Back in October of 2008, my husband and I embarked on a self-guided five-day walk in the Pyrenees. He had meetings in Paris and we took the opportunity to get into the countryside before they started. My intention at the time was to write a short article about the trip. Supported walking trips are becoming more popular, but are still not the most common holiday.
There may be a reason for that! Our trip (which was, in retrospect, a great experience) was fraught with challenges. I needed a bit of time to get some perspective on it, so I never did write that story.
The idea itself is sound: an agency who knows the walking region organises accommodation, breakfast and dinner, and daily transportation of the baggage. They send you topographical maps and walking notes. Of course, the notes come with a disclaimer, and this disclaimer must not be taken lightly!
We opted for the eastern-most section of the Cathare Trail because it was the shortest walk, and therefore fit into our time frame, and for an English agency because they spoke English (duh!). We got out our walking pants, bought new bandanas and walking sticks, and set off with a song in our hearts…
 Day 1, Padern to Duilac: Setting off up hill on the first leg of our trek. Padern, Pyrénées-Orientales
Getting there is half the fun ~ Well, sort of. You might be forgiven for thinking I am a good traveller, but I have never mastered the art of packing. Our first stop in Paris was to the Monparnasse hotel where we would later stay, to drop off our ‘city bags’ before heading to Bordeaux, and thence Narbonne, at the west end of the Pyrenees. The hotel concierge kindly directed us to the Gare de Lyons, Paris for ticketing. Unfortunately, as we and our remaining bags discovered some time later, Bordeaux trains leave from Monparnasse station, not Gare de Lyons. So back we schlepped.
 Day 1, Padern to Duilac: This is, indeed, wine country. Autumn Grapes Pyrénées-Orientales
European trains are, as a rule, fantastic, and our trip to Narbonne, once we had managed to sort out the difficulties of ticketing, was enjoyable and uneventful. Although our trip notes were a bit vague about connection details, we had assumed we would be able to manage the next step: getting to our hotel in Tuchan. The cab driver smoking in his van in the Narbonne railway station parking-lot just raised one eyebrow and laughed when I asked where I could find a bus to Tuchan. After half an hour of wandering around in search of anything resembling a bus stop, we broke down and agreed to the cab driver’s highway robbery: 120 Euro fare for a 35 km trip.
Driving from Narbonne into the foothills of the Pyrenees was a delight – the highway winding through the mountains was wide and smooth (albeit bus-free). Every so often we could smell the herbs of the garrigue over the stale smoke in the hot car. Stone castles were visible up rocky cliffs and atop hills dotted with grape vines. Truly magic!
 Day 1, Padern to Duilac: Our first building - at the top of our first hill: Chapelle St Roch
French lessons 101- “Lundi se fermé”: Tuchan, once we arrived there, seemed deserted. Fortunately, some of my French was coming back as I watched the signposts and I managed to direct our cab driver to our auberge – an old two-story stone building. As we and our bags tumbled out of the smoke-filled car, I looked at the chalk sandwich board at the entry to the courtyard, then at my husband: “We’re in trouble! ‘Lundi se fermé’ – Closed Mondays.” Sure enough, no one was around, no doors were open and there was no note. We had paid reservations, so presumably were expected, but we hadn’t had lunch and there was no telling when someone would show up. Our phones refused to work and I set off to find a pay-phone or a person…
Long story short, after finding only one establishment (an insurance office) open – as it was after two, any place that might have sold food was taking in the chairs and closed for the afternoon – and ascertaining that there was one pay phone several blocks away, we decided to experiment with our own mobiles some more, and finally got one to work. I rang the local agents, and in my best French told them “Nous sommes arrivé – il n’y a personne. (We have arrived – no one is here).” Very helpfully, the agent rang the auberge – we could hear the phone inside – and told me no one was answering! She promised to try and track the owner down. We sat down in the courtyard to lunch on nuts from Thailand and chocolate from the airport duty-free. At least it was sunny!
The auberge, once we got inside an hour later, reminded me of the one where I had worked in Parignargue back in 1979: comfortable enough but dark and with bathrooms squashed into spaces clearly not meant for them. But, we were inside, we had keys, and directions on how to find dinner (three delectable courses with a ‘demi-pichet’ of red wine). Not bad for our first day on the road.
 Day 1, Padern to Duilac: Mediterranean garrigue. This took me back to my summer in Provence! Pyrénées-Orientales, Languedoc-Roussilon
 Day 1, Padern to Duilac: High on the hill amid the autumn colours, the ruins of the medieval Padern Castle was the first we saw on our five-day walk along the Cathar Way.
 Day 1, Padern to Duilac: Moss. The woods were beautiful... It takes a long time to walk 20km when you stop to photograph everything!
 Blue Succulents on the Forest Floor
 Day 1: Château de Quéribus "Le château de Quéribus est le dernier bastion de la résistance cathare à tomber en 1255." Last bastion of the persecuted Cathars, which fell in 1255.
The next morning, we presented ourselves downstairs for breakfast in a room rich with atmosphere, locals and medieval tapestries. Our Host, somewhat gruffly, asked what we wanted. Hmm. No sign of a menu. Coffee? Croissants? I asked, somewhat timidly. So, that’s what we got. I was too intimidated to ask if we might have juice, and of course, asking if there was something vegetarian we might take with us for lunch was beyond my nerve or my French. But surely we’d make it to the next town in time for lunch…
You guessed correctly: we didn’t. By the time we had climbed and descended countless hills through the ‘garrigue’, the sweet-smelling French scrub, and sufficiently explored our first two medieval castles, almost everything in the pretty town of Cucugnan was closed for the day. We eventually found a tavern that agreed to make us cheese and tomato ‘sandwiches’. Never has crusty French bread tasted so good!
 Day 1, Padern to Duilac: Finally, we can see lunch: Cucugnan, still almost two hours away, with Château de Peyrepertuse up on the hill in a distance. Pyrénées-Orientales, Languedoc-Roussilon
 Day 1, Padern to Duilac: Finally fed! A sandwich and a beer and we are on our way again! Moulin à Cucugnan on the hill, Pyrénées-Orientales
French lessons 102- “Il n’y a personne”~ “There is no one here!”: We still had a few hours to walk that first day, over more hills and through more vineyards. As we got close to Duilac towards evening, we came across a field of late grapes where the workers were singing Guantanamera as they worked. More magic!
We finally arrived at our hotel, only to find it locked. At least this time there was a local telephone number to call. They told me the key to our room was on the desk inside. “Yes, but we are outside!” After much linguistic struggling, I managed to understand that there was a key pad and a code to enter. It was rather romantic having an inn all to ourselves! And, once we found our allocated restaurant, we ate and drank well.
The rest of our trek followed the same sort of rhythm. We walked and walked, and stopped to explore. We got a little lost three out of five days, and very lost the other two.
 Day 1, Padern to Duilac: Picking Grapes and singing Guantanamera. Pyrénées-Orientales
 Day 2, Duilac to Cubières: The Château de Peyrepeteuse - Languedoc-Roussilon
 Day 2, Duilac to Cubières: The Château de Peyrepeteuse Ruins, Languedoc-Roussilon
 Day 2, Duilac to Cubières: Rosehips in the Rain
 Day 2: Duilac to Cubières: Rugged Mountain Road: Long and Windy! Galamus Gorges
 Day 3, Cubières to Sougraigne: Fallen Mushrooms. Pyrénées-Orientales, Languedoc-Roussilon
 Day 3: Cubières to Sougraigne: In the Chestnut Forest
 Day 3, Cubières to Sougraigne: Through the Beech and Chestnut Forests, Pyrénées-Orientales
 Day 4, Pumpkin Patch, Sougraigne, Pyrénées-Orientales, Languedoc-Roussilon
 Day 4, Sougraigne to Granes: Everlasting Sunflowers, Languedoc-Roussilon
 Day 4, Sougraigne to Granes: Blacksmith, Rennes le Château
 Day 4, Sougraigne to Granes: L'Abbé Saunière, Rennes-Le-Château
 Day 5, Granes to Quillan: Still Life Found ~ Tractor
 Day 5: 'Laval' - Pyrenean Village ~ Pyrénées-Orientales, Languedoc-Roussilon
 Day 5, Granes to Quillan: Pine Cone
 Day 5, Granes to Quillan: Quillan
 End of our Trek: Quillan, Pyrénées-Orientales, Languedoc-Roussilon

You might wonder why I’ve uncovered these memories and photos now… Well, in spite of often being lost, tired, cold and rained-on, we enjoyed the scenery, the walking, and the food and drink in the evenings. We had a really good time – so much so, that when this goes to ‘air’, we’ll be part of the way through the full twelve day walk from Padern to Foiz.
I know we’ll have a good time, and I’m pretty sure we won’t get lost as often…
Posted in Architecture,France,History,Nature,Rural,TravelTags: architecture,blog,France,nature,Photo Blog,Travel Blog,Ursula Wall
 Afternoon view down Rue des Gras, Clermont-Ferrand, to the dormant volcano: Puy de Dôme
Clermont-Ferrand, in case you don’t know it, is a charming city with a two thousand year history right in the middle of France “at the crossroads of the main highways of Europe”. It is also at the heart of the Michelin company, so we are here while my husband attends meetings at his head office. As happy as I am to sit at a table on the cobblestones of the old quarter, drinking wine and eating the excellent local cheese, I am at risk of turning into a complete pudding.
Fortunately, Clermont-Ferrand is also within reach of the Auvergne volcanoes: a chain of eight dormant volcanoes (or Chaîne des Puys, in French) at the edge of the Massif Central. Looked after by the Maison du Parc Naturel Régional des Volcans d’Auvergne, this area offers some great hiking opportunities. I was lucky enough to find an obliging local resident willing to accompany me on a couple of wonderful forays into the “Monts Dome” range.
These mountains are not particularly high (the Puy de Dôme is the highest at 1465m), but they stand out in stark relief against the surrounding plateau. On Monday, in changeable weather and under ominous clouds, we walked 1.9km up the well-graded Chemin des Muletier or ‘Mule Train’ path, through the hazel, oak and alder trees, to the top of Puy de Dôme. This sounds easy enough, but the 350m rise in elevation is much more difficult with jet-lag and and after a surfeit of wine and cheese!
 Driving to the Puy de Dôme from Clermont-Ferrand, you have a continual view of the volcano from the access roads on the flat plateau surrounding it.
 In 2012 you won't have to walk up the hill. The new crémaillère (rack railway) train will do the job for you. Puy de Dôme, Auvergne
 Last year's oak leaves remain on their branches until the new buds send them tumbling...
 The New Season's Alder Leaves
 Physics Laboratory and Signal Tower Under a Looming Sky: Puy de Dôme, Auvergne
 Up-drafts from around the Volcano Make it Popular for Paragliding
 Safely Cocooned over La Chaîne des Puys
 Ruins of the Gallo-Roman Temple to the God Mercury were Uncovered in 1873. Puy de Dôme
 A Statue to the Pilot Eugène Renaux, who, with his mechanic Albert Senouque won the Michelin Grand Prix in 1911 for flying from Paris to Puy de Dôme in 5 hours, 10 minutes and 27 seconds.
Today (Thursday), we walked up the Puy de Pariou. Not only is the walk relatively easy, with a reasonable gradient and a total altitude of 1209m, but we were blessed with glorious sunshine, clear skies and great views across to the neighbouring Puy de Dôme.
 Setting out on the Puy de Pariou Trail with the Puy de Dôme Overhead
 The French Forest of Puy de Pariou
 Anenome on the Forest Floor, Puy de Pariou
 View of the Mountains in the Chaîne des Puys, from the top of Puy de Pariou
 Whimsy in the Crater Bowl, Puy de Pariou
 The Path Into the Bowels... Puy de Pariou
 View from the top of Puy de Pariou ~ looking at Puy-de-Dôme
 Wildflowers on the Forest Floor, Puy de Pariou
It was a beautiful way to enjoy a couple of spring days in the heartland of central France.
Enjoy the season!
Posted in Every Day Life,France,Nature,ThailandTags: blog,France,National Park,nature,Photo Blog,Provincial Park,puy,rural,Travel Blog,Ursula Wall,volcano
Some trips are such a jumble of colours and textures that they more closely resemble a crazy quilt than a tidy tapestry. So it was for me on the short trip to Attapeu Province in Southwestern Laos in January: a mix of Wats (temples), waterfalls and monuments; rural plantations and rough-board housing rubbing shoulders with chic French-style coffee shops; dusty streets with brightly coloured clothing; and ‘peaceful’ monks racing over sun-lit sands.
So, this last post in the Attapeu series is a scrapbook of scattered impressions; a crazy quilt of clashing colours and cultural contrasts.
 Washing Away Any Sins ~ Wat Pra-ong San Sukharam, Ban Sakae, Attapeu
 Monks' Dormitories ~ Wat Pra-ong San Sukharam (วัดพระองค์แสนสุขสําราญ)
 Airing the Orange ~ Monks' Cloths, Wat Pra-ong San Sukharam, Ban Sakae
 Morning Blues: Rinsing the Bike in the Xe Kong, Attapeu, Laos
 Purple and Red! A Child's Coat Brightens the Dusty Street Scene, Attapeu Market
 Is it Cool Enough Yet? Oye Man Checking the Temperature of the Clay Pit Kiln, Ban La Yao
 White and Gold Against a Cloudy Sky : With War on One Wall and Peaceful Agrarian Industry on the Other : The Two Nations (Laos and Vietnam) Monument, Attapeu
 Golden Comrades in Arms: Lao and Viet Soldiers at The Two Nations Monument, Attapeu
 Colours on the Beach ~ Monks on the Run ~ Attapeu
 Shades of Lao Coffee, Bolaven Plateau
 Green and Dusty: Coffee Bush, Bolaven Plateau
 Contrasting Bedding ~ Airing the Blankets ~ Coffee Grower's House, Bolaven Plateau, Laos
 The Coffee Planter's Wife Taking Time Out ~ Out of the Heat of the Day
 C'est Charmante! A Little Piece of France ~ Sinouk Coffee Resort and Café, Lakkhao, Laos
 Purple Bougainvillea
 Fresh Green Tea Leaves, Pakxong, Bolaven Plateau
 Still-Life: Basket of Tools for the Tea Harvest, Pakxong, Bolaven Plateau
 Still Waters: Kong Dung Waterfall... Waterfall? Where?
 Bridge to the Pasuam Waterfall: Constructed from Locally Recovered Driftwood
 On the Bridge: Visiting Soul Sisters ~ The Kmer Buddhist Nun and Her Cambodian Friend
 Orange and Green: Buddhist Monk from Cambodia at Pasuam Waterfall, Laos
 Monks' Day Out: Photographing Each Other, Pasuam Waterfall, Laos
 Nature at Work: Pasuam Waterfall

‘Till next time ~ enjoy your days in full colour, and happy travels.
Posted in Culture,Every Day Life,History,Laos,Memorial,Religious Practice,Rural,TravelTags: agriculture,blog,buddhism,farming,Laos,nature,people,Photo Blog,religion,rural,travel,Travel Blog,Ursula Wall,work
First impressions count for so much.
 On a Clear Day, You Can See Forever… On a Normal Day at The Peak in Hong Kong, You Can See Midlevels… and Almost See Kowloon!
My first flight into Hong Kong was a surreal sensory experience: I can still wrap myself in surround-sound memories of listening to Asian flutes in luxurious Cathay business-class comfort, fuelled by love and champagne, as the plane descends through the clouds, allowing the first sight of that beautiful harbour with its sparkling light, junk-sailed boats and triangular karst islands rising out of the mists.
That whole trip, ten years ago, was magical. I must have walked, cabbed, bused and ferried just about every inch of the city and its harbour. My (now) husband was living there at the time in a perfectly-situated high-rise in Midlevels, overlooking the city, where the sight of the mists rolling out and the city lights coming on through the picture windows stopped everything in its tracks.
So, smoggy, cold, windy, and damp… it doesn’t matter – Hong Kong can do no wrong! That first impression entranced me, and I am forever in the city’s thrall.
Our most recent trip to Hong Kong, two weeks ago, was primarily about business and catching-up with old friends, but we did make a point of revisiting The Peak. We (wisely) elected to take The Peak Tram straight up, rather than walking the rather long and circuitous road as we had done when we were ten years younger.
 The Track Divides Higher up, for the Double Reversible Funicular System
 Funicular Trams Operate as two Cars That are Permanently Attached to Each Other by a Cable
 Here Comes the Funicular Tram: A Smiling Operator and Potentially 120 Passengers
 120 Years and Proud: The Peak Tram Company
It is only an eight minute trip up to Victoria Peak from Central; considerably quicker than the walk from Midlevels! The incline ranges from 4 to 27 degrees, and the views over Hong Kong, if you are smart enough to get on the right side of the the carriage, must be amazing on a clear day.
 Passengers On The Peak Tram
I’ve never been in Hong Kong on a clear day, so I take my photographic subjects where I can find them; inside the tram-car rather than outside it, if necessary!
Hong Kong is composed of hills which are made manageable by stairs and escalators. In that respect, The Peak Tower is a microcosm of the city. And, like downtown, the trip up or down the various levels of The Peak Tower is punctuated by food, entertainment and shopping…
 Like Hong Kong Itself: Bright Lights, Multi-Levels and Escalators: The Peak Tower, Hong Kong
 Gray on Gray: On the Escalators, The Peak (太平山頂)
 Hong Kong ~ Through the Glass ~ The Peak Tower
So, we dutifully ate (a lot!) and shopped (a little) before embarking on the 3.5 Peak Circle Walk. I had no illusions about photographing views, as the the combination of overcast from the sea and smog from China showed no signs of lifting. But it is a pleasant circuit and (hopefully) helped to work off the super-sized strawberry shortcake I’d eaten with lunch.
 凌霄閣 ~ The Peak Tower (Relaunched in 2006)~ as Seen From The Peak Circle Walk
 A Break in the Natural Jungle Affords a Glimpse of the Concrete Jungle Below
 I Love How the Building Contours Follow the Hong Kong Hills and the Karst Islands
 The Curves of the Iron Banisters on Lugard Road ~ The Peak Circle Walk
 ‘Old and Valuable Tree’ Says one Sign; ‘Ficus Elastica: India Rubber Tree’ Says Another, More Scientific but Less Poetic Sign
People actually live up here, although I think the prices are well outside ‘normal’ ranges. Clearly some of the rambling properties have become too much to maintain and have been abandoned.
 Garden Gate on Harlech Rd
 Rusty Gate Above an Abandoned Greenhouse
 Taking in the View? Bench on the Peak Circle Walk
 View Over Aberdeen From The Peak
After our perambulation, we returned to The Sky Terrace to see if the view had cleared enough to make it worth while waiting for the night lights to come on.
 View from the Sky Terrace
 Young People on the Sky Terrace
It hadn’t, so I satisfied myself with some people-watching before we headed back down The Tram and walked over to The Escalators at Midlevels for drinks and dinner.
 Ticket Seller, The Peak Tram, Hong Kong

That’s the thing about Hong Kong: there is always a viable alternative.
And, good wine, good company and good food always makes a good impression!
Photos: 12March2011
Posted in Architecture,Hong Kong,Mass Transportation,TravelTags: architecture,blog,funicular,Hong Kong,people,Photo Blog,rail,railway,train,travel,Travel Blog,Ursula Wall
I was in Japan several years ago with three other reasonably well-travelled adults. We had arrived into Tokyo late in the evening and were tired and hungry. We went to a shiny restaurant of chrome and formica across the road from the hotel and were met at the door with a “Hai!”, given menus, and shown to our tables. Once we had deciphered the pictures (there was no English) and decided what we wanted, we looked around for someone to take our order… Not a serving person in sight! We waited. And waited… We stood up and craned our necks. We waited. We tapped our feet and looked around. And waited. Finally, two young women, customers at another table, took pity on us. “You have to push the buzzer on the table,” they explained. Once we did this, our server instantly appeared, as if by magic, with an electronic pad, and transmitted our order to the kitchen as we were making it.
 The Price of a Room: A Fist Full of Lao Kip
This memory came back to me as I was looking through my cache of photos from Attapeu in Southwestern Laos and I came across the one of our group leader, Khun Napat Sirisambhand, holding out the bundle of Kip she needed in order to pay for our rooms.
This particular trip, to Attapeu and to the Lawae and Taliang villages in the region, was rich with cultural experiences. But, I find it is often the seemingly simple things that stand out most when I travel: ordering food, paying for a room, or getting a cup of coffee…
 Lao Coffee, or Pakxong Coffee, is Served in a Glass with a Rich Layer of Condensed Milk at the Bottom
(Lao coffee is wonderful! Don’t be fooled by the Nescafé mugs on the table in the picture: although Laos exports their robusta coffee to Thailand, where it goes into Nescafé instant, I’m drinking the locally-grown Bolovens Plateau arabica that is also grown in the region.)
It’s not just the differences for myself as a traveller – it is the differences I see in other people’s daily lives. How they get to work or do their shopping. How they wash their laundry; themselves; their dishes. What people’s houses and gardens look like. What pets or animals they keep in their yards. What the town streets look like…
 Walking to Work in the Fields... Dusty Attapeu Sunrise
 Going Shopping at the Attapeu Morning Markets
 Suburban Housing: Wooden Home on Stilts, Attapeu
 White Buffalo Calf in the Garden, Attapeu
 Attapeu Street: Cleaning Supplies and Garbage Bin made from Recycled Tyres
 Laundry Day, Attapeu Province
 Lunch Dishes Hanging in the 'Kitchen' ~ Attapeu Province
Children may be children all over the world, but different cultures have vastly different expectations of them. What amounts to ‘sharing household tasks and responsibilities’ at one end of the spectrum can run into child labour at the other. On our travels, we crossed the Xe Kong by small ferry or ‘bug’. The old ferry operator was ably assisted by his pre-teen granddaughters. It was impossible to know how many hours a week they help or to what extent they are paid for their help…
 Small Ferry, or 'Bug' on the Xe Kong River
 Ferry Man and His Granddaughters
 Young Lao Sisters: Working on the River
The trade-off for the expectation of work, I suppose, is the sense of belonging to a tightly networked community. We visited Ban La Yao, home to the Oye, one of the many ethnic groups in the Attapeu province. It seemed that half the village turned out to greet us, play music, sing, dance and show us their wicker weaving and pottery.
 Oye House - Ban La Yao
 Oye Dancers Get Ready to Perform (Again we See the Red Face of Someone who Has Used too Many Local Skin-Whitening Products)
 Music, Singing, Drumming and Dancing: Women on the Wooden Xylophone
 Smiling Oye Drummer
 A Young Woman Models the Traditional Oye Headdress
 Oye Mother and Children at their Daily Bath in the Yard
I wandered out into the dusty ‘main road’ (the only road?), past the ‘petrol station’ and had a chat with the local shopkeeper. He told me that they’d had no school teacher for some time. I stopped into the schoolyard, where three children were playing in the dirt with small stones – a game that looked like a cross between tiddly-winks and marbles.
 Gas Station - Ban La Yao
 Schoolyard - Ban La Yao
 Oye Kids in the School Yard
The young girl who was was the ring-leader of the three had organised her friends into a game she was clearly winning. Children will make games out of whatever they have at hand, and those with sufficient intelligence and attitude will get ahead. I have no doubt she will do well! What sticks in my mind, though, is that tray of flat ‘marbles’; as I said earlier, it is often the small things that stand out.
 Main Road - Ban La Yao
I hope you enjoy your travel experiences: large and small. 
Posted in Culture,Every Day Life,Laos,Rural,WorkTags: Attapeu,blog,children,nature,people,Photo Blog,rural,travel,Travel Blog,Ursula Wall,work
« Older posts
Newer posts »
|
I often chuckle as I read your adventures that if you got a little lost, they’d be looking for bones if it were I… sounds magic… enjoy the trip.
much love to you both
Ha Ha!! We are only getting a little lost – and with all the French food, our bones are well covered!!
Very interesting trip 🙂 I have to watch your Laos’ photos…
Thanks for your visit, Tribudragon. We just finished another ~ longer ~ one. Hopefully the pictures will be ready sooooon. 😉
[…] fragrant Mediterranean scrubland, alternates with vineyards and rocky outcrops. Because of our previous experience of arriving on a Monday when the hotel is closed, I made sure we would arrive on a Sunday instead. […]
[…] park. We thought we’d have a relatively easy time of it for two reasons: 1) unlike the day of our last visit in 2008, there was no sign of rain; and 2) our walk to Cubière would be 4km shorter than the walk to […]