• Basil Howitt obituary: music and life in P-O

    Basil-howittWELL known writer and journalist, Basil Howitt, died in December and I am sure readers will have read his many articles about life in France.

    Here his wife Clare Gallaway writes about their life together, after their meeting in Manchester in 1997.

    The couple got on famously, finding many shared interests and were soon married. However Basil set a condition – that Clare should be prepared to live in the south of France as soon as it became feasible!

    Quotes-start Basil Howitt, who died on 3 December, will be missed here in France, perhaps first and foremost for his well-informed and widely-read articles on local customs and issues.

    However it was through his previous career as a professional musician that he discovered his beloved corner of the Pyrénées-Orientales.

    Born in Manchester, his first trip to France was a holiday with his parents. The little boy was wide-eyed with wonder at the cheminots he saw in Calais (his articles often feature trains and train journeys).

    His musical career began then too, as a chorister in Manchester Cathedral, followed by Chetham’s School of Music, then a Choral Exhibition to Trinity College, Cambridge.

    He sang, conducted, and played the cello, and eventually left his ‘day-job’ as a Liberal Studies lecturer to become a professional cellist.

    Writing was another love. He gave pre-concert talks and his articles about music and musicians were published in music periodicals and the British press.

    His first book, Life in a Penguin Suit was a collection of vignettes on the life of a jobbing musician and was followed by three books on the love lives of composers.

    Finally, he completed a mighty work on the lives of the Carroll family, Walter and his Daughters, commissioned by the Walter Carroll Trust.

    In retirement, not an appropriate word where Basil was concerned, he and his wife Clare came to live in France.

    In the 1980s he played in the Rasiguères Festival de la Musique et du Vin with the Manchester Camerata and had bought in 1991 an enchanting old maison de village in a nearby village.

    Typically, he adapted his writing skills to the internet and for several years, wrote regularly on life and customs in the P-O on a range of websites.

    He kept up with current issues via the French press and internet, and tackled political and social themes, local customs and the patrimoine, but was never happier than when writing about gourmet topics.

    His style was readable and lively, but the contents were always well-researched and informative. His series of 55 articles appearing monthly on expatica.com were hugely popular.

    He will be remembered as a genial, hospitable friend who loved food, drink, music and France, with an infectious enthusiasm and joie de vivre. Quotes-end

  • A magical walk with the trois évêques

    Lavaur-walk-01YOU are sure to see the steep rock face from the road as you navigate the tight bend, but not many people stop and take a stroll to the Fontaine des trois évêques.

    Thanks to a recommendation from my friend Cro, we took a magical walk past rushing springs, overhanging rock walls and sparkling sunlit woods, all of which can be found near the small hamlet of Lavaur, in the Dordogne (map).

    The mid-morning sun was trying its best to take the chill off the icy air, but with a faint mist rising off a small stream, and the light playing tricks with your eyes, there was a medieval touch to the day.

    Lavaur-walk-02

    Beneath the steep cliff face you will first cross the Fontaine des trois évêques where the old feudal boundaries, and the powerful, were able to meet without fine or charge.

    There is also a tumbledown lavoir with its wooden frame and tiled roof taped off to keep the inquisitive at bay.

    Lavaur-walk-03

    Continuing past the waterpump house, the path takes you close to the sheer rock faces and although evidence of small streams is still there, the past year has been very dry so the occasional trickle soon heads back underground.

    Walking along, with only stout shoes required, their was still a chill along the track but as it rose the air warmed and the icy tree tops began to melt with droplets splashing onto the leaves and twigs below.

    Lavaur-walk-04

    The path is established enough to drive along, and car tracks could be seen, but no one else was out that day, just the occasional jay and crow screeching and squawking as we headed deeper into the woods.

    Lavaur-walk-05

    As the path gently rises small patches of open space, with banks of wood behind, point to how the forest may have been worked in the past, and possibly sheep and other animals were kept when the area was intertwined with agriculture.

    But today it is another trade that leads the way with yellow capped sign-posts pointing to a new belief in tourism and the euros that might bring.

    Related:
    A walk around Prats-du-Périgord, the Dordogne
    Monpazier, the Dordogne

  • Public holidays in France for 2012

    French-holidaysA LIST of French public holidays for your diaries, so you can plan your visits to France or outings.

    I have also included the days they fall upon, as you can be pretty sure that if one lands on a Thursday, then it might be a struggle to get anything done on the Friday.

    French Public Holidays 2012

    New Year’s Day (Jour de l’An)
    Sunday 1 Janaury

    Easter Sunday (Pâques)
    Monday 9 April

    May Day (Fête du Travail)
    Tuesday 1 May

    Victory in Europe Day (Fête de la Victoire)
    Tuesday 8 May

    Ascension
    Thursday 17 May

    Pentecost (Lundi de Pentecôte)
    Monday 28 May

    Bastille Day (Fête nationale)
    Saturday 14 July

    Assumption (l’Assomption)
    Wednesday 15 August

    All Saints’ Day (Toussaint)
    Thursday 1 November

    Armistice Day (Jour de l’Armistice de 1918)
    Sunday 11 November

    Christmas Day (Jour de Noël)
    Tuesday 25 December

  • Give charities in France a little of your time

    Christmas-loubejacLoubejac’s comités des fêtes heads back to school for Christmas
    IT is this time of year when many of us look back over what we have done, what we might have done and maybe what we hope to do in the near future.

    If one of these changes is to get involved more within the local community, or to pass on your knowledge to groups and associations here are a few ideas.

    On a personal level, one of the best things I have done is get involved with the local comités des fêtes, which saw me help out at a wind-lashed summer fair, join the committee itself and dress up as an English schoolboy, complete with cricket hat and bat, for the children’s Christmas show.

    Often the same people are always helping out, so a new face or two is sure to lift the spirits of the volunteers at your local comités des fêtes, and it is a great way to improve your French language skills.

    Below is a collection of charitable groups that have featured on the site over the years, so you can find out more about each one, and offer a helping hand.

    Confédération des MJC de France
    The MJC is a national organisation first set up in 1948 which runs events for all ages, there are many local groups that meet regularly, and Coral dropped in on one.

    Cancer Support France
    This voluntary service offers English-language help and support to both people with cancer and their carers.

    The Royal British Legion in France
    Offers social events across France, and welcomes new members whether ex-service or not, British nationality, French, or any other.

    Geoff Thomas Foundation
    The former England football international is a regular on the Tour de France and his organisation raises money for leukaemia research.

    SOS Helpline
    Offers a confidential listening service to English speakers in France, but is always keen to accept volunteers.

    Secours Populaire Français
    A national organisation that organises events to raise money in support of children and disadvantaged families.

    The Phoenix Association
    Based in the Dordogne, this long established animal charity is able to offer advice and often has pets looking for a new home.

    Dog Rescue Carcassonne
    The SPA animal charity has centres across France, but Rowan Gwillim has gone that step further and is both helping at her local rescue home and using the web to help stray, read more about her work.

    Galgo News
    A site I’ve helped set up but which is written by Beryl Brennan on an almost daily occurrence, helps in the rehoming of greyhounds and other dogs from Spain and features links to many associations.

    Chats du Quercy
    I couldn’t leave our feline friends out. Run by Lynn Stone the association specialise in cat welfare, running trap-neuter-return schemes and issuing neutering vouchers around south west France with adoptions throughout France as a whole.

    Equine Rescue France
    Oh yes and don’t forget the help and advice offered by Trina Summerfield, and Jon and Kathryn Dobson for horses and donkeys which have suffered neglect. Beryl visited the team to find out more.

    Find more animal rescue centres in France.

    And so over to you, if you currently help a local charity leave a line in the comment form below about its work. And if you complete the website address field this will automatically link to your site.

  • Festive frost and mists around Loubejac

    Loubejac-december

    THE Christmas weekend looks set to be one of clear blue skies, with frosty mornings and low lying mist in the hollows and dips of the countryside.

    This was the view this morning whilst taking the dog for a walk as the sun edged its way over the horizon and the faint crunch of frost on the grass could be heard as I walked through the fields, click image to enlarge.

  • Support from Alcoholics Anonymous in France

    Alcoholics-anonymous-franceFOR many people the wines of France are one of the reasons for visiting and living in this wonderful country, writes the Alcoholics Anonymous France South West Intergroup.

    But what if the dream starts to be tainted by an uncontrollable desire to drink more and more and you, or somebody you know, find that drinking alcohol is causing a problem?

    Nobody likes to be classified as an alcoholic because the image of a down-and-out in a dirty raincoat sitting alone on a park bench, drinking from a bottle wrapped in brown paper is the one that is normally associated with alcoholism.

    But it doesn’t have to have reached that stage: broken relationships, lost jobs, financial problems, losing your driving licence, blackouts and periods when you can’t remember what you did the night before, secret drinking and behaviour unacceptable to your friends and relations are all part of the downward spiral.

    One of the members of Alcoholics Anonymous writes a cautionary tale, when ignorance is anything but bliss:

    There was a time when I enjoyed a glass of wine or two with a meal or at the pub with friends. Then something changed. Due to a life event I discovered that a glass or two or three blocked out what I didn’t want to deal with emotionally, and it worked.

    However, things progressed. I did not realise it but somehow along the way I had lost the choice of having a glass or two. That did not do the job and my drinking gradually escalated to the point where it became an absolute necessity to function.

    Always having access to a supply became essential and still I did not realise that I had a problem. Of course I could control my drinking, if I really wanted to that is. I always had a strong will. So I tried to stop the downward spiral and to my great surprise I could not.

    Fear, panic, self condemnation and loss of self-respect followed. Living both with and without my daily medication became a living hell.

    What I had not realised was that I had an allergy to alcohol which condemned me to obsessively consume it, a progressive illness in fact.

    However I did find the help I needed through the Fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous. With their help I am now happy and sober because I accepted that for me alcohol is lethal.

    If my story raises any doubts for you, or rings any alarm bells then get in touch with AA. You will not be judged because they know how hard it is to come to terms with the problem as they have all experienced it themselves.

    Our websites are listed below and give details of most of the meetings conducted in English. Just turn up at one. You will be made most welcome.

    The websites also give the contact e-mail addresses for each meeting. The telephone numbers listed on the websites might be private ones so you may need to try more than once – but don’t give up.

    You have absolutely nothing to lose and a life with choices to regain, I promise you.

    Websites
    www.aafrancesud-ouest.com
    www.aa-riviera.org
    www.aa-europe.net
    www.aaparis.org

    Related: Alcoholics Anonymous in France there for ‘dangerous’ Christmas period

  • Petition to block shale gas permit in south west France

    Thumb-permis-de-Beaumont-de-LomagneTHE fight continues to block exploratory work on shale gas deposits, or gaz de schiste, at locations across France.

    Despite legislation being passed by the French government banning the use of ‘fracking’ techniques to extract the gas, research by drilling companies can still take place.

    The team behind the Schiste Happens website are hoping people will sign a petition aimed at blocking the creation of a permit covering land in the south west of France (click thumbnail image to enlarge).

    “The petition is calling for a rejection of the Permis Beaumont de Lomagne in the Lot, Dordogne and Tarn-et-Garonne, as well as the rescinding of all existing permits and a general tightening up of the law passed in July which only banned commercial hydro-fracking,” writes Schiste Happens.

    “It still allowed companies to go ahead and get the gas out if they could do so without hydro fracking. It also allowed for experimental fracking for research purposes. A cynic may interpret that as using fracking to find a new way of fracking which is not called fracking…

    “But this misses a critical issue which is that while the prospect of ‘easy’ energy is dangled in front of oil companies and governments, research and development into alternative and renewable sources will be greatly reduced. Also the drive to reduce the use of all energy derived from carbon based fuels will also slow down.

    “If you are in any doubt about this, witness Canada’s withdrawal from the Kyoto agreement yesterday on the grounds that they could not reduce their consumption and withdrawal would mean they could not be fined for missing their target – brilliant! Oh yes, and they have massive reserves of shale gas.

    “Petitions in France work. They were in no small part responsible for July’s law but they need to get to 100,000 (or so) before they have any effect. So far there are fewer than 600 signatures on this new petition. Let’s see if we can get that into the thousands before the end of the week.”

    Sign the petition now.

    (After you sign the petition you will get an email from Petitions24.net asking you to confirm that you are the person you say you are. Just click the COMFIRMER link in the email.)

    Related:
    Total continues shale gas studies in south of France
    Fighting shale gas plans in the Lot

  • Tips for your first yoga class in France

    Kundalini-yogaGOING to a new yoga class in France can be daunting, but with a few familiar words you can soon make a start, writes Carol Miers.

    If you are interested in finding a class, ask at your local mairie, visit the tourist office, look in the local paper and read the notices pinned up on the sports hall and salle de fête notice boards.

    You can also search online, don’t worry yoga is just yoga in French or in English.

    In class although it’s usually possible to stand next to someone and follow their movements, unless you are told to close your eyes, knowing a few words can make it easier.

    So you can practice a few yoga movements while saying the French phrases below:

    • Chat-Vache à quatre pattes – Cat-cow pose on all fours
    • Assis sur les talons – Sit on your heels
    • Levant les deux bras au-dessus de la tête – Lift your arms over your head
    • Debout – Standing
    • Inspirez/expirez – Inhale/exhale
    • Accrochez les doigts – Interlace your fingers
    • Faites les cercles avec la tête – Make circles with your head
    • Allongez-vous sur le dos/ventre – Lie on your back/stomach
    • Fermez les deux poings – make fists with your hands
    • Levez les jambes vers le ciel – Lift your legs towards the ceiling (for example in shoulder stand)
    • Penchez-vous vers l’avant – Bend forwards
    • Assis les jambes tendues devant – Sit with the legs straight out in front
    • Accélérez – Go faster
    • Attrapez fermement le gros orteil de chaque pied – Grip the big toe of each foot
    • Accroupissez-vous – Crouch down
    • Gardez la colonne droite – Keep the back straight
    • Expirez en vous penchant vers l’avant – Exhale as you bend forwards

    And some individual parts of the body:

    • le pouce – the thumb
    • le menton – the chin
    • le gros orteil – the big toe
    • l’oncle – nail
    • les sourcils – eyebrows

    Miers-yoga Carol Miers holds Kundalini yoga classes in Villefranche du Perigord, Dordogne and qualified to teach Kundalini yoga with the Amrit Nam Sarovar school in France (KRI Level 2).

  • Get set for Lalbenque truffle market

    Truffle-market
    IN just a few more days, on Tuesday, 6 December the main street of an otherwise undistinguished town in south west France will be magically transformed by one of the most exciting, adrenaline-pumping and important events in the entire French culinary universe – the opening day of this year’s truffle market in Lalbenque, writes Vino Veritas.

    The usual rusty, fifteen year old Citroens normally found in Lalbenque will on that day be displaced by shiny new Mercedes and Beemers with 75 (Paris) and 69 (Lyon) plates, all herded through town by whistle-blowing traffic control officers who will never be present the rest of the year.

    Truffle brokers and speciality restaurant supply buyers from all over France, the UK and beyond will flock to Lalbenque on market day, momentarily swelling this small town’s population by up to a thousand.

    Truffle-marke-t02They are all there for only one purpose, attempting to acquire specimens of perhaps the world’s pre-eminent culinary delicacy.

    Lalbenque, 25 kilometers south of Cahors, is the largest truffle market in south western France, and from early December until early March, hundreds of kilos of France’s ‘black gold’, botanically known as Tuber Melanosporum, will be sold in Lalbenque’s weekly truffle market. (It should be acknowledged that another truffle market, somewhat larger then Lalbenque, is held at Richerenches in the Vaucluse, but the author’s experience is with the Lalbenque market.)

    All the fuss began in the 18th century, when the French gastronome and author Brillat-Savarin described these truffles as “the diamond of the kitchen”.

    Exactly how Lalbenque assumed such an important culinary role is not altogether clear, although the scrubby calcareous soil of the surrounding area abounds with the twisted small oak trees whose roots have a symbiotic relationship with and host the growth of truffles.

    The market itself is simultaneously picturesque and unusual. Most markets bring buyers and sellers together for extended periods, to foster continuing relationships, trust and ongoing commerce. Not so at Lalbenque.

    Truffle-market-03
    On market Tuesday, beginning around 2pm, sellers stand shoulder to shoulder behind benches running in a long line along the main street, displaying the truffles they are offering that day in a basket set on the bench in front of them.

    Some sellers have but a few truffles, while others have a bounty exceeding several kilos. About a metre in front of the benches is a strategically positioned rope that prospective buyers dare not cross.

    The buyers, usually numbering in the several hundreds, stand in front of the rope and engage in discreet conversations with the sellers. Most conversations revolve around weight, since sales prices are calculated in grams and kilos, but occasionally a forward buyer even asks to have a basket handed to him across the rope for a brief inspection, requests that are often declined.

    Nervous smiles are exchanged on both sides of the rope, because both buyers and sellers know very well what is about to come. At exactly 2.30pm (with wry comments occasionally heard about this being the only time French are known to be on time), a rapid fire series of events very quickly ensues.

    Not a moment before or after, a loud police whistle is sounded, the rope drops to the ground, the buyers charge forward, earnest and somewhat frantic negotiations ensue, and five minutes later, the market is over for that week.

    Yes, its all over in a few fast paced moments. A buyer who dithers, is indecisive, or offers too low a price goes away empty handed. And a seller who initially drives too hard of a bargain is often forced to accept a bargain basement price minutes later if a prospective buyer’s offer is rejected and that buyer turns away.

    Truffle-market-04What is remarkable is that even though all sales have truffle weight, as well of course quality, as key value drivers, you will never see a scale at Lalbenque. Sellers will tell you what their basket weighs when you ask, but verification is considered an insult.

    The sellers, who are looking for repeat business in following weeks, consider it dishonourable to not state a very accurate weight. This author has participated as a buyer in many Lalbenque markets, and has never experience a short weight. If anything, the sellers slightly understate the weight of their truffles as a matter of personal pride.

    Opening day at Lalbenque, always the first Tuesday in December, is of particular interest because the elders of the organization that runs the market, the Syndicat des Trufficulteurs, parade through Lalbenque in long black ceremonial robes and plumed Three Musketeers-type hats, with golden medallions hanging around their necks.

    With much ceremonial flourish, the Mayor of Lalbenque then declares the market to be open. Lest one thinks that this is mere French pagentry, it should be acknowledged that the syndicat provides a vital function that is critical to the market’s success – truffle authentication.

    Prospective sellers at the Lalbenque market are required to arrive early, and are ushered into a back room at the Marie where syndicat experts sniff, poke pinch, examine and otherwise take steps to assure that this particular batch of truffles are genuine Tuber Melanosporum, and not Chinese counterfeits. The Chinese truffle, Tuber Sinensis, is a decidedly inferior culinary product that is often passed off as a Perigordian black truffle.

    It is frequently joked in culinary circles that half of the Perigordian truffles sold in London, Tokyo and New York are Chinese. But not at Lalbenque. The syndicat verifies Tuber Melanosporum botanical correctness, which gives comfort to buyers and presumably emboldens bidding.

    And bidding at Lalbenque is not for the faint of heart, or those with shallow pockets. In 1900, France produced 1,000 metric tons of Tuber Melanosporum a year, but incessant demand and the resulting over-harvesting has reduced today’s annual harvest to a mere 20 to 40 metric tons.

    The laws of supply and demand have driven the price of Perigordian black truffles to stratospheric heights. On 6 December, you can expect to pay upwards of €500 a kilo for good quality truffles at Lalbenque, and considerably more if summer weather has not been conducive to truffle growth, as may have been the case in 2011.

    Truffle-market-05
    And this is buying at source. Expect to pay considerably more at a gourmet store in a large urban area, including Paris.

    If you are successful at a truffle market, either Lalbenque or any one of a number of smaller truffle markets held in southern France, northern Spain, or Italy, you are in for quite a treat indeed.

    While entire cookbooks are devoted to the myriad culinary applications of truffles (I even saw a recipe for truffle ice cream), Vino Veritas will offer a few brief suggestions here.

    The biggest mistake a would-be truffle chef can make is muddling the delicate and subtle nuances of truffles with other flavours. The food applications that show off truffles the best, in my humble opinion, are those made with eggs, rice or potatoes, and very little else.

    Very little preparation of the truffles themselves is either necessary or desirable. You want to maximize the surface area of the truffles you are using and then heat them for just a bit to bring out the volatile odour elements.

    Take a one euro vegetable peeler (the expensive truffle shavers are a rip-off), place shavings of truffles in a small saucepan with butter, heat under very low heat for just a few moments, add the truffles to the balance of your chosen dish, and be prepared for oral ecstasy.

    The truffles you buy at Lalbenque were about four inches underground a couple of days before they are sold, and the shelf life of fresh truffles is about three weeks.

    Store them in a tight-lidded container in the refrigerator submerged in aborio rice, which allows a little air circulation but not too much, and facilitates the most delicious risotto long after the truffles themselves have been consumed.

    Hope to see you at a truffle market soon, but if you go to Lalbenque, please do not covet the same basket as Yours Truly. Truffles, available only during the shortest, darkest and coldest days of winter in France, will bring a broad smile to any food-lovers face despite the season’s other gifts.

    Vino Veritas is a pseudonym for a passionate Francophile, wine collector and foodie currently living in southern France.

    See also:
    What wine goes with your cheese? There’s an abundance of choice
    A tour de force from the Tour de France

    Visit nearby:
    Museum of Resistance in Cahors
    Lalbenque truffle market
    Abbaye Nouvelle, a place of hidden stories

  • Stay safe if driving in France in winter

    France-winter
    THE log fire is roaring away, there is a chill in the air and the village Christmas decorations are going up – the tell-tale signs of winter are here.

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