Little Bob hits the road

Little Bob hits the road
Little Bob hits the road

Friday, November 14, 2014

Leaving Sunshine Mountain

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October 24, 2014

We were all up a little later this morning. Clay cooked his biscuits and ham. Delicious! We worked on the doughnuts and the muffins, there was also cereal, yogurt and of course, coffee.

We wandered a bit and all carried rocks to fill in sink holes that keep swallowing them in the driveway. Vivian showed me their little cave near the stream on the far side of the cow pasture. Soon it was time to think about leaving. Warner had a hankering for lunch, so we all pitched in and started the work to clean up and shut down the house for the winter months. Everything came together and we were on the road before noon. We drove looking for barn quilts.

Warner wanted to share a last meal with us at Shatley Springs. There was a crowd when we got there. It was surprising, because it appeared to be a very large place in the middle of nowhere! We put our names on the waitlist and waited. We wandered to see the original spring, the gift shops and to sit and rock. After about 45 minutes we finally got seated. It was worth the wait. They only serve chicken breast, fried as their chicken. They have great mashed potatoes. Well, everything was pretty good and we could see why they draw crowds from miles around. The down side was that the large dining room where we were seated was tilted! The front was a good foot higher than the back. I hate that! Warner and Clay sat on a sideways tilt, which I couldn't have managed. Vivian and I sat leaning back, which was tolerable.

We drove straight on back to Durham then since it was late afternoon by now. Clay and I stopped again at Krispy Kreme on the way home and scored a half dozen Ghostbusters marshmallow crème stuffed doughnuts. That was our dinner!


It was a physically exhausting couple of days for me and I was happy to be back home and in my own bed tonight. I think that might have been true for Clay too. I know he enjoyed himself and had a great birthday. I made him an "official" birthday cake with candles. He had picked the recipe out of Relish magazine for a butterscotch chiffon cake. I did a bad job on the frosting and Clay wound up having to help me out! When we finished it, I made another from the box. His usual request for his b-day cake is white cake with chocolate frosting. I did a nice job on that one, but since it was a week late, no candles.

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Thursday, November 13, 2014

Clay's 66th Birthday on Sunshine Mountain

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October 23, 2014

We slept well as the wind lashed the leaves and the house overnight as we were warm and snug inside. Clay was up before the sun as usual. He was under a lap blanket on the couch watching a movie on his tablet when I got up around 7am. Everyone else was up shortly after.

We all found something to eat for breakfast. I had made Oat flour raspberry raisin muffins to bring and I enjoyed one with some of the peach yogurt I had brought. Others had doughnuts and cereal. We had coffee. I gave Clay his birthday card and gift. It was The Great NC BBQ map.

This morning Warner and Vivian had an appointment to have the defroster repaired on the refrigerator. We were all cleaned up and dressed when the repairman arrived early. He had replaced the faulty part within 15 minutes and we had the rest of the day free.

We headed out on a sightseeing drive. First stop was Big Horse Creek. We crossed the New River several times, but I don't think we ever got a nice photo of it. We had a couple of goals today. One was to go to Ingles Market. Two was to see the Ben Long church murals. We went into Jefferson which is larger than West Jefferson. We went through the history museum there. They had a lot of stuff from the Virginia Creeper train that used to be here. They also had a fascinatingly detailed model railroad set in a miniature model of West Jefferson.

We had lunch at Smoky Mountain Barbecue & A. B. Vannoy Hams. It is cafeteria style and very good. I got another long-sleeved t-shirt here. Clay bought some ham hocks for making soup back at home and some thinly sliced prosciutto for in the morning. Now he needs 2 things from Ingles. Biscuits and birthday cake. 

When we got back to Sunshine Mountain, we found the cattle roundup underway! The herd had gotten split and some were in the small pen at the bottom but the rest were trapped in the gully on the wrong side of the house. Those cows were bellowing and hollering and just generally agitated. Not the calm, happy cows of yesterday. We unloaded the car and watched for a while, but it was upsetting. The cows did NOT want to get into those trailers. They were being moved down the mountain to a much larger farm near Wilkesboro for the winter. But, they weren't happy about it!

Warner stayed and watched the whole operation while Clay & I followed Vivian up the mountain again. This time in the sunshine and up the other face of the mountain. The house is in sort of a crease where the 2 faces meet. We ducked under the fence out of sight of the cows and headed straight up hill again. The views were the same, yet different. A new angle and in sunshine. It was exhausting again. The reward was to enter the old house on our return downhill.

We went into Lansing for dinner tonight. Lansing is the closest small town. We went to Pie on the Mountain and had pizza for dinner. It was very good. Warner declares Vivian a lettuce connoisseur! It's true!

Back to the house after dark where we shared the large piece of sheet cake/birthday cake Clay bought at Ingles earlier. Then we looked through more of Clay's trip photos and early to bed again. I think Clay had a good 66th Birthday!

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A trip to Sunshine Mountain

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October 22, 2014

We got up early this morning to set off to Durham to Clay's brother and sister-in-law's house to join them for a trip to their shared mountain home. They have owned this mountain property for close to 20 years now, I guess. We've never been. It's also exciting because we'll be there with them for Clay's 66th birthday.

Our first stop was at Krispy Kreme. The hot sign was on and we got a hot dozen. They had lots of advertising for the 30th anniversary of the Ghostbusters movie and their special marshmallow crème filled doughnuts, but they didn't have any of these doughnuts now. Maybe next time, but they won't offer them for long! Clay and I each ate 2 doughnuts on the way to Durham. They're best when they're hot!

We moved over to Warner's 4-wheel drive and had a trip to the bathroom and then set off again. We stopped in Greensboro at their State Farmers' Market for Vivian to buy some apples and use the restrooms. It was surprisingly windy and chilly!

We soon left the Interstate and the roads kept getting smaller and windier the higher we got. We knew we were close when we crossed the Blue Ridge Parkway. Near lunchtime, we arrived in West Jefferson. We stopped for lunch at the Havana Café, a tiny Cuban restaurant. It was very good. Clay and I both had the Cuban sandwich. Clay had a full-sized one and I had a half one with a side of rice and black beans. Delicious!

Warner went into the hardware store on an errand with Clay. Soon we were driving around looking at the many murals on our way to Ashe County Cheese. I love factories of any kind and I was fascinated by the loading of the cheese curds into tin forms to press them into wheels of cheddar. I also loved the store and got a long-sleeved t-shirt. We had bought a bag of curds from here at the State Fair earlier this week! So, we bought a big wedge of Parmesan in the store as well as juusto. 


Just around the corner, we saw The Honey Hole of the Blue Ridge and I insisted we go in there too. They had an amazing selection of honeys in squirt bottles with little plastic spoons that you could try. They also had a lot of things handmade from beeswax. I picked a jar of New River Honey from Bare Bottom Farm of West Jefferson!

We finally headed back uphill and out of town for Sunshine Mountain and our home for the next 2 nights. We all got unpacked and got the utilities running then we headed out for a hike. We hiked straight uphill through a cow pasture. The property owners let a local farmer graze a small herd of cattle here in exchange for keeping the 60-acres worth of fence maintained, as I understand it. The cows are usually gone by November 1, so we were glad to get to see them. I believe I understood Warner to say there is a 600-foot elevation change on their acreage. So, we knew and could see that it was going to be an uphill walk. But! It was straight uphill! It was a strenuous hike up and back down. But even though it was windy, chilly and cloudy, the scenery was amazing and the cows were mostly friendly with some cute calves.





When we got back to the house, exhausted, we fixed snacks and drinks. We put cushions out on the front porch furniture. We sat out on the front porch and enjoyed our cheese purchases. I really loved the baked, warm juusto. Soon, the sun was setting and it was time to go in.

Vivian made and brought with her from Durham a chicken and rice casserole and that is what we had for dinner. She also brought along and made a salad from her neighbor's garden. It was good and hit the spot. Everyone was very tired. After dinner, Vivian wanted to see Clay's photos from the Mississippi River cruise and other trips, they looked at about half of them and then we all went to bed. Warner and Vivian have their own room upstairs. Clay and I chose the downstairs bedroom to borrow. It was closest to the bathroom, which is downstairs.

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Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Day 8 Village Life in Dordogne & Back Home

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Friday, October 10, 2014


Neither of us slept well on our final night in Sarlat. It was too bad because I have really come to like this soft squishy bed. I can settle right into it and since we don’t seem to be able to adjust the thermostat, but just turn the AC on or off, we both snuggle up under the heavy duvet they have in lieu of sheets and blanket. Anyway, I couldn’t seem to stop the tremor until after 2am. Clay said he only slept until 2am, I guess my going still woke him. In any event, he woke me before our alarm went off at 4am and I was out of the shower by the time the room phone rang with Monika’s 4:30am ordered wakeup call. We went down with our luggage to put under the bus about 2 to 5 minutes before 5am. The dining room door was open but no one was in there and we had our luggage to get rid of anyway. We found Cathy, the bus driver, standing in the lobby with what looked like Monika’s luggage. We asked her if we could take it out to the bus and she walked out there with us and put in right by the door up front. She locked it and we went back inside to wait for the now closed dining room to open. It was 5am on the nose by my watch when Monika started berating them to open up. We had our usual breakfast, just a lot earlier.
Everyone was on time, the bus was loaded and we were off by 6am. We had a 10 minute technical stop at a truck stop about 2 hours into the drive. Monika pretty much stayed on the microphone after that. She did have the lights off and quiet for the first 2 hours so people could sleep. That part has such curvy, up & down roads and it was so foggy and rainy that I felt carsick and couldn’t really sleep until we hit the freeway. Then I slept off and on for about an hour. Off and on because the guy behind me’s watch alarm kept going off every 15 minutes. We had heard it during breakfast everyday but assumed he had it set to take pills or something. But it was going off every 15 minutes well before our usual breakfast time which makes us think that he just can’t hear it and doesn’t realize it is going off. Oh, well. I had been watching for animals in the headlights of the pre-dawn darkness. I didn’t see anything.
When we got back on the bus right after the technical stop as we were re-entering the freeway we passed a green pasture, or field, and there must have been 100 gray rabbits out in that field. It was crazy! That is the only wildlife we have seen in southwest France other than birds and escargot! We got to the Bordeaux airport a little past 9am. Monika announced that she would unload in front of Terminal A because our BA flight at 10:20am was the first of the group's and the others mostly needed Terminal B but they had time and she would walk them down. Cathy opened the door where she put our bags and we pulled them right out and set off for security. Monika came running up with a cart that I know I had told her several times we did not need. I hope she found someone else who needed it and that she got her Euro back.
The security line was short and they opened 2 more x-ray machines after we got in line, so we were through in plenty of time. Then we had to go through French passport control to get to the gate 14 that was posted for us. Now we were trapped and with nowhere to sit. Gate 13 was right next to ours and was an international flight to Montreal by TransIt that was supposed to have departed at 8-something AM but was still sitting at the gate with all its waiting passengers sprawled over every available surface in the contained area. We stood until they started to call boarding for our flight. Then we stood in a cluster nearer the jetway door. They never did call our seats or Ruby category, but we were some of the last in line anyway since we just couldn’t get across the room in the crowds. This was a different plane than the last one. It was still about an hour flight and this time they served either potato chips or a cookie with beverages. You wouldn’t even get a drink on a one hour flight in the US!
We arrived in Gatwick a little late but got through immigration quickly, even though BA did not give us landing cards to fill out onboard, so we had to stand in arrivals and do it. Thankfully Clay had bought our return Gatwick Express tickets because there were crazy lines to buy tickets, but we just had to find our way from North to South Terminal and we were off. He paid £44.70 for them online before we left home and we picked them up when we arrived at Victoria Station on the inbound trip. It was about 1pm by the time we walked into the Comfort Inn from Victoria Station. While Clay checked us in, I logged on to the Internet at the lobby terminal for free and printed our boarding passes for £1. (Clay was peeved because he did not recall being charged for printing on our way over, but we were.) Clay had prepaid £67.15 when he booked early online, so the price was right. This is the same place we stayed at outbound. We got room 605 this time. It is probably the category that we actually booked this time. It is below the ground floor and very much smaller. It does have a daylight window though. The bed is very hard. The good news is that we don’t seem to feel the trains as much in this room as we did the half floor above the ground floor last time. Sorry, no photos. I don't know how Clay missed this one!
We dropped our bags and used the restrooms and found our Oyster Cards and set off back to Victoria Station. Clay had chosen to return to the National Gallery today to revisit the 2 Vermeers they have. We wound up at the Embankment Tube stop because they made the announcement too late in the train about no connections at Charing Cross. As we were trying to find a platform to back track, I saw a sign outside the turnstiles that said Charing Cross station was a 5 minute walk up the street. It was probably closer than that and the National Gallery was probably only 5 minutes walk. In addition, out the back side of Embankment Station was a new pedestrian bridge across the Thames with great views of the London Eye and Big Ben and the Parliament and much more. Anyway, I just ran out of energy and couldn't go anymore as we were walking up to Charing Cross and I had to have something to eat. We stopped in at a Pret a Manger shop and got a cup of bircher muesli and a bottle of water. I have what feels like the beginning of a sore throat and I ache all over. If I am just now getting sick it is a miracle after being in the bus every day with some clearly unwell people. Fingers crossed that if I am getting sick that I wait until we get home. We walked on to Trafalgar Square and sat on the edge of the fountain to eat and drink. We then went in and found the Vermeers and then looked through most of the Impressionists and the Renaissance and 17th century collections before calling it quits.
On the way back to the Comfort Inn, we found a place to buy my little stash of Fox’s Glacier Mints since I had recently opened my last bag. We also stopped and put £5 on each of our Oyster Cards for the trip back to Heathrow on Piccadilly Line tomorrow morning. 
We stopped in at the St. George in between the Comfort Inn and Victoria Station again. This is where we ate on the way over and I think Clay wanted a repeat experience. So, we had one. We got there about 3:45pm and the lunch specials ended at 4pm. So, the waitress sent him up to the bar to order and we got a repeat meal. Three Old Spot sausages in some kind of dark brown sauce or gravy for me over mashed potatoes and then Clay got the beer that came with it. He ordered fish & chips off the regular menu. He offered to complete the experience with a crepe from across the street and over we went. I had toffee this time and he had hazelnut gelato. We got back into the Comfort Inn early and I typed while Clay used the Internet and we went to bed early. We have to get up early in the morning again. 
Saturday, October 11, 2014

Clay got his Northumberland sausage sandwich this morning at The Upper Crust at Victoria Station! This was a regular meal for him when he had his extended work stay in London a few years ago and he has been craving a reprise. Unfortunately, the last several times we have passed through a Tube stop with a shop the timing has been off, until now. Finally!
The trip home was uneventful. It is a longer flight on the return. Couple with the fact that it is all daytime. The flight over is an hour shorter and they served you dinner, let you sleep and then feed you breakfast. It seems to go by quite quickly. The return flight is all day time with lunch and a snack as I recall. So, it lasts an hour longer without all the food and sleeping. The good news is that we both watched both movies. AA did not provide headsets at no charge on this flight as they had outbound when we didn't get them because we weren't watching. Good news, we both had a set with us anyway. Bad news was that I did get sick. It took me a couple of weeks to get back to normal. All better now!
So, that's the end. Dordogne lived up to or exceeded all expectations. We can recommend Village Life in Dordogne.

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Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Day 7 Village Life in Dordogne

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Thursday, October 9, 2014


We were first to breakfast this morning just after 7am. It is raining this morning. We are very hopeful that it will not being raining at 11:30am when we have our boat ride on the Dordogne River. We had our usual breakfasts and the staff has altered over our stay and is much friendlier and more helpful and it is not such a problem to get coffee, milk or juice.

The bus left at 9am for Beynac. It raining with dark skies and lots of low clouds as we wound around and up and down from one valley to the next. It was still raining when we got off the bus outside Beynac castle. Adrian told us that the river parts of Chocolat were filmed here in Beynac. Besson's Joan of Arc was filmed here. Another thing we’ll have to revisit now when we’re home. Beynac castle was very impressive atop a cliff above the Dordogne River.
The Dordogne Valley has 5 castles and is where the 100 years wars took place with the English on one side of the river and the French on the other. Though honestly to hear Adrian explaining the Plantagenets and Capuchins, and the way everyone kept changing loyalties it was hard to say who was French and who was English. Anyway, this is where they battled it out. 
Beynac castle is privately owned. It has been in the same family since the 1950s and they are the ones who renovated it to its current state. Evidently there is only one 80-something year old woman left and she lives in the little gatehouse. It was an amazing visit and the views were spectacular even in the pouring rain. We all had to hole up in the kitchen for a while at the end of our visit to wait for the pouring rain to slack off some. Those of us who reached the top of the tower first could actually watch the black clouds of really heavy rain roll in. Eventually we had to leave even though it was still raining pretty good. 
We got down to the Garbarre landing on the Dordogne River early, but that was just as well because we needed a technical stop. At 11:30am as we set off the rain slacked off and we had a few minutes of sunshine before it started raining again. That was too bad because it is probably a beautiful little cruise. It is a very short cruise from Beynac around a bend in the river and under a railway bridge before you reach a very shallow fording place historically in front of a castle, Chateau de Feynac, owned by Texans with a car crushing machine invention fortune, from San Antonio.  According to our guides, the flowers blooming in the window boxes indicated that the owners were currently in residence. In the distance you could see Castelnaud. There we turned around and more or less drifted with the current back to the dock.  We saw fish jumping. We saw birds. We saw some different kinds of ducks and geese, either in the water or flying. Notably, we saw a couple of kingfishers, one diving! They were brilliantly colored blue and red but too quick to photograph. We saw quite a few gray herons.

The restaurant, Hostellerie de Maleville, where we ate lunch was right there at the garbarre landing. They were ready for us with a glassed-in room overlooking the Dordogne River. They served us at long tables in family style. They had water and red wine in bottles on the tables. They brought out platters of sliced, roasted veal with some onion gravy on it. They brought out platters of roasted potatoes and stuffed roasted tomatoes. There were wooden baskets of crusty whole wheat bread on the table. For dessert they gave everyone a slice of chocolate topped walnut cake with crème Anglaise. I would have liked some coffee but we waited and none came out. During lunch, while we waited for the cake I had already gone out to take some photos because the skies had cleared to blue with bright sunshine! When coffee didn’t come all the people at our end of our table went outside. After some time, someone came out and told us to go back in if we wanted coffee. I went back with several others and they served us tiny espressos. I needed the caffeine to get through the afternoon, as you might guess I did not eat veal or walnut cake!

At 2pm we departed for Domme. Our last stop of the tour. Although we could see it atop the cliff across the valley, we couldn't just go there. We kept driving further away from it as we had to approach it from the side without the cliff! Eventually, we wound our way far enough and high enough to park outside the medieval fortification walls. Domme is a bastide. That is a fortified, new town built maybe 700 to 800 years ago. There was a little road train waiting in the parking lot to take us to the top and into Domme. Adrian talked to us over the train’s speaker system and then for the first 10 minutes or so of our visit over our QuietVoxes. Then we had about half an hour of free time. There were only a few shops and restaurants, a church and the visitor’s bureau open. Mostly we appreciated the view and used the restrooms. Fortunately the rain seemed to have cleared out for the rest of the day. Unfortunately, I was already soaked all the way through from the boat ride.
We got back to the hotel between 4 and 5:30pm. We all said our good byes to Adrian who has been our primary local guide here in Dordogne. Clay had gotten us checked in for tomorrow’s BA flight while we were in the restaurant and parking lot as we left Beynac. We went straight to the 2 computer terminals near the dining room of the hotel as soon as we arrived. Even with the weird French keyboards Clay soon had our boarding passes printed. We should be fine to fly tomorrow morning. We are mostly packed and ready to go.

Dinner tonight is in the hotel at 7pm. We are expected to go to bed early. We all have wake up calls scheduled for 4:30am tomorrow. They are serving our normal breakfast buffet tomorrow at 5am! I think we all expected that with a 6am departure and a 3-hour bus ride that we would get another sack or box meal like we did on the way here. But, no an hour before departure we get a last regular meal. I guess that is toss up for which would be preferable. At 5:30am, at least one member of each party has to go out and identify our luggage before it can be loaded on the bus. Outbound we did this as we ourselves were boarding the bus, so I don’t know if this means we should be finished with breakfast, but I think so. I think we are expected to bring our bags and not go back upstairs after breakfast. I hope that works out OK. There are a lot of people in our group who are even less morning animals than me so we’ll see how this works. We are to depart at 6am sharp. We hope that happens because we have one of the earliest scheduled flights. Bordeaux is a very small airport and we are traveling with only carry-on luggage and we already have our boarding passes so we should be fine if we get there in 3 hours. If not, there are at least a half dozen other flights to London that day and we’ll assume that somehow we’ll get back. Fingers crossed that Plan A works.

Our last dinner was another catered meal in the hotel dining room. It was special. I had a mixed salad followed by an herb omelet with sauted zucchini and squash on the side and another salad with warm goat cheese followed by crème brulee and a plum liqueur. They also served red and white wines and tea and coffee. The regular menu was foie gras followed by sea scallops (that were evidently very fishy, they smelled) the goat cheese salad, etc.

We have an early morning here at the end. So, bonsoir et bonne nuit.


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Monday, November 10, 2014

Day 6 Village Life in Dordogne

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Wednesday, October 8, 2014


We both slept in today and arrived at breakfast about 8am. It had not rained overnight and the streets were all dry when I looked out. Yeah! After I showered and dressed, I opened the curtains and you guessed it, it was raining! Boo! We had a leisurely breakfast and bigger than usual because we did not want to eat out at lunch on our own. We eventually headed out for our morning on the town. This morning is the smaller morning market in Sarlat-la-Caneda.
Clay wanted to go to the top of the park across the street and enter Sarlat from a different avenue. I wanted to go in the opposite direction and walk the side of town we had not been on and look for a large section of the ancient wall around the town. We started on our side of the traverse street and found the first of the old gates, we think, as it was below street level. Then we walked up to the top of the park and turned in.
One new thing we noticed today that we had not noticed anywhere else since we got to Europe was little free libraries. We saw a couple of them today, including one right at the corner of the park across the street! I don’t know how we missed it before as we’ve walked by there a dozen or more times!
We found not one, but 2 different shops that specialized in soap made from the milk of asses (burros)! I never imagined such a product, much less 2 shops fairly close together specializing in it!
We hit the morning market and confirmed that the knitting store and the view tower elevator both opened at 10am. Clay was looking for the oyster vendor, but she didn't come today. So, we have an hour to walk. The skies opened up and poured. We had to get out our umbrellas as it was too much for the rain jackets alone. It only poured for about 15 minutes but that was enough to make everything drip for the next 2 hours.
We made our way over to the other side of town and walked the old wall and gates across and then took the tiny meandering lanes and alleys all the way back across. There was nowhere, no matter how narrow a passage we thought it was that we did not encounter a car! It was crazy! We saw a lot of new and interesting architecture including some that Christophe had shown slides and talked about in his architectural preservation talk.
We were finishing up as we heard the bells ring 10am. Clay wanted to go straight to the shop and tower. But, I wanted to try to wander some of the higher streets above St. Sacredos near where the wall had been. There were a lot of closed streets and it turned out we had been on all of them earlier at some point anyway.  
So, we finally came out near the fabric store where I had decided I wanted to buy some bamboo knitting needles with painted finials on them. Before we got there we saw an open art gallery that we hadn’t noticed before and I went in and picked out 3 laminated bookmarks of prints of painting at 3 for 5 E. I picked Rocamadour, Lascaux and the geese statue of Sarlat. I wish I had found this place first since I prefer these paintings to the prints I got already! I got my needles in a size I hope I can soon use, 6 but they look more like my size 9s at home. European sizing?
We went around to the tower which was open. But, when we asked about going up were told it was ferme due to the weather. Huh, it was still wet but it wasn’t actively raining as we stood there discussing it. As Clay said, this has got to be the gravy job of Sarlat civil servants. The tower is only scheduled to be open Wed., Sat. and Sun. but in reality there is almost always some reason to not actually operate the elevator! So, we walked through the covered market again and Clay bought a walnut biscuit for his dessert and I got 2 of our most expensive macaroons yet, over 2E each. They were completely different from the ones in Bordeaux (which they most resembled) or St. Emilion. They were much more substantial and cakey.
Then Clay headed back down the traverse street looking for a sandwich walk up window. At least I think that was what he wanted. It is where he eventually stopped most of the way across town. He went to La Mie Caline (which is where we got our sandwiches in Bordeaux too). He got a Rosette Cornichons which was a small baguette with butter, salami and cornichon pickles. It was very intensely flavored and after he started eating it back in the room, he realized too late that he’d have liked some mustard. I expect they’d have had it if he’d asked but he didn’t think of it then. I ate the raspberry Bonne Maman yogurts we had put in the mini-fridge back on Saturday. When we got back to the room after 11am, it had still not been serviced. We checked the pool area about maybe eating out there but it was dripping wet out there and no umbrellas were open, so we went in the room and changed the service sign to do not disturb. I don’t think we will go back out before our 1:15pm bus departure time because Clay has gone to sleep. We’ll see. I just saw a little Welsh terrier leaving the Sarlat market from the window. We had passed him earlier this morning going into the market. He was a very busy little terrier, not to be distracted by people at all!
At 1:15pm we departed for Tursac where we visited the Madeleine troglodyte village along the Vezere River. It reminded me of the Gila Cliff Dwellings a bit. But, of course without a river and without a 17th century chapel. The public is not allowed to visit the prehistoric portion of the Cliffside housing. The bus slowed today as we passed the family home of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, author of The Little Prince. The bus also drove a special route today so we would drive past a goose farm since everyone was commenting that with all the goose and foie gras, why no duck or geese farms.
Next we drove to Rouffignac to visit the privately owned “cave of 100 mammoths”. There are over 6 miles of underground caverns so we rode a little electric train to see only one level during an hour long visit. It was amazing, again. It was cold and humid in there and the train was crowded so not too comfortable and very dark. It was a cave. We headed back about 5pm. We arrived at the hotel about 6pm. Sorry, no  photos allowed.

We have an early dinner tonight at L’Octroi Bistro. We have a folk music and dance performance after dinner. Monika assures us that the group will require audience participation, but I personally am thinking that attendance is not required. We’ll see.

On the bus ride home, Monika passed out tomorrow’s itinerary. It is our last day and night on the tour. On Friday we just get a ride to the Bordeaux airport. Breakfast buffet is from 7 to 9am. At 9am the bus departs for Beynac Castle where we have a guided tour until 11am. We have to 11:30am for a technical stop. At 11:30am we board a gabarre (a flat-bottomed boat) for a cruise up river in the Dordogne Valley. At 12:30pm we have lunch at a restaurant Hostellerie de Maleville. At 2pm we depart for Domme. We ride a little train to the village center and return. It is a spectacular hilltop Perigord bastide with classic Gothic architecture and unforgettable panoramic views. At 4:30 or 5pm, we’ll be back at the hotel. We are requested to pack our suitcases before dinner. At 7pm, dinner is served in the dining room of the hotel. We are requested to have our suitcases outside our rooms before 9pm and to pay our personal expenses by then. We don’t have any expenses and since we are traveling with only carryon luggage we’ll plan to take it downstairs ourselves when we depart on Friday morning.

It is 9pm and dinner is over. We had the entire upstairs of the restaurant and it was incredibly noisy up there. I guess I should say we were noisy. Clay had foie gras, which he liked very much, and duck breast which he ate all of it so I guess he liked it as well. I had a salad which was mainly a large hollowed out roasted tomato filled with creamy cheese and surrounded by a few greens. I ate most of the cheese and some of the greens and Clay ate the tomato. For main course, I had 2 small beef kabobs still not well done of course but some pieces were more well-done than others and I ate those. We all had a green square and a brown square, a little pot of ham & bean soup and a ramekin of gratinéed potatoes. The squares were, I guess, a mousse of broccoli and one of mushroom. I think everyone would have rather just had the actual vegetables. For dessert we all had a small molten chocolate cake with vanilla ice cream and whipped cream. It was very rich. It was 8:35pm when the waitress came to take coffee or tea orders. That meant that 2 blocks away 5 minutes ago, our folkloric performance had begun. Our table all declined after dinner drinks and got up and left, but no one else left. We don’t know if they forgot or if they were just all boycotting it. I did not go. Clay and one other couple and a single woman from our table went and another couple and I turned into the hotel instead.
Clay is back and he said I didn’t miss much. He did say there were 16 performers and that was a lot of bodies in that room with even half of our group attending. Clay thought it was pretty well attended with most of the group eventually attending. He said that audience participation was high enough that he was not pressured to dance.

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Thursday, November 6, 2014

Day 5 Village Life in Dordogne

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Tuesday, October 7, 2014


We slept in to almost 7am today. It is a gray rainy chilly morning, so just as well. Clay set off with his laundry, a bacon sandwich and an audiobook around 7am for the self-service laundry down the street. I got in the shower and dressed and then went down for breakfast alone. I had the cherries with yogurt again as well as 3 speculoos crepes with a strip of bacon and coffee with hot milk. I sat on a banquette at a two top between 2 others with couples on either side and then both sides engaged me in conversation so I was hardly alone. Clay has come back with some good looking laundry. He says he only had one snafu when the clothes were in the dryer and he thought he needed more money so he ran down to the tabac and bought a roll of Mentos. But he said as soon as he put only 2 coins in that the dryer started right up. He said the clothes were not completely dry, but that was good because he can hang them up now and hand smooth them and have a chance to let them dry completely when smoothed. He laundered my white flying blouse with the big breast pocket and it looks just fine. So, that worked out very well.

I see a new word on today’s program, lauze. There is a traditional style of stacked flat stones on fairly steeply pitched roofs around here and I guess that is what it is called. Lauze roofed. (You have probably noticed this word in the blog already, but when we were hearing it before today, I didn't actually know how it was spelled!)  We’ll see if the architecture preservation lecture this morning by the French historian Christophe Larriberre covers it. He introduced himself yesterday as an expert in historic French firearms. So, we’ll see. We're back! I enjoyed Christophe’s lecture and he did talk about the lauze roofing as well as other subjects. Most interestingly, was that other than early government involvement and funding, the story could have come from Raleigh and Historic Oakwood. Basically the procedure is not so much about want you want to do, but who is asking whom for a permit at a particular moment. The other thing was that he had photos of a lauze roof before, during and after renovation and he said the inside as well as the outside have to be the same before and after. So, in that example, they could not use any nails and the wood had to be the same kind cut to exactly the same dimensions and fitted together exactly the same! That seems excessive and in Raleigh anyway, you can do what you like inside and the rules only pertain to what is visible from the street. Christophe said that they actually have a trade school now in Sarlat to train people to do this kind of reconstruction and roofing and they make 4 times as much money as he does. The guide at the Jardins the other day was showing us a redone roof with only the bottom 1/3 in limestone and the rest in slate or tile of some kind because the cost was prohibitive and there were so few craftsmen available to do that work.

We walked down the Le Cellier du Perigord. They sold terroir products. We tasted a rosé, and 2 white wines from Bergerac. The rosé was a first press and young wine of mostly merlot. That was interesting and very good. They let us sample black ham smoke-cured over juniper berries and a goat cheese from Rocamador with a young Bergerac white wine and a mid-level duck foie gras with another drier, bolder and older Bergerac white wine. I skipped the last part! After that we were freed from 11am to 1:15pm departure for Lascaux II.

We first went looking for the St. Mary’s bell tower with the elevator to see if it was open. We knew we were close when we found the brass geese statue. The tower is only open from 10 to noon and 2 to 4pm on Wednesday, and I think Saturday and maybe Sunday. I did see people up there last Saturday, but it hasn't been open since then when we've checked. Today it was closed because of rain.  
We went looking for the other galleries of Veronique Guinard that were listed on the bookmark I got with the Rocamadour print. The 2 listed were no longer located where they were listed. One had a sign to follow arrows to the new location and we followed them through several turns, but lost the arrows at the main square. We walked on through the Place de la Liberté towards the Cathedral Saint Sacredos. On the way, Clay stopped in a candy store to try and buy some nougat. When we left we turned left and then left again and I found the sign for the art gallery. It was up, I think, Rue Montaigne. We went in and they had the same 10€ prints of Rocamador as well as the St. Sacredos cathedral tower seen from the Place de la Liberté. I bought one of the latter for a set. The woman there did a much better job wrapping it as she used cardboard. So, we taped the 2 together and hopefully they will ride home nicely in Clay’s suitcase. Mine doesn’t have any rigid sides!
It was time for lunch now. We had read a couple of menus of restaurants on the Place de la Liberté and were going to eat in one of those. Clay thought I needed to have a Croque Monsieur since that was all I could order to eat the last time I was in France in 1976! I like Croque Madame since I have been eating those in Durham, but only one place had that and it was much more expensive. As we were walking back I noticed a little ice cream place that had all kinds of sandwiches and crepes with some seating in the rear. They were not busy and the prices were much lower. Added bonus of gelato. I had a ham & cheese crepe. Very good. Clay had a 3 cheese panini. We shared a bottle of tap water. Afterwards we got our gelato on cones and kept walking. Clay had pistachio and I had speculoos. Mine had big chunks of cookies in it. We both liked it best and Clay finished mine.
I went back to the room and used the restroom and brushed my teeth and was typing on this while Clay went down to Carrefour (small grocery store) to buy another Coke Zero. Clay got all hairy about leaving the room because I was typing while he was eating nougat and picking it out of his teeth with his Coke and I failed to notice the bus had pulled up outside. It was 1:05pm and we had 10 minutes to get down there without causing delay. Anyway, he was so harried that he left his camera in the room and didn’t realize it until after the bus had left. So, we have no photos of this afternoon. Sorry.

Oh, it rained all morning. But when we came out of the wine shop the sun had come out and it turned into a beautiful afternoon about 72F.

The good news is that the first part of the afternoon was at Lascaux II and no photos are allowed because the artist who painted the reproductions owns the copyrights to them. We learned that there is a Lascaux III touring the world now! I can't imagine how we have missed hearing about this before now. We drove past the construction site of Lascaux IV. We spent about an hour in there and it was fascinating. The real paintings in the actual cave are thought to date from 18 to 36 thousand years ago, I think Adrian said. He said that in 1940 a dog named Robert had rediscovered the cave. The boy who went down there later with his friends were the first humanoids to be down there in 10’s of thousands of years. When we were about to enter the partial replica cave there was a large photo of Robert’s owner and another boy with 2 men who first explored the cave. Clay and I both asked, where’s the dog. Adrian answered, He took the photo. Clever!

On the way back to Sarlat, we detoured to St. Amand de Coly. This was a cave where another hermit lived and died. They built a church right in front of his cave and then they fortified the church with defenses and there was an abbey there. Only the church still stands and the cave is walled up. The church and the village have literally tons of the stacked limestone lauze roofs. There was a guard house inside the defensive walls of the church that you could enter and look up and see the internal structure of the lauze roof construction that Christophe had talked about. It was amazing. On the way, I learned from Monika about the round huts with lauze roofs called borie. Sorry no photos!

We are having some free quiet time now waiting to meet to walk to another included dinner off site. This one is at Le Petit Manoir. We have no idea what they are serving. It will be a surprise.

On the bus ride back, Monika passed out tomorrow’s itinerary. Breakfast buffet is from 7 to 10am. We have the entire morning free. There is a small market day in the Place de la Liberté in the morning. (Not all over town like Saturday’s.) Maybe the St. Mary’s tower will be open and it will not be raining! We have lunch on our own. At 1:15pm, we depart on the bus for Tursac to visit a Madeleine troglodyte village. I really hope it isn’t raining because we are advised to wear sturdy shoes as there is a half dirt/half stone path going up and down. After, we drive to Ruffignac Cave where we ride a little train through more than 6 miles of underground galleries with 100s of depictions of mammoths and other extinct species. At 7pm we have dinner at Le Bistro de L’Octroi. At 8:30 to 9:30pm we have after dinner entertainment in the room next door. It is a folk music and dance program. Audience participation will be expected. I don’t think so.
Dinner tonight at Le Petit Manoir was good. They had us at smaller tables than the last restaurant, so that was better. They also had us in different rooms and in our room not everyone was with our group, so that was nice too. We were at a table for 6 which was a nice size. All of us had been on the pre-tour. In fact, one of the couples were 2 of the 6 of us on the bus from the airport in Bordeaux our first day. Dinner was first course of a salmon tartare that was actually cooked. The men seemed to like it better than the women. I had greens with some kind of julienned root vegetables in a pile in the center. I ate some leaves. Main course was prawns over black rice. I had steak frites. It was not well done, but it wasn’t a bleeding mass either. I ate around the cooked edges and ate fries. Clay finished it. It was good. Dessert was chocolate mousse over caramel with whipped cream and a walnut lace cookie. It was good. They served both red and white wine. I never saw the labels, but I am sure they were local wines. There were smeared decorations on the edges of the dishes and one of the women at our table made Lascaux reproductions from them very well. First an aurochs and then a horse.
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Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Day 4 Village Life in Dordogne

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Monday, October 6, 2014


Somehow, we were the first 2 people down to breakfast this morning. That means that Clay had an opportunity to take a bunch of photos. Thanks to Flickr deleting all but 1000 photo free storage accounts late in 2018, see the links at the top & bottom of each post. Sorry!

So for the last 2 mornings people have been raving about the small glass jars of what looks like cherry compote. We’ve seen people mix in plain yogurt or pour it in crepes, spread it on toast and eat it straight out of the glass. Last night the insulin-dependent diabetic next to me also assured me that it was sugar free. I like tart cherries as well as the next person, so today I had a glass. I mixed plain yogurt in mine. It was alright, maybe even pretty good, I wouldn’t have recommended it to anyone, neither would I wave someone off it. It was just OK. I went back for a slice of bacon and 3 speculoos crepes. Weirdly, we have been finding pieces of bone in our bacon that are like crunching into glass. We can’t figure out what that is about. I picked carefully and got one good piece. Now that I'm looking, I can actually see the glass-like bits in the slices of bacon. Clay had some of the fresh squeezed orange juice today. I knew he was drinking OJ each morning and the first morning I definitely saw him pour it from a pitcher. I had seen the help asking people who picked up a pitcher if they wanted fresh-pressed instead and point to the machine. Somehow Clay had not noticed the orange squeezing/juice dispensing machine. He said he would not ask for any, anyway. I asked for a pitcher of hot milk as soon as someone appeared behind the counter. (We were the first to breakfast today!) She offered pressed OJ as well. I asked Clay and he said yes, so she brought out a small pitcher of hot milk and a glass of OJ to me. The machine has a hopper of whole oranges on top. When they put a glass under the spigot below and press the handle, the oranges fall in one at a time and then halves fall on to orange-shaped half balls that are rotating in the center and they squish the juice out and down to the spigot. Voila! Presse! Clay said it was good and we still don’t know if that is the same OJ that is in the pitchers. Clay likes the big long baguettes standing in the tall basket in the center of the buffet room. He takes one out and cuts off about a 6 inch piece and then gets some bacon and some of the ever changing selection of cheeses from the table in the center of the dining room and makes a sandwich.


After breakfast we had a lot of time free before 9:30am departure. (We should have slept later!) We walked down to the self-service laundry we had passed down the street on our way to and from Les Tulipes. It opens from 7am to 9pm. Last load in at 8pm. Since there are no hangers and not even a shower rod here, Clay’s plan to hand launder has been stymied and he is about out of clean clothes. Now he has gotten change from the tabac and is ready to go at his next free 2 hours.

At 9:30am we left for a tour of Les Jardins du Manoir d’Eyrignac. Our tickets say that the cost of our entry was 7.7€. . It was included in our trip fare. It was a chilly but bright and sunny morning, so a perfect time to tour a garden. We stayed in one large group and were guided through by an employee of the gardens. It was quite nice but Clay and I are not really garden people. We still really enjoyed it. It was a nice morning.

Back onboard the bus we had to order our dinner for L’Octroi tomorrow night. The choices were duck, duck or fish, fish or duck, fish or fish, duck. Clay laughed and laughed. Monika came back before the order form made it to us and told me to sign up for special diet and we covered that I only eat meat that is well done. She said she knew that. Maybe she knows, but is she sharing that with the cooks? We’ll see.

We drove back to Sarlat and arrived a few minutes before lunch at the hotel. Menu was vegetable quiche and a small mixed green salad followed by fruit sorbets and fruit with whipped cream. It was a nice light lunch. There were rolls on the table and coffee and tea was self-service in the buffet room. We had time to go back to the room and brush our teeth before setting out for the afternoon.

Clay checked the Internet while I brushed my teeth and told me that it would be warmer and sunny all the rest of the day. So, I left my rain jacket and umbrella in the hotel. It rained on and off for the rest of the afternoon and evening! It turned out everyone else on the bus had seen weather that predicted rain all afternoon and evening, so Clay needs to find another source for weather information.

For some reason, a member of our party was 5+ minutes late and we did not depart on time at 1:30pm. We have appointments scheduled for most of the itinerary and so it is important to be where you are supposed to be at the time on your daily itinerary handout. It is not clear that everyone quite gets that. I have heard our director and guides iterate the point enough times, but I guess those who need to receive the message are not hearing it or receiving it. We went to Abri de Cap Blanc to see bas relief sculptures in a stone cliff overhang shelter. It was pretty incredible. No photos allowed in there though, sorry. I picked up a brochure (all in French) and it looks like it costs between 6€. and 7.50€. Again it was included in our fare.  

Next we drove to Les Eyzies, the epicenter of Paleolithic discoveries. Instead of Bruno, we have had only Adrian as our sole local guide all day today, except at the garden. (I believe that is his name and I am sure I am spelling it wrong.) He has been speaking to us on the bus and when we went into the stone shelter he was allowed to guide us with the QuietVox system with the local guide accompanying us. He was also allowed to guide us here at the Musee National de Prehistoire in Les Eyzies. It was good because I would have just been lost in there. It was nearly overwhelming and I am sure he just showed us the best of the highlights to give a narrative overview of humanoid evolution as displayed by artifacts. He did a good job and is quite enthusiastic about his subjects. Our tickets say 6€ but again it was included in our fare. So, we covered the last 400,000 years of human history and it was fascinating.

Tonight we still have the village life Q&A and then Clay and I have reservations at 7:45pm at Café dez Arts for dinner on our own. We plan to follow Monika’s advice and pick up a glass of wine at the bar to take next door to the room for the lecture. The wine was like an ounce or less for about 3€. Our 20€ card will not go far. Clay got a double of Pouilly Fuisse and I got a single of Chateau Neuf de Pape. It is still not clear if I got the size squirt I was supposed to get because the machine shut that tap down with a message that the bottle was empty as it dispensed my serving. Anyway, it was not our money, it was a gift. They were both OK, but I didn’t think either were as dear as they were priced. I gave mine to Clay. The Q&A was a little painful in really uncomfortable folding chairs. The pain was from the questions. Evidently Obamacare was eating at a good percentage of our group and they refused to accept what 2 Frenchmen who have grown up with government run healthcare had to say on the subject. Uncomfortable.

This afternoon on the bus ride back to Sarlat, Monika handed out tomorrow’s itinerary. Breakfast buffet from 7 to 9am. 9 to 10am will be a lecture by one of tonight’s local speakers, Christophe Larriberre, about architectural preservation in Sarlat. At 10:30am, we are in the first group to walk somewhere in Sarlat for a tasting of wine and local products. At 11:15am, the 2nd group goes. We are on our own for lunch.

At 1:15pm sharp we must leave for Lascaux II or miss it. At 3:15pm we leave for St. Amand de Coly to visit an Augustinian abbey. At 7:30pm we have an included dinner at the restaurant, Le Petit Manoir. Menu unknown.

Back from dinner tonight at Café dez Arts. It was a very tiny place with seating for only 18. There were only 8 in there eating while we were there from 7:45 to about 9pm. Monika told us that after she learned from me that it was newly open on Monday that she tried to get a reservation for 6 more and was told they were full. Anyway, it had a small menu as well. In addition it was weird. I’ll explain. I had boeuf bourguignon which was probably normal, but it came with a very hot jar in the center of the bowl of stew that had what tasted like gratineed mashed potatoes. Clay ordered cassoulet. (I thought!) We’d seen it in jars and cans all over town and it was duck and white beans. His came and it was a tiny fish pot pie with a small salad. Oh, Clay tells me it was not cassoulet but cassoulette and like andouillette we have decided that ette is used here not to indicate a smaller version of something but a grosser, more disgusting version of something. Like Andouille is a sausage we would eat, andouillette is not a smaller version but a yuckier version. Cassoulet is a white bean-based casserole and cassoulette can be fish stew with a crust and no white beans. Actually, I can't find a definition for cassoulette that is different from cassoulet. Go figure. Desserts were hand written in cursive on a black board across the room. Not only could we not tell what it said, we didn’t understand it. The waitress spoke no English, but we asked her to tell us what the board said. Clay saw her point to the potato jar when she read the top one which was Fondant au chocolat. We thought maybe pot de chocolat, so I ordered that. The next one sounded like it was caramelized fruits. The 3rd one she offered was raspberry soup with vanilla ice cream, so Clay ordered that one. When mine came it was a classic chocolate soufflé in a ceramic ramekin. So why not call it that? Soufflé is a French word, isn’t it? Mine came with a scoop of vanilla ice cream too, which I gave to Clay. I put whipped cream and best of all lots of Clay’s cold raspberry soup on the chocolate soufflé and it was delish. I ate half and shared the rest with Clay. Oh, we both had a glass of white Bourgogne wine with the meal. Our meal price came to 51€.

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Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Day 3 Village Life in Dordogne

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Sunday, October 5, 2014


We woke up to another chilly morning. Monika had earlier confirmed the weather forecasts we had seen that a cold wet front was expected on Tues/Weds. It looks like it arrived early. Yesterday afternoon wound up sunny & hot, but it was a surprise that it was in the 40sF when we first went out. In all the 10-day forecasts we had never seen a temperature lower than the 50sF. Anyway, it was not only below 50F this morning but we could see out the window that it was raining. We checked online weather and it showed the temperature not breaking 60F today but the rain ending at 8am. We’ll still have to wear rainjackets and take umbrellas since we’ll be out of Sarlat all day today. Oh well, it is the weather. I know the grape growers/harvesters will be sweating this rain more than we are!

Breakfast was the same today as yesterday, but they were a little later opening the door and the steam table had not been warmed, so all the same food from yesterday was stone cold. That was a bit disgusting. There were fewer coffee pots out on table and the staff was a bit curter about finding and getting your own coffee for yourself. The problem is that the room is small, there is not much space with people in pulled out chairs and even less space as people walk from table to table to try to get some coffee much less into the back room to get food to take back to their tables. It is poorly designed, staffed and implemented. They were right to shut down their restaurant because it is clearly not a business they want to be in. To do right by their customers they need to shut it down entirely and send us somewhere that wants to run a restaurant! Again, a 4-star establishment should not be telling people to get up and go get their own coffee off some other person’s table. It is ridiculous all around.


We drove away at 8:11am. We had about a 1-hour drive. It was cold and misty and raining all day. The drive was along narrow winding twisty roads that clung to the edges of cliffs. It was a little terrifying. We have a very good female bus driver. She knows the dimensions of that bus to the centimeter I think. We stopped just outside our lunch parking area at Hospitalet for a photo op of a long view of Rocamadour, our destination.

We unloaded at Hotel du Chateau, our lunch restaurant, for a technical stop to use the restrooms. There we met Bruno our other Sarlat local guide and we joined him while the other half joined Andre who had ridden with us and talked to us on the bus. Andre had told us about all the little towns ending in “ac”. It is from the Roman Empire. When the soldiers who had survived 25 years of mandatory service retired, they were given an estate of land to build, farm and live on. They named them based on their names with “ac” added at the end. It meant where lives blank.

So, we walked from beside the top chateau which we did not enter. It is now the Hotel du Chateau and the building across the parking lot from it is where we will eat lunch later. We went down what Andre said was a new ramp put in this year. It was the 12 Stations of the Cross from bottom to top, so we went backwards. We walked down to the bottom of the ramp and then through a tunnel and into the fortified lower middle level and up stairs to the level of the chapels. We saw the replica sword of Roland and the site of the grave of the hermit, Amadour, who started the Christian religious history here.  It was below the sword and beside the door to the Chapel of Notre Dame. It felt sacred in there. It was small with dusty boats and manacles hanging up. The black Madonna and child were very primitive looking on the altar. It was obviously very old, but I can't tell you when it was carved. Clay did not get any good photos in here, sorry. 

We walked through this small, older chapel into the larger and newer active church where they were tolling the bells to call people to today’s service. We got to hear the organist & vocalist warming up. We went on through and out and then down the grand staircase of the penitents. I did not count anything close to 200 steps. They were slippery today though! We had about an hour and 15 minutes of free time to make our way down to the main street, through the tiny old town of Rocamadour, and out to where the bus was waiting for us outside the city gate. There were mostly shops and cafes along the road. About half were closed since it is off season and Sunday morning. We found a Rocamadour patch for me though, yeah! Then we found an art gallery, Guinard. It supposedly has 2 stores in Sarlat which we never found in all our wandering. But, I dithered and finally decided to buy a print of a painting of Rocamadour from a distance in the mist which is just how it looked when we first saw it. It is just a bit too long to go in the bottom of Clay's suitcase between the rails, so I hope it survives the journey home. But, if it doesn’t it wasn’t an expensive original so I won’t worry about it. When we get home I will have to reread Michael Crichton’s Timeline and watch the movie again as well as reread Jean Auel's Clan of the Cave Bear series.
We also stopped at an ice cream shop on the single street that was just opening. They said they also served the & caffe so we went in and I asked if they had chocolat chaud. They said yes and made me a delicious tiny pitcher full by steaming milk and vigorously stirring in chocolate. They put a speculoos cookie and 2 sugar cubes on the side. I also got a glass of water. Clay had the cookie and some water. He only got a sip to taste the hot chocolate. He looked in the pitcher when I was through. I think he was hoping to finish it for me, but I had already poured the last of it in my cup and drunk it. Tant pis, or too bad as the French say.

We made our way on to the bus and got another view of all the levels clinging to the cliff. Amazing! The bus left right at noon. We made a very tight u-turn to get into a very tight tunnel to continue the U which when we exited the other side turned into an S turn. It was a very challenging bit of driving and earned some well-deserved applause. Within minutes were back up top and through the little town of Hospitalet. They were ready to serve us lunch at the Hotel du Chateau. We were all quickly seated and efficiently served. Our included meals offer only one option for each course it seems, unless it is a buffet at breakfast. Lunch today was veal stew with rice and a roasted tomato and bread and water and a frozen dessert that she said was walnut ice cream when she served it. It was more than that but evidently it didn’t translate and that was a close description. It was all good. Of course, veal and walnuts, I didn’t eat much. They served a tiny cup of Turkish coffee-like espresso after. It was bitter and not as good to me as Turkish coffee but I needed the caffeine and sugar boost to keep going.


At 1:30pm or so we reloaded the bus and set off backtracking to return to Sarlat. Andre talked about food or specifically local food like foie gras and truffles and how to prepare them. He told us we were being very French, eating and then spending the afternoon talking about eating. We had a photo op stop of Belcastel. Another fantastic chateau atop a rocky cliff. We stopped about halfway back in Souillac to visit Ste. Marie’s 12th century, a very Byzantine-looking church. We learned a new word, squinches for something that accommodates a shape change. In this case the square or rectangular shape of the altar into the circular dome above. There were some surviving Romanesque sculptures built into the structure that were fantastic creatures and storytelling devices. It was only another 30-minutes drive back to the hotel. It finally seems to have stopped raining, though it still seems a little misty and it never did warm up. 
There were some questions on the bus on the last leg as Monika was handing out tomorrow’s itinerary about a live music performance tonight before dinner, but Monika assured those asking there was not one. We had seen the poster too at Les Tulipes last night and I had Googled it when we got back to the room. It was 10 at 5pm today in Salle Moliere in the Courtyard of Fountains. I wasn’t sure where that was but thought it was where Bruno had begun his tour yesterday. (It turned out that was exactly where it was.) I thought that was too far away to take a chance to rush back after the performance to meet the group at the hotel to walk to dinner tonight at the Four Seasons (which we also don’t know where it is). At least one other couple thought they might go, but I wasn’t sure I’d like Renaissance instruments and songs enough to go. Also, Clay went to our room and went to sleep and I definitely did not want to go alone. So, we missed that. Monika was upset that on Saturday morning she was misinformed by the Sarlat Tourism office employee she asked if there were any live performances or other special events during our week here. I suspect if she had known she would have made a plan. At the point when we arrived back at the hotel, no one could get a phone call answered to query specifics like where to buy tickets or how long the performance would last. They did not find out any more than I told them from my Internet search last night. Which I didn’t think was enough for me to walk across Sarlat.

Dinner tonight is at 7:30pm at Le Quatre Saisons. We will meet outside the hotel at 7:25pm and Monika will lead us walking there. No idea what is being served tonight. It was not on the menus she handed out before and she did not tell us while she had us on the bus. I will not get my hopes up. I have yogurt in the minifridge and protein bars in my suitcase. I need to remember to put one in my purse just in case for the rest of the week.

Tomorrow’s itinerary. Breakfast buffet from 7 to 9am. 9:30am departure by bus to Gardens of Eyrignac. We will have a guided walking tour. We will drive back to the hotel for lunch from 12:30 to 1:30pm. (See menu above in Day 1 entry.) At 1:30pm, the bus departs to Cap Blanc. This is a UNESCO World Heritage site that is an authentic Cro-Magnon shelter that is much engraved and painted. After Cap Blanc, we drive back along our route from Bordeaux to Les Eyzies to visit the Museum of Prehistory that Monica pointed out to us on Friday. This is the place where the first known bones of Homo Sapiens were discovered. We will learn more about the bones and other prehistoric discoveries at the National Museum of Prehistory. We’ll drive back to the hotel. From 6:30 to 7:30pm we’ll have a village life forum done by a Q&A with local residents who hope to answer our questions about life in France. I hope someone has some good questions because I know I don’t, otherwise I hope the residents just have an hour of presentation prepared! Monika advised us to buy a glass of wine and take it with us to the room St. Michel next to the hotel. I’ve been looking, but I haven’t noticed this room yet so I guess someone will point it out when we need it. After 7:30pm, we are on our own for dinner. I hope that works out because again we have not made reservations and it is Monday. It looked to us as we wandered Sarlat that most of the restaurants were closed on Monday. There is one, Café de Artes about a block uphill from here that I checked yesterday and the signs said it was open Monday evening and they had one dish I will eat. We plan to try there, otherwise no idea!

Back from dinner at Le Quatre Saisons. It was a little tricky to find as we had never walked in that direction before and even Monika almost missed the turn uphill to it. But after a steep lane and a steep stone circular stairwell we arrived in a beautiful dining area. They were ready and waiting for us. The table was set with water jugs and red wine in unlabeled bottles. A woman next to Clay insisted on white wine and unlabeled bottles of white appeared. It was quite good. Monika had given them the heads up that I wouldn’t eat duck and they assured me they had a great meal for me. So, the menu was mushroom soup which was served in a little mason jar. I tried to wave the waitress off and refuse it but she told me, no it is cappuccino and you’ll love. It was disguised as a frothy cappuccino but it was mushroom soup and I didn’t eat it. Clay ate half of his and then swapped jars with me. I was happy to leave it untouched since I had tried to refuse it, but he wasn’t. Main course was duck breast or magret and green beans in a phyllo dough packet. The waitress brought me a plate with a huge pile of green beans and a tall cut of meat in mushroom sauce and she told me it was filet mignon. It clearly wasn’t and if it was at over 2.5 inches thick it was not going to be well done. I cut it in half and it was dark pink throughout with a gooey brown plug stuffed down the center. I scrapped the plug out and ignored it. I gave Clay a strand of the very pink meat that looked like undercooked pork tenderloin to me and he thought it was lamb. I tasted it and still thought it was rare pork tenderloin. It tasted like pork tenderloin which I cook at home a lot, but never underdone! It was very lean and tasted like pork. I ate about ¼ of the piece and about ½ the green beans. Clay finished his and I guess didn’t like me leaving mine uneaten so he reached over and took another ¼ of the piece. He ate it and immediately got that “I’m going to vomit” look on his face. I told him to go to the bathroom and he left with his napkin in his hand. He came back and sat for a few seconds then put his napkin down and got up and told me he’d see me back at the hotel and he left. He upset the woman next to him who told me she was a retired nurse and she thought he needed help. I told him that when I got back to the room and asked him how he was. He said he was fine and that he was fine as soon as he started walking. He said that he choked himself on my piece of meat and he shouldn’t have had it and that did I tell the woman he just had his best annual physical ever. I told him that I did tell her that and she assured me his doctor did not know about this. I assured her that she was correct, there was no way Clay had told his doctor about this or asked him about it. She pointed out that there was no way we could leave the country for 6 months with this undiagnosed and unresolved and I told her I was sure that was the plan and that I did not think I could do anything about it without his cooperation. She was very upset. It is upsetting. She knew I had Parkinson’s Disease and she thought this was putting unnecessary stress on me and I agreed and once again told her that I couldn’t do anything about it. So, all in all a pretty unpleasant evening in a beautiful setting. The other downside of the evening was that the restaurant had us all in a large stone room seated at 2 long narrow tables. It was very noisy and you could barely hear the people next to you and people were trying to have conversations with others by talking over. It is better, I think, to split us up into smaller tables and that way people only try to converse among a manageably sized group.