Sunday, January 20

Finally: In full preparation to walk the Camino!




"This is the way of peace:
Overcome evil with good,
and falsehood with truth,
and hatred with love."[/i][/b]
....Peace Pilgrim





Why make this pilgrimage?

I have always had a yearning to do things that challenge me -- to take the road less travelled, to explore the unknown territory. Deciding to walk the Camino de Santiago-- making the pilgrimage to Santiago Compostela, is not taking a road less travelled -- on the contrary -- thousands walk this road every year! Nor is it unknown territory -- it is probably the best known pilgrimage of all time. But for me it will be -- finally taking on this challenge that I had set myself several years ago will be the road less travelled and an unknown territory in my personal life in every sense.`


Father Frank de Gouveia said:

Every major religion has a tradition and practice of pilgrimage.

Pilgrimage is a ritual journey, either alone or in a group, with the aim of achieving purification, perfection or salvation; a religious experience in which a series of bonds are established between a place of this world and a higher sphere, between an individual traveller and a community, between a flesh-and-blood pilgrim and he who is reborn, purified by the consummation of his goal. These bonds are what distinguish pilgrimage from other types of journey or travel.

Pilgrimage requires a sacred journey, a sacred place and a sacred goal. The sacred place may take many forms – a tree, a spring, a mountain, or a place where holy relics are revered. On the journey – a metaphor of earthly life – a personal transformation is initiated and effected through a series of rites that culminate in the moment of arrival. Here, his goal attained, the pilgrim is reborn, a new man.


All the above refers to pilgrims in the traditional sense. Of course, many people do the camino for other reasons – they may be keen walkers who want to do a truly long walk, they may want to walk on Roman roads or see famous places, they may want to find themselves or ponder the meaning of life and their place in it. They may be religiously motivated or simply look for a spiritual experience. They may hope to find the reason for their need to make the pilgrimage along the way....

Pilgrims have been travelling to Santiago de Compostela on foot or horseback for over a thousand years. (The Bishop of Le Puy, who went there in AD 950, was one of the first). Some say the cult of the spiritual traveller along the path existed even earlier as the way led to Cape Finisterre the end of the known world.

The route to Santiago was a Roman trade-route. It was nicknamed by travellers la voje ladee, the Milky Way. It was the road under the stars. The pale arm of the Milky Way that stretched out and pointed the way to the edge of the known world : to Cape Finisterre, and Santiago --- far away under the mists and Atlantic skies of Galicia, woods and water in a Celtic landscape of menhirs and lost gods that exert an appeal that is infinitely pre Christian.

Its 800 kilometers from the Saint Jean Pied de Port in the foothills of the Pyrenees to Santiago de Compostela in the western reaches of Galicia have changed little in that time. For although sections of it have now become modern tarred roads and many of the refuges and other accommodation set up by religious orders along the way to minister to the needs of pilgrims have long since disappeared, the Camino still passes through the same villages, crosses the same rivers, visits the same chapels, churches, cathedrals and other monuments as did the path taken by our predecessors in centuries gone by.

At the height of its popularity in the eleventh and twelfth centuries over half a million people a year are said to have made the pilgrimage from different parts of Europe, the majority of them from France.

The high point of the pilgrimage occurred between the years 1000 and l500 but although numbers dwindled after that, due to the Reformation and other, political, factors, the stream of pilgrims making the trudge westwards to the far reaches of Galiciain north-west Spain never completely dried up and in the late twentieth century is making something of a comeback.

Several thousand people walk the Way of St James (Sant' Iago) every year, whether from the Pyrenees, from different parts of France or from even further afield: it is not uncommon, even nowadays, to meet Swiss, German, Belgian or Dutch pilgrims, for example, who have set out from home to make the entire journey on foot. The Cathedral authorities in Santiago maintain a register of pilgrims and in 1991 recorded a total of 7274 travelling on foot, bicycle or horseback (compared with 5760 in 1989, the year of the Pope's August visit there, and 4918 in 1990).


Click on Link:
  • The Pilgrimage

  • Home stay in a chateau: On the way of the Camino



  • Chateau Lalinde : The perfect venue for your event

  • Relocation Orientation in France



  • Saturday, January 19

    Who flies where in France? Useful airline and flight information




    Thanks to an article in The Telegraph, herewith a list of all the airlines that fly from the UK into France. Just about every region and/or airport in both countries is covered -- and you are sure to find a convenient and reasonably close airport from - and to which you can fly to come enjoy a marvellous holiday in France this year!


    Aer Arann (0870 876 7676) Cardiff to Nantes.

    Air France (0870 142 4343) Paris from Aberdeen, Birmingham, Bristol, Edinburgh, Manchester, Newcastle and Southampton; Nice and Strasbourg from London City.

    British Airways (0870 850 9850) Bordeaux, Geneva, Lyon, Marseille, Nice, Paris and Toulouse from Heathrow, Gatwick and London City.

    BMI (0870 607 0555) Heathrow to Lyon and Nice; Manchester to Lyon.

    BMIbaby (0871 224 0224) Bordeaux, Marseilles, Nice, Paris and Perpignan from Birmingham, East Midlands and Manchester.

    Eastern Airways (0870 366 9100) Southampton to Angers.

    EasyJet (0905 821 0905 - premium rate) Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg, Biarritz, Bordeaux, Geneva, Grenoble, La Rochelle, Lyon, Marseilles, Nice, Paris and Toulouse from Gatwick, Luton, Stansted, Belfast, Birmingham, Bristol, East Midlands, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Liverpool and Newcastle.

    EasyJet is taking over GB Airways, which offers summer-only services (from May) from Gatwick to Montpellier, Nantes and Ajaccio and Bastia in Corsica - the flights are already bookable with EasyJet.

    Flybe (0871 522 6100) Avignon, Bergerac, Brest, La Rochelle, Limoges, Nice, Paris, Perpignan and Rennes from Belfast, Birmingham, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Exeter, Glasgow, Leeds-Bradford, Manchester, Newcastle, Norwich and Southampton.

    Flyglobespan (0871 271 0415) Edinburgh to Geneva and Nice.

    Jet2.com (0871 226 1737) Avignon, La Rochelle, Nice, Paris and Toulouse from Belfast, Edinburgh, Leeds-Bradford, Manchester.

    Lyddair (01797 322207) Lydd to Le Touquet.

    Ryanair (0871 246 0000) Angoulême, Bergerac, Béziers, Biarritz, Brest, Carcassonne, Dinard, Grenoble, La Rochelle, Limoges, Marseilles, Montpellier, Nantes, Nîmes, Paris (Beauvais), Pau, Perpignan, Poitiers, Rodez, Toulon and Tours from Stansted, Luton, Birmingham, Bournemouth, Edinburgh, Liverpool, East Midlands, Glasgow and Manchester.

    Skysouth (01273 446400) Shoreham to Paris (Pontoise), Deauville, Caen and Le Touquet, in eight-seater planes.

    Thomsonfly (0870 190 0737) operates summer-only flights to Corsica from Gatwick, Birmingham, Bristol and Manchester.

    Aéroport de Bergerac Périgord Dordogne
    Route d’Agen
    24100 BERGERAC


    aerobergerac@dordogne.cci.fr

    Tél. : 05 53 22 25 25

    Fax : 05 53 24 35 43

    Sita : EGCAPXH

    Telex : 541064 F

    Code IATA : EGC

    Code OACI : LFBE



    Click on Link:

  • Chateau Lalinde : The perfect venue for your event

  • Wonderful apartment to rent in Bordeaux

  • Relocation Orientation in France



  • Wednesday, January 16

    Monday 30 January 2006 : An exceptional winter wonderland -- this time two years ago!




    The Canal de Lalinde

    Looking back in the archives, I came acorss this post -- and although it is cold and wet right now (especially compared with the beautiful sunshine and warm days in South Africa which I sadly bid farewell yesterday!) it is nowhere near as cold as it was laast year or the year before. Truly exceptional this was.....

    Monday, January 30, 2006
    An exceptional winter wonderland


    Apparently, according to the local records, this wintry weather does not happen more than about once in a decade. Twelve inches of snow in 36 hours! And the countryside and villages are transformed into a picture book scene. Although picturesque and exciting for a newcomer to the area, snow in these areas can be very disrupting -- few people have vehicles equipped with snow tyres or chains and as harldy anyone in these usually warmer climes are accustomed to driving on snow covered or icy roads, the world around us came to a virtual halt. ....But I never heard a single soul complain about that and most of us were out there with our cameras and walking boots and enjoying the glacial beauty of a countryside clad in white.


    The Canal de Lalinde




    Click on Link:

  • Chateau Lalinde : The perfect venue for your event

  • Relocation Orientation in France



  • Back home at Chateau Lalinde!




    What a fabulous site it was when the Flybe plane from Southampton picked up the beacon and glided in straight over Chateau Lalinde on its way in to Bergerac airport!

    Not even the lashing rain and gusting wind and 3'C temperature could spoil that good fuzzy warm feeling of returning home!

    Home sweet home!



    Click on Link:

  • Chateau Lalinde : The perfect venue for your event

  • Relocation Orientation in France



  • Sunday, January 13

    Michael Kay : My discovery of a multi-faceted artist in the Dordogne























    There is something to be said for nature vs. nurture. Or is it just that living in such a beautiful part of the world brings out the creativity and talent in people. Not that they did not have the talent before, but it seems that when they leave the big crowded cities and rushed rat race and polluted air behind and come to settle here in the Southwest of France, there is something in the air – or the water? – that makes them blossom and surprise even themselves with their latent gifts of creative art. Or is it that when people leave their land of birth behind to go settle in a new country and in a new environment, a side of their creativity is awakened, enhanced by a different perspective, different stimulus, a different language?

    I recently enjoyed a delicious meal in L’Imparfait in Bergerac and was immediately struck by the gorgeous water jugs on the tables. Each table was adorned with a small work of art – a ceramic, slightly out of kilter designed jug, decorated with delicately colourful figures of women, reminiscent of the work of Lautrec, but with an individuality that makes you want to go pick up each and every jug to inspect it more closely. Beautifully crafted in sensuous lines, the jugs form a perfect backdrop for the equally sensuous figures and faces of women.

    I was not the first to comment to the manager about the jugs! He had a card ready at hand of the artist responsible for them, so it was with great anticipation that I set off over the hills of the Dordogne one misty winter’s afternoon to go look for the man behind the jugs – another fellow-expat who has made France his home – and source of inspiration.

    I am not sure what I expected to find, but Michael Kay was a surprise to me --- if I had met him at a dinner party, I would probably have guessed him to be ….. well, anything but a potter. He welcomed me at the door with a wide smile and a warm handshake, drawing me into the lovely large living room of their restored farm house, one of a cluster commune sitting perched on top of a hill not far from Beaumont. In front of a crackling wood fire we sipped coffee and ate delicious banana cake, that Sue, his partner had specially baked, chatting about his fascinating career.

    It was only in the early 90’s that Michael, then a successful graphic artist in London, discovered his love for clay. “I have become fascinated by the amazing complexity and unpredictability of the medium and the endless possibilities for the making and decorating of a form. The concept of ‘the illustrated vessel’ – applying playful and narrative images onto a three-dimensional canvas, opens up endless creative possibilities.”

    This is very obvious in his work. Some of his pieces are more sculptural than functional – such as his totems – intricate collections of people and animals that demonstrate a strong mythological influence whilst still mesmerizing the viewer in the complexity of its sometimes erotic subtext, frequent touches of humour, intelligent use of glaze and colour and hidden meanings.

    I work on the edge of the potter’s craft”, says Michael. “I consider myself rather a painter or illustrator – engaging the onlooker in a narrative or fantasy, much the same as those masters of story telling, the ancient Greeks.”

    However you look at his work, he successfully fuses the various disciplines of painting, sculpture and story-telling into a powerful language of its own – a language that not only crosses the boundaries of time and space – but a language that crosses all boundaries of country, culture and custom.

    Michael Kay has exhibited in many locations in France and the UK. He is preparing for yet another large exhibition in Paris, but currently his work may be seen at:

    Galerie Anagama
    29, RUE DU VIEUL ABREUVOIR
    78100 SAINT-GERMAIN-EN-LAYE
    PARIS, FRANCE
    DESSINE-MOI LA TERRE
    17630 LA FLOTTE EN RE
    ISLE DE RE, FRANCE


    www.michaelkayceramics.net
    michaelkay@orange.fr




    Click on Link:

  • Chateau Lalinde : The perfect venue for your event

  • Relocation Orientation in France



  • Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...