France Aigueperse

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  • Day 1

    “Cross a recent landslide? Oh, can I”

    April 26 in France ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

    Hello from the mountains, people of the cities and plains!

    Tis I, Ruby, and indeed I have returned to bring you a detailed and complete version of what exactly we do, where and why. Because as I read mum’s (magnificent) blog, I noticed that many a moment was left out and also I have too much free time on my hands (this is a lie I procrastinate like I’m going for a medal in that field and who cares about exams really hahahaha).

    Anyway!

    So I do recall that last night (after arriving, snacking (on food not bros worry not (well there was one bro in the supermarket but yk)) and hot-tubbing) it was loudly and communally decided that we would aim to leave at 11. But when I awoke to the pitch black room I saw that it was 10:40 (blackout blinds are art I swear) and I realised that this was yet again a prime example of life as a Simpson: not really meeting your targets.

    But to be fully honest this was a target I was more than willing to not meet. And so as to avoid being made to get ready I decided to simply read, and ignore messages sent on the family group. Mum was telling Lily that we were asleep and I was not about to dispute this, but sadly Lily apparently has no concept of sister-solidarity because she strongly advocated for mum and dad to wake us up. And sadly-er, they then woke us up.

    And then we had to eat breakfast in mugs?? Because this place?? Doesn’t have bowls?? Like??? I was perplexed at this discovery because what self respecting place doesn’t have bowls. Anyway. The breakfast was still delicious (cornflakes in hot chocolate, I recommend to everyone) and then we all got ready, and dad saw allegra in a black t shirt and dark trousers, and said “snap!” Because he was wearing the same. And so we all wore a black t shirt and had dark trousers! It was so fun and we were all like a real family!

    Except mum who wore a white t-shirt.

    Jkjk mum is obvi still the best madre I know, but still.

    Anyway! And then we set off, and after some jokes about how we were like assassins because we all filed out of the sliding door of our black van dressed in head to toe black, we confidently started on our path.

    And immediately lost all confidence and questioned everything, got confused, wondered if we were lost. Luckily my excellent translation skills let us know that we were on the right track, and so we, as per instructions, clambered (what a word amirite like that is just 10/10 when you say clamber you can just picture someone clambering it’s amazing) up a, at times sheer, rock face, testing our teamwork skills and strength (were I a more honest person, less exaggerative woman, I would tell you to picture Anna in Frozen).

    Our father had no small amount of trouble as he has weak knees and so was not up to the leaping across slippery rocks in a stream and the climbing a miniature cliff in the way we all were. It was quite funny. And once we had made it out of that first trial, as had to cross a recent landslide, which seemingly worried my mother (I wonder why), and she wittily said, and I quote, “cross a recent landslide? Oh, can I”.

    And then we actually saw a path, and signposts, and even a bench! And for the first time (we were about an hour in, I feel I should mention) we got actual evidence that we were following a trail, and we were not simply victims of our own imagination and determination to never admit that we may be wrong. I mean it was literally not even a trail, it was a bunch of rocks. And so we followed it and life felt easy because all we had to do was walk!

    After I have no clue how long, we came upon a waterfall, and decided to park our butts and have lunch! And it is a well known fact that no food is better than a sandwich, hastily prepared in the haze of fatigue, stuffed into a paper bag with two other sandwiches, had the many flavours leaking into each other, marinating, before becoming soggy and smooshed. Literal heaven on earth.

    So yeah, that was lunch, and we also had dolmadaes and crisps and apple slices. Life was good! Dad poetically proclaimed his undying love of waterfalls, we analysed and compared our “step symmetry”, thank you health app, at some point Dad was mocked by yours truly and I can’t remember why but everyone found it funny, and then we were off again!

    We followed some signs, the twins and I played a game where we had to each sing a word from a song (we failed sadly, I blame Tate and her lack of rhythm), we posed, sat on the ground, consumed walker’s chocolate, all of this very nonchalantly of course.

    And truth be told, the second half of the walk was rather uneventful, and I found it quite boring, because it really was just a walk in the forest and it looked very similar to the walk in the forest behind our house, so there was that.

    Towards the end I decided to walk with my parents who had been behind me and the twins the whole way, so I hung back and struck up a conversation about Marvel and Black Widow and sexism. An experience I shall never repeat, because while mum just loves it when Lily talks about her views on feminism, she equally loves to disagree with mine. Needless to say mum and dad told me I was wrong, ignored my examples, and then made some really really bad jokes about Marvel and “vibranium [redacted]”, “holographic [redacted]”, “artificially intelligent [redacted]”, and many more different types of [redacted].

    I was very unamused and rather disturbed.

    We then, finally, arrived back at our starting point, (after dad had a midlife crisis because we passed an older man who was walking, and dad was all “if I had worn the same shirt as him, you would all be saying that it was me we just passed” which to be fair is fully true and it would have been hilarious) and I was très happy, but then our parents said that we should walk into the old town. I said we shouldn’t, they said there was a boulangerie, I said we still shouldn’t, but who was I kidding this isn’t a democracy, so into the old town we walked.

    Lily called at this time, so I regaled her with tales of Dad climbing up the gorge. And the boulangerie was closed. So the old town was pointless. There is a lesson to take away here somewhere: always listen to The Blue Bastard aka Contessa Rubina de Tuesday Casswell Simpson, aka me.

    And so we drove to a nearby supermarket, got some bread and other snackables, and headed home.

    You know the scene in penguins where Skipper is like “I think we all know what we have to do next *dramatic music*” and then it cuts to them bouncing on a bouncy castle? That was us, but in a jacuzzi, to clarify we did not jump on the jacuzzi). But after a while, it got really warm and I needed to shower and so I got out to test the shower at this place and it’s one of those weird fancy showers where there are no walls to it? It’s just like in the bathroom over some different stone, with no door or anything, which is really strange. Like I wanted to grab something from the sink counter, and so I just grabbed it.

    Moving on.

    And then we snacked on excessive amounts of mini pretzels (those germans knew what they were doing) and watched some Derry Girls because honestly, top tier show, hilarious, 10/10 recommend.

    And then dad dropped some not so subtle hints about hot chocolate but no one could be bothered to get up and make some so no one did and we didn’t have hot chocolate 😔. But then dad made dinner and we had Sunday Night Sausage and Mash but on a Saturday, I know I know we are rebels, we are anarchists, we are rapscallions. It was exemplary (what excellent mashed potatoes, it’s been many years since I’ve had such an exemplary vegetable, can you tell we watched Pride and Prejudice recently?).

    And finally we all sat in the sofa area to watch more Derry Girls because we are “knackared” as mum might say, that is “knackered” to the rest of the world, and ultimately a chill time was had by all, and mum made an absolutely delicious desert, with greek yoghurt, strawberries, hot chocolate powder…

    A moment of silence for our Fallen Comrade, may she work at McDonalds in peace.

    Peace out chaps!
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  • Day 47

    19. Stopp: eine Übernachtung in Champs

    January 14 in France ⋅ ☀️ 0 °C

    bei bis zu -8 Grad (vorhergesagt). Dies ist kälter als bei uns zu Hause. Allerdings befinden wir uns immerhin noch auf einer Höhe von knapp 600 m.
    Wir kämpfen uns so durch das winterliche Frankreich.
    Die Fahrt heute morgen über das monumentale Brückenbauwerk in Millau konnten wir leider gar nicht genießen, da der Nebel uns quasi eingehüllte. Es folgte eine wunderbare Autofahrt über Berg und Tag durch ein „gezuckertes“ und eisiges Wintermärchen. Sehr schön anzusehen.
    Große Aufgaben liegen vor uns: Tankstelle mit LPG finden in Clermont-Ferrand. Die erste angefahrene Tankstelle war SB und die Gastankstelle abgesperrt… hm….
    Kein Servicepersonal weit und breit in Sicht, ein klarer Nachteil von SB.
    Ein Mitarbeiter der hiesigen Feuerwehr bekam unser Desaster mit und beschrieb mit Händen und Füßen halb englisch und halb französisch den Weg einer weiteren Tankstelle mit Gas, die abfahrbereit wäre.
    Gesagt-Getan.
    Wir drängeln uns durch Stau und Berufsverkehr, um schlussendlich festzustellen zu müssen, dass auch diese Tankstelle für größere Womo nicht zu empfehlen ist.
    Was nun?
    Da uns das ganze Prozedere knapp 2 h Zeit gekostet hat, ging es durch den Berufsverkehr zurück zur Autobahn.
    Eine der kommenden Raststätten sollte das nächste Ziel unserer Begierde werden.
    Abgefahren um zu staunen, warum hier wohl nur Pkw stehen?!
    Wir fahren über die Brücke zur LKW-Tankstelle. Dort gibt es Diesel, aber leider kein Gas.
    Wieder zurück zur PKW-Tankstelle, die zwischenzeitlich die Durchfahrtsbegrenzungshöhe aufgehoben hat.
    Endlich getankt: Gastank voll und Diesel ebenso.

    Uhrzeittechnisch liegen wir bei knapp 16.00 Uhr. Leider geht die Sonne schon um 17.30 Uhr unter. Wir merken, wir sind schon deutlich nördlicher und die Tage werden merklich kürzer.

    Also bleiben wir heute Nacht im Womo-Bereich, der sehr schön im Grünen gelegen ist. Wir sind die Einzigen und haben den ganzen Platz für uns allein.

    Nun heißt es: Hund schnappen und raus. Kurze Runde, auch der Hund findet es etwas „schattig“.

    Heute bleibt die Küche kalt und wir schlagen bei Bürger King zu.

    Morgen läuft es hoffentlich wieder besser.

    🥹
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  • Day 19

    Les bonnes choses ont une fin

    May 2, 2024 in France ⋅ ☁️ 10 °C

    Salut, une dernière fois
    Ajourd'hui c'était le dernier jour à Vichy et en France et demain nous partirons à 9 heures. L'après midi quand nous avons fini l'école, nous avons décidé d'aller acheter des souvenirs et la nourriture pour l'autobus. Après nous sommes allées dans une cafétéria et nous avons fait une soirée agréable.
    Je crois que pendant cettes 3 semaines j'ai pu apprende beaucoup de nouvelles mots et mon français s'est amélioré tellement. J'ai vraiment aimé le groupe ici et c'était très amusant et drôle avec eux mais maintenant je suis prête de retourner à la maison parce que ma famille et ma chienne me manquent beaucoup.
    À cause de ça, je dis: Au revoir!
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  • Day 15

    Clermont-Ferrand et le Crazy Jump Park

    April 28, 2024 in France ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

    Coucouuu :)
    C'est encore dimanche, et nous avons seulement 5 jours à Vichy. Cette semaine l'école était un peu plus ennuyeuse que la dernière semaine car nous n'avons pas fait des nouvelles choses sauf le futur antérieur. Mais les gens dans notre cours sont très gentil et nous avons beaucoup de conversations (bien sûr en français).
    Le mercredi nous visitions Clermont-Ferrand, une ville plus grande que Vichy. Il y avait une cathédrale noire ,qui était incroyablement belle, et une autre eglise plus petite qui nous avons pu entrer. Après nous faisions du shopping dans une centre commerciale.
    Hier, le samedi, nous avons fait une pique-nique dans un pavillon. Tout le monde a pris quelque chose et nous avons tout partagé. L'après midi nous avons passé le temps dans le "crazy jump park" à Vichy et c'était très drôle et je me suis senti comme un enfant.
    Mon objectif pour la dernière semaine est de profiter du temps avec mes amis parce que notre séjour linguistique est malheureusement bientôt terminé. :(
    À bientôt!
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  • Day 15

    la deuxième semaine

    April 28, 2024 in France ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

    Malheureusement, il reste seulement une semaine avant notre arivée en Suisse . La deuxième semaine était comme la première: froid et venteux. Heureusement la prochaine semaine s'améliore :)
    Pendant cette semaine nous avons vistité la ville Clérmond-Ferand qui me plaisait, en particulier la cathédrale sombre et le temps libre pendant nous avons fait du shopping :) Sinon nous étions chaque jour dans un caffé et une fois nous sommes allés dans un parc de trampoline, c'était très drôle :)
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  • Day 1

    La première semaine

    April 14, 2024 in France ⋅ ☁️ 22 °C

    Coucou! Je suis depuis une semaine à Vichy et elle est passée très vite! Quand j'ai rencontré ma mère d'acceuil à la gare routière, j'avais un peu peur mais elle est très contente et nous parlons de tout ! J'ai aussi rencontré ses parents. Je me sens très bien et j'adore la maison de ma famille: Il y a une cinéma et j'ai und grande chambre avec une seule salle de bain :) Alors la ville Vichy est petite mais mon groupe et moi en tirons le meilleur parti.Read more

  • Day 117

    Aigueperse

    February 28, 2024 in France ⋅ ⛅ 9 °C

    Nach dem Besuch bei der Gendarmerie kommen wir erst sehr spät los. Wir vermeiden die teure Autobahnmaut und fahren durch die wunderschöne Berglandschaft der Cevennen und durch Millau.
    Unseren Schlafplatz finden wir in Aigueperse, einem kleinen Städtchen zwischen Clermont-Ferrand und Vichy. Der städtische Stellplatz ist ruhig gelegen.
    Wir machen den obligatorischen Stadtrundgang und besichtigen die Kirche.
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  • Day 192

    “A feeble attempt at a hill”

    Yesterday in France ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

    Hello from the mountains, people from the cities and plains!

    I strongly debated writing this blog because, as perhaps you may know, I can never commit to anything, and I hate writing the blog every night, and I only wrote the one yesterday because mum missed out some crucial details.

    But you know, while I also can’t commit, I am never one to admit defeat either (it makes for a complicated life I must admit).

    And I could never abandon my people of the cities and plains!

    And so, here I am once more. So! Today I woke up at 10:10 and I really hoped once again that the parents wouldn’t wake us up but we had less luck than last time because our door was brutally opened no earlier than 10:20!

    But I once again enjoyed a delicious mug-breakfast of hot-chocolate-cornflakes! And then Mum and Allegra realised that they were both wearing pink t-shirts! And I had a pink t-shirt, and Tate had a purple-pink one!

    And then dad said he had no pink. And everyone was a little annoyed, because we could have been team pink today, but dad instead put on a salmon t-shirt. I don’t think he realises that salmon is pink. We all wondered why he said he had no pink for a second.

    And then the moment passed, and we strolled put the door with vigour, ready for our walk! We had to drive to the starting point of course, and as we drive, the parents flicked through the radio stations playing on this fine sunday morning. Thankfully, they heeded our shouts of “SKIP” when a song was terrible, at first.

    Less thankfully, when they came upon a radio stations playing french accordeon and trumpet instrumental live music, and apparently, this was the *perfect* music for our drive.

    And so we drove along jauntily, feeling like something out of a rubbish comedy or a french movie. So also a rubbish comedy.

    And thennn they finally switched after three “songs” and APT by Rosé and Bruno Mars came on! And if you know the Simpson family, you know that there are few things we love more than driving and hearing APT coming on the radio, and then singing along like some carpool karaoke.

    And sing along we did!

    And then we arrived, and set off on our walk.

    It was rather uneventful at first, dad (who had, earlier on, complained about “being given jip about his appreciation of waterfalls”) began to talk in length about how much he just *loved* forests. And really, would he prefer a waterfall or a forest? A waterfall in a forest would be ideal.

    So on and so forth.

    I walked ahead to join my young sisters, who bullied me about how much cooler they were (as per usual) and then they joked about some reference I didn’t have, and then finally they accepted that I was walking with them. At some point, allegra pointed at a volcano (dormant, of course) and said “it’s nothing like Norway, that is a feeble attempt at a hill”, naming today’s blog. Everyone say thank you, Allegra!

    Speaking of whom, she was complaining about not being mentioned in the blog yesterday, so please be glad at your mention, Allegra 🙄.

    We entered a forest, a peculiar one (remarked upon very much by dad, who is still going on about how cool nature is), since on one side of the path there was a ghostly, messy, twisted forest of beech trees.

    INTERLUDE: Allegra would also like it to be noted (bossy bastard that she is, I mean twice in one blog?) that when dad said (of course it was dad, trees and all that,) “these are beech trees”, Allegra wittily replied, “no they’re not, this is a forest, dad”. And then, no word of a lie, Dad laughed (something highly sought after by the average Simpson daughter), and not only did he laugh, but he pointed at Allegra, like he was going, ‘good one, Leg’, and *then*, he said he was going to use that joke!! And later that same day, he did!! So needless to say, Allegra has a god complex.

    Interlude over! And on the other side of the path, there were some neatly planted, tall, orderly pine trees on a mossy blanket. It was a very beautiful sight, something out of a fairytale, ethereal, otherworldly, deep greens on one side, pale greys on the other.

    So we decided to do a pano and like, run behind the camera, and be in it twice. That did it justice for sure.

    But it was a decidedly cool pano.

    Anyway, we continued up our oath, veered off to begin the steep, hilly part of our walk. Pretty much immediately, me and mum fell behind, and of course, this is not because we are slow. Or because we hate walking up hills. Or because we dislike putting in effort.

    It’s because we’re anaemic! Valid excuse! For any and everything! I use it on the daily! (No seriously we have dangerously low iron and in fact if anyone ever asks me about it I will explain in length and detail about when they did the blood test and it was a disaster and i even fainted, because I am entirely narcissistic and I like talking about interesting things that have happened to me, yes I am aware that it is not really interesting. Do I care? No. Hey, maybe that’s why I write these blogs!!) Anyway, me and mum loudly whined at our much further ahead family, “we’re anaeeeeeeemic, anaemiiiiiic” which I found hilarious. Because mum was wining with me for once.

    And finally, we made it to the top of the hill! There was a rather basic view, and we took some pictures, and then we walked along, and took some pictures, and then we stopped for lunch. I did some posing with my sandwich, because earlier that morning we had to convince dad to make the sandwiches again, because he makes the best ones, and he said “why me”, and I said “because of RooPaul’s Gourmet Bakery” (an old name for when I partook in the sandwich making many a year ago) and he said “there’s not much Roo in it now”, and I said “I do the marketing”. So! Like I said, best sandwiches ever! Boom. Job done.

    And after that we then walked over some more hills, and downs some stairs, and up some stairs, and through some woods. We saw some viewpoints, it was the same view.

    And then mum and dad had a collective midlife crisis slash I don’t even know what and started naming trees? And like, inventing a story about some deadly battle between pines, because there were many who had fallen over? So there was the “transpine” who really wanted to be a beech tree, and the “octotree”? Of course, the entire fallen “infantree” was present as well. And there was no escape for me because up ahead my sisters were like shout-rapping some Kendrick Lamar song.

    The moment of crazy passed, and then mum began to mention Lily, again, and how it wasn’t the same without her, and that we should have a minute of silence for the fallen comrade.

    So we stopped in a circle, but between me blowing my nose loudly, Tate jabbering on, and Allegra laughing, the minute was hard to start.

    But then it did? And three seconds later we all hear mum start loudly humming the, like, fallen comrade tune thing? And dad just looked purely affronted, and we couldn’t hold in our laughter, and mum was trying to explain that “it’s what happens when you remember a fallen soldier!” and we laughed and laughed and kept walking, and then we hear the actual trumpet sound ringing through the silence, and mum has pulled it up on Spotify, and we’re all laughing again, and I say “we need to film this!” And they all stand in a line, hand on the heart, music sombrely playing, desperately holding in our laughter- anyway.

    Maybe the moment of crazy hadn’t quite passed.

    And we made it up another hill, and took some photos, and admired the view. Mum insisted that we had just walked through the crater of a volcano, and I said it didn’t look like it, and so dad said that he had looked on a map, and that if it was a volcano, it was “impuyseptible”. It is worth noting that a puy is like a hill in french, and that considering we were doing the “three puys walk”, dad was cramming in as many “puy” puns as he could. Anyway, after that one, I told him to “puys off”, which amused mum to no end, dad even said it was a good one and pointed (god complex for me too, I have joined Allegra’s ranks), and mum clapped, and then pulled out the slow, impressed clap, before deciding that it even warranted a patented “Tim Clap” which had been mastered by Tate, who obliged.

    Anyway, after that moment, it was, as dad said, “all downhill from here!” And he and the twins sped ahead, but me and mum were really slow on the downhill (because we’re anaemic, duh) and had some interesting conversations about Narnia, Harry Potter, and eventually JK Rowling and transphobia. And then we were scandalised to see dad and the twins taking a tree selfie without us, and then he even dared joke and say “it’s just the tree of us”!

    Anyway, we soon made it back to the car, and drove home, relieved as we compared once more our step asymmetry, step count, etc.

    And as we neared our humble abode, you will never guess what played on the radio in a true full circle moment!

    French accordion, of course!

    No, kidding, it was APT and so we all, once more, pulled out our best karaoke talents and sang our way into the driveway.

    Upon entrance into our aforementioned humble abode, we just went straight into the hot tub and chilled, relaxing our muscles. But I, the unloved eldest child, was forced out to make a round of hot chocolate.

    Which I did and it was delicious and then we compared photos, and watched some Derry Girls (hilarious) and mum stressed a little because Lily hasn’t been answering and while my usual hilarious reply is “maybe she’s dead”, I figured mum was not in the mood (and she really hates it when I say that).

    And then we had some dinner: Monday Nighy Pasta on a Sunday! So either upholding our reputation as rapscallions, or we are simply fools who have no concept of day nor date.

    We then watched some more Derry Girls as I finally motivated myself to put metaphorical pen to metaphorical paper and typed up this blog!! And it took me like six episodes to write so I feel bad for anyone who has actually made it this far. Seriously I apologise but hey, you did this to yourself.

    And so I must leave you, see you chaps tomorrow maybe!

    A moment of silence for our Fallen Comrade, may she work at McDonalds in peace.

    Peace out chaps!
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  • Day 6–7

    5. Stopp: Vichy

    December 4, 2024 in France ⋅ ☁️ 1 °C

    Im Regen gestartet und im Regen angekommen.
    Wir sind nach insgesamt 6 h Reise (400 km) inkl. Buschi-Buschi-Pause für unsere Fellnase in Vichy angekommen.

    Die Stadt Vichy ist ein am Fluss Allier gelegener Kurort im Nordteil der Auvergne und das bedeutendste Heilbad Frankreichs, 260 m hoch gelegen. Es leben ca 26.000 Einwohner in Vichy.

    Am 24. Juli 2021 nahm das Welterbekomitee der UNESCO Vichy als eine der bedeutenden Kurstädte Europas (Great Spas of Europe) in die Liste des Weltkulturerbes auf.

    Es soll eine sehr schöne Stadt sein. Einst galt sie als "Königin der Kurbäder“.

    Der Wettergott hält Regen für uns parat und so werden wir die geschichtsträchtige Stadt wohl ein anderes Mal besuchen. Deswegen gibt es heute leider keine Fotos.

    Nach einer sehr spektakulären Anreise aufgrund falscher Angaben in der P4N-App, die uns durch ganz Vichy mit unserem 12 Tonner führte, haben wir den Stellplatz dennoch gefunden.
    Leider gab es ein Problem: die Hubstützanlage funktioniert nicht.
    Wir befragen Mr Google und hoffen, eine Lösung zu finden.

    Wir üben wir uns weiter in Entschleunigung. Gemütlich im Womo kochen und später Fußball für Uwe ⚽️

    Morgen geht es weiter 🚐

    Habt alle einen schönen Abend und eine gute Nacht 😘💤
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  • Day 31

    Richtung Germany

    November 22, 2024 in France ⋅ 🌙 1 °C

    Heute kurz und schmerzlos und ungeschönt. Richtung Heimat müssen wir Kilometer machen . Das war heute so und wird morgen und übermorgen auch so sein. Wir sind vor dem Frühstück beim Sonnenaufgang gestartet. Es ist mittlerweile ganz schön frisch hier auch wenn die Sonne scheint. Wir sind in den Bergen schon durch Schneewälder gefahren 🥶. Die Campingplätze sind jetzt alle geschlossen haben aber etwas gefunden , sogar mit Strom. So können wir unser Öfchen anschmeißen und es bleibt warm im Camper.Read more

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