19 October 2020

September 2001 in Provence

After the slideshow featuring pictures of the gîte which we rented for our 2001 trip to Provence,
I'm re-posting an account of our stay in Cavaillon that I wrote a dozen years ago.



Early in 2001, Walt and I started talking about our travel plans for the year. We were both working, so we had to coordinate some time off. Our first idea was to go to New York City around Labor Day and try to get some tickets to the US Open tennis tournament. We went so far as to find an apartment we might rent by searching the Internet. It was in Lower Manhattan, not far from the World Trade Center. But it was really expensive — something approaching two thousand dollars a week for a small apartment. It looked nice and was a good location, but I started wondering about paying that price.

Instead, I started searching the Internet for places we might rent in Provence. I had a couple of weeks of vacation that I needed to take or I would lose it. It had been six years since our last trip to southern France. I was always ready to spend a few days or weeks in France, anyway. Then we asked our friend Sue if she would like to go with us. She was interested and she had been to France before but never to Provence. I found a gîte — a house rented out by the week — in Cavaillon, with three bedrooms and two bathrooms for about $400.00 U.S. a week. Even with plane fare and car rental, it would cost less to go spend two weeks in Provence than to spend two weeks in New York.

I don't know if we would actually have been in Lower Manhattan on September 11, 2001, but we might well have been. Instead, we were in Provence that day. It was a Tuesday, and we drove over to Gordes in the morning and then on through some of the other villages toward Lourmarin. I had a bad sore throat and was definitely coming down with something, but the weather was nice. That evening, we got back to the gîte and put something on the table for supper. At about 8:30 we decided to turn on the TV to see the weather report for the following days. When we turned it on, what we saw was the World Trade Center in New York with smoke pouring out of the two towers. It was 2:30 p.m. in New York, so we weren't seeing it live. Walt and I stood and listened in shock, trying to figure out what was going on. Sue doesn't understand French, so she just watched.

At first, I thought we might be watching a science fiction movie or some kind of documentary about something that in somebody's imagination might happen one day. And then when it became clear the buildings really were the Trade Center in New York I thought it might be some kind of documentary about the earlier terrorist attack on those buildings. And then they showed footage of the towers collapsing. Anyway, it gradually became clear what was going on and we explained to Sue as best we could, translating what we were hearing on French TV. We all went to bed that night pretty freaked out, and none of us slept much, I'm sure. It felt strange to be so cut off from big events taking place in the U.S., but that has happened to me many times in my life.

By the next morning, I was exhausted and had a raging fever. Walt and Sue didn't know what to do, but it didn't make sense for them to be stuck at the gîte with me. I certainly couldn't go anywhere — I was too sick and needed to rest. Sue had never seen Provence, so there was a lot of stuff she wanted to do and places we wanted to show her. She and Walt left for a day trip to Aix-en-Provence. I didn't need to go to Aix again, I thought. I'd get better and then go see some places I hadn't seen before. But I was feeling a little sorry for myself, I'll confess.

So what was there for me to do all day? Take aspirin, drink hot tea, and eat soup. Wrap up in a blanket and watch TV or listen to the radio. I couldn't read because my eyes were stinging, burning, and teary. Besides, I didn't have the mental energy to focus on the written word. And what was on the TV and radio? Nothing but full-time coverage of the situation in New York. It was pretty depressing. I heard on the radio that it was impossible to put a telephone call through to the U.S. All the lines and cables were saturated, over capacity, with calls. And we didn't even have a phone at the gîte, or a cell phone. So all I could do was sit there and try to get over the cold or flu or whatever it was I had. That was Wednesday 9/12.

I stayed in all the next day too. On Thursday night, I actually got in the car and drove into Cavaillon at midnight to try to call my mother from a phone booth and tell her we were fine. I couldn't get through. I made a call to a French friend in Normandy just because I wanted to talk to somebody and not feel like I had wasted my time by going out. By Friday the fever had broken and I was starting to come back to life. The three of us went into Cavaillon to go to a pharmacy. I wanted something stronger for my cold and sore throat, and we needed some kind of sleeping pills because none of us was getting any rest at all. The shock of the New York events on top of jet lag had us all completely discombobulated and worn out.

When I explained to the woman behind the counter at the pharmacy that we were Americans and we needed something to help us sleep because we were having nightmares and were exhausted, she looked at me and said something like, "Monsieur, I understand. We are all having nightmares right now, you know." She recommended a somnifère that turned out to do the job.

We continued our trip and sightseeing, of course. There were no flights back to the U.S. those first few days, even if we had wanted to fly back home. That Friday, the woman at the pharmacy also gave me something for my cold symptoms. I told her I had bad pollen allergies in California, and she said with the winds we were having — the Mistral was blowing — there was a lot of pollen and dust in the air. Maybe all that was aggravating my condition. I still think it was just a cold that I caught on the plane on the way from California to France. But a year or two later an allergist in San Francisco told me that I shouldn't even consider living in the South of France because I have severe allergies to the pollen of cypress and olive trees, which abound down there.

11 comments:

  1. On 9/11, I was in Paris and I got a phone call from my niece. Not having listened to the radio and not having a TV, I didn't understand what she was talking about what was happening in New York. I thought she was making this up since I couldn't believe it was in real time. Later on, I turned the radio on and the airwaves were full of this terrorist atack and I had to believe it.

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  2. I left Cavaillon by train and went to Rouen, and then to Paris. Walt and Sue drove back to Paris and the three of us stayed at the Hôtel Lecourbe. You were there. That's my memory.

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    1. I don't recall seeing Sue in Paris, ever! Or in France for that matter.

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    2. I have a distinct memory of Sue being in your apartment, with me, you, and Walt. It must have been in 2001, just after she, Walt, and I spent time in Cavaillon. Otherwise, Sue was in France in 2006, and again in 2018. She was here in 2004 too, but we didn't go to Paris. It was in March, and you wouldn't have been in Paris a that time.

      When was it that we went to see your notaire? Not in 2001? You gave me the key to your apartment and the clerc du notaire came to the rue Lecourbe to see the place.

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  3. 9/11 plus jet lag plus a cold- oh my. I visited the ruins of the World Trade Center in December of 2001 when it was still smothering or gases were coming out. Now you would never know anything happened except for the memorials. You were lucky to not be stranded when the airlines were shut down. Who knows how long before it will be possible to travel from the USA to France safely?

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  4. Evelyn that's so interesting. Ken, that must have been quite something to see from France. Yes, when I saw it I did not think it real at first either, and I was in CA. A good friend was trying to catch a flight out of Dulles that morning and got stuck at a "not great hotel at very elevated prices."

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  5. Ken, my daughter was in Avignon on 9/11. She had arrived just 2 or 3 days earlier for her junior year abroad. She arrived at the door of her school and noted that the sign identifying the church as now an American University was missing. She did not know about the attack but heard about it from the director who told her she was the one who had taken down the sign in case there would be those in Avignon who might terrorize Americans as well.

    My husband and I were terrified that our daughter might have to return to Oregon and that there were no flights. The school continued, though, flights returned, and she stayed in Avignon. I went for her Christmas break but it was scary getting on the plane. We had a wonderful, long, 35-day vacation traveling around France.

    It would have been scary to be in your shoes, too. Life goes on... I hope our election will turn things around.

    Mary in Oregon

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    1. Our friend Sue was especially stressed by all that was happening because she doesn't speak or understand much French, and because she has two children who were back in California — a son who would have been 25 and a daughter 21 at that time. She had no way to get news from them. What American college ran that study program in Avignon. Just curious...

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  6. It was not connected to a college or university. It was directed out of Evanston, IL - American University of France or something like that! I can't contact my daughter at present - she will be teaching on zoom. It is now centered in Aix, the last time I checked. Small classes, totally accredited, she had a home-stay within the walls of the city and she was quite satisfied with the quality of her professors. It was a lot of researching on my part to be assured that all of her courses would meet the requirements at her university (Mary Washington University in Fredericksburg, VA). They did and she graduated in 4 years with both a teaching credential as well as her french degree. That was another "crazy" time to be in, wasn't it.

    Mary in Oregon

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