Bordeaux
We arrived
at Bordeaux, with no problems, well if you are using the French Motorways that
goes without saying, they are well maintained and the rest areas frequent and
clean. The campsite is situated near the Expo site, after a bit of to-ing and
fro-ing (the SATNAV was trying to take us in a different direction, but we
followed the signs, I suppose the locals know where they have plonked their
campsites.
Linda with her Salami |
My cool beer |
This is a 4
star campsite, very plush around a lake with its own ponds full with wildlife,
Frogs, ducks and Muskrats (an introduced species from the new world). The bird
life in the trees was amazing, not only at dawn and dusk but also through the
night (Nightjars and owls) .
We had decided
to stay 2 nights and spend the next day sight-seeing. The rest of the day was
to be spent setting up the camper and seeing what was on the campsite.
Next day we got up early as I had found a
camper repair workshop, we had an early breakfast and got around to the
workshop for 09:00, alas shut and barred, it does not open on Mondays, in fact
a lot of places don’t open on Mondays.
So it was
back to the campsite, set up the camper again and hot foot it down to the bus
stop, to catch the number 73 bus to the Expo tram station and jumped on the
€3,000,000 tram this is printed very large inside and also that the fine for
not paying the €1,70 fare is €300, fair (fare) enough.Monument aux Girondines |
We alighted
much better equipped with knowledge of one of the major wine growing regions of
France. There was an antique fair set up on the Esplanade de Quinconces, rows
and rows of antique , replica and modern furniture also a lot of bric-a-brac
and tat. There was also a plant market which was much better but it would be a
long trip for a few bedding plants as pretty as they were.
But our
peckishness now took hold and we searched out a nice bistro, and informed that it would be about 15
minutes, but take a table outside in the warming sun. We ordered a glass of
very nice cold Rosé and along came the bottle of cold water (free). We ordered
a mixed seafood and ham salad, when this came it was enormous, consisting of Pâté
de foi gras, Slices of smoked ducks breast, Bayonne ham, Prawns, Whelks and a
mixed Greenleaf salad with a mustard and honey dressing. It was all fantastic,
Linda doesn’t like Whelks, all I can say is more for those that do, I ate hers.
The wonderful thing about French Restaurants, they do not hurry you, there is
no hovering waiter trying to get more bums on seats, the French would not put
up with it!
Meal
finished, we decided to visit some of the sights that we had seen that morning
on foot as they required a closer inspection. First off, we walked to the
large, new and closed shopping centre at the Grande Hommes. But we did have a
nice ice (not ice cream) sitting in the sun outside.
We then headed down to the
Cathedral dedicated to St-Andre (Andrew), interestingly it like the other large
Bordeaux church Basilique St-Michel has the bell towers not attached to the
churches, it would seem that when they were built in the 15th
century the master masons thought it was too dangerous to attached it to the
Cathedral as the thought it could pull the rest of the structure down if it
fell (poor static engineers that’s all I can say).
The small one was mine |
The
Cathedral of St-Andre saw two Royal Weddings, that of Eleanor of Aquitaine to
Louis VII and that of Anne of Austria and Louis XIII. Our own Richard Coeur de
Lion, spent quite a bit of time in the city, I think not as much as in the Holy
Land but a bit more than he spent in London.
Next we
went to one of the remaining original City gates, Porte Cailhau, this was a
former defensive gate built between 1493 and 1496 in dedication to King Charles
VIII of France for his victory over the Italians at Fornovo.
We then
walked along what would have been the old quayside with its ware houses and
merchants houses, all built in a similar style and all from a beige coloured
stone and their small wrought iron balconies, very impressive. Passing the
Place de la Bourse with its fountain displaying three naked muses and one
corner of the crescent shaped building
that was the First American Embassy in the world, built shortly after the
Americans had declared independence from GB.
By this
time we were hot, bothered and foot weary so decided it was time to get a cold
drink and catch the Tram and Bus back to the Campsite. We had a glass of Rosé
and some cheese and hams and settled down for the night. Tomorrow we are off
across the border to Spain and San Sebastian.
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