This Blog is about what I hold dear - nature and the countryside in which I live, community life and local heritage. During Covid-19 lockdown, I reinvigorated the blog, first with daily musings, now generally on a weekly basis. There are also regular videos of the wildlife that share our space.
There is a German word, Dunkelflaute, which describes a gloomy, windless weather system, that is cold. We have had that here for the past couple of months, interspersed with periods of just wet, windy and nasty. Germany is currently suffering a major bout of Dunkelflaute, and that is placing a really heavy strain on the European electricity network. Germany's electricity generation includes some 20GW wind capacity, and currently the turbines are not turning. The knock on effect, combined with two country interconnectors being down, is that the power grids are doing all they can to reduce peak electricity use. In the UK, you might spot a slight fluctuation down in power. Here in France, if you are on the extremely interesting Tempo electricity contract, it translates into Red Days. Days when daytime electricity is 3 times the unit price of the regulated tariff. Tuesday to Friday was like that, and tomorrow will be too. It is rather constraining!
The run into Christmas isn't totally fun when your feet and hands are always cold, and you are keeping the lights off as long as possible! There are odd rays of joy - the very last cyclamen flowers are still going in the One Acre Wood for example.
There is little to photograph at the moment, as nothing much changes with the dull weather, and when you do take a photo, such as of a small amount of water in the lower pond in the Wood, it is singularly underwhelming.
I have had to resort to searching trail camera archives to find pretty photos.
The jay is handsome, although not as handsome as the male pheasant (who knows it too!).
However today, my spirit bird is this rather hacked off female pheasant. I can feel my blood pressure boiling over the stupidity of HMRC and the unfairness of the amount of tax they suddenly feel I need to pay every month. This is not good for me, so I need to go and find somewhere warm and cosy and try to forget about it all. Being near computers only makes it worse!
Isn't she splendid? Actually, just looking at her makes me feel better!
Anyway, I hope your week is not affected by Dunkelflaute, and now I had better get back to writing Christmas cards!
It has been another strange week for us, with pretty nasty weather, friends over from the UK, a cat needing eye drops very frequently and weather that continues to depress. While the good news is that we seem to have saved Poirot's eye, we are still on a regime of regular eye drops (two sorts, each every four hours) to shift the rather tenacious ulcer that caused the problem.
What has been going on the past couple of weeks, is that I have brought in for checks two out of the three trail cameras dotted around the Meadow and the Orchard. I think we have had trail cameras for the past three years, and it has been a learning curve. The first one was excellent, with a capability of checking what was on it remotely, well, about 6 feet away, and it took rechargeable batteries and was a delight. But after about 18 months a small piece of plastic gave way, and as it was the on/off switch, it was quite an important bit of plastic, so a pity it wasn't stronger!. Reluctantly, the supplier offered us a new one, as it was still within its two year guarantee, but as that model was no longer available, I had to go "posher". The new one was Bluetooth and very funky, but didn't like rechargeable batteries, needed 12 AA batteries in any case, and basically blew up two SD cards. After a lot of hassle I got that replaced, but I wasn't happy. Instead I got a pack of three very simple trail cameras, taking rechargeable batteries, each only needing four AA batteries anyway, but with no remote or WiFi capability.
These have turned out to be excellent. Robust, easy to understand, not overly heavy on batteries and I can put them up and leave them for 6 to 10 weeks and not worry about them. When I bring them in for cleaning, a battery check and to download what is on the SD card, I then have a lot of work on my hands.
Assuming I have found a good place to put the camera (and that in itself is an art), I have anywhere between 200 and 2,000 files to go through and check. I would say that between a third and a half of all files can be ditched easily - they are of my bottom walking away from the camera, or something interesting went past too fast for the camera to spring into life.
At first, I would also hang onto partial images - a fox's tail, a disappearing badger bottom, a blur of something that might be interesting. Now I am more selective, although as with the image below, I've not a clue what it is, but it is big and interesting!
Quite often the photos are a bit blurred, although some are enchanting. The videos take up a lot of space, and are a mixed bunch. These badgers are lovely, but why do they have to be off to the right of the image?
Or something really interesting is going on but just a couple of metres too far away from the camera to be stunning.
Some things are nice, but could do with a bit more context.
Other captures would be really excellent if the wretched animal didn't decide to do most of what they were doing behind a tree!
Some would be great, if only the subject had decided to do the really interesting thing during daylight hours for that extra crispness.
Sometimes however, things are nearly perfect, and I could try to kid you that they are deliberate!
And sometimes, not often, but sometimes, things work just right! That magpie was just begging for his close up!
I know magpies aren't favourite birds, they are a bit mean and they make a lot of noise, but they act like they have characters. I also didn't know they liked walnuts!
For anyone who is interested, the cameras are Num'axe PIE1066. You do need an SD card reader to download the images as well, not supplied with the cameras. Two have been attacked by deer and boar and have survived, and all have been covered in bird poo from time to time.
I hope you enjoyed the videos and have a good week.
It's been a strange week, with memories of this time last year when my Mum broke a bone in her neck with all the attending panic and worry, added to nursing a poorly pusscat with an abscess behind her eye, while trying to get rid of the last vestiges of a nasty cold that has been doing the rounds. Nursing duties for the cat have become more and more onerous (we don't begrudge her that), but it has been amusing to see how many of the medicines she has that I have also used, or my Mum needed to use after a corneal transplant. We are now on drops every hour and a half or so, day and night (assuming we can wake up), and tomorrow we find out whether we have been able to save the eye or not. I am not optimistic.
I brought in a trail camera during the week - I wasn't convinced about the batteries, and quite rightly - it had stopped doing night time photos and videos at the end of October! The change in the activity by this trail camera (it is a favourite position to leave one as there is a lot of activity) between the summer and October was extensive. The ducks that used to waddle past most days are not to be seen at all. There are only one or two shots of coypu and none at all of boar (although if they were around after dark, the camera wouldn't have picked them up as it was out of juice). The pine martens are still in the zone and bouncing around very happily, which pleases me hugely. One is larger than the other, so I'm not sure if it is a couple or parent and offspring.
There has also been some bird activity, with a Great Tit visiting more than once to see what might be lurking on the tree trunk by the camera. We encourage this species as they have adapted to become predators of pine processionary caterpillars, which are nasty, non-native invasive dangerous critters. There are a few caterpillar nests in the pine trees, so we do what we can with bird nest boxes and limited winter feeding to attract the birds that will predate.
The foxes are also around and there are some nice still photos that I need to work on to show what they are up to, but the stars so far of this batch of files have been the deer. Any fear they have had in the past of the camera has gone and they quite happily stand by it and in front of it and show off their best and not so best sides!
It seems to me that deer spend a lot of time itching and waggling their ears.
After a certain amount of nagging, I made the Christmas cakes on Wednesday, so still in November but a little on the late side in my view. They have already been "fed" once, and I will do them again shortly. There is a wonderful stall in the market at la Flèche that sells loose preserved fruits, including not one, but two varieties of glacé cherries, three varieties of sultanas and 5 varieties of candied citrus peel, and is the only place I know in France to supply dried currants. As I have stocks of treacle and the chickens provide eggs, while we have a fine range of our own eau de vie, there is no excuse for the cakes not being luxurious and alcoholic! Here is the mixing, and if you are good, there may be a picture of the decorated cakes in due course.
This autumn is one of the wettest on record, so it should have been no surprise to us that the two small ponds in the One Acre Wood now have water in them, a full two months before our earliest sighting up to now (so in the last 18 years). They are not natural ponds, but rather pits that were dug to provide clay for making bricks and roof and floor tiles (the chestnut coppice provided the heat to fire the bricks and tiles, while the few pine trees provided a resin to seal the tiles before baking). As such they are on clay, but with years of leaf litter build up on top, and when the clay contracts when it is dry, the water soaks away. Currently the clay is swollen with water and so the ponds form. Newts and salamanders like them for breeding purposes, so I am hoping they will last and we will have lots of babies in the spring.
So now it is time for the next batch of cat eye drops - this time it is serum made from horse bodily fluids (so not one my Mum used to have), then in another hour and a half, it will be antibiotic eye drops, and so on all through to tomorrow afternoon. We are fortunate that Poirot is a very gentle and forgiving old lady, and that she is very food orientated, which is making this process manageable on most levels. I'm not keen on getting up in the night however!
It's been another of those weeks where the weather could take centre stage, with rain, wind, snow and today, bizarrely warm temperatures. The 18ºC we see today is a blip caused by a weird weather pattern, and amusing after the snow that fell on Thursday to the horror of cats, chickens and us!
The Douceur Angevine meant that the snow here quickly disappeared during Thursday morning, which was good as we were heading to Paris for a 24 hour trip, but further north and east it kept going and Paris in driving snow is different, but a bit uncomfortable.
Once in Paris and off the metro, we learned that our "smart" phones and Google maps don't like snow and what should have been a 2 minute walk to our hotel took 15, as we were taken from the metro in a sort of spiral. Dumping our case and things not needed for the rest of the day, like a decent camera, we headed back out into the blizzard to find the Musée d'Orsay and the rest of the gang for a much needed hot chocolate. We had occasional stops to admire buildings and views that were transfigured by driving snow flakes.
If it is before Christmas and it is snowing, clearly the right thing to do is go to a Christmas Market and the big one at the Jardins des Tuileries had opened. It therefore seemed churlish not to go along and partake of the Christmas spirit and some welcome vin chaud before a turn or three on the big wheel. As we don't like crowds, it was probably the best time to go, despite the snow, as a nice, dry evening would bring out the hoards I'm sure. We were amused at how little French we heard while we were there!
Once we had done the fun of the fair, we headed south to find dinner - sadly we didn't go far enough and had an average and expensive meal near the Beaux Arts. Still the place was able to cope with 7 of us, each with different food and drink needs, and more inclined for chatting and laughter than haute cuisine. Walking through to the river, I did take the compulsory Eifel Tower shot!
Then it was time to head in different directions to respective hotels and we strolled up into the St Germain des Près district to find a café for a nightcap. We found the Deux Megots - famed for its illustrious clientele such as Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir and the like, and us! St Germain is also famous for jazz, and Thursday night is jazz night, so we settled in for inspired music from an instrumental trio, expensive drinks, and the most amazing floor show of people watching. That is what Paris nightlife is about!
The following morning and the storm had gone, as had much of the snow, and Paris is much prettier in the sun. We wandered around the district, finding another couple of amazing cafés, one for breakfast, and one for a restorative cup of hot chocolate - the sort of hot chocolate that is a large spoon of quality chocolate spread, with a bit of scalding hot milk added so that the spread melts. If you let it go too cool, it then resolidifies! We also found the Palais de Luxemburg or the French Senat.
And so we are home again, after living the high life for 24 hours. And it is good to be home. There was a Christmas Market here too today - no snow, no fairground rides, lots of French being spoken and rather than some tacky baubles and overpriced foods, local craftspeople were showing off their wares. There were felted gloves, repurposed wood and furniture, home woven textiles, an animal psychologist, producers of seeds, and of course food stalls. We succumbed to spice sachets for vin chaud, tomato ketchup and smoked chilli paste before heading home for lunch.
I had thought I wouldn't bother with Christmas cake this year, but I have been ranted at from Australia (and not even a family member too) about lack of respect for tradition rather severely, so I had better go and look at my store cupboard and see what I need to buy in addition for cake making on Wednesday afternoon. I know it is leaving it a bit late, but on the other hand, the Christmas pudding has been maturing for well over a year now, so these things balance out. That's my excuse anyway!
Late autumn often brings nasty surprises - tax bills for example - and we have had a number this week. The last, but most impactful for me is a virulent head cold, which is making every task seem much larger than it really is and more painful too. It will go in time - taking seven days if I use treatments, and a week if I let it run its course - but I am on day 3, normally the worst, and feeling sorry for myself.
Yesterday (so day 2 of nasal misery) I came face to face with another nasty surprise, an over wintering House Slug. Not a normal slug: in its resting mode it was a good four inches (9cm) long and half an inch (one and a bit cm) wide, so clearly a flesh eating House Slug. It was resting on the side of the pot that holds my tiny mango seedling, grown from a pip of a fruit given to us by our new neighbour, and it is the first time I've managed to get one to germinate. The seedling was living quite happily in the garden until it got attacked by a slug or snail, so I put it indoors to be guarded by the Country Cats. We had a discussion about how they were slacking, but they paid no attention. I evicted the slug and hope it was found by a questing fox or buzzard.
We have had two nights with a slight frost this week, enough to further chill down the house after an October that hit the record books for being one of the two dullest (i.e. lack of sun) on record. It was a relief on Monday to see a strange yellow glow in the sky, but it didn't last long.
But in amongst all this gloom, there are some truly French things that remind me why we live here.
There was a note in our post box a couple of weeks ago - "come along to my garage on Sunday morning for a wine tasting (there will also be nibbles)". A neighbour has a chum with a vinyard over the border near Chinon, and once a year, they lay on a tasting of bottled wines and wines "en vrac", i.e. buy a canister and bottle it yourself. We weren't much taken with the bottled offerings, but the "en vrac" was rather splendid, so we put in an order. The word on the street was that the wine would arrive on Saturday evening. So yesterday evening, along with a bunch of others, we strolled down the road with our wheelbarrow and brought back our 20 litres of finest Chinon red.
Which is a roundabout way of saying that I am going to take my festering head cold away from my freezing cold office and down to the warm, where I will help bottle 20 litres of red wine, which seems a very sensible way of spending a November evening!
In the end we had 13 consecutive days without a glimpse of the sun, just dull, foggy, dankness. On Friday, the sun finally made an appearance for three hours, one and a half of which I was in an office and for the rest I failed to bring out my phone and take a picture as proof. And now the greyness is back for a few more days - how nice!
I did threaten to bring in a trail camera, as I thought the batteries might be running out. I did that yesterday, and discovered that the batteries gave out about 3 weeks ago - my bad! Actually there wasn't much activity recorded in the three weeks it was working. It was placed in the Orchard, with the hope of catching boar family antics, but while there was one night time video with a couple of snuffling sounds, there was not a hint of boar. The camera was by something we call Badger Road, and sure enough, there were numerous shots of a badger passing through at speed, so most weren't much good. This is one of the best.
There were lots of pictures of us passing by the camera (well as many "lots" as you can get when there were only 160 files in total), which have all been removed, leaving just 49 files with anything at all, including a few of our cats. There was a nice image of a deer, with an accompanying video I've not had a chance to load onto YouTube - for another day!
There was also a nice one of a couple of jays, again with an interesting video to follow.
Finally, there was a fine shot of the fox, showing off his magnificent bushy tail!
Other wildlife fun this week has been observing a few Asian hornets in the zone. They are mainly workers at the end of their life, fulfilling a desire for sugary things - rotting apples and ivy nectar in the main. A good frost and they will die off, but we will be vigilant from February, keeping an eye out for the next batch of queens to trap and destroy. European hornets are natural, the Asian ones are non-native and causing havoc among the insect population as they seek out protein from May to August to feed the colony.
An important discovery for us yesterday was that our favourite café in town has reopened. About a month ago I guess, I spotted that it was closed with curtains drawn, and after waiting a couple of weeks in case it was just holidays, I reluctantly decided it was gone - another blight on the year. But yesterday, the curtains were gone, there was a new painting on the plate glass window and when we went in, the coffee was still the best in town. Good luck to the new owners!
And now I must turn my attention back to a slightly poorly puss cat. Poirot, the doyenne of our group, has an eye infection, which means anti-inflammatory drops four times a day and anti-biotic paste in the eye twice a day. Fortunately she is very food oriented, with a passion for Dreamies and for cheese or salmon flavoured creamy gloop. She is not resisting eye drops or paste as she knows that she will get a copious and tasty treat straight afterwards. It is not so easy with cats that don't like treats!
While last week I showed a photo of a sunny day and a cat in a hammock, I had hoped for much more sunshine this week. Indeed every day the forecast was for sunshine "tomorrow" or "the day after tomorrow" and today even "this afternoon". But it hasn't happened - the high pressure and sodden ground has kept fog and low cloud in place all week with no respite at all. The ground hasn't dried out at all, making lifting potatoes unnecessarily hard work, while the lack of light saps the spirit. I think the constant broken promise of sun tomorrow has made it all the harder to bear and I am sick of it.
There are odd chinks of colour to look out for. I have always been a fan of nerines, and sometimes they flower for me, but mostly they don't. This year I have been lucky and one has flowered and I have been able to admire the circle of bright pink flowers each day for a couple of weeks as I go to feed the chickens.
The trees haven't done much by way of autumn colour - we haven't had much of a cold snap, just constant, bone aching dank. It is possible there will be a late flush of colour but I'm not holding my breath. However there is another plant that provides a pretty reliable splash of colour in the autumn, and because I grow it in hanging baskets, I get to admire it rather than having it covered in dead tree leaves. The strawberry leaves are quite spectacular this year, with odd fruits hidden away. The fruit isn't interesting as it needs sunlight to produce a bit of sweetness and flavour, and we haven't had any of that for a while (see above), but you can't have everything.
I had to visit a house and garden during the week and was stunned by the display of dramatic flower heads on the yucca plants there. Mine have done nothing this year, and of course indoor ones don't get the conditions to do this. For me there is no rhyme or reason to when yuccas flower, but I am grateful to see them doing their thing this year.
As the leaves fall, it becomes obvious where Asian hornets have been building nests. While I've not spotted any in our area, not least due to the successful trapping and destroying campaigns in Baugé en Anjou, I did see this one when visiting the house and garden with the yuccas. The nest had been breached as I saw a bird or two flying in and out - perhaps the amazing tit family have decided they like to eat them, much as they do with pine processionary grubs?
It's not all gloom I guess. The lack of frost and the moist conditions mean that the cristophine vine goes from strength to strength, with leaves the size of dinner plates and hidden fruits. In the gloom it looks a bit like a hut or shelter, and actually it does do a good job when it rains. Assuming no prolonged period of intense frost this winter (unlikely given global warming, although it would be good), this brute will be back next year!
Most of the garlic we planted last year was not worth lifting, so I didn't. But I noticed today that those bulbs are pushing back up and will provide tasty scallion style garlic "spring onions" through the winter. It might be worth planning next year's potager plots after all!
With that in mind, I am now off to cook chicken Béarnaise, otherwise known as garlic chicken.
I am minded to bring in a trail camera during the week, as there is one that has been in place for a couple of months now and probably needs to be checked over. All things being equal, there could be much more exciting things to write about next week than autumnal murk!
It's been a relatively quiet week, as Autumn slowly does its thing. In the garden, the cyclamen flowers are disappearing and great tufts of leaves are taking over, to feed the corms for next year - it has been a riot this year. In the One Acre Wood, the white cyclamen are slower to come through, and the light is very different of course. Still we have some 14 flowering zones (one of which isn't strictly in our bit of wood), and there will be a lot more clumps of leaves than that, when they really start to show. It would appear that a cyclamen needs at least three years from germinating to getting to the flowering stage. It is worth thinking about that, when you buy disposable pots of cyclamen as presents for people I think. The most magnificent flowering has been quite hidden from us until a bit of judicious strimming cleared access to part of the orchard where they seem to have gone totally crazy!
The weather has wavered between nice sunny days, warm enough to lie out on the hammock (modelled here by Monsieur Clause), and dull, dreary, grey and wet days, when the only useful thing to do has been to sit in my office area, do filing and throw out 30 year old insurance documents.
Some of the filing has been positively pleasurable though - 2018 files from a trail camera need a lot of pruning down to the bits that are worth hanging on to. There is no point in trying to make a paradise for wildlife if one also clogs up a datacentre with unnecessary and rather poor quality photos and videos! There was a rather nice image of the hare making a very rare appearance this year.
But badgers do not make good photo subjects in general, as they are out and about at night and tend to move quite quickly - this is a better example than most, but it isn't really worth keeping!
The video shorts of badgers were much more amusing though, and I was able to take time to load quite a few onto YouTube to share here.
This is much more amusing!
This one has two badgers going about their legal and lawful.
As does this one.
The quality of this video is dire I admit, but it did prove that once again we had a faun in the Meadow this year. The weather wasn't great over the summer, with cool mornings so the misted up camera was a fairly regular thing.
We had to wait another 12 days to get better visual confirmation that the pair were in the zone, and by that time the faun had grown a lot! Also, they weren't that close to the camera.
The clocks have now gone back - fallen for the Anglophones (Fall - fall back - go back). The French mnemonic is that in Octobre the clocks reculent. For a couple of weeks we will be getting up in daylight again, but not for long. By December it will still be dark at 8:30am and the temptation to stay in bed on grey days will be almost too much!
Autumn should be the time of foraging and harvesting, plus spending lots of time in the kitchen doing stuff with the results of said harvesting and foraging. This week I got into the swing of that a bit more, and we peeled loads of chestnuts so I could get creative with the results. A savoury fish crumble with a chestnut and cheese crumble was very good indeed. The sweeter apple and quince crumble was a bit too sweet and sat in the tummy and on the hips in a rather alarming manner - less sugar, and more flour could be the answer. But that means peeling more chestnuts...
In addition I had another go at the fig tree, which seems aware that it is going to be massacred soon, so is putting out more figs than the local starlings (the top ones), the chickens (the bottom ones) and we (those in the sweet spot in the middle) can comfortably get through. I am now up to a dozen pots of fig jam made, and as we haven't finished last year's, I'm making no more!
I should also be digging up potatoes, but the ground is currently still sodden thanks to Kirk and then another few depressions that have been passing through during the week. I'm waiting for the promised dry patch next week to do more of that. There are no frosts predicted, so the cristophines continue to produce a huge crop - this lot are on a new plant John planted to protect the asparagus bed. I like to think that the row of diminishing fruit are reminiscent of the pottery flying ducks so beloved of sitting room walls in the 1970s!
The foraging is going less well, and the view locally is that it is not a year for cèpes, as no one has seen one. I did find what looked like one, but it was under a birch tree, which is wrong, so I discarded it. There are strange bits of fungi around, like these yellow threads we found in the One Acre Wood - inedible and also not clear from our array of mushroom identification books what they actually are! Quite attractive though.
Less peaceful autumn pursuits include trying to get the dense thickets of bramble and old man's beard under control. While I don't mind odd pockets of it, when you get banks that are taller than me and cover a third of a field, it is not good and it doesn't create valuable habitat. The density is so great that most plants can't grow, the cover defends some animals (hares and pheasants mostly) from hunters, but doesn't provide a dry or comfortable holt for winter, the plant quality is poor, as they all strive for sunlight, so there is little if any fruit, and not much by way of insects as there are no flowers. And it grows and grows upwards and then outwards, taking over flower meadow and pond edges to the detriment of a wide range of flora and fauna.
So we are punching paths through the big bank with strimmers and hedge trimmers and then using the big yellow Beast to mulch through the cut stems to create walkways that may be easier to maintain next year, while providing some shelter and routes for our non-human visitors to move around more easily. It's all very much a work in progress, but I am pleased with how it is going.
With bad weather forecast for much of the week, I brought in Trail Camera 1 to see what had been going on in its line of vision. It was as well I did, as it had over 2,000 files on it, and the batteries were pretty well dead. It had been out since late July and the batteries, which weren't the best quality in the first place, had been used for a few months before then too, so weren't fresh. It took a while to prune down the 2,018 files to just 252 that had some interest, and they will require further triage and editing and videos put onto YouTube, but as a taster of what there is, here is our fox in the open.
I did also load just one video onto YouTube today, as I wanted to show how robust the cameras need to be - turn the sound up for the full effect and yes, those are tusks!
I did also promise a bit of coypu action - I am ambivalent about them. They are an invasive, non-native species with no natural predators and cause a lot of damage, and I don't like their tails, but their whiskers are magnificent!
That's enough coypu for the moment! Have a good week!
OK, last weekend I promised more wildlife videos, and maybe I will include a couple at the end, but this week has been quite a busy one, and for a number of reasons.
Last week I wrote this blog early, before dashing off to the photo competition exhibition, hoping I had at least one of my photos printed and therefore in the top 30. Well, my hopes were dashed, but to be fair to those that were printed, there were only 2 that I would have said weren't worth printing. One was out of focus, and perhaps I am old fashioned, but I don't think that is good photography. The other one looked to me more like an advert for Legal and General (other financial services companies are available but have different advertising and logos) than an entry in a provincial photography competition, and in my view would have been barred on that basis in a similar competition in the UK. It won the adult section.
Of the two printed ones I liked the best, one got a prize for the popular vote done over the two days of the exhibition, and is shown here the furthest left, modelled by a member of the Society running the competition, the next one along won the popular vote, probably as it had a bird in it, the other two were the winners in the Junior section. Well done all!
The next big excitement of the week was Storm Kirk. He didn't bring much wind, but he brought a shed-load of rain with him. It started raining before dawn on Wednesday and carried on with varying levels of intensity until just after 6pm. Overall we had 59mm of rain or 2 3/8 inches - however you count it, it was a lot! For the main rain gauge in our garden by the house, we had to empty it twice during the day, taking readings each time. At 10am when I went to feed the chickens it was like this!
Fortunately around us there is enough of a gradient to ensure that house, garden and cellars don't flood, and that was the case for most around here, although some low roads became impassable as water came off the fields, and the Couasnon broke its banks. But the main flooding was in low lying fields. Others were not so lucky in other parts of France and I feel for them. Occasionally however field banks were not up to the task and ceded with the weight of water, particularly if the field above had been harvested or ploughed recently so the soil was compacted. This slip was near our country retreat.
The ponds are now nicely full and since Kirk did his worst, the weather has improved and blue sky has been seen!
The other excitement during the week was round two of the Challenge Communale in boule de forte. My team had won our first round match, so on Thursday evening we were pitted against the team from one of the boule de forte clubs, the Esperance, and weren't totally hopeful. I was instantly depressed when I revealed my antique boules, which were denounced as disgusting. However it turned out that the Esperance team were unavailable to play the semi-final on Saturday, so forfeited the game when they were leading 8 - 2. Once that was sorted, they told me the product I needed to get to make my boules beautiful and shiny once again, so I sort of forgave them.
Saturday morning, 10am, I was back at the boule de fort club with my "disgusting" boules for the semi-final against another boule de forte society, la Paix. Despite hangovers and lack of sleep on both sides (not me, obviously), once we got going, the game was quickly lost by us 10 - 1, so I didn't have to worry about the final. To be fair, we would have forfeited if we had won as one of our team couldn't be there for the final. Anyway, by 11am, hair of the dog was being taken by those that needed it, and I was drinking a glass of chilled sauvignon blanc, knowing that I wouldn't have to play again for another year!
The only ones of these boules that are ours are the red ones!
As I mentioned, it rained all day on Wednesday, so one thing I could do to pass the time was to load up a few more wildlife videos on YouTube so I can share them here (you can also find my YouTube channel and subscribe or follow to see more of what is there). I found another amusing woodpecker video - I am very fond of the Woodies!
There is a fair amount of mouse or rat activity down by the ponds - that's fair, as it's a wild place and they are wild animals. I have no issues with them living as nature intended.
In the same way, I am fascinated to watch "our" fox as he goes about his business. He is in the wild, away from domestic gardens and chicken runs, fending for himself, and not relying on dustbins either. I've no idea what he is eating!
I have looked to see if there are nests or fungus or fruit around there, but I can't spot anything. If he is eating slugs or snails, good luck to him, but I would be a bit less happy if it was frogs and toads. Whatever, it is nature doing its thing.
Next week you can see coypu, plus I'm going to bring in another camera which has been at a point where I used to see hares and deer, so hope to have news of them. I fear there will be a lot of John and I strimming however!
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Eighty Years Ago This Week Adrian has published books on the Abdication Crisis and Appeasement; this blog looks at what happened 80 years ago and is updated weekly.