I forgot to mention a few things in my post yesterday. First, the gîte (vacation rental) we stayed in while we were cleaning the house we had recently bought, getting it ready for us and our furniture to move in, was in the village of Thésée. That's where the house for sale with those horses was located. It one was only about half a mile away. And the gîte we were staying in six months later was less than three miles from our new house. Those are flying-crow distances; the drive from house to house took 10 to 15 minutes. It was convenient.
Above is a Google Maps aerial view of the gîte property. You can see the owners' house on the left. The house we stayed in is the one right above the red map pin, and the barn is just in front of it. Oh, and I remembered the name of the people we rented from. It was Courtault. It appears that both the couple's sons are in the wine business in Thésée, so I plan to go see them in the spring, when the new wines are released. In the slide show below, the gîte is the house in the first photo. The third photo shows a view out over the river valley from near the gîte. That's the château de Saint-Aignan off in the distance.
Other photos in the slideshow might give you a better idea what the Loire Valley looks like in early June. (Actually this is the Cher Valley — the Cher is a tributary of the Loire, which is 25 miles north.) And this is wine country. There are dozens of châteaux all around, too, including some of the most famous ones: Chenonceau, Chambord, Cheverny, Blois, and Chaumont-sur-Loire.
18 December 2020
17 December 2020
From urban to rural
After finding a house in France that we thought we might want to buy and live in, we spent a few days in Paris and then returned to San Francisco. Walt had to go back to work. We had to decide what we were going to do — would be stay or would we go? The next time we came to France together was in June 2003, having sold our SF house and bought the French one. I had made the trip alone in February 2003, for different reasons — one was to measure the rooms in the French house so we could see what pieces of furniture we owned might fit and what we would have to get rid of. Walt had to stay and work.
No, that's not our place in the photo above. It's the gîte where we spent our first few nights here in the Loire Valley. When we arrived in Saint-Aignan in early June, we rented it to stay in for a week while we cleared out and cleaned up the house we had bought. We couldn't move right in. For one thing, we didn't have any furniture or appliances except a boiler and a water heater. During our first week here, we went out a bought a refrigerator, a kitchen stove, a washing machine and dryer (there were no laundromats in the area), a telephone, a coffee maker, and a couple of air mattresses on which we would sleep before our furniture arrived from SF in July. A friend had loaned us some sheets and towels.
Here's what the kitchen looked like. It was old-fashioned, but perfectly clean and well furnished. I think there were three bedrooms. There was a full bathroom — I remember that the shower pan was actually a laundry sink that had been set on the bathroom floor and plumbed in. The price we paid for the gîte was more than reasonable: about $250 U.S. for the week. The people who rented it to us lived in a bigger house nearby and they were very helpful and welcoming. I remember being invited to their house one evening and sitting in their kitchen with their two grown sons talking and enjoying a glass of the Sauvignon Blanc wine they made. It was a nice evening.
The woman who sold us the house in Saint-Aignan had left a lot of stuff (junk might be a better word) behind. We hadn't yet met her. We had a lot of cleaning out to do. We filled up our rented Opel and made numerous trips to the local déchetterie (dump and recycle center) to haul stuff away. Also, the grass and weeds in the big back yard were at least knee-high because the seller had cancelled her gardening service two months before our arrival. We had to go buy a weed-eater and a lawnmower for Walt to use outdoors while I was scrubbing floors and walls inside. The house had sat empty for about two years before we took possession.
Looking at these pictures, you can see why these French vacation rentals are called "rural" (gîte rural is their name). They are in the countryside, and they often really feel rural. The older couple who owned this property kept rabbits — for food, I'm sure — and the man (I wish I could remember their name) came and fed them every day. We could see him out our back windows.
We arrived on a Saturday afternoon, dog in tow. By Thursday, we had ordered and and received delivery of essential appliances. We bought a vinyl table and chairs (patio furniture from a garden center) and used it as our dining room table for more than a month. Walt got the yard under control. Starting on Thursday, then, we slept on our air mattresses — we had been on many camping trips in California over the years, so we had the right skills.
We were excited to be living (or camping) in our own house. When we left the gîte two days early, I told the people we rented it from that I wanted to give them some money to cover the cost of having the place cleaned. The woman refused. I insisted. I told her we had been there with a dog who tracked in quite a bit of sand as she came and went. She finally relented and I gave her 25 euros, with our thanks.
16 December 2020
Paris street scenes
Our lockdown here in France has changed again. We are no longer required, before going out of the house, to fill out a sworn statement specifying what time we left our house, our address, and the purpose of our outing (groceries, doctor's, pharmacy, etc.). Instead of being allowed out for only three hours a day, we no longer have a time restriction during daylight hours.
However, all of France is under curfew from 8 p.m. until 6 a.m. every day. We're not allowed out in public between those hours unless we fill out and sign a form (une attestation) specifying that our outing has to do with going to or coming home from work, dealing with a medical emergency, or providing aid and assistance family members or other people in need of help.
This must be a lot easier for the gendarmes to enforce, since nearly nobody is authorized to be on the streets after 8 p.m. Over the past few weeks and months, Walt and I have been very careful to fill our the form with the required information, but neither of us has actually been stopped or questioned by anybody. Face coverings are required indoors (except at home).
Speaking of being out on the streets, here are some photos that I took in Paris back in the days when we were allowed full freedom of unmasked movement.
15 December 2020
La Conciergerie de Paris
Across the place du Louvre from the grand colonnade of the Louvre itself stand the église Saint-Germain-l'Auxerrois and the mairie du 1er arrondissment. The tower in the second photo below is the belfry of the mairie. The chuch you see today was built in the 1400s, replacing two earlier churches on the site. One was destroyed by the invading Norsemen in the 800s. The mairie, to the left of the belfry, was built to mimic the look of the medieval church.
Continuing upriver along the right bank, in the photo below you can see the place Dauphine in between two buildings, one which is on the place while the other is part of the Palais de Justice complex. It's the Cour de Cassation, France's supreme court of appeals.There's only one Cour de Cassation for all of France.
Then there are three old towers — one in which prisoners were tortured in medieval times and another where the crown jewels were once stored. These are photos I took on December 14, 2002, very late in the afternoon. I've "enhanced" them in Photoshop to make them — I hope — less hard on the eyes.
The square tower below, the 14th-century Tour de l'Horloge, is where in 1370 the first public clock in Paris was installed. It's still displaying the time on the Île de la Cité after 650 years, according to what I read in the Michelin green guide. However, the big silver bell that used to ring out from the tower was melted down by revolutionaries in 1793 because it was a symbol of the monarchy.
This is the Conciergerie, which has been called the "antechamber" (waiting room) for people headed for the guillotine (to be beheaded) during the Revolution — the most famous was queen Marie-Antoinette. Thousands were executed after spending time there. The building with the dome on the other side of the boulevard du Palais is the Tribunal de Commerce, where disputes between merchants, disputes over commercial acts, controversies involving commercial corporations, and bankruptcy proceedings have been adjudicated since medieval times.
14 December 2020
Et puis Paris encore une fois
After we found the house in the Loire Valley where we've lived since 2003, we went to stay in Paris again for two or three nights before flying back to San Francisco. This was in December 2002. About the last thing we did while we were in Montrichard was to sign what is called la promesse de vente for the house. We committed to buying it, in other words. When Bourdais asked us if we were ready to sign on the dotted line, my first reaction was NON! Then he said we should consider that we were going back to America in a couple of days, so if we didn't sign now, when would we ever? He also said we had a week to change our minds. All we'd need to do in California was call him and say we'd reconsidered. Or we could send him a down payment to seal the deal. So we didn't feel we were risking much.
In Paris, we stayed in a room at the Hôtel du Muguet, near the rue Cler shopping street and the Ecole Militaire. We just wandered around the city for a couple of days, trying to figure out what we'd done and what would happen next. Walt had either bad allergies or a bad cold and he hadn't slept much since our arrival in France a week earlier. We went to a pharmacy and got him some medicine that made him feel a little better. Here are some Paris in December photos that I took at the time.
These photos are ones I took on a walk up the Seine, around the Louvre, and through the Tuileries garden. I believe I was thinking about how we'd be able to go to Paris a lot more often if we moved to the house in the Loire Valley instead of staying in California.
13 December 2020
Le pont sur le Cher à Montrichard
First, let me say that today is my friend CHM's birthday. I'm sure you will join me in wishing him many happy returns of the day. Turning 96 is quite milestone to pass. All the best to you, mon vieux ! I wish I could come see you today. (In case you don't know, mon vieux is an expression of affection and friendship, meaning something like "my old friend." To a woman you could say ma vieille — it really doesn't have anything, or at least not much, to do with age.)
Today I'll post five pictures of the bridge at Montrichard, 10 miles downstream from Saint-Aignan. I've driven across it countless times in 20 years, but I've never walked across. I'll have to do that in the spring or next summer. The bridge is about 450 feet long.
The Wikipédia article about Montrichard says that this bridge across the Cher has retained many of its medieval features, even though it has been much modified over the centuries. The Montrichard bridge was on the old road from Paris to Bordeaux. Nineteenth-century texts say the bridge dates back to the time when the Plantagenets were in control of the old Touraine province.
12 December 2020
A surprise — a good one
After we left the house with the horses, realtor Bourdais showed us another house near Saint-Aignan that was on a steep hillside. The place needed a lot of re-decorating, and that was okay. It had a full basement, and that basement had quite a bit of water standing in it. That was a deal-breaker. Then Bourdais said he wanted to show us one more house — one even closer to Saint-Aignan. It didn't meet our specifications because it had only two bedrooms. But he thought we would like both the house and the setting. He was right. Here's what we saw, not in photos from December 2002 but in photos from June 2003, when we had just arrived and were still cleaning the place and getting moved in.
After we saw this house, I seem to have stopped taking pictures of the other half dozen houses we saw over the next couple of days. I think our minds were made up, but we were still willing to see more houses that were on the market...
I'm going to move on now to the next French gîte we stayed in. It was in the same village as the house with the horses. We stayed there when we arrived in the area in early June with our dog Collette in tow. We had no furniture — the container-load of belongings we had shipped over wouldn't arrive for at least another month. We also had to go buy all new appliances so that we'd be able to get the kitchen working as quickly as possible.
11 December 2020
Houses and horses
It was 18 years ago that we spent our second afternoon touring around with a French real estate agent looking at houses for sale to see if we could find one that was affordable and that we might want to live in one day. We didn't really have a plan to leave California and move to France. We were just exploring the options. We had struck out the day before. Actually, this was the first house we saw that seemed like the right kind of place... almost.
The house came with too much land — bare land — nearly 2½ acres (presque un hectare) of it. I don't think the horses were included in the sale package. The house was too exposed. We wanted privacy. It was also very close to a rail line, so if you lived there you'd have to get used to hearing trains day and night. Both passenger and freight trains run on the line, with runs from Tours in the Loire Valley to the major city of Lyon in the Rhône Valley. There seems to be a retail bakery right across the road from the house now, but I'm not sure it was there 18 years ago. The building was operated as a bakery, but the breads and pastries made there were sold in open-air markets all around the area.
The interior was not bad. It was obviously a new house. The kitchen was very modern and fully equipped, but it showed signs of wear — burn marks on countertops, for example. I think there were four bedrooms, three of them upstairs in a converted attic. One was on one end of the house, and the two others on the other end. You had do walk through one of those to get to the other. Again, no privacy. I don't remember how big they were. And I don't remember if there was more than one bathroom. We had to keep looking.
10 December 2020
Strike 3... but still batting
After seeing two houses for sale in Montrichard and not being attracted by either of them, realtor Bourdais told us he could meet with us the next day at 2:30 p.m. He wanted to show us houses in the Saint-Aignan area, which is 10 miles upriver from Montrichard. We didn't think we had ever heard of Saint-Aignan before, so with our free morning it seemed to be a good idea to drive over there and check it out. We did that, and it was beautiful. It seemed a little sleepier than Montrichard, and it was farther from Amboise, but still... The town had all the standard shops and businesses, a big church and an impressive château, plus a couple of supermarkets nearby. I was convinced it would be a good place to live. We saw the town and had lunch in a little restaurant (ten euros each for a three-course meal including a glass of wine). Then we drove back to Montrichard.
One of the places Bourdais showed us that Tuesday afternoon was the house in the photo above. It's in Seigy (pop. 1,000 or so), which is the village that borders on Saint-Aignan to the east. We knew immediately that we weren't interested, because the house was on a very steep hillside. The the back yard was nearly vertical. It had been nicely landscaped at some point, with little paths and box wood hedges and birdbaths. It had probably been very beautiful, but it was completely overgrown when we saw it. Living on the side of a hill like that is a problem for two reasons. Water runoff is a danger. The other problem is that the yard is basically useless for gardening. We're talking about a very steep hill. Below is a view of the house from the back yard.
Our house in San Francisco was on a hill like this one. Once, when we had very heavy rain for a couple of days, we had water flowing from the back yard, up above the house on the hillside, down under the house and pouring like a fast-flowing stream into our garage and under our electric washer and dryer. We wondered whether the foundations were going to be undermined. We had to scramble to move a lot of stuff we had stored in the garage to prevent things from being ruined by the water. Luckily there were drains in the garage floor to take the water out of the building. Our next-door neighbor told us she had water flowing under her house and into her garage every time it rained. At least ours was just a one-time occurrence in the eight years we lived there. We didn't want to repeat that experience.
Speaking of streams, this house had one nearby. It was just on the other side of the narrow lane out front. It's called the Ruisseau de Seigy. I don't know if it ever floods, but it might. The house wouldn't get flooded because it's on that steep hillside, but the road might flood and make it hard to get to or away from the house by car. And, Bourdais told us, the ruisseau crossed our property so we would be responsible for keeping the stream bed clear and the stream flowing. Merci, mais non...
Above is a Google Maps street view showing the Seigy house as it looks now. when we saw it, there were five small bedrooms inside, plus a small living room, a small dining room, and a kitchen that was just an empty room — no sink or cabinets of any time. It was carpeted throughout with gold-colored shag carpet, very 1970s, and the wallpaper all needed to be redone. There were neighboring houses close by. There was a big garage underneath. The attic was semi-converted and was used as a game room by the owners' grandchildren when they visited. The owners' were an elderly couple and the man had heart problems. He could no longer deal with the two steep staircases in the house so he and his wife were selling and moving on. We also moved on...
By the way, the Seigy house is now operated as a chambres d'hôtes establishment — a B & B. Here's a link.
By the way, the Seigy house is now operated as a chambres d'hôtes establishment — a B & B. Here's a link.
09 December 2020
Strike 2
After touring the first house on realtor Bourdais' list, we drove back down the hill toward the river and downtown Montrichard. At the intersection between the road to Amboise and the road to Chenonceaux, we turned right toward Chenonceaux (the famous château is only 6 or 7 miles to the west). Then almost immediately we turned left and drove down a long street lined with platanes, plane trees, all pruned in the French style. We came to the little road that runs parallel to the river and turned right. We were in a suburban, residential neighborhood.
The house we were going to see was on the side of the road farthest from the banks of the river, just over a kilometer (about half a mile) from the center of Montrichard in one direction and also a kilometer from big supermarket in another. Directly across the street from the house there was a campground, which was of course empty on this December day — however, we immediately imagined it crowded with noisy campers partying on summer evenings. The house itself was attractive enough from the outside — two stories, very typically French, with a big yard.
The main living area was on what we call the second floor in the U.S. It's how our house in Saint-Aignan is built. This style of house is called un pavillon sur sous-sol — un pavillon is a detached house surrounded by a yard or garden, and the sous-sol (basement) in this case is not underground but at ground level. The elderly woman who lived there was at home. That surprised us, because in San Francisco the people who are selling their house are always asked to leave the premises when potential buyers are coming to see the place. It's hard to express your honest opinions about a house when the person or people who live in it are listening.
The owner's husband had passed away recently, and she was going to move into a retirement home. The house was stuffed full of furniture and knickknacks. The rooms were small. It was all dark and kind of gray. No lights were on, and some of the windows were shuttered (that’s typical in France). The kitchen needed work, but at least it had cabinets and a sink. It seemed small and crowded. There was a fireplace in the main room, but it was oddly placed so that you couldn’t really enjoy it from the sitting area. It was only visible from the dining area, which was closest to the hallway and kitchen. It wasn’t a very spacious living room. I think there were just two bedrooms.
Above is a wonky photo of the house now that I grabbed from Google Maps street view. On the ground floor — le sous-sol — there was a garage and an improvised living space, including a little sitting area, plus what is called une cuisine d’été (a summer kitchen) and a double bed. But none of the space was completely finished. Concrete block walls and rugs on poured concrete floors were the style of the downstairs — it was a basement. There were areas where a lot of boxes full of who-knows-what were piled in corners. I imagined the couple who lived in the house would retreat to the basement when the weather turned really hot in the summertime. That's how people live here because they don't have air-conditioning.
We also went up into the attic, which was an unfinished space. It was spacious and could be converted into more living space, Bourdais said. There was fiberglass insulation just laid on the attic floor, with its paper backing turned up. Somehow, the river and flooding came into the conversation. The woman told us that in the last flood, two years earlier, the water had only come up to the front door but hadn’t actually come into the house. She showed us how far up it had come. That information and explanation didn't inspire confidence.
Next door, there was a long, narrow strip of land that was partly planted as a vegetable garden and partly covered in what you could only call junk — an old car, I think, piles of rocks or paving stones, firewood, and farm equipment. It wasn't a junk yard but it was definitely had a rural appearance. The neighbor's house was on the back end of the lot, a couple of hundred meters from the road. I guess it was far enough from the river to avoid having water come up to its front door during floods.
This house had an enormous back yard. It was nicely planted with fruit trees. It was flat ground (probably a little soggy). That was a plus. But it wasn't at all private. As we said au revoir to the owner and got into the car, Bourdais said he needed to point out to us that there was a "gypsy" camp just up the road, only about 500 yards distant. That's it in the photo above, and I've marked it and the house on a Google Maps aerial view above that. Bourdais took us to see the site and explained that one of the elders of this group of gens du voyage had died on that spot a few years earlier, so it was considered sacred ground by his descendants. They returned every year and stayed a while. Since the road we were on dead-ended at the encampment, the only way to get there required passing by the house we had just looked at. Disclosing all that was a legal obligation, I think.
We drove back to the realty office. I was feeling more than a little discouraged. When we got there, Bourdais asked us what we thought. We said we wanted to continue looking. Good, he said. I’d like to show you some houses over near Saint-Aignan, which is only 10 miles up the river. There are some good prospects over there. Fine, we said. We didn't remember having ever heard of Saint-Aignan. I needed to look at a map. Bourdais asked us to come back at 2:30 the next day, so we'd have a free morning before continuing.
08 December 2020
Strike 1
That first day of house-hunting in December 2002 — a Monday — realtor Bourdais showed us two houses in Montrichard. The first was up on the road that goes to Amboise, just a few hundred yards after you cross the railroad tracks, up on the right. The house was the plain-looking one in the middle of this picture — I've put a red dot on its roof.
In Montrichard there is a huge retirement complex up on the hill overlooking the town and the Cher river valley. The place we were going to look at bordered on the retirement complex property, which Bourdais said was an advantage. That land was like parkland, he said, and it wasn’t likely to be developed in the foreseeable future. Actually, the retirement complex fell on hard times just a few years ago, according to a report I saw on the French national news. I haven't kept up, but I think it went into bankruptcy. I wonder what has become of it. I'm glad we don't live there.
Anyway, the location was not what we were looking for. First of all, there were a lot of other houses really close by. The yard was big, but it was on a hillside and was divided up into several oddly shaped plots, one of which was a narrow strip that ran down the hill to to the Amboise road, where there was a gate. It was true, as Bourdais pointed out, that we could have a good garden there — it had a southern exposure. But it also was completely exposed to the neighboring houses. I've put a red dot on the road in front of the house in the Google Maps image above. You can see the Montrichard train station in the upper left-hand corner.
We arrived at the house, just 100 meters off the Amboise road, in Bourdais' Audi. There was a gate across the driveway, and it was locked. Bourdais tried several keys but couldn’t get the gate open. He looked at us and said, well, are you willing to climb over the wall? It wasn’t very high, so we said why not? You can see it in the image above. I hoped he hadn't taken us to the wrong house. What kind of character had we gotten ourselves involved with? Over we climbed. I was almost 20 years younger then.
Here's what the house looked like as you drove up the hill. Inside, it needed a lot of paint and polish. There was a central hallway, off of which we saw a small dining room, a small living room, and a couple of bedrooms. The kitchen was a medium-sized, totally empty room — no cabinets, no appliances, no sink. It needed a new floor, I think. All over the rest of the house there was ugly carpeting that needed to be removed. There was no telling what the floors under the carpeting looked like.
Another sad thing about the house was the view. It overlooked two collections of modern apartment buildings down on the Amboise road. I think they are subsidized housing, but I'm not sure. There was a good view of the river valley beyond them, but the apartment buildings, blocky and tall, attracted your eye and blinded you to the rest (current Google Maps images above and below). On the plus side, there was a SuperU supermarket not far away, and the house was within easy walking distance of the Montrichard train station.
Nontheless, the search for a house was not off to a roaring start. Okay, it was only a first encounter. At least Bourdais had been able to find the key that opened the front door`to the house itself, so climbing over the wall didn't turn out to be a complete waste of time and effort.
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