11/19/2008
Château du Pin. Jura.
11/18/2008
Pannessières. Jura
11/06/2008
Two things on my list.
We met with Sam's friends on Thursday at La Part des Anges, neat restaurant/wine bar located in our street. They have a cool website. It's good to meet people from the area. We came out with a list of local restaurants to try.



From our conversation that night, I also decided that I needed to go to a corrida once in my life. I have some issues with the concept but I need to see it once. They only happen in the South of France (and Spain of course). I did Las Vegas for the first time this summer. I can do a corrida!

On my list too is to go to a soccer game. Even if you're not a sports fan but you're french, you know l'OM, Marseille's soccer team. Their fans are completely crazy and the excitement during the games is unique. Unlike american football, at least here I understand the rules...
11/05/2008
Les Baux-de-Provence
In the previous post, I was telling you about our wet outing to the Maussane et Les Baux-de-Provence. We didn't take any pictures of Les Baux and we found the village completely taken over by tourist shops.
Hiden in the village, we did find an authentic little print shop. Sam took a pic of the interior. This shop was Louis Jou's, of Catalan origin, he worked with Apolliniaire, Picasso and Cocteau. He bought and restored a Renaissance hotel in Les Baux, where he settled in 1939. We were impressed by the old equipment of typography and lithography.
11/04/2008
American presidential elections. Nov 4th.
11/03/2008
Maussane les Alpilles. South of France.
This picture taken by Sam is from Sunday. We decided to go explore the countryside close to the Baux de Provence. We drove to Maussane les Alpilles and walked by this old charming place. We didn't take a lot of pictures, the light wasn't good. We even got caught in a major storm. Lightening, thunder, pooring down rain. We got completely drenched to the point that we couldn't wear our soaked pants in the car on the way back... Stopping at the self service gas station was rather interesting!

I'm adding this picture stolen from the web to give you any idea of where we went. We saw a lot of orchards with olive trees. There are 37,000 olive trees around Maussane. They supposedly make really good olive oil. Have you ever tried to bite a fresh olive? I did and will never try it again.
Another Marseille. Khamsa.
11/02/2008
La Vieille Charité. Marseille.
A picture I took last Sunday as we were walking in Marseille. It's in the same street where I took the cloth lines and within 15 minutes from the appartment.
According to Wikipedia, it was constructed between 1671 and 1749. It has four ranges of arcaded galleries in three storeys surrounding a space with a central chapel surmounted by an ovoid dome. It was first used as an almshouse (new word for me!).
In the seventeenth century the repression of beggars was conducted with great brutality in France. Guards called Chasse-gueux ("beggar-hunters") had the task of rounding up beggars: non-residents among them were expelled from Marseille, and natives of Marseille were shut up in prison. Often the crowd would take the side of the beggars during such arrests. The almshouses served as workhouses for the beggars. Children were found jobs as domestic servants, cabin boys or apprentices with seamstresses or bakers.
Today La Vieille Charité houses a couple of museums, a library and a school of advanced studies in social sciences.
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