Is that your
small dog I’m standing on, or are you just displeased to see me? Small dogs are everywhere in France, and they
go everywhere with their owners – most particularly they go to restaurants,
where they lounge around looking bored, but usually sitting under their owners
seats. I say usually, because the one I
encountered today, was not under its owner’s seat, and although I can not vouch
that it didn’t move, I know that I certainly was, and the yelps of pain / ecstasy
that suddenly emerged from under the table put me entirely in defensive mode,
and I was left apologising profusely for stepping on the proud owner’s
dog. In future, I will know to have my
game face on and to loudly proclaim “who left this small dog in this ridiculous
position” in English or Australian, of course.
We have
noticed an over abundance of a particularly ugly, pug dog type creature, with
huge ears that we have nicknamed “chien du pays”, dog of the region, after the
wine of the similar name. We’ve seen
several of these parked car chases positioned in restaurants and have been
unfortunate enough to have them seated beside us in a couple of
restaurants. This of course obliges us
to do the usual, “oh, isn’t he beautiful” type malarkey, but whatever it takes
to keep the locals happy, I say.
Honfleur is
a beautiful little town, and after the 14th of July’s fireworks
display, it is now looking a wee bit the worse for wear, but the town’s council
staff are in full swing at 8am cleaning up the detritus from last nights festivities. Anne and I went out early to look around the
town, and take some photos while the light was good.
Honfleur is
a town of artists, yachties, and as I mentioned, small dogs. I feel like k, k, k, ken from a fish called
Wanda, as I’m forever on the lookout for
these hairy sneakers / hand bag fillers that people parade around with so
proudly. The Honfleur harbour is in fact
a small off shoot off the Seine, so has no natural water flowing through it,
although fish do chose to live in it. It’s
other main inhabitants are yachtsmen, who are put on this earth to provide
entertainment for the restaurant goers, who are lucky enough to get to enjoy
them manoeuvring their boats. The
harbour is trapped inside an elevating bridge, which is lifted every hour, on the
half hour. The boats stack themselves up
4 or 5 deep, then when somebody wants to leave through the channel under the
bridge, everybody outside them has to move, so they can get out, then the
people who aren’t leaving re-position themselves and the whole thing waits for
the next hours bridge lifting. With
boats, skippers, wives, ropes, friends, children, dogs and cats, all involved
in the manouvering process, there is limitless possibilities for things to go
wrong, and for large and expensive yachts to be sent crashing into one another,
so for the price of a small breakfast, you can be set up for the day amusing
yourselves at other people’s misfortune.
That might sound a bit cynical, but some of the yachties comments
indicated that it wasn’t just us land lubbers who were having a bit of a laugh.
Neighbors in
the camp ground are just trying to shut up for the night. 38 hearty door slams later, I think
everything is ship-shape. There are
teenagers, and potentially stressed parents involved, so I’m not sure who was
involved in the ruckus, but it certainly makes for interesting living.
I’ve
mentioned artists, and Honfleur has many very beautiful art galleries, which
have some very exotic, and in some cases, some very beautiful and original
art. None of it is priced of course, so
I’m working on the basis of “if you have to ask, you can’t afford it”. The
people who work in the art galleries are very friendly however, and fully
accepting of the fact that with what they are selling they might have to talk
to 1,000 flunking before they find a real customer who wants to buy. The great thing about the UK and Europe, is
that you never can tell what that real customer may look like, so you have to
be nice to them all.
Tomorrow, we
are off to Bayeux, and back to camping which we are looking forward to. WWII D-Day landing beaches, the Bayeux tapestry
and more small French villages to wander through. What fun.
I love this post - the hairy accessory.... they knew it was you coming. Did you gt bitten? Remember if so, you DO need tetanus shots and perhaps rabies - not being funny :)
ReplyDeleteNo, I didn't. All I heard was the yelping. The owners did look mighty miffed about it though. It seemed a bit unnecessary to me. I thought the only thing that wasn't funny about it was my meek apologising.
ReplyDelete