely at the lower end of the age spread of passengers.  Should be restful, eh?  There is quite a large population of wheelchair users, a forest of walking sticks and quite a few of the rest of us without props plainly have dodgy joints.  Fortunately, our neighbours at the adjacent table are a pleasant and interesting Welsh couple.

Sunday 18 December

Saturday’s dinner was pretty good, with portions that were not excessive.  We have signed up for the wine package, and have resigned ourselves to a $40+ bottle per evening.  Last night’s Rioja was very good, without the overpowering oakiness that Riojas can sometimes suffer from.  Service is attentive, and just the right side of obsequious.  I didn’t feel I could deal with that first thing this morning, so we went up to the self-service buffet and indulged.  They helpfully offer an eggs to order service, so I could have my massacred eggs without fuss.  Another chap had the same order: when I saw him a little later, he said he’d then been back for kedgeree.  We’re going to have to watch it, or we’ll be spherical in eleven days’ time.

Not the greatest of nights: I was either too warm with the covers on or not warm enough without, so sleep was kinda intermittent.  I’ll get the hang of the thermostat, I expect.  There was a bit of movement as we made our stately way down the Channel, and when I went on my route march to get some tea, there was an alarming creaking noise from stairwell A…  As we approach Cap Finisterre, we’re starting to get an idea of the familiar Biscay mix of pitch, roll and yaw, although the sea looks perfectly calm.
Dithering whether to go for digital photography or watercolours this morning.  The programme is wide-ranging and very full!  [Later]  In the event we opted for the morning pub quiz, with the questions asked in Mrs Merton style by a sparky young hostess.  (We got 13/20, with the winner scoring 15). 

At lunchtime we went along to a presentation about Madeira, delivered by a young fellow who would have fitted in better at Butlin’s.  Quite informative, but the presentation was really about selling excursions.  

We made the mistake yesterday of having hot breakfasts and a hot buffet lunch, so were already quite well filled when dinner time came round.  Once again, portions were sensibly sized and well prepared.  Prawns provençal style with a rosé from the same region.  We have two more days at sea, and at this rate will have to be wheeled off the ship at Funchal with sack barrows – and we still haven’t tried the afternoon tea!

Monday 19 December

A better night’s sleep, thank goodness, though punctuated with crazy dreams such as are provoked by excessive amounts of richer than usual food.  We had tea, OJ and toast brought to the cabin this morning – and shall not trouble with the toast again!  But it is better than walking the length of the ship to the self-service tea machinery.

As I write, we’re just turning the north-western tip of the Iberian peninsula, according to one of the the helpful shipboard TV channels.  The wind is up to 27 kts and the sea is described as moderate.  The ship is so enormous, however, that you scarcely notice the movement until you get up and move around – or try to address the sanitary ware accurately.

I tried my hand at some watercolours this morning, having brought my paints, a few brushes and a tiny rough pad with me.  It was good to be reminded of wet in wet technique, and the cling film trick, and I turned out a very quick sketch from a photo, supposedly of La Palma [Later identified as the Roque Bentayga, Gran Canaria] which we shall visit in a few days’ time.  I’ll probably go back tomorrow, when I gather that our teacher is to have us tackling flowers.
 
This afternoon we attended a charming little string quartet concert given by four young Ukrainian women, the Eos String Quartet.  A nice little collection of lollipops and fun pieces, pretty well played.  Then a brief pause followed by afternoon tea: what else?  Next we shall attempt to pour ourselves into our DJs for the first of a number of formal evenings.  

Tuesday, 20 December

A pleasant, mild day with quite a lot of sun: we sat outside on the balcony for a time.  Last night was a little bit rough: I was conscious of me and the bed not moving quite in synch.  We were both a little restless for a time and had the light on briefly.  Entertaining to watch the dressing gowns on the hooks opposite the foot of the bed swaying through around 15° as the ship rolled and yawed!

Most of the fellow passengers we’ve talked to are veteran cruisers.  I still have an open mind as to whether I have the makings thereof.  The food is generally very good and nicely presented, but the opportunities to overeat are just too many.  Still, I cut down to somewhere around three times my usual breakfast this morning, adding just a bacon sandwich to my two slices of toast and marmalade. 

I’ve done two sessions of watercolour painting today, and have turned out a pretty feeble sketch of a strelitzia flower.  No more painting for the next four days, on all of which we shall be on dry land - provided we can get into my email account and retrieve the car rental voucher for Gran Canaria.  We have booked excursions on Madeira and La Palma, and plan to explore Tenerife and Gran Canaria under our own steam.  

Wednesday 21 December

The shortest day, and it was sometimes damp, and quite chilly at altitude.  We took an excursion to Cabo Girão and another rather less impressive viewpoint looking across Funchal from the Pico dos Barcelos.  From there, we wound our way up the mountain to the Pico do Serrado, for tea, buns and Madeira, and views of the astonishing Curral das Freiras.  Much photography.

As is so often the case, we preferred the time we had to ourselves.  We’d come away with incomplete documentation for one of the car rentals, so needed to find WiFi so as to find the documents without paying the eye-watering amounts that Cunard charges for internet access.  Well, taking a tip from our Redcoat – oops, sorry: tour manager! – we took a turning off the main drag and found a little restaurant that provided the necessary wizardry, and had soon saved the car rental voucher to the iPad.  The waitress who served us was happy to indulge my poor Portuguese.  We had a lunch of scabbard fish (delicious) with a shrimp sauce for Martyn, and the traditional Madeira accompaniment of a fried banana for me.  Surprisingly good!

We had a nice prowl round Funchal after lunch.  The place is decorated for Christmas, mainly with sculptural plantings of poinsettias, but with a host of other quirky and amusing ideas.  When the ship is in port, a fleet of shuttle buses plies between the harbour and the western end of central Funchal, so, although I’d walked reasonably comfortably for half an hour or so, I was content to be spared the last mile.  We paused for refreshment in the café at the cruise terminal, and finished off the necessary on-line tasks on their free wifie.

We both felt faintly emotional as the ship left port to a cacophony of ship’s whistle, foghorns, pressure-can horns and much cheerful waving from the port staff on the end of the mole. 
Maybe that’s why I was feeling so tired and crotchety at dinner.  There was nothing wrong with the meal, but the wine the sommelier suggested with the venison was a coarse, immature claret, which we didn’t finish.  Everything seemed very rushed, and Martyn’s pudding plate was whipped away before I’d finished my cheese.  I’ll have a word with the head waiter when I’m rested and less hypertensive.

Thursday 22 December

We ran into Sta Cruz de La Palma in a glorious sunrise, and a healthy swell, which prevented the pilot from boarding: we watched a number of heroic attempts, and a very sensible abandonment.  We took a walk into town after a recidivist breakfast, and enjoyed the relaxed atmosphere of the town, which, like Funchal, was much decorated with poinsettias.  The town prides itself on its floral balconies, which we found in good shape and well maintained.  A café in town provided orange juice and free wifie, so catered for our immediate needs.  

As we returned to the ship, the crew boat drill seemed to be finished, but the boats were still hingin’ oot on their davits: good to see that they work – at least on the starboard side.

In the afternoon we took an excursion across and down the island and back again.  We were disappointed not to be taken up to the caldera, but others who had booked a trip that went there were also disappointed: owing to high winds, they couldn’t do the walk.  The island is volcanic, and there is still a very prominent lava flow from high up right down to the sea.  The other scar on the landscape resulted from a fire that took out 9% of the island’s vegetation last year.  We didn’t learn the cause of the fire in Madeira last year, but on being asked, the guide educated us on the La Palma one.  Evidently some fellow living in nature had, following an appointment with the Ministry of the Interior, decided not to bury the paper, but to burn it instead.  He owned up, but we didn’t learn how the justice system treated him.

Like all the islands in the archipelago, La Palma doesn't really get a winter, so the poinsettias grow into trees, the strelitzias thrive and the bougainvilleas burgeon.

The tour bus this afternoon was very short on leg room, and high on amplification.  I spent the first leg with the ears plugged with paper handkerchiefs, and had a word with the guide when we stopped.  She racked the noise down from painful to merely loud, so the rest of the trip was less uncomfortable.  All in all, we find we are not excursion types.  We were stamped with stickers corresponding to the bus number each time, and didn’t greatly care for being given 10 minutes here and 25 minutes there.  At each of the next two ports, we are renting a little car and buggering off under our own steam.  We shall learn less, but enjoy ourselves more, we hope.

Friday 23 December

Some hope!  The Purser’s Office couldn’t help us to find the address of our car hire outfit.  It turned out to be in the building next to the one where the shuttle bus dropped us.  Given the uncertainty when we’d get there, I tried to ring them to ask them not to let the car go if we were late.  On the rare occasions my useless Samsung mobile actually seized the network, I got either RTNR or busy.  So we just pressed on, and Martyn eventually spotted the office in the upper floor of the Fred Olsen terminal.  We’d a long walk to the car park, but eventually got there and found our car, a Fiat Tipo, well above the grade we’d booked, and quite roomy and comfortable.  Totally gutless, however, and quite unable to reach a decent cruising speed on the climb out of Sta Cruz without revving the brute to screaming point (petrol engine).  This, I should add, was only after a protracted tour of the docks and an endless shuffle through the badly signposted town.

Well, on the gentler winding roads up towards Teide the car acquitted itself better, cornering flat and precisely on the countless bends.  The road through the forest is lovely, but there have clearly been heavy rains and strong winds in recent days.  The roadway was practically carpeted with pine needles and twigs.  There were no views to speak of, since it was cloudy, and it rained practically all the time we were out.  The road to Teide was closed, presumably because of snow.  We had got down to 6° at about 1500m, so it would have been freezing around 2000m.  

So, we snaked down the hill to the coast road, thinking we’d at least find better weather in the south.  Well, we did catch the odd glimpse of blue over the sea south of Los Cristianos.  But there was not a parking space to be had, and judging by the general tawdry awfulness of the place, maybe that wasn’t a bad thing.  We opted to grab a snack at the South airport.  Catering there runs to sweet shops and a Burger King, so I’m afraid I declined to stay.  Lunch was therefore a picnic of Fortnum’s baguette-pizza in the car in the rain in the car park, facing a grey stone wall through a wet windscreen.  Since the weather was getting worse again as we drove back north, we turned the car in early (once we’d found the way into the rental firm’s car park), and repaired to the ship for tea and a sandwich.  

The officers’ choir led the carol singing in the evening, so we added our struggling baritone decibels to the cacophony.  No Richard Salter refinements, but I did sing as many of the rude words to the Twelve Days of Christmas as I could remember.  After dinner we repaired to the Lido for tea and Armagnac, and paused in the Garden Room to hear the harpist play a medley.  

Saturday 24 December

We had a bit of a trek into town to pick up today’s hire car from a scruffy back street operation known as Orlando.  The car – an elderly Clio - went, steered and stopped.  That’s the good news.  The bad is that it had no hub caps, 105’000 km on the clock, dents or scratches to most panels and the inside was, as we say in my country, mingin’.  All in all, it was the sort of car that your friends would rather you didn’t park on their drive.  Oh, and it rattled like a sack of saucepans.  The clutch and gearbox were OK, but, like yesterday’s Fiat, the car needed the whip to get it to climb hills.  We’re so used to our grunting turbo-diesels, that it goes against the grain to have to make engines scream to deliver performance.

The north coast of the island was looking superb, with huge breakers curling on to the beaches.  The roads are rather better than they were last time I was here (37 years ago), but we’d to use the old road for Plan B when Plan A was thwarted again by road closures.  Said Plan B followed the route up to Tejeda that Barbara and I did in 1979, and we were again rewarded with wonderful views of the Arizona-like scenery around the Roque Bentayga.  The mountain roads are generally well-maintained, though there are some pretty ropey stretches here and there.  It pays to have served one’s apprenticeship in the Hautes-Corbières.  

Thereafter, we battled our way back into Las Palmas, found a fuel station and got the car back to the renters, thanks to Dotty.  Said renters had buggered off for their siesta (they had not prepared us for this), so we abandoned the car on a motorbike parking bay and stuck the key through their letter box. 
A pulse-steadying glass of white wine later, we trekked back to the ship for afternoon tea and the afternoon quiz.  All good fun, but the questions were too easy – we found ourselves joint second at 19/20 along with six or seven other tables.  Four tied tie-breakers later, we were stumped by the question of how many tiles there are in a game of mah-jongh (144, it seems).

Best dinner so far, we thought: rack of Romney Marsh lamb, perfectly done.

Christmas Day 2016

A largely restful day at sea, following the exertions of the last few days in port: lots of reading, some snoozing – and, of course, more eating.  I’m not sure whether there’s some sort of competition among the regulars for the silliest Christmas pullover, but we are glad we aren’t required to judge it…

We dropped in on the art class this morning, but just to wish them a happy Christmas.  There were quite a few stalwarts there.  I shall join them tomorrow, armed with my Christmas present brush case and sketching kit.  Martyn has also kitted me out with new cufflinks and a bow tie: they will see service already this evening.  We each received a Christmas card signed by Madam Captain and her three senior officers, together with a little Wedgewood dish.  The signatures appear to be original, so they must have been signing them in their sleep for the last month or so! 

After lunch we were treated to a game of charades in the ballroom, the captain’s team capably dispatching the hotel manager’s.  Great fun.  Then reading, snoozing and some sorting of photographs until dinner time, then some more reading etc.  A restful Christmas.

26 December 2016

We took the tour of one of the galleys this morning – what a vast operation it is!  The one we saw was for the lower floor of the restaurant where we have been having dinner.  The restaurant caters for over 800 covers per sitting, so it’s nice to know that they have good systems in place.

In fact, we’ve made more than usual use of the entertainments today.  After lunch we went to a rather good piano recital: Fauré, Debussy, Ravel, Granados, Albeniz and Saint-Saëns.  Hard on the heels of that came a talent show by members of the crew.  Great fun!  It included a hip-hop dance routine by five of the stewards, including our James.  Straight from there to the quiz: we teamed up with a couple we’d met at breakfast and two of their friends, and won.  The tie break question was ‘how many cantons are there in Switzerland?’, so the other lot didn’t really stand a chance. 

Tuesday 27 December

We had opted for the ‘Santiago de Compostela On Your Own’ tour, since the advertised guided tour was said to involve a good two hours’ walking.  Although we probably did that, we did it at a pace that suited us, and without being droned at by a guide.  It was noticeably cooler when we went outside in the morning, and the drive to Compostela was foggy in places, with lots of frost on the fields.  Today’s temperatures have been rather a shock after the mildness of Madeira and the Canaries, but once the sun was as high as it gets at this time of year, we basked for a while, seated on the granite bench outside the south transept of the cathedral.  As I write, we both feel the benefit of a spot of sun on the skin.  The warmth of the sun on black jeans on such a cold day was pure luxury.

The bus was clearly fitted out with people of Iberian dimensions in mind, so was not the most comfortable of experiences.  Still, it was driven very steadily by Juan Carlos, and Jutta the guide was knowledgeable and pleasant to listen to.

Once in town we had a quarter of an hour’s walk from the bus station to the Praza do Obroidoro, where we were disappointed to find the façade of the cathedral in scaffolding.  We were told on the bus that this was the case, but those who had booked the tour with a view of the façade as a highlight must have felt somewhat robbed.  I was more interested in the pure Romanesque interior, and cannot imagine what moved the authorities to mutilate the cathedral with a 19th century baroque revival facelift.  Spain, however, seems sufficiently proud of it to adorn its small copper coins with its image.  

The interior is superb, with all I expected and more.  The architecture is left largely to speak for itself without the gaudy embellishments that wreck so many historic churches.  The organ case is something to behold, arranged either side of the nave, with ranks of horizontal trumpets facing each other as if challenging each other to battle.  (Assuming that it sounds as warlike as it looks, I declined to pay €25 for the CD…)  At the west end of the nave was a rather fine nativity scene of a whole village with all its trades and activities, beautifully made and presented.  We passed on the shrines to St James, since they involved more steps than I was keen to take.

What I liked most about the place was the flag-stoned streets and old vernacular architecture.  We visited the market, and would have made good use of it had we been self-catering!  As it was, we had a passable lunch in a restaurant largely patronised by local working people, and sampled the local Alboriño white wine, which I greatly preferred to the overpriced, catsy sauvignon blanc we had at dinner back on board.

Linguistically, not a greatly challenging day.  I bought stamps for the postcards without difficulty, and a bit of pointing got me the plasters I needed after grazing my arm on some millennial granite after tripping in the cathedral.  The restaurant offered an English menu, and I found the Gallego version rather more reliable…  I did get a chuckle from the restaurateur when, on trying to read the small print on the wine label, I said in Portuguese that I need new specs.  (Portuguese and Gallego are close relatives.) 

Back at the ship, we decided against the quick sprint round A Coruña that the timetable allowed.  I was never likely to sprint anyway, and far less so after a day’s footslogging in Santiago.  But the waterfront near our berth looks very attractive, and mental note has been taken, we hope for future reference.

We left A Coruña in daylight, and indeed in brilliant late afternoon sunshine.  Since our balcony is close to the bridge, we could watch the captain as she watched others doing the work.  We also watched the pilot disembarking once we had left the harbour: a less dramatic process than the pilot’s failed embarkation in La Palma.  

Wednesday 28 December

The early part of the crossing from A Coruña was a touch on the rough side, so it was as well to be on a vessel the size of the Queen Elizabeth.  We slept satisfactorily, but met a couple whose cabin was on Deck 1 forward, and who complained of a pretty poor night.  

A couple of watercolour sessions today.  Miss wanted us to do pieces in the style of Picasso or Paul Klee.  I made a start on a view of the rooftops in Malcesine, but defaulted to a representational style, to Miss’s disappointment.  Towards the end of our session, fellow passengers were invited to come and take a look, and they were very polite…  Meanwhile, Martyn did the clean packing (I’d packed the dirty washing the previous evening) and spent a while reading upstairs in the rather pleasant Commodore Club.

Most mornings we have been rewarded with beautiful sunrises, and today’s was no exception.  I did not have a camera with me, so just enjoyed the experience of the evolving colours, the rays radiating from behind clouds and the constantly changing glitter resembling molten gold of the sun reflected on the waves.  But I’ll sling in a few samples from earlier days.




The colour palette has been pretty varied on our travels.  The colours of the bougainvilleas in Madeira.  The poinsettias and strelitzias on La Palma: and the deep brown lava.  The arid expanses of southern Tenerife and the deep greens of its forests.  The reddish brown desert scenery of central Gran Canaria. 
Well, there we are: finally on the last leg.  It has been an enjoyable experience, but we’re happy to be heading back to the home we love.  It has been great to be waited on and pampered all the way, and the environment has been very pleasant.  The catering has been good, if on the over-generous side, but in that regard we have only our lack of self-discipline to blame.  We’ve had some very good company, and we had the unexpected pleasure of meeting a childhood friend of Martyn’s on board.  Conversation in the art class and elsewhere, however, has been about operations and what variety of cancer late husbands died of, so the reputation of floating care home has been well demonstrated.  Shall we do it again?  Well, maybe, if there’s a cruise to ports we particularly want to visit.  But we’re not rushing to book the first vacancy – and in any case shall probably be in need of the care home treatment ourselves by the time we do it again.

Unfortunately, an element of the cruise that sticks in the mind – and indeed the craw – is Cunard’s rapaciousness.  Wine was very expensive, at over $40 a bottle for indifferent wine, and internet access was priced out of sight.  We were for ever being solicited to pay for massages, shaves, iPad lessons and the rest when we had already paid handsomely for the trip, plus service charges on every purchase, and a daily gratuity levy. 

Friday 16 December 2016

Well, blow me down!

For the Annual ramblings , click on the link

I grizzled last time about the wasted time, extra walking and additional cost caused by Transport for London's fiddling with bus routes.  I emailed the company, who say they will sort the signage - and refund my tube fare!  Well, if you don't ask, you don't get.  In fact, I didn't ask directly for the refund, but shall not decline it.

Last gathering of the art group yesterday, and, as per tradition, Miss gave a little demo, working up an earlier charcoal sketch of three hares, using acrylic paints.  The meeting degenerated into a little party to which we'd each brought a contribution.  I'd made some sausage rolls, someone else had brought a rather nice cheeseboard, and there was load of sweet stuff of which I didn't partake.  A number of us had brought in pieces for our January show at Bridges in Edenbridge (I won't link to their web site, since it's sadly out of date).  Our framer rang on Tuesday to say that my last two pieces were ready, which was handy.  I'll put one in for sale, but shall not be too sad if it comes home again.

From the framer's place, I'd to head off to Sevenoaks for a hastily arranged dental appointment.  One of my 1991-vintage crowns broke on Tuesday, so will have to be replaced, but not till February.  Meanwhile, I have a large temporary crown, and hope it stays put.  Not bad timing, I have to say.  Had it happened four days later, it would have cast a bit of a damper on our jolly jaunt to - we hope - warmer climes.

Monday 12 December 2016

Grumpitude

For the Annual ramblings , click on the link

Long nights and short days are bad enough.  Our potentially wonderful transport system is not helping.  I stood beside the N°43 bus timetable (3-7 minute intervals) at London Bridge for a good quarter of an hour on Friday until it occurred to me to check with a N°141 driver whether the 43 had died in the night.  For reasons that aren't immediately obvious, the service now starts at Moorgate, whither Mr 141 driver was happy to take me - and he kindly alerted me when we got there.  In fact I stayed on board as far as Moorfields Hospital in the hope of finding a better choice of buses to take me up to the far end of Islington Green.  Hmm: not a 43 in sight, and the only bus on offer took me only as far as the Angel, leaving me with a lengthy walk, and a late arrival at my meeting.

Better still on the way back.  I went to the usual stop to get a 43 as far as it would take me, and was delighted to see a N°4 indicated as due in 3 minutes' time, since that would take me to Waterloo without the need to change.  Seeing no buses for some minutes, I rolled my eyes skywards, only to see a sign on the top of the post saying 'bus stop closed'.  Information as to the diversion route?  No chance!  At this point I started off for the Angel in futile search of other suitable buses, and to cut a long story short, finished up taking the Khartoum to Cairo express, sardine-fashion, to London Bridge - for the tidy sum of £4.90, if you please!  This is bad news to a tight Scot with a bus pass.

These days, stairs are somewhat tiresome, so it was rather a shock to be reminded of how many have to be negotiated at the recently rebuilt London Bridge to get from the Northern Line to the main line station.  Not to mention rather a lot of corridor.  Still, there are at least lifts at the now rather impressive main line station, so the last lap was easier, and my usual ritual of finishing the first draft of the minutes on the train home helped kill time on the train.

Lovely day on Saturday with Celia, Andy, Dawn and Darcey, three of whom came to lunch.  Martyn had already made the Christmas cake and pudding by the time we decided to decamp over Christmas, so we were already set up with pudding and afternoon tea accoutrements.  I made a starter I'd spotted on line, using some leeks wrenched untimely from the garden that morning, together with lardons, cooked chicken, cream and a spot of Ras al Hanout.  I now have some ideas how to Do Better Next Time.  Main course was a piece of rolled brisket from Tidebrook Manor Farm: I had done it on Friday for hours in the slow cooker, with carrots, garlic, home-grown onions and herbs, red wine, Worcestershire sauce and a few other bits and pieces, and reheated it on Saturday - always best for such a cut.  It seems to have gone down OK, served with charlottes, beans and spiced roast cauliflower.  As I so often say at this point, is it any wonder we're the shape we are?  Darcey, by the way, is a miniature Schnauzer of surpassing charm and excellent behaviour.  She is also a handy guest to have around at the end of a morning's cooking: we've rarely seen the kitchen floor so clean.  Oh, and having served meanly, we have leftovers for a cottage pie tonight.

The good thing about this time of year is the influx of thoughtful greetings from friends round the world.  I posted the first domestic batch of cards this morning, and will give and perhaps receive others at Thursday's art class bash.  We produce our cards in-house, but applaud those who buy cards to support the charities they approve of.  We salve our consciences by highly selective direct debit rather than by buying cards from which the charities derive too little income.

The other good thing about this time of this year is that we have in prospect twelve days devoid of cooking, cleaning and washing up.  More of which anon, as and when we have a Wifie to turn to.  Today's grumpitude arises from a trip to M&S, your obed. servt. having detected a sock shortage when preparing the bag for our forthcoming jolly jaunt.  This is what comes of turfing out thinning socks without replacing them at the time.  Parking at the Mall was somewhat less awful than I'd expected, but M&S was 'orrible.  Queuing for the till is bad enough without the added torture of canned festive crooning over the loudspeakers.  [Snarls, festively.]

Friday 2 December 2016

Annual ramblings 2016

Greetings all round!


All in all, we shall not be sad to see the back of 2016, though it has had some redeeming moments. I have seen rather more of the medical profession this year than heretofore, but then, I'm getting older. Minor surgery on the knee has not worked wonders, but some days are OK, and I'm not hurrying to have the suggested steroid injections. Preferable to the alternative, as they say: just as we were leaving France in September, we received the sad news that Barbara had left us. As we write, we haven't heard what the cause of death was, but we imagine that the decades of smoking and consequent emphysema may have been implicated. Her funeral turned into a memorial service, since the remains had not been released by the coroner: a faintly surreal experience.

Political developments have been somewhat alarming: I was shocked and remain very upset by the referendum vote. Some analysts might observe that a number of opportunist/populist Leave advocates stirred up all the wrong sentiments before the vote, and then cleared off when they were faced with the consequences. They might similarly observe that the Remain campaign was feeble and lacklustre to the point of sabotage. I couldn't possibly express a view. As for Colonial developments, I do not plan to visit the Untied States of America again. Ever. I'm just hoping that the lunacy has not spread to France and Germany.

We've adopted a policy of using funds rather than leaving them to evaporate in savings accounts. More anon.

Garden
Martyn threatens to buy some stencils and mark the summerhouse/studio as 'The Pentagon' given its shape and the US Army surplus colour that we inadvertently bought for it.  We chose the structure, then had a base built for it, together with a path up to it.  It was somewhat alarming that it took three attempts to get a satisfactory kit delivered.  We got there in the end, and it's a nice place to doze off in after lunch on a fine day, and to paint in when it's not too cold.
We had a good crop of spuds this year, and the onions aren't bad.  We've started pulling the leeks, and though we present no threat to the village produce competition, they are wholesome and full of flavour.  The flowery bits haven't been bad: gazanias, pansies and our own fuchsia cuttings have filled the gaps next to the new path, and the roses have been good in parts.  Last year's plantings of cistus and penstemon have rather swamped the border on the right, smothering the roses.  But the good news is that the cistus have flowered better than ever.

Arrivals

Annie dropped in on us on her return from foreign parts at New Year, and we had the pleasure of a visit from Val in October, albeit for the sad occasion of Barbara's funeral.  Bryan and Paula Phillips were over for a few weeks in Europe this summer, and had treated the whole tribe of us to lunch in Covent Garden before we spotted Bryan up at the till.
In Another Place, we had a visit from Yshani, this time for three nights during the piano festival.  While she was with us, we did a lunch for her and three of the other musicians, whom we also ferried to the airport at the end of the bash.  Though we made no artistic input to the event, we were happy to pitch in with the logistics.  Pam and Geoff joined us for a few days in September, and we enjoyed lunch at Le Somail together with the Coopers and Chota.

Departures

As usual, we made three trips to Lagrasse this year.  In the spring, we took the train from Tonbridge to Avignon with only one change, in Ashford.  Lovely way to travel, and, although we'd an early start (thanks to Andy driving us to Tonbridge), we were in Avignon and outside a light lunch by early afternoon.  The drive from there to Lagrasse took a little over two hours, and was tiresome: given that the Eurostar ticket includes a free transfer from the TGV station to the clickety-clack ditto, we'll try to get a connection to Narbonne or Carcassonne next time, and rent a car there.  The return trip was less good.  We'd to get off the train with all our luggage at Lille, file through border controls and then re-board in the same seats.  The process takes a good hour, including hanging about in a hot, stuffy waiting room.  It's not something we'll be doing routinely, though: it was only competitive because Hawkeye Bishop had spotted a promotional fare.
In August/September, we drove south again, spending a night in the outskirts of Geneva, since I needed a new laptop, and prefer the Swiss keyboard.  The drive through the Jura was testing but beautiful, with fine views of Geneva from the Col de la Faucille.  Have to say that the Campanile in Ferney-Voltaire was pretty ho-hum, but adequate, and not too expensive.
For the return journey, we decided to do Bilbao-Portsmouth, spending a night en route south of Pau and another two in the forest above Bilbao.  Dotty guided us over a beautiful route from Tarbes, and we shall probably take a look at it another time.  From Lurbe-Saint-Christau, we headed through the Somport tunnel and on to Pamplona, where we paused for refreshments.  From Jaca to Pamplona we enjoyed vast, parched landscapes: thence to Bilbao was by mountain motorway, with more spectacular if very different scenery.  We saw some pretty execrable driving, I have to say, but survived.  Our lodgings were in a country gite near Meñaka.  Clean, with distinctly rustic furniture, and the welcome was warm and the facilities satisfactory, including an outside dining area - very welcome in the relative cool of the evening when daytime temperatures had been knocking on 40°.  The drive to the ferry port in Bilbao revealed some outdated data in Dotty's elderly memory, and we had one rather hairy moment when I got into the wrong lane as we approached the port.  Well we got there unscathed.  The ride across the Bay of Biscay was somewhat sporting, with quite a swell on the water.  I found the movement quite soothing, but Martyn was less impressed!

Wheels


We rented a vehicle of extraordinary hideousness at Avignon.  It turned out to be a pretty competent little car, though the thick pillars were a nuisance, and the presence of a stick thingy in the middle with numbers 1-6 and R in the middle were puzzling, though I did usually remember what to do with the superfluous pedal.
I ordered a replacement for the Tiguan in the spring.  It was running well enough, but there were a few electrical funnies, and it was older than any other car I'd bought new.  At one point, it seemed like the replacement wouldn't arrive until January, but we were pleasantly suprised to learn that it was on the way in September.
Since the VW had still not had its fraudulent software fixed, a private sale was unlikely.  The trade-in price was an insult, so I got an estimate from one of the car-buying web sites.  It was scarcely better, so I ignored it.  A couple of weeks later, they came back with a far better offer, so I booked an appointment for the day we returned from Bilbao.  Needless to say, an inventory of scratches and chips brought the offer well down, but the ensuing haggling resulted in an acceptable price.  So there we were, a one-car family, on our hind legs in the industrial estate.  Cutting a long story short, we blagged a demo drive home from our friendly SEAT dealer.
The new motor seems to be nice, if a touch thirsty.  It is quiet, comfortable and remarkably nimble: a good comfort/handling compromise.  It's a Spanish VW, built in the Czech Republic.  Go figure.  So, we're an all-SEAT family again.  At 8 years old with only 40-odd thousand miles on the clock, Egg2 is rumbling along satisfactorily, so will probably stay with us for a while yet.

Arts

We enjoyed the Lagrasse piano bash very much, and enjoyed a recital in the church during the chamber music festival later in the year.  The latter included a performance of Franck's second Chorale for organ, given by one Thomas Ospital, the only organist we've known to master the registrations of the rather over-powered organ in the village church. 
Our Thursday morning art crowd held a little exhibition in Edenbridge.  I'd put in a couple of pieces I could bear to part with (but didn't) and (inadvertently) a couple of little pieces that I'd planned to give away or keep.  We have another show coming up in January, but I don't plan to retire on the proceeds.
Martyn has dismantled the model railway layout in Lagrasse, which is sad, since the house shows no sign of selling in the short term.  He is practising a lot of new pieces at the piano, though, so is exercising his creativity in that way.

Kate's Fire and Phoenix marks the 350th anniversary of the Great Fire of London.  It has completed a series of performances at the Bridewell Theatre and a number of the City churches rebuilt after the fire.  We saw it in a church that actually survived the fire: All Hallows by the Tower.  We enjoyed it very much, and in particular the versatility of the actors, each of whom played a number of parts (with only one slight costume continuity slip!).  Photos of the performance here.

Food and Drink
We've been a little disappointed by some familiar addresses this year, though the Auberge du Somail performed better in September than in May.  Its sister establishment, the Guinguette in Argens-Minervois was a bit better, though the place is distinctly quirky, lacking a proper dining room.  
Back at the ranch, we've been working on dishes like pork rillettes and beef casseroles, and too many delicious puddings to mention thanks to Martyn's expertise in the medium.
Our house wine tends to be a Navarre rosé from good old Fortnums.  Galling to find it at less than half that local price in the same firm's shop near Bilbao.  Well, who needs the single market, for goodness' sake?  While in Bilbao, we bought a few bottles of Txakoli, the dry white wine of the Basque country, and were somewhat underwhelmed.

What next?
We shall be out and about over Christmas, so send our greetings in advance, along with hopes for a better 2017 for us all.  

Best wishes from us both

Martyn and David