Summer
is back! And just on time, a few hiccups with the late snowfall,
but good and hot now. With summer Narbonne puts on her flowers, the
oleander is exploding and the showy pots on the bridges are brimming with
color. The tourists are back, our little chambre d'hote is
running and busy and we are at the beach at least three times a week.
Bastille Day brings fireworks ~ very impressive fireworks indeed ~ for
a small city.
The
Tour de France passes through our neck of the woods once again. This
time we go to see them high in the mountain village of Esperaza.
We make the one and a half hour trip complete with picnic and sunscreen.
It is always a thrill even if it only lasts for a few seconds.
The
theme 'Tempos d'Eté' is back on the walls of the Palais des Archevéques.
The colorful sails have been stretched across the streets of Narbonne and
music is the best part of all. Small impromptu musical groups pop
up everywhere such as a group that played in the Place de la Mairie
today wearing long capes covered with the flags of the world. Outdoor
combos and even orchestras are a regular feature. One orchestra
catches our attention in particular with the initials on their music stands:
NBB, which stands for Narbonne Big Band! It's a really big band with
both a male and a female singer, five trumpet players, five saxophone players,
four trombones, a drummer, a guitarist, a piano player and a sound man.
They have been around for about 12 years and play all around the villages
and towns surrounding Narbonne. Check out their beautiful web site
at www.narbojazz.fr ~ you can also hear a sample of their music there.
They have only recently come back to play in Narbonne in the Place Contemporaire
on Thursday evenings.
 
Impromptu String Ensemble
Narbonne's Big Band
While
they play, people can also wander around about to sample wares from a couple
dozen food and wine stands that have been set up to promote products from
Aude, the department (number 11) of France where Narbonne is located.
Among the wines, foie gras, cheese and honey, one very elderly gentleman
had Poire William eau de vie to sample. Not for the faint
hearted, it has a mighty kick and one should sample with caution.
His Poire William 'Reserve' is excellent and measures up to the German
and Austrian Poire William with which we are more familiar. He had
several of his granddaughters at the stand to help him and together they
make a charming portrait of real French agricultural life. Monsieur
Cathala also produces wines and other products at his Domaine des Pouzets
in Narbonne.
 
Monsieur Cathala and family with their Eau de Vie Market Day in Narbonne
For
the first time ever we have a Miss Grand Narbonne pageant - a premiere!
About 20 contestants representing Narbonne and all the surrounding villages
(hence Miss Grand Narbonne) proudly made their debut on a runway in the
Place Contemporaire. A New Orleans style jazz band that sings in
English (with a great French accent) backs them up. The beautiful
young women come out in bathing suits and then parade in summer outfits.
For the finale they sweep around the runway in gorgeous flowing gowns and
the young men swoon at their feet. One contestant in particular stands
out and she is the winner along with two Dauphins who are the runners up.
I catch a photo of the new Miss Grand Narbonne just before the crowds surge
in front of me in ecstatic celebration. Thus it is impossible to
get nearer to the stage, and I have to be content with a blurry photo of
the winner (not shown). But, she is shown third from the left
(in the red gown) in the photo I manage to take just before the winner
is announced. The Narbonnaise love their beauty queen. I hope
we see more of her in photos and in person. Little Narbonne keeps
getting bigger and bigger.

 
Now
that we have been here over a year, my perspective of Narbonne is more
intimate, and I have a story to tell of a smaller picture. It is
a little Narbonnaise story about 'patrimoine'.
When
we first laid eyes on our new home here in southern France, the first thing
we saw ~ and doesn't everyone ~ was the front door. Rather tall,
about 11 feet high and heavy, it is made of solid wood and it has a noble
air about it. It was dusty in some places with a little rot at the
bottom (well, it did look old), but I really didn't pay much attention
at the time. I wasn't aware of how old it was. It looked serviceable,
and that is what mattered. We were so much more curious about seeing
the interior living space and the common areas inside that the entry faded
behind us as we hurried in. The outside of the building looked solid
and attractive. That was what we cared about. Fast forward
a year later, and I am having a most interesting conversation with an artisan
who grew up here in Narbonne on the very same street as our building.
Monsieur
Vidal came to us mysteriously; I really don't know how I found him or did
he find us? I was calling various companies for a quote to install
two new interior doors in our apartment to make it cozier and facilitate
the operation of our little chambre d'hôte. There is
a large foyer just inside the entry way and the main apartment is to the
left while the chambre d'hôte is to the right. We really
needed a door for the little hotel room to make it completely private and
another double door for our side to give us privacy as well. As doors
had never been installed in these openings, they were not perfectly square,
nor were there any pre-existing frames. Visitors get their first
impression from these two doors so they also had to be, well, stylish.
A couple of devis came through accompanied by sharply suited salespersons
with nice manicures and fancy pens. 'Sign here - and now!' they would
implore. I couldn't help wonder who would do the work ~ certainly
not them ~ which they confirmed, of course. The sums of money they
wanted were seriously high and mighty. I fended them off, looking
for someone who looked more like they worked with doors, not just papers
and pens.
Things
started to look gloomy for us. We thought about installing the doors
ourselves and ordered a pair through the local brico-marché.
Six weeks later we eagerly came to the store to find that ~ the doors had
not yet arrived. After another four weeks of badgering the manager
we discovered a minor detail: what we had ordered (and paid for) did not
exist. In other words, we wanted doors with glass window panes installed,
which were on display at the store and which we ordered, but they were
really not available. The door we wanted was on display with the
panes installed in the door. The manager showed us what came in as
our order: solid wood doors with the glass panes very neatly bound
in shrink wrap next to the doors. We were welcome to take the solid
doors and install the glass panes ourselves. Staring in disbelief
at the manager I asked him if he could tell us how to install glass panes
in a door. I certainly didn't know how. He shrugged the classic
French shrug that means 'not my problem'. Okay, a full refund later
we are standing out on the street and starting to think that we are not
going to get our doors.
A week
later I received a phone call from a man who said he was coming over to
see us about our doors - sure, said I, come on over. I brace myself
for another full-fledged and suited sales force.
The
next day I said hello to Monsieur Vidal. Intense eyes set in a classic
Roman face, wearing worn blue jeans and a very quiet manner he proceeded
to spend about an hour measuring and talking quietly. He talked a
little to us, but mostly it was to himself. He looked doubtful about
our project and wasn't very positive about anything at all really.
He showed us a small photo album with very beautiful pieces of furniture
in it that he said he had created. I wondered ~ they looked too good.
He left. Not much small talk. His sales manner was less than
perfect, almost defying us to hire him!
The devis
came in and was not cheap, but much better priced than many that came before
it, by half in fact. I asked him how he had heard of us. He said
he didn't know; he just had our number scribbled down from some messages.
I couldn't find out where I heard of him either. We both traced back
to the companies we knew, and there was not a common one between us.
I mentioned friends who gave referrals, and he knew none of them.
I was still suspicious if this was just another attempt to make business
with people who obviously didn't know what they were doing. However,
we were desperate so I finally called him back and accepted his bid.
Fingers crossed, our luck held out. We discussed the door we wanted,
made sure it had the glass panes installed, made a down payment and waited.
About
a month and a half later he and his father, a smaller man in his late 60s
or early 70s, came into our apartment toting exactly the model of door
we had originally ordered - with the glass installed. It had taken
these two experts about a week to install the glass properly. Imagine
if we had tried!
They
set about to work with intensity and zest. Their ardor also extended
to arguing with each other with a lot of passion and attention to detail.
They could discuss the tiniest aspect of door hanging with each other as
if it were the latest political scandal. We sometimes wondered if
they would start shouting, but it never came to that. Finally, the
job was done. We were astounded with the results these two men achieved.
Many times we have had doors installed but this was the first time we witnessed
a work of art being installed as doors. They fit seamlessly; they
worked soundlessly and looked devastatingly beautiful to us.
So,
with this experience in mind, I found myself in a most interesting conversation
with an artisan who grew up on the street where I live: "Madame O'Neill,
it is a shame what is happening to your front door," said Monsieur Vidal.
"What? What is wrong?" He shrugs the French shrug, not his problem.
"It is just that the door will be ruined beyond repair if something is
not done soon," he says with a raised eyebrow. "Really? Show
me," say I. With that we trot down to the building front door and
both lay eyes on the old entry door which has spent a lifetime in the intense
Narbonne sun. I finally see my front door for the first time in a
year. I see a grand old lady, maybe 250 years old or so. Graying,
but strong, collapsing at the base but standing, old but useful ~ and neglected.
I see what he means without him having to say a word. I see the rot
behind the panels, the layers of dirt on the molding. He explains
how old this door is and the work involved in creating such a door.
He adds that we have an additional 'problem' ~ the hinges. Hinges?
"Look," says he, as he opens the door. And there I see the ancient
hinges that are constructed within the masonry so that the doors cannot
be 'unhinged'. In other words, the grand dame must be renovated sur
place and not in a shop. Additionally, if the door goes beyond
repair a replacement of a plain, ugly metal door would be around 5,000
euros. Another door like this would be practically impossible to
find. Everyone wants one. "Faites le devis," I say. "Please!"
He looks at me quizzically, as if he is surprised to hear my response.
It seems that people don't pay much attention to things like doors in Narbonne
- but apparently I have seen the spirit of this lady faster than he thought
I would, so he agrees.
My first
task is to convince the rest of the building owners to pay for this renovation,
which is surprisingly easy. They appreciate our grand dame as much
as I do. With the approval of all in writing I sail over to the City
of Narbonne where I obtain a promise of 25% reimbursement of the cost of
the work upon completion. It is all in the spirit of keeping the
historic center original and maintained. Mr. Vidal does the renovations.
He replaces the rotting wood, the hollow molding and fills the fissures
and holes where hardware was but is no longer. Now comes the difficult
part. In order to get everyone to sign off on the door renovations
I agreed (hastily) to sand and varnish this fresh makeover!

The author
hard at work refinishing the door, and the final result!
Two
weeks of sanding, scraping and cleaning in the hot sun and our lady is
ready for her close-up, er, varnish. During this time I meet the
neighborhood regulars, all of whom stop to chat with me at least a couple
of times. A local whose hobby is studying old woods and carving styles
teaches me how to determine the age of the door by counting the rounded
crowns on the center column.
He ascertains the door was created around 1750, which is about the age
of the building as well, so it makes sense. The day I add my first
coat of varnish, Rob and I go for a celebratory lunch at the restaurant
across the street. The waitress, the owner's daughter, smiles at
me as if she knows me. She says that she and her family have been
watching me work and looks at my husband as she says "She is a superwoman!"
I am pleased, a little embarrassed, but I appreciate that there are certain
things that have meaning and importance even if they go unnoticed for decades.
This lovely old hand carved door has a spirit that I felt as I scraped
and sanded the carvings of the carpenter's work so long ago. Tourists
noticed the door as well as they ambled down the street. They would
remark about it, the wood, and the style. I sanded and varnished,
but the door sang back. She is a Grande Dame now. She has dignity;
she no longer stoops, but stands tall to face the next century with certitude,
beauty and pride. She is a Miss Grand Narbonne herself.
I am
inspired by her and take my camera to the streets of Narbonne to find her
Dauphins, silent sentries of time in this ancient city. The photos
show one door in particular that looks older than ours - a lot older.
She is still standing incredibly strong and is ravishingly beautiful.
She is the original Miss Grand Narbonne.
Wine
Notes Camplong Winery
Several
years ago, back when we lived aboard a steel Dutch motor yacht and cruised
the canals and rivers of France, we were invited to a dinner on a lovely
saddleback tchalk owned by an Englishman and his Canadian wife.
We were in the Canal du Midi near the Dordogne and there were about a dozen
people at the dinner party. During the apéro we were given
a choice of several bottles of wine to choose from on the side bar.
There was also one bag-in-box wine at the end of the bar. I noticed
that everyone skipped the bottles and kept returning to the boxed wine.
It was
a rather upscale group of wine lovers, so I thought what they were drinking
might be pretty good. I had a taste myself and was very impressed
with the fruity and mellow flavors and the velvety feel of the ruby red
wine. Taking note of the name - Camplong - we called them up the
next day for more information.
We
found out that the winery is in the Corbières region of the Canal
du Midi, not far, and they delivered! So we ordered several boxes
since we were about to take a long journey with several different friends
joining us for the ride, at different times, up the Rhone, on our way to
Paris. The delivery man came the next day and unloaded the boxes
in a hurry as he had a busy day ahead. He then ran off!
"Monsieur!
Stop please. How do we pay you?"
"I don't
know. I don't handle the payment. Look on the boxes. There
is a facture attached to one of them somewhere. Au revoir!"
Finding
the facture was not a problem, but who delivers to a customer living on
a boat that is about to leave town without asking for payment? I
called the winery.
"Madame,
thank you for the prompt delivery. How do I pay you?"
"Whenever
you
like in the next three months is fine," was the unconcerned reply.
I reminded
her that I lived on a boat and would be traveling to Paris.
"Enjoy
your voyage!' was her answer. I could have been a vacationer; the
boat could have been hired, not owned. But it was not a problem for
the winery. I later found out that this is often the way wineries
work, giving people several weeks or even months to settle the bill.
As it was, I was still worried I could forget. After all, I was going
to be drinking a lot of that wine. So, I gave them my payment over
the telephone with a credit card. I didn't want to meet any gendarmes
looking
for us along our travels.
It wasn't
until last year, 2009, that we finally visited the Camplong winery.
Their wine is as excellent as ever, and they sell most of it in 'bib' that
is how the French say 'bag-in-box'.
Founded
in
1932, the winery still harvests the grapes by hand. There are 250
hectares of which 95% is classed Appellation d'Origine Contrôlée
Corbières. Five exclusively Mediterranean varieties of grape
are grown: Carignan 40%, Cinsault 10%, Grenache 28%, Mourvèdre 12%,
and Syrah 10%. On average the annual production is 12,500 hectoliters
of red, rosé and white Corbières, with white being 5% of
the production and rosé between 10% to 15%. The rest is red
~ our favorite of the three. 50% of the production is exported to
other EU countries, Japan and the USA.
Vignerons
de Camplong, 11200 Camplong d'Aude, France
Telephone
(from within France): 04.68.43.60.86
Fax (from
within France): 04.68.43.69.21
email: vignerons@camplong.com
web site:
www.camplong.com
French
words in Italics:
-
Palais Archevèque
-
the Archbishop's Palace. Narbonne used to be the seat of the Catholic
Church in the southwest zone of France and the Archbishop lived in the
palace, which is now the Mayor's place.
-
Dauphins
- heirs apparent or runners-up.
-
patrimoine
- heritage. The French use this word to refer to the heritage of the country.
Landmarks, antiquities, historical buildings, sites and even literature
are patrimoine.
-
devis, 'Faites
le devis' - estimate, 'make an estimate'.
-
brico-marché
- hardware store
-
sur place
- in place
-
apéro
- apéritifs, drinks and nibbles before dinner, happy hour
-
facture
- the bill
-
gendarmes
- policemen
.....on to Autumn
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