Wednesday saw another day of preparation, including quite a lot of gardening in 100 degree heat. The plants were all very thirsty! So it was the usual ritual of watering every potted plant in the place (roughly 70 of them) with two 6-liter watering cans, and dead-heading all the wilted blossoms and leaves. But we saved the hard work for the evening, once it was cooler: I dug up some three dozen bolted lettuce plants. They were starting to look pretty ugly.
Our new guests, an artist's group from California, arrived Thursday, and were promptly treated to a welcoming dinner of one of Kate's specialties: a kind of stuffed chicken breast, filled with asparagus, mozzarella and local ham, with an incredible shallot cream sauce. Not to mention chocolate torte. She really is an amazing chef, able to cook and bake with equal skill, and I have been lucky to be her helper, or as she terms it with her characteristic wry British humor, her "kitchen bitch." When she said this, I told her jokingly there was "no one's bitch I'd rather be." In this role, I mostly do prep work like setting the table, lighting candles, cutting bread, plating and serving, and piles and piles of dishes. The fun part about the dishes is where they are done: in the prep room, which has no ventilation whatsoever. This means that it is at least 10 degrees hotter than outside, so steamy that condensation forms on the tile floor. At least not having had a dishwasher in my college apartment stood me in good stead for this task.
Our painting guests dug into their artwork in earnest on Friday, setting up shop overlooking one of our fields where the hay had just been baled. In the background were also another set of new arrivals: Michel's horses. Tomorrow afternoon, we have another group arriving to do a horseback riding tour with Michel, who we refer to as "the French cowboy," not only because of his job but because he dresses in big belt buckles and stetsons. Through my open window I can occasionally hear the horses doing that little lip thing they do that makes them sound slightly exasperated.
Today, Saturday was the artists' excursion to Rocamadour, the pilgrimage city an hour and a half north of here. What's special about this city is that it is built into a rock face (which is admittedly not so special here, where troglodyte dwellings abound), serving as a destination for Christian pilgrims since the 11th century. It is considered holy 1) because of the discovery of St. Amadour's uncorrupted body and 2) for the Black Madonna statue brought back from the First Crusade. It also figured into a bit of military strategy during the Hundred Years War: Charles VII, needing a diversion to build up an army to kick the English out of France, enlisted the help of his pal Pope John XXII. The pope declared that year a jubilee year, giving all the Christians who completed certain tasks a free pass into heaven. So everyone, including the English, dropped their weapons and pursued the jubilee year tasks. For France's Christians, this included a pilgrimage to Rocamadour.
The wedding car. |
Mike hard at work on that watercolor. |
See it there with the chain? |
After we had seen all the highlights, we made our way up the path of the Stations of the Cross, which finishes one station short because they ran out of funds, and back to the van for the ride home. And now here I am, bags packed, ready to leave in the morning. It's a little surreal. I've been in this country for such a long time; the Baran feels like home and William and Rosalie like family. I don't know how I'll ever be able to repay them for their generosity.
Tomorrow will consist of roughly 8 hours of train travel to arrive at the Paris airport, where I will stay overnight and catch my plane the next morning. Hard to believe I'll be back in Cincy by Monday afternoon! I'm surprised at how little homesickness I've experienced since I've been here. When I studied abroad two years ago, I missed home terribly. Now, while I can't say I don't miss it at all, I suppose I feel it less. However, I am definitely ready to come home and start a new chapter of my life. And I am definitely ready to see my family again. And I am definitely ready for good Mexican food--France has delicious cuisine, but they can't seem to figure out a chimichanga.
So, with that, I am off on the long trip home. Here's to a safe journey!