jeudi 29 juillet 2010

Beach blues by the Seine





Whilst Parisiens have evacuated the city to head everywhere but the Rive Gauche, we've been discovering a side to the city that until now we've greatly avoided, thinking the crowds would be unbearable. 
One of the most pleasant surprises of all has been Paris Plages. 
Uncrowded in the mornings, it's perfect for a spot of people watching, a bite to eat by the water, sit on a deckchair on the side of the Seine to read, sleep, and soak in summer vacation atmosphere.

vendredi 23 juillet 2010

Under the mist on tiptoe



When you're in Paris, in love, and at the Paris plage, there is only way to cool off.  Yes, under the soft showers of mist by the side of the Seine.

mercredi 21 juillet 2010

City of Stripes & Bikes




A few photos from today's out and about in Paris.  No lights, but much sightseeing of bikes and stripes.

lundi 19 juillet 2010

Fruits of Summer - Memories of Long Ago


Long gone are the days when, with untamed braids, a scorched, freckled nose and rather un-fashionable pret-a-porter shorts becoming only of the 70’s, I’d spend afternoons hanging from the willows that rested on the edge of a nearby stream, dipping their tips into the trickle of water as it flowed past. 
It was a summer holiday routine, constant and stable. There was a forever-ness to the vacation, summers would always be full of this, or so I thought at the time.  They’d go on endlessly, never stopping.
Just as the sun would rise, and the cock would crow, each day in a field above the creek, a herd of cows would stand metres away from a kitchen door anticipating her arrival. Waiting in the bushes alongside the outhouse, swishing tails at bothersome flies, they knew with regularity that she’d soon be there.  Sure enough, eventually she was.
Mistress of a small acreage, my grandmother would arrive to her dutifully awaiting stock. Bucket in one hand, a stool in the other, her tiny grey haired figure, would exit the kitchen door. It was a cheap tinny door with a fly screen that clanked shut against a worn wooden frame, a frame that witnessed many openings, and bore the smacking shut, on much love and bickering. 
As the door slammed and echoed behind her, she’d descend the single step and pass through a gate adorned by her beloved apricot trees.  Each day her attire was no different to any other, standard floral dress, protected by an apron, and boots, to endure the cow pads that lay ahead. 
There, in that dry and dusty corner of town, each day with steady repetition, they’d run along beside her, her devoted Herefords, parallel but kept apart by wire, until she arrived near the barn.  Entering the first gate, metal with herringbone patterned wire, she’d cross a muddy, or otherwise dusty yard, open an old splintered gate and finally allow their smelly company into hers.  As per every other day, as done for some years previous, the stool would take its place, the bucket would go down and she’d assume her spot, crouched, aggravating an aching back, rubbing her already calloused fingers, milking away for another day.
Whilst I didn’t often wake to see her go out for the morning milk, there were many a time at the hour of the early evening session when along with my sisters, we’d stand peering, faces squashed through the divides of the wooden cattle yard.  Once relieved of their engorged udders, the cows would be returned to the paddock.  At which point we’d take it upon ourselves to be their chief tormentors, chasing them madly, possessed little devils having taken over our bodies, up and down the rocky hill. And, that was how days passed on those long summers spent in quiet, loving arms. 
On the mornings when she’d tiptoed gently out, that grandmother of mine, I’d continue to sleep on her heavenly pillow where dreams were made.  I’d miss the ritual sizzling of the pan fried breakfast, awakening long after it had been eaten, but just in time to soak in the last of the flavor of sausages and eggs that lingered in the air.  From the kitchen came the smoky smell of the grill that my grandfather and uncles would devour.  On the bread board were the remains of slices of bread, its blackened crust, a smell I can conjure up now, and a taste I’ve wished for again on so many occasions.
At other times when I’d been so lucky to have finished my dreams and woken before everyone had eaten, I’d sit alongside of them all.  In the middle of the table would be a jug of cream, strained through cheesecloth, full of the taste of farm freshness, straight from the cows that I’d tormented the days before.  With the cream, I’d indulge in apricots of summer in that little house on Petrie Street.  Grown, picked and preserved for longevity, they were enhanced with a flavor that can only come from something homegrown, loved and nurtured.
And that was the start of many of my early summer days.  Tart apricots, not quite ripe, yet nevertheless relished in their abundance, served with a fresh, rich cream, gave flavor to long summer holidays in a house full of the essence of a woman who’s influence runs deep so many years later.
A generation has now passed and thousands of miles stand between those memories and where I find my life happily settled in France.  Grandparents are long gone, the cows and the house too.  Yet each year, from the end of May, and until autumn arrives, French markets fill with the richness of tasty ripe apricots. They take me back to the paddock, the door, and those morning smells.  Once again, I dream of the magic taste that came only in the company of my grandmother,  her  cream,  her tart, but most deliciously full of love, apricots.
This summer, just as all others for the past nine years was no different.  On a recent outing to the Marché Notre Dame in Versailles, there they were, sitting amongst the cherries, waiting to be eaten and indulged, were the most beautiful apricots.  And there I was, a child swinging from a tree on the banks of a stream, waiting for the cows to come home. Wanting for the taste of some of that cream from so long ago that would go so deliciously with them.
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The Marché Notre Dame is a lively, 300 year old market located on the Rue de la Paroisse in downtown Versailles.  The ‘halles’ (pavilions) are open Tues-Saturday 7am-19.30 and Sunday 7am-2pm.
The ‘Carrés’ Notre-Dame (external market) on the same market square is a bustle of activity each Tuesday, Friday and Sunday from 7am – 2 pm. 

dimanche 4 juillet 2010

GirlsguidetoParis.com




These days, the years evolve around 'times' when an annual event occurs, usually to do with a school calendar. 
Once one annual ritual has passed we move on to the next.  It’s predictable in nature and carried out with military precision; la Rentrée, Toussaint,  Noel, vacances d’hiver ( when everyone skips town and heads to snow capped mountains), mi-careme, finally arriving at Paques when church bells go silent from Easter Thursday until Sunday when the bells grow wings and fly back to deliver chocolate eggs to the gardens for French children.
Not so long after the delivery of chocolate, the air starts to fill with the scent of Spring. And, then you start to see it.  The streets start to line with removal trucks, doors open, for two days men become little beavers, packing  up houses and apartments, filling the truck before moving on.  It continues for several weeks as the school year comes closer to an end before finally going silent. 
Then it is time to say goodbye, again.  I’ve been lucky in that the removal vans have been impacting on other people’s lives for the last four years.  My luck ran out this year and it caught me with a wallop.  Not one, but three wonderful friends are saying au revoir to French soil. One will return, but two won’t and the company of all three will be missed, greatly.
Knowing that the day was arriving where we’d soon be saying goodbye, I passed a wonderful morning with one of these dear friends, wandering the streets, cameras slung, doing what we both love to do so much, taking photos to add to memories of her time in France.  Whilst the friends will be gone, along with me the memories will remain. But it just won’t be the same.
At the same time, GirlsguidetoParis ran a photo competition.  Happy to participate with the above photos, it was fun to be included in the 'special mentions' and featured on the GirlsGuidetoParis homepage.  

Paris Polaroid cards - set no.2


Polaroid Paris set.1

The first of our card sets is now ready to go.  Take a look at the photos below or, on our homepage.  Likewise, visit us in our Etsy shop or come and say hi on Facebook