Welcome to the Blog part of the website. This is my attempt to make sense of Kate and I living in France, the lifestyle,the french, my home and animals and anything else that seems amusing to me. Sorry I have a strange sense of humour!! 

The blog is written on a monthly basis with regular  news of my adventures and those of my animals at La Godefrere.  You can now look us up on our new facebook page - La Godefrere.

This website can no longer host my blog so I have changed to using wordpress. This can be accessed through the following link:

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A week in which there are visitors; a gigot arrives; we suffer machines and make it to Sandy’s favourites

November 17, 2013

It has been a busy week and started off last Monday with a bank holiday in France. The French very wisely have lots of bank holidays. Last Monday was the 11th November (Armistice Day) and rightly commemorated in France with a public holiday. Bank holidays in France are a bit different from England where public holidays are either a reason for a party or to go shopping. In France all the shops are closed and there don’t seem many parties around here so instead everyone goes visiting. Usually family but anyone will do. So last Monday we had a series of visitors. Firstly Giselle and Daniel came over and so we had to offer the normal French hospitality and offer a coffee. The French have a strange way of dealing with this. We say “Would you like a coffee” and in Britain would expect the answer “Yes please, that would be great”. Or some such response. The French when asked if they would like coffee reply “If you wish”. At first we couldn’t quite get our heads around the response.  We wouldn’t have asked if we didn’t wish and the reply seems somehow off hand as if saying “if you insist; you are forcing us to have your ghastly coffee”. After a while we realised that this was just the French being polite. In effect it means “If you are so gracious as to wish to honour us with your coffee, we can hardly refuse”. French visitors never seem to say, “Sorry we don’t have time”, or “We have just had one thanks”, they always say yes.

And then of course you can’t just offer coffee, you have to get out the cake or posh biscuits (usually after disappearing and returning with a new packet, clearly bought specially for visitors). Once you have had the cake or biscuit, then out comes the Calva and your coffee gets topped up with the special Calva kept just for visitors. So what starts out as just a call out of courtesy becomes a fully fledged royal visit!

So when Giselle and Daniel visited, Mrs. Parish just happened to have made some cake so we were able to do our duty as fledgling French people with offering the right things. 10 minutes after they have gone more visitors arrive. This time it is Patrick and Katrin whose sheep grazed our field. They have arrived with a “Gigot” (a leg of lamb) as the price for letting their sheep graze our field. So of course we offer coffee as we are required by good manners to do. This means more coffee but of course more cake so I am beginning to like this French custom.

A further hour later and Emile and Yvette turn up so we have to go through the coffee and cake ritual again. I have noticed that when Emile comes he always insists on only having a small cup of coffee and that only half filled. Clearly he has many visits planned and is pacing himself to be able to manage several offerings of coffee. Mind you he always has a full slice of cake!! In the afternoon Mrs. Parish and I felt compelled to work in the garden as penance for all the cake.

The gigot arriving is good news and this is now in the freezer until we have enough people staying to justify a Lamb Feast. We had a leg of lamb last year which we devoured with my son Ian and his fiancée Emma and their friends who came to stay. Maybe when they come again in January? Of course by then we should have a second Gigot from Alex and John. This is the couple who have Alpacas and whose lambs we also look after. They have taken the lambs way and will bring us a gigot in December.

I have written previously about the strange noises made by our Fridge. It seems that French machines have their own personality. Like the French they exhibit stubbornness and cultured indifference. Sometimes you can hear the fridge give a real French sigh so much it almost shrugs its shoulders. The toaster is a different kettle of fish (sorry, that’s pretty awful). The toaster clearly enjoys being difficult and is assisted in this by French bread. The toaster can be adjusted to up to 6 numbered settings with infinite permutations in between. Setting it to 3 will produce warm bread on one occasion and if adjusted a micro measure, will burn the bread. Just when you think you have found the right setting to produce perfect toast in steps French bread. We usually have a French “boule”, a round loaf which is cut into slices. Depending on the day we can buy the bread from anyone of three or four local boulangers (Bakers) or from the supermarket. So this means that the bread is all baked differently. Some is much lighter than others and then of course the cutting machines in the bakeries are set at ever so slightly different thicknesses. All of which allows the toaster to run riot and for the kitchen to be full of black smoke. Of course the bread has one final trick to play. Once we have got the right setting for that day’s bread you find that because of the way the bread is made, some have holes in the slice. This means that 95% of the slice will be a perfect brown but the bread around the hole will be black, again causing the fire alarm to be set off. This results in panic and grabbing a tea towel and flapping like mad while Mrs. Parish attempts to get to the bread before it catches fire. Of course at this point the toaster will not allow the bread to pop up and so it must be extracted using the end of a wooden spoon.

It is not just kitchen machines that are the bane of my life. My computer is a constant source of confusion and stress. It is now about 5 years old so it is a relic from the dark ages. This seems to require it to move very slowly when starting up (a bit like me I suppose). The keyboard is also getting a bit gummy and the letter A sometimes doesn’t work unless I bash it quite hard. It is quite frustrating to have typed a paragraph and then to find loads of strange words with no a’s in them. My biggest frustration however is the seemingly constant need that software providers have for giving you “updates” which bizarrely you have to “download”. This seems to take forever and then to require you to restart the computer. Worse is to come as you discover that the new software, offering great improvements has simply changed the format and moved everything to paces that I can’t find. ITunes is driving me mad and after the last update everything changed around so I couldn’t work out where my podcasts were or how to update and transfer stuff to my IPod. Now yahoo has changed the layout on my emails and of course I can’t find anything as they seem to have repositioned all the important buttons in different places. Why do they need to do it! My theory is that computer companies are all staffed by children with ADHD and so they have to be doing something or changing something all the time.

A bit like our cats! They spend most of their time being annoying and trying to convince me that it is time for food. When we have chucked them outside they will often go and visit the cows in the next field, until the cows get fed up and chase them under the fence. Then they wander up the lane to wind up Giselle and Daniel’s dog. It is called Pepito and like French farm dogs lives outside in a little wire enclosure. His job is to bark if anyone comes to their yard. The cats like to wander up the lane and sit just outside the entrance to the yard but in view of Pepito. (They won’t go into the yard as they are scared of Giselle). This of course starts him barking but the cats just sit there and taunt him.

I was talking about computers and this coincides with a telephone call with my good friend Wee Sandy Clark. Sandy has embraced the use of computers as a necessary evil but regards mobile phones as the work of the devil and regards things like facebook and twitter as unnecessary time wasters. Sandy is an old friend from Keele University where we both did a Masters Degree almost 20 years ago!!!! My god where has that gone. Anyway we were discussing the nature of computers and change, as he has a new computer with the latest version of Windows and generally being grumpy old men when Sandy paid me the ultimate compliment. Not only was my blog, Sandy’s favourite blog (alright, it is the only blog he reads) but he had now marked it among his favourites on his computer. So my Blog now sits amongst a select band including BBC radio Scotland; Radio 3; Laithwaites wines; Motherwell FC, Wakefield Jazz; Cycling Wakefield and Pontefract Weather. I just hope that when he next does his software update that my blog does not disappear to some strange other place on his computer.

The cats have somehow invaded and are demanding their tea. Mrs. Parish has appeared from the garden and is demanding a cup of tea. I decide to treat her as a visitor and offer coffee and a piece of cake and of course do the polite thing by having a slice myself. I might even have to offer the Calva, it’s the right thing to do in such circumstances.

Bon soiree
Graham

 

 


 

This week we encounter the Day of the Triffids; we mend fences; we worry about knitted cats; football arrives and we light up.

November 10, 2013

The beginning of the week was one of mixed feelings. On the one hand I was basking in the great backgammon victory but on the other sad to see my friends return to Britain after a great weekend. Alan has asked me to point out for the sake of accuracy and his self esteem that he did win on both the pool table and darts board. But as these were not official ranking tournaments we can safely move on without making too much of a fuss. Needless to say the official Backgammon tournament trophy is s...


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A week in which we welcome a fraternal delegation, defend the honour of France, say goodbye to the sheep, play Inspector Clouseau and witness several ornament related incidents!

November 4, 2013

Well, lots to report this week which ended spectacularly on Sunday night with the final leg of the Anglo-French Backgammon championship here at La Godefrere. As regular readers will know my good friend Anglo Al and I regularly compete at Backgammon each time Alan comes over. On the last visit I won a great victory and as a result the trophy rests proudly on a shelf in the kitchen. I have tried to insert a picture into the blog of the trophy. And failed! The trophy is a small pottery figure of...


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This week we discover new ways to remove moles; clocks go back; there is an olive oil incident; we get new doors and appoint an angling consultant

October 27, 2013

The internet is a wonderful thing and a source of much useful and useless information. Following Mrs. Parish’s great success in the Mole Wars I have been looking at alternatives to the minefield approach. Over the past week our mole patrols have reported no further incursions into the La Godefrere exclusion zone. There are some rather large mole hills at the bottom of our big field and it may be a matter of time before we have a red alert situation.

So I typed “removal of moles” into Goo...


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Three – nil, to the Mrs. Parish; Mole’s blues; Home Alone 2 and buttered crumpets (lack of!)

October 20, 2013

Mrs. Parish has returned to Blighty for her well earned R&R and victory tour. Medals have been mentioned for gallantry. The moles are in full retreat and the daily mole patrol has reported no sightings of moles in the past week. Admittedly, our orchard looks a bit like the Somme at the moment with lots of craters where Mrs.Parish has dug up turf to lay out the minefields. Still our strategy of fortress La Godefrere and strict enforcement of the mole exclusion zone has paid dividends. Mrs. Par...


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A week in which the Moles move the goal posts, a gendarme calls, we plan world domination and Giselle(2) excels.

October 13, 2013

It has been a busy week here at La Godefrere and the weather has stayed fine for October but it has got a bit colder. Time for the winter duvet, Mrs. Parish decides. The apples and pears continue to fall off the trees at a remarkable rate and a daily task for me is to go around and pick them up. A mind bogglingly boring and tedious task as well as backbreaking as of course they have fallen to the ground and have to be picked up. Not for much longer as plans are afoot to deal with this.

Mrs. Pa...


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Mole’s retreat in face of twin assault; the song of the lonely tractor driver; and we meet Giselle (2)

October 6, 2013

I am sitting out in the garden overlooking the orchard on a beautiful evening with the sun still shining and after a lovely day it is still warm at 6-45 (7-45 English time). I am sat here with a glass of kir and some snacks and my trusty computer writing up the week’s events reflecting on an interesting week at La Godefrere.

You will want an update from the Front I suspect. Well after last week’s success, we have continued to hit the moles hard. In a brilliant flanking manoeuvre Mrs. Paris...


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Gotcha! Mrs. Parish 1 the Moles 0; more cat madness, we visit the Foire aux vins and we meet Maurice

September 29, 2013

Great excitement here at La Godefrere as we bag our first mole in the great fight back. We have noticed all week an increasing number of mole hills around the orchard and it soon became clear that strategy number 1 was failing. Strategy number 1 is of course my major offensive armed with tractor and songbook. Despite much revving of engines and some truly awful singing we found that the moles must have improved their defence mechanisms and now be wearing ear defenders or maybe they had just g...


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A week in which it rains a lot; we organise our annual shareholders meeting; there is a pheasant incident and the moles invade.

September 22, 2013

In fact the past 2 weeks have been very wet and gloomy. In typical fashion Mrs. Parish was complaining we did not have enough rain and the garden was dying. Now of course we have had too much rain and Mrs. Parish has been cooped up inside which is not good. A great deal of pacing up and down like a caged tiger and grumbling. Fortunately there has been sewing to complete so Mrs. Parish has taken herself off to the sewing garret to make some cushions for Ian and Emma.

The bad weather has led to...


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Moggie, the Mole Mangler of Mayenne, a new game is invented, autumn arrives, we discover the joys of odd shaped vegetables and meet again Jean and his accordion.

September 15, 2013

After last week’s somewhat esoteric blog, we are back to normal (or what passes for normal here). Moggie has excelled himself this week by catching a mole. He did have one a couple of weeks ago but we were suspicious, that he may have just found it. This week no doubts as he proudly brought back the mole from the allotment and proceeded to play with it. I am told that moles taste revolting and therefore cats won’t eat them. I’m not sure who tries out mole tasting to find this out. Moggi...


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About Me


Graham Parish Graham Parish is a former UNISON Trade Union official who retired to France with Kate (a previous self employed gardener and now resident gardener here) to start a new life of wine, cheese, french bread and a vegetable garden on a large rural french farm with holiday gite, and associated animals.

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