There was a dew on Monday morning and the
awning was damp to the touch. Apart from when we had rain at Camiers on our
first night in France, it has been bone dry ever since. It was very warm when we got up and the dew
soon dried off.
Blue skies and neighbours arrived at Messane |
During the morning a German couple arrived and
set up camp next to us and I saw their car had a fish symbol on the back; I
think it’s the first time I’ve seen this on foreign fishermen’s cars. The site seems to be full of Dutch and French
people with us and the Germans tucked out of the way 😉
Karen went for a run whilst I set about
planning the rest of our journey down to southern Tuscany.
We are now at our sixth campsite of the trip
and I reckon we will stay at four more, moving about 100 miles or so every
other day; we have about 550 miles to go before we to get to our destination in
Italy. Remember that we are not going on
motorways so that makes it easier to take things slowly.
Putting our French and Italian road maps together to get into planning mode |
When Karen got back, she made a picnic lunch
and we set off for Istres as we had found a walk around the salt lake there –
Étang d’Olivier. It was a walk of about
4 ½ miles and we thought that would be far enough in the heat of the day. We drove to the lake and couldn’t find any
access from the road for ages. In fact,
we circumnavigated the whole lake before we realised that the path on the guide
was actually on the road itself – not a particularly inspiring walk.
We decided to go back to the campsite and go
for a walk along the much larger lake where it is situated – Étang de Barre.
Strange cloud formation across the lake |
It was a good walk as we were able to let
Buddy off and a lot of it was in the shade of the pine trees that came down to
the shore. There was lots of birdlife
and plenty of diving birds that seemed to be getting a good supply of
fish. One cormorant literally bit off
more than it could chew; it just could not swallow the fish it had caught as it
was so large. We watched it toss the
fish in the air a few times, spinning it over and catching it again, but to no
avail. On the final toss it missed the
catch and the fish fell into the lake, with the cormorant diving after it, but
it came up empty mouthed.
Our shady walk along the beach |
When we were having a drink back at the tent
before cooking dinner we independently rated the six campsites we have been to
so far. We both ranked them in the same
order – I wonder if we’ll agree on the remaining ones?
On Tuesday it was time to continue our
road trip. It was another dewy morning
and we wondered if it was because we were so close to water as the nights are
warmer than we have had so far. Anyway,
it didn’t matter if we packed the tent away wet as it would quickly dry out as
soon as we put it up again. We were
headed for Aups so we could spend time at Lac de Sainte-Croix and the Gorges du
Verdon.
Sun rising on the villas on the hills above the campsite after our last night on the Camargue |
Funnily enough, as we were heading out
of the Camargue we saw a few wild horses, the only ones since we have been
here. It was a very hot day and we were
glad we only had about 90 miles to travel.
As we left the Camargue we realised what a brilliant experience Mike & Aileen had had for the last month or so in the area cruising through it on their narrowboat - there would be nothing like it in the UK.
We dropped in at the first campsite we
found in Aups and soon left as it was over 30 euros a night – all sites have
been between 14 and 20 euros so far. We
didn’t fancy the second site either so continued out of Aups towards the lake
to a little area called Aiguines. We
finally found a site that was right up our street...
…it was so hot that we took ages setting up camp |
We had glorious views over the wooded
hills and the other way over butterfly meadows that seemed to be swarming so we
will be spending time trying to identify the different species of clouded
yellows and blues we could see.
Looking the other way at the meadows |
In the late afternoon we went for a
walk around part of the lake. Lac de
Sainte-Croix was man-made in the early 1970s for hydroelectricity in the valley
of the Verdon. It is now a beautiful
spot with clear waters ideal for swimming and sailing and other water
sports. You wouldn’t know it now, but Sainte-Croix
du Verdon was buried under the water.
Imagine how long it would take these days if you wanted to displace a
whole village. It reminded me of a
French drama series we watched a few years ago, Les Revenants, that was set
around a similar looking lake. Karen wasn’t
so keen about the thought at the drama was quite morbid.
Arriving at the lake – Buddy already investigating |
Large expanses of water are now
confusing to Buddy as, since the salt lakes of the Camargue, he is not sure if
he can drink the water or not. It took
him quite a while before he realised it was fresh water. He still doesn’t swim but we will probably go
for a swim tomorrow so that may encourage him.
The closest he gets to swimming |
It was nice and quiet with the odd
couple sunbathing and/or swimming, so we found a spot where we could sit on a
rock with our legs in the warm water an idled away an hour or so throwing the
odd stick in the water for Buddy to fetch.
We were right at one end of the lake
so the views we had didn’t do it justice.
Tomorrow we will drive round it, maybe stop for a swim somewhere and
then have a walk at the Gorges du Verdon.
We don’t get any electricity at
campsites, so we rely on our mobile solar panel to charge our phones. The trouble is, is that it won’t charge a
fridge, so we have to be careful how we keep our fresh fruit and vegetables and
it means regular trips to a shop or market nearly every day. We have been to a couple of places where we
have been able to leave our car fridge plugged in to a socket in a laundry room
or similar which helped but accept it is not the norm.
As I said, this latest campsite is up
in the top of our list – rustic would be the way to describe it – no
entertainment or swimming pool or lights at night and most pitches are taken by
permanent residents or at least permanently taken if not lived in all year
round.
It gets dark soon after 8 so we spend the
last couple of hours or so sitting outside in candlelight. All of the other sites we have been to have
some sort of lighting around the place but as this one doesn’t it makes
stargazing more romantic. We even both
saw the same shooting star at the same time – only the second time that has
happened to us.
During the night the dog howling was
more in evidence that recently as now we are in the hills, the howls echo
around them.
Getting up this morning to our first
day at Aiguines, the tent is bone dry and there is not a drop of dew. The last two dewy mornings must have been
because we were camped so close to a large lake.
2 comments:
Hi Neil and Karen, sounds like younare having a fabulous road trip. I am wondering if the fish symbol you mention is actually the Ichtys? Travel safe. Love Karen
Yes thanks Karen - it's a holiday of a lifetime. You are right about the fish symbol - I was trying, but failing, to be ironic ;)
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