France
Département de l'Aveyron

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    • Jour 13

      At St-Jean-de-la-Blaquiere

      22 avril, France ⋅ 🌬 13 °C

      We arrived here at about 2pm, after one of the most spectacular walks we’ve ever done, and that is saying something! But we did not do the 8 hour, étape difficile, that the Book which is in French, warned us about. Instead, after a long and rather difficult stage yesterday we decided we would not enjoy an even longer and more difficult one today. So after studying the Book, and finding that today started with a 3 hour difficult ascent (and we could see the huge rocky hillsides all around us!) we decided to organise a taxi to shorten the distance. And it was such a wonderful plan…our lovely hotel lady rang to organise it last night, and we were picked up at 9.30 and taken to a town, Arboras, which is actually a bit more than half the distance! But we are not proud, we just wanted to enjoy the day, and not endure it…

      So the taxi dropped us off, right where there was a GR and chemin de Compostelle sign, and we set off happily. And the whole of today the way was well marked, never worried that we may have gone off track. And it is still cold…in fact today was the coldest yet, and in the high spots the wind felt icy! In the end I took off my hat which was annoyingly flapping in the strong wind, and just put up my jacket hood, and Amr had his hood over his new hat!

      So we only had a walk of about 12 kms, but this was the part that Book said was difficile, and we did it knowing we could be slow and careful (don’t want to spoil things with a twisted ankle…) and pause and admire the view and not just be intent on reaching a destination. And so began our wonderful walk. From Arboras we walked at first among a valley of vineyards and then did a very long ascent, even higher than the one out of St Guilhem, all the while looking down at the view of the valley from the heights. We could see Arboras in the distance and were amazed at how high we were. Photos just can’t capture the scene, but will put some up anyway, but they won’t do justice to the beauty.

      There were a few other walkers on the track today…one man who zipped past so quickly on the uphill - we barely had time to say bonjour before he was gone - and on the downhill to our amazement 2 cyclists whizzed past…riding over the boulders, roots, zigzagging around trees!!…and also another woman who is also staying in this town. After the exhilarating uphill we started the inevitable descent, which was the difficult part - the book had warned of sliding rocks, slippery slopes etc, and it was a bit of a tricky narrow path, but not as bad as we feared, and wonderful views over the other side. We found a perfect picnic table in the sun for lunch, but it was just too windy…and by then only a few kms from St Jean, so we continued on, and found a slightly more sheltered and sunny seat in the main square near the Mairie and ate there, as we were fairly early, and often accommodation places don’t want you to arrive before 3.

      But at about 2.30 we headed off to this wonderful place, an oasis! It was another kilometre from the centre of town, not in the direction of the camino - great today, but would have been a lot after an 8 hour walk! It is a B and B run by a delightful couple, who welcomed us, gave us a beer and cake, and with whom we will have dinner tonight as we are the only guests! They like Australians and Australia as they lived in Perth and their daughter is in Nice living with a group of Aussies. So we can comfortably speak French and English! Now we are relaxing totally and will have dinner at 7.
      En savoir plus

    • Jour 14

      French pilgrimage finished - in Lodeve

      23 avril, France ⋅ 🌬 13 °C

      We have arrived in Lodève, French walk finished! We feel quite proud, as it wasn’t easy walking, but certainly spectacular. We have checked into our very nice Hotel De La Paix, and booked to have dinner here at 8. Amr is, surprise surprise, off to the laundromat to wash everything, and I’m happily sitting in the room in shorts (all that’s left not being washed) and with 2 tops and my jacket still feel cold…I look back at photos of walking a couple of days ago and I was just in a t-shirt and can’t imagine it….today we did 16 kms of strenuous walking with fleece and jacket on all day and not even sweaty!! …and yesterday the same, but didn’t have my fleece and wished I did!

      Anyway, first last night’s dinner…it was rather like a couple of years ago in France when we stayed at a guest house, we had dinner with the hosts, Martine and Guy, such lovely people. The season is just starting and we were the only people. They can take 14 people, but only do dinner for 4….so we had a delicious home cooked meal in their dining room overlooking the valley! Just beautiful. Started with endive, egg and crumbled cheese salad, then pork fillets and potatoes with very tasty onion sauce and a raspberry tapioca dessert. Comfort food! And we had fun and lively conversation…half French and half English…and this morning we had breakfast there before we set off.

      They had told us a shortcut to get to the GR without going the km back to the village, a path at the end of the vineyard and across the creek, but Amr this time wanted to be authentic and we walked back and started from the square, following the true path! After quite a while we thought we must have passed where we would have joined in from the guest house, as we were out in the wilderness and had been walking several kms, but then suddenly we saw their Domaine through the trees on the other side of the valley… it would have been a true shortcut.

      We knew from the graph that today’s walk was basically a big climb, then going along for quite a way along the top plateau, then a descent into Lodeve. But the Book said it was a short (15km) stage and somehow implied easy…but it wasn’t really easy, the big ascent was most of the time very rough loose stones and roots that needed concentration, and also the descent at the end was also potentially treacherous! But of course the views were spectacular and it was very exhilarating! But we didn’t saunter into Lodeve in time for lunch!! And it continued to be so cold, with the icy wind blowing a gale, specially when we were at the exposed spots at the top…Amr said his app said it was 42 km/hr at one stage, but not sure if that was the max…sometimes you could hardly walk against it. But we are lucky, despite the cold wind, it remained sunny and blue sky. So many wildflowers out now - we saw lots of lavender and irises, which you associate with this part of the world, and the new oak leaves are so bright and beautiful.

      After about 12 kms we realised we needed a break, and tried to find a semi sheltered stone to sit and eat…very pleasant, but about 50 metres further we found the perfect spot, tables, sheltered and a superb view ….too late - if only we’d ventured just a bit further!

      This hotel is part of a chain we loved when we were on the walk from Vézelay, and where we always seemed to have the surprisingly superb meals…so here’s hoping for tonight. Tomorrow we take a bus to Montpellier where we stay for 2 nights before getting a train to Barcelona on Friday. Just a little break between walks! But we are familiar with the Camino walking, and there is no tough bush walking there like we have had for the last 3 days, so we feel very relaxed!
      En savoir plus

    • Jour 85

      Lost in France... öhm... back in France

      10 juin 2022, France ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

      Heute haben wir uns erst einmal von Spanien verabschiedet. Nach beinahe 12 Wochen in diesem wunderschönen Land, das wir nach 30 Jahren ganz neu entdecken durften, fällt uns der Abschied erstaunlich leicht. Denn neue Abenteuer warten auf uns... und auf zwei Sommermonate zuhause freuen wir uns auch!

      Wir sind neugierig und fahren über die A75 Richtung Norden, die quer durchs französische Zentralmassiv führt.... und sind begeistert. Was für eine wundervolle Landschaft. Bis auf 1000 Höhenmeter fahren wir hoch und wieder runter.

      Ganz gespannt sind wir auf die Brücke von Millau, die 2,4 km lange und 270m hohe Schrägseilbrücke, eine der höchsten der Welt. Wir können sie von ihrer schönsten Seite bestaunen, da wir auf dem Rastplatz direkt am Viaduc de Millau eine Lunch- und Fotopause einlegen.

      To be continued...

      ...
      En savoir plus

    • Jour 101

      Schnee in den Pyrenäen

      19 avril, France ⋅ ☀️ 7 °C

      Die Fahrt über die mautfreie AP 7 bei sonnigem Wetter verläuft problemlos. Wir übernachten nochmals in Spanien auf dem kostenfreien Stellplatz in Girona. Der Platz ist schon gut gefüllt als wir nachmittags ankommen.

      https://maps.app.goo.gl/G4cDHyRL5LWYQh9AA?g_st=ic

      Ist eigentlich klar bei der spannenden Stadt, die fußläufig durch einen Park in 2 Kilometern zu erreichen ist. Auch wir lassen uns durch die Altstadtgassen treiben und machen das obligatorische Foto auf die Häuser die sich im Fluss spiegeln.
      Die Strecke über die A 75 durch Frankreichs Berge ermöglicht bei toller Fernsicht traumhafte Blicke in die schneebedeckten Pyrenäen. Überall blüht der Ginster, es ist bunt auf den Wiesen.
      Dieses Mal nutzen wir wieder das französische System Pass’Étapes, „Camping-Car Park“. 12 Euro kostet der Platz. Er beinhaltet Strom, Ver-Entsorgung und freies Wifi. Wir schlafen super ruhig in dem Dorf Canourgue, das von der Autobahn aus in wenigen Kilometern erreicht wird.
      Wir machen in der untergehenden Sonne einen Spaziergang durch den alten Ort, der wegen seiner vielen Känäle auch „Klein- Venedig“ genannt wird.

      https://maps.app.goo.gl/RmVrcsMnsjqSpZfh7?g_st=ic

      Heute Morgen zeigt das Thermometer 5 Grad an. Die Sonne scheint aber noch.
      Tja, die Wintersachen müssen wohl wieder aus den hinteren Schrankregionen nach vorne geräumt werden. 🥲
      En savoir plus

    • Jour 17

      Figeac to Cajarc: sun, greenery, kms++

      5 mai, France ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

      We left our Figeac refuge around 7:45 (breakfast was naturally brilliant}, bought a baguette at a bread shop and were on the way by 7:55. There were light clouds in the sky and in the valleys, but no rain, and after a few hours were both down to a single T-shirt (each). It was a long walk - 31.3 km according to the GR65 signpost, but other than a steep hill up and then down at the start it was mostly steady small hills and flat areas, at least until a few more hills near Cajarc.

      We saw very few walkers all day, so we tottled along at our own pace. Towards the end we overtook quite a few people, but otherwise we saw almost no-one. . Anne does not use the poles, but I use one of Amr and Rosie's, especially on the rockier paths. We were mostly on small roads or wide paths, with no mud to speak of (ie not deeper than shoe soles) but towards the end there were a few longish sections of rocks.

      Mostly we were going through farmland or little woods, and going over hills often gave views of the whole countryside because it was all gentle hills. There were dry-stone walls most of the way, and we even went past a lone dolmen of unknown origin in a corner of a national park. The areas with rocky paths were probably hard to cultivate, because there were usually stunted tress and scrub beside the path, rather than fields. It was all extremely green, though - especially the rolling fields of oats or wheat.

      We stopped for lunch on a stone wall in a messy little village where the church was closed. It was around 12;30, and we had done about 19-20km. We had to refill some of our water bottles there- a first for the trip. Suddenly the "eau potable" signs were important! We also stopped at a set of signs around 2pm to take a photo for Amr, Rosie and Annie Clarke, and to ask if they remembered where they were exactly 34 years ago (Australian EST)? [A: Dinner at Amr and Rosie's in Shirley Road Wollstonecraft. Anne arrived late].

      We reached Cajarc and the hotel around 3;30, although it might have been 10 mins earlier if I thought the sign to Gite with our hotel's name would also take us to the hotel. We went into town and up the street to be sure... and they ended up being the same place.

      Our luggage was at the hitel when we arrived, so we had a shower and walked into the town. The church is big, but without the arches and vaulted roofs of other old ones, and the town has building in the same stone as Figeac and St Come, but it is not as well kept. Lots of the old buildings are closed, and seem unlikely to be used again given the advanced state of disrepair. There is a large 14th c "palace" right near the centre of town that looks like it will need squillions to be usable, even with a wonderful facade.

      We could hear a lot of cheering, so we also went to the local sports field thinking there might be a rugby game... but it was soccer. the team in green was better than the one in neck-to knee grey.

      The hotel ( La Peyrade) is part of the Logis chain, but perhaps only just. It is like a single storey country motel, although the room are much larger, so lots of space. they also have little terrace in front, with a view over the town and hills behind it. So far it's average: 1. Good wifi. 2. No tea or coffee. 3. Totally non-controllable temperature ( to the point of the panel being bolted shut. 4. Very light and open. 5 Dinner included a fish non-curry with vegetables that were surely once frozen. 6 Bed good.

      45,210 steps, 36.2km and 86 flights.
      En savoir plus

    • Jour 10

      St Chely to Saint-Come-d'Olt

      28 avril, France ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

      As we went up the hill leaving St Chely I took a photo back down over the village, thinking "Yep. Great shot. That should be first on the blog." Now we are in Saint-Come-d'Olt and I am not so sure. This is Brigadoon in France - the village time forgot. The Lot River valley has (I am told) some of France's prettiest villages, and this one tops the pops. Street names are in French and Occitan.

      Packed our one bag to the gunnels again, left it for collection and went to breakfast, which was different: two coffee machines, pots for tea, muesli and granola, but no cheese (but otherwise as usual). We left around 8:30, over an apparently famous pilgrim's bridge, up a long, steep hill with amazing views back over the village, and off through farmland. It was lime green, since trees already had new leaves, and it was noisier with birds. We wore ponchos as we assumed that, being overcast, it would rain, but it didn't , and we were sweaty, so off they came. There were a few steep ups and downs, and often rocky paths, but nothing very hard. We went through one hamlet, but alongside numerous old farmhouses and barns, often with enormous piles of straw and cow dung ready to be spread back over the paddocks.

      We arrived at St Come around 1:15, and as we stopped to look around a young woman asked if we needed anything, then told us about the shops being closed and the few bars etc that were open. She had an apron from a cafe (Cafe La Pause), so we went there later. The village has a few 11th C features, a church with a twisted spire (design or bad builder? no-one knows) and looks untouched. It might need a section to itself..

      So far so good physically. Weary feet, but nothing worse than aches and end-of-day tiredness.

      27,785 steps, 22.0km and 51 flights. Tomorrow is a short day - only 7km to a large town
      En savoir plus

    • Jour 11

      St-Come to Espalion

      29 avril, France ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

      Today was a short walk - 7km from one scenic village to the next. It was even shorter after we read Rosie's advice on alternative routes, and Anne's Vespers partner suggested going via the secondary road since it was cloudy and raining.

      We left the convent around 8:45 and were in Espalion around 10am. It was a flat walk beside a river that seemed twice as big as yesterday. Some rain, perhaps, or a release from one of the upstream hydro-electric dams?

      There were cars and people, but it is Monday and most shops are shut. That includes clothes shops, so our plans to buy waterproof pants were foiled. Espalion is much larger than the last two villages, but the centre is as old and as pretty. There are some old 20 houses built side-by-side along the river that used to be tanneries, and they still have the stone steps down to the water.

      We expected the hotel to be closed until 3pm, but we came in with our dripping ponchos after walking around the town. Reception was empty, so we sat for a while, then Anne found a notice saying reception was closed from 12-5pm, but if you arrived during that time you should look up your room umber and take your own key...so we did, and we in the room around 1pm. Our one bag was in reception, waiting.

      Dinner at the hotel. Very cheerful staff, and no choices: a bacon, egg, pork ad mustard salad, great bread, aligot and a local sausage, and then a pear tart. The first two courses were fantastic. Heavier rain as we sat there, but hoping for a long break in the drizzle tomorrow.

      17,565 steps, 13.9 km and 1 flight
      En savoir plus

    • Jour 14

      Conques to Decazeville: cold mud

      2 mai, France ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

      We left Conques at the same time as everyone we knew - around 8;15am - but stopped at the Englishman's stall, and he reassured us the climb up was not too bad. Just 15m down the street (made of schist, not cobblestones or tar) one could look up and see the cross of the Chapelle-St- Foy, which was a tiny church almost at the top. It had a bell that people rang to show they had made it.

      It was a tough climb in the light rain,. Thankfully the path was mostly chiselled in rock, so the water was running down rather than creating bogs. We reached the chapel in about 25-30 mins, and the end of the long till after 50 mins. The rest of the day was mainly across gentle slopes and farmlands, but the light rain did not ease up until midday, and it was accompanied by a cold gale. Sometimes we looked forward to a climb because it meant being protected, and getting feeling back in all 10 fingers again.

      It was green all around, with the occasional herd of cows watching us walk by. There were good views sometimes when the clouds broke, but the challenge was underfoot: the path was either roads (which were hard but fine) or squelchy mud. It was usually possible to walk around the edges of the boggy sections, but it was slow. In the afternoon we met a few people who walked the last half of the 20 or so km down the road, saying there was no joy in sloshing through mud with numb hands and wet clothes.

      There will be a textile one day that solves the issue, but most people have ponchos covering themselves and backpack, waterproof jackets and separate waterproof backpack covers. They all keep the rain out, but going up long hills, even in sleet, makes you hot and sweaty, and under all the waterproofing, nothing evaporates. Having said that, I was glad we were not doing some of the hills in 30 degrees and laden down by extra litres of water.

      We arrived in Decazeville around 1:30. It is a large and definitely not thriving industrial town spread out along the river. The hotel was almost on the trail, so we found it very quickly. The manager (part of the family running it, and he once did 4 months in NZ), let us in after several minutes of consternation about us not having a booking, which was resolved when everyone realised they were looking at reservations on the wrong day. Much laughter. Our bags had not arrived, so we went up, took off the rain gear and set forth to find lunch. Somewhere along the trail we clearly offended a French spirit, because every boulangerie within a km of the hotel was shut, either permanently or because it was Thursday, or just because. There were numerous beauty shops, vaping shops, real estate agents and the odd tattoo parlour, but no food stores… go figure. But in the end there was a table-less Carrefours... Baguettes and cheese in hand, plus something for the 31km walk tomorrow, we went back to the hotel. Our bags had arrived, so warm showers, dry clothes and lunch with the benefit of Nico's Swiss knife.

      The Hotel Malpel is okay. 1. Bright room and good wifi. 2. View is a bit run-down industrial. 3. Lugging bags up two flights of stairs (but two bags to lug, so no complaining). 4. Good dinner 5. Friendly staff. 6 Controllable heater, but no coffee/tea.

      32,173 steps, 25.9km, 124 flights
      En savoir plus

    • Jour 9

      Nasbinals to Saint Chely d'Aubrac

      27 avril ⋅ 🌬 10 °C

      Breakfast was at 8am. Actually, 8:02am. Our room was in a separate building that served breakfast, but not dinner. There were perhaps 20 rooms, and it was managed by a large, non-English speaking grump. The room set up for breakfast was behind the entrance foyer. She turned the lights on and unlocked the door at 8:02 when the foyer was crowded. Inside, each table had cutlery, a napkin, a basket with croissants, chocolate rolls and sliced baguette, plus a small, silver bowl of jam, but the crowd moved in formation straight to the coffee urn, which meant the things beside it (hot water, milk, cheese, salamis, yoghurt, cake) were invisible to the world. Perhaps five minutes later they appeared again, and we had breakfast, too.

      We left around 9am. The good St Craig of Kiama let me keep the waterproof overpants again. I have suggested to St Craig and his wife, Liz, that I will buy the pants, or a new pair just the same at the first shop we find (probably on Monday in Espalion, which is c, 4,000 people (Nasbinals 500)), so my suggestion was that we solve two issues and I buy him the size he wants and take his. We will see...

      We walked through the town, up a wooded hill, then across fields. When we arrived at the exposed fields an Arctic gale set in. Thankfully no heavy rain. It might even have been that we were in clouds: it looked like there was rain all around us, but there were never many drops. There are, after all, a couple of Alpine ski resorts (one with black runs) less than 10 km away. It was not the stuff of guide books, but it was different and invigorating, and even charming in its own way. I had not anticipated walking on wind-swept moors, but it had that ethereal, isolated and rugged feel. Call me Nellie Dean, if you will, but Heathcliff would have felt right at home. We heard that one man was (literally) blown over.

      After a small village we walked up a road for a bit, then through a forest and along a very stony path that had some steep, slippery sections (all down, thank goodness), then between mossy rock walls. It was the muddiest day to date, with boots and lower trousers all suffering. The wind dropped down around 1130, and the clouds lightened, so soon it was lovely just walking along. We passed a young French couple from Normandy whose English was as bad as our French, but they want to go to Oz even thought they have heard that it is very dangerous with all the animals.

      Lots more downhill to St Chely, . We arrived around 1:45pm, and the hotel opens at 3pm. It wasn't snowing as at St Privat, but it was cold! We walked around the village, which is extremely pretty, looked in the church, then sat at the tables outside the hotel with some others...mostly Australian, as it turned out.

      The hotel (Les Coudercous) is good. It is another in the Logis chain, which Rosie alerted us to as being good. Dinner was amazingly good. Anne had a terrine, incredibly tender veal in mustard, and a nut cake. I had a vegetable soup with cheese, trout perfectly cooked) and a raspberry cake ( the healthy option). The waiter had worked in the UK and US for years, then spent a long time in Asia, and beside our table was a man walking from Bordeaux to Lyon (a different but recognised trail) who had started off in 29 degrees carrying all his gear, and wondering why he brought cold-weather gear. He was from Annandale Street, Annandale (Sydney).

      Lovely room, good-humoured man at reception, and we had to leave our muddy boots in an annexe. 1. Soap, good shower (best, per RAS),wifi in room, but no tea or coffee. 2 middle of town. 3. Good room with good bed, accessible power points and controllable heater.

      Tomorrow we walk only 16km, then 7km the next day to the larger town of Espalion, and the chance to sight-see and shop. The forecast for tomorrow is not bad at all: 6 deg-12 deg, likely to rain a little (but heavier at night) and the wind will drop. Rain may be a little heavier in the days afterwards.

      25,778 steps, 19.6km and 76 flights. Easier than yesterday!
      En savoir plus

    • Jour 13

      Golinhac to Conques: rain, mud, hills

      1 mai, France ⋅ 🌧 12 °C

      It was raining lightly when we left around 8:15, and it only got heavier. The views were misty rather than panoramic, but it was always green countryside, with cows sometimes lined up by the trail to watch us walk by. Sadly it was a day of many narrow, steep paths, which were sometimes rivers of mud. But what the heck: clean socks and shoes awaited us in Conques.

      Conques was a revelation. We knew the path went down steeply to it, so assumed it would be a typical village/ town spread out beside a river. The last 1.5 km was an overgrown and steep Kokoda- style mudslide, and we could not see where the land flattened out. Then we were in a stony street with old houses, with an enormous abbey church around the corner - work started on it in the 11th C. . It is more a cathedral than a church, and the houses and hotels etc are packed in lines beside and around it. It was like expecting Nyngan but finding a miniature Oxford.

      The hotel is about 1 room wide. It has 4 rooms per floor. It is also several centuries old. We arrived at 2pm, seconds before out bags, but the 3pm rule was mentioned, so we looked in the abbey, the tourist office, and some of the shops, talked with a chstty young Englishman who had a tiny souvenir shop, then collected a key and started drying out.

      We met St Craig and Liz to return the borrowed overpants. They arrived in Conques yesterday and were in the other open hotel, but we took them to dinner in this one. The restaurant is usually closed on Wednesdays, but they were open on 1 May as it was a holiday and they hoped it might be busy. It was. Very good dinner: more aligot and local pork sausage for me, and the best beef ragout ever for Anne. Pus local red wine. Craig and Liz have a speech therapist daughter in Dubbo. Also shared a little trepidation about the very steep and muddy path that goes back up to start tomorrow.

      Hotel was the Auberge St Jacques. 1 Wifi erratic. 2 No tea/ coffee. 3 Good bed. 4 Dark and up some winding stairs.

      31,250 steps, 25.2km, 76flights
      En savoir plus

    Vous pouvez également connaitre ce lieu sous les noms suivants:

    Département de l'Aveyron, Departement de l'Aveyron, Aveyron

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