There
are not many level places here – there's the road of course, way
down below in the Roya valley, there's the cultivated terraces that
people have hewn out of the slopes, and there's the high road in the
village, quaintly called Repentia
Looking down from Repentia |
which leads to the cemetery (there seems to be a tradition here of making the last resting place one that has a spectacular view).
But for those of us who want to walk any distance, you have to be prepared to climb.
Looking out from the road to Saorge, part of the old salt route is just visible on the opposite hillside, in the middle of the picture, snaking up above the train track.
I discovered the trail that forms part of the old salt route by chance, walking near the road down at the level of the river. Rocky but not stony, it snakes up and up, in those bends called lacets like laced up boots because of the way they go in one direction then the next, hairpin bends we might call them, except these are smaller, more intimate paths up the rocky slope. It is not bordered by trees, so the view unfolds beneath you all the time.
The ground falls away immediately at the edge of the path so there were times when I just had to look at where I placed my feet and not look down...
The weather changed, everything started to sprout and blossom, pear trees, cherry trees, the quince tree which became my 'spot' in the garden to work, where I parked my table and chair in its shade, drifting flower scents, the humming of insects, birdsong...I once caught sight of an enormous bird hovering motionless above the valley.
To
find a level walk, but also to visit the famous church of Notre Dame
des Fontaines, we took a bus to la Brigue, and walked from the
village to the church, and back. La Brigue is another ancient
village, with decorated lintels above doorways.
The
walls of Notre Dame des Fontaines are covered in frescos, dating from
the end of XV century, depicting the life of Christ.
La Brigue is even higher up than Saorge and the path through the woods gives a clear view of the mountains that form the border between France and Italy.
After a few glorious days the weather changed again and it's back to lowering clouds, and intermittent rain showers. But 'showers' are really when the clouds envelop the mountains and massive drops of rain fall like stones straight down on the earth and its inhabitants and as well as the rain there are the even bigger drops that fall from the edge of the roof overhanging my cell window.
One
day when it was not actually raining but there was a light covering
of cloud, I took another walk heading to the ruins of Chateau Malmort
but I didn't actually reach it.
Fontan train station on the right, village of Fontan to the left |
This path is even steeper than the old salt route, and goes through strangely silent woods. It finally opens up, giving a tremendous view, and showing Saorge from a different angle.
But
just after that, the path passes under some huge overhanging rocks,
with fallen stones lying on it and I decide I've gone far enough. I'd
felt uneasy about the name of the castle anyway (mal meaning bad and
mort meaning death!) Coming down was almost as hard as going up, your
knees get quite wobbly because of the steepness of the path.
I'll soon be heading to somewhere very different, where the terrain is completely flat. And from an ex monastery to Le Diable Vauvert (the phrase au diable Vauvert in French means in the middle of nowhere), but Vauvert is a real place, and the building is in the remote marshlands of La Petite Camargue. And Les Avocats du Diable is the name of the publishing house who hosts the residency.
I'll soon be heading to somewhere very different, where the terrain is completely flat. And from an ex monastery to Le Diable Vauvert (the phrase au diable Vauvert in French means in the middle of nowhere), but Vauvert is a real place, and the building is in the remote marshlands of La Petite Camargue. And Les Avocats du Diable is the name of the publishing house who hosts the residency.
Comments
Ah, the quince... The quince and I have a special relationship.
And, as I said before: you do get around!