20 March 2020

Restricted

We are confined to quarters for the foreseeable future. I'm sure there will be big celebrations in France when this confinement généralisé ends. The weather is beautiful right now, but we're supposed to stay inside as much as possible. Walks in the vineyard are allowed, as long as it doesn't involve contact with other people There are workers out there,  and we shout greetings and even exchange a few sentences, but we don't get close to anybody.
An American friend who lives on the other side of Saint-Aignan, a few miles from us, told me yesterday that one of her neighbors went to our local SuperU to pick up some supplies. She found the store pretty much empty of customers, and also found the shelves mostly empty of merchandise too. Apparently, the SuperU over in Selles-sur-Cher, 10 miles upriver, is better stocked, so our friend said she was going to try to do her shopping over there.
We are starting to think about things we might need from the supermarket next week, and making a list. I also tried to do some shopping on-line yesterday on the SuperU Drive site. We can order things and then drive over there to pick them up, without getting close to anybody. I started putting together an on-line list by choosing items from the store's web page. It crashed. Suddenly, I got an error message when I tried to add an item to my list. That's not promising.
The friend I talked to said that gendarmes are stopping cars at major intersections (they're mostly roundabouts — traffic circles — here) and asking drivers to show the official document we're supposed to carry with us if we go out in public. It's a sworn statement you are required to sign to declare the purpose of your trip. Grocery shopping, doctor or  pharmacy visits, or going to work are the only reasons why you should be out driving or walking around.
We are luckier than people who live in apartments, that's for sure. We have a big back yard and we've started cleaning it up after a long, wet, windy winter. It's still too early to start preparing the vegetable garden plot, mostly because the ground is too wet. Walt did some mowing yesterday, and I started working on potted plants that need TLC. At some point, we are going to need to buy seeds or seedlings. Potting soil. New pots. But so far trips to garden centers are not allowed, as far as I know.

The pictures here are some I took day before yesterday.

13 comments:

  1. Can you buy seeds through the mail? You and Walt are lucky. I am too. I have a large yard and also family nearby. Your vineyard to walk in and Tasha and Bertie are also things which make you lucky. But I am a little worried about how long this will last and what it will do to the economy. Still, I see a lot of people helping one another in a very positive way.

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    1. I hear this morning on CNN that all of California is on lockdown now, like France but without the confinement being enforced by the police the way ours apparently is. I don't know first-hand because the last time I went out in the car was last Saturday.

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    2. Hi Ken, ours is exactly the same as your situation in CA, except walks for the sake of walks are out. You can be stopped by the police if out and about. They are able to inquire what your purpose is in being out and may be asked to justify it with supporting papers.

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    3. Interesting. On CNN they said the police would not be involved in enforcing the confinement.

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  2. Stay safe. DC is largely closed, the weather is getting nice. I took one of the cars out yesterday for a drive, it hadn't been moved in three weeks, and people were moving about. We did a little shopping, the stores were not busy, and reasonably well stocked.

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    1. Thanks. One of our cars, the newer one that we use for longer trips, often stays in the garage for weeks or even a month. Our neighbor the mayor, who was just re-elected for a third 6-year term, stopped by this morning to see if we needed anything she could pick up for us at the supermarket. Very nice of her.

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  3. Like you, we are fortunate to have a nice, large home and good weather. These are crazy times.
    Judy

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  4. Buying seeds for a garden and eventually food sure seem to me to be an allowable trip...but then I live in the USA. I mean, really! Enjoy your pets, your beautiful backyard and the springtime!

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    1. I read yesterday on blog that garden centers are open. The number of people who are allowed in at any one time is restricted — no crowding allowed.

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  5. Commnenting via Firefox, because Safari is still no-go on Blogspot. Grr.
    Friends in California say they are on lockdown, stay home, don't go out, etc. It's varying wildly state to state, and with no strong national leadership people are just making do. A huge shortage of the protective masks that health care workers need, and now people in the fashion industry are stepping up to make them, as are amateur sewers.
    Apparently because the US is so far behind others in preparation, it will last longer and be more severe here. I bought some herb and small veggie seedlings today, for pot-on-deck gardening, and a sense of hope.

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    1. We have enough seeds of many kinds that will let us start getting some sprouting in little pots for the 2020 garden. SuperU sells seed and potting soil, and we're hoping to be able to order some things on-line next week and go pick them up, using the drive-through.

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  6. I was researching sewing masks today -- but 1/4" elastic is SOLD OUT everywhere. Plenty of cotton available and maybe fusible interfacing (I didn't check on that) is also impossible to obtain. Here I was really anxious to start a mass manufacturing at my home...

    Too bad.

    I'm hoping Washington State can get their supplies. Oregon doesn't seem to be in the same predicament.

    Mary in Oregon

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