Summary
Awoke to steady rain which continued all morning. Late morning we drove to nearby Cosne-Cours-sur-Loire for a hike along the Loire river and lunch. On the way back to our hotel we stopped into Le Perrière winery for a Sancerre tasting and view of their caves. Bought a few bottle for the near future. Spectacular rainbow on the way to dinner.
Details
At 7 am, when we wake up, it’s already raining. It looks like it has been for a while and the weather service says it will be most of the day, for most of the country. Oh well.
We look at the date on the calendar and realize that today’s pretty much the 1/2 way point through our two month trip to Europe. We better get our butts in gear and start doing stuff (wink). On days like today we ask ourselves whether the X amount of time we’re here… is it too much? too little? It’s been fun so far. It’d be OK if it continued on.
While having breakfast we look ahead to the rest of our soggy day. What should we do in the rain? Any logical free indoor activities? How about having a realtor show us houses? That’s free, isn’t it? How many times have we convinced ourselves that owning a place in France would be a bad idea? Many. We’re surprised, though, by how “affordable” the places here seem. Maybe if we were 20 years younger.
Post breakfast we pretty much just hide inside from the rain.
After noon we gather our courage and our rain gear and head out. We drive the short distance to Cosne-Cours-sur-Loire to do a walking circuit I’ve found online. It features lots of views of the river & fancy houses there alongside. Karen seems to recall that the Loire river is France’s longest and least navigable. Very wide with lots of sandbars and shallows. We’ve seen levees and they seem to put the houses up away from the water proper, so it must get deep and wet at some times.
Karen finds a place for lunch that’s well reviewed. It’s also well attended and we’re nervous they may not let us in, given how close to 2pm it is. Service is slow which allows us to observe our fellow diners. The French are very social but don’t share food. At the nearest table the six people (not a family) pretty much each get their own big pizza and each eat the whole thing. How do they do it?? Karen keeps close track of who’s eating their pizza with a knife and fork (the French way) and who is just picking it up.
After eating a whole pizza most get dessert. A couple of them get a favorite of ours: Le Colonel. A couple of scoops of lime (lemon?) sorbet and a long pour of vodka. Cheers.
Back at the car we point our GPS in the direction of the La Perrière winery. We can see it from our room. It looks like a dark horizontal gash in the hillside and that’s pretty much what it is. It’s a natural cave that the monks, way back when, expanded by carving out big blocks of stone for constructing local churches. It’s just the two of us. Madame (it’s her third day on the job) gives us samples of five wines with deep details about each. We get a mineral lesson about the three terroirs complete with rock samples. Tastes like wine to us. We buy four bottles to be enjoyed in the coming days.
We’re back at our room just in time for another downpour. We hang out until dinnertime when we notice it’s stopped raining (likely just for now). On our walk to Hotel du Rempart for dinner we’re treated to a bright colorful rainbow. Either end is touching down, not to the ground but at least to the trees or buildings.
At the restaurant we see that they have chicken breast and salmon on the menu, just what any long-traveling, self-respecting American could want. They’re just OK, but at least we get a break from all the traditional, rustic, high-fat fare we’ve been enjoying.
After dinner we again walk through town, to exercise off a bit of dinner. It’s cool and the sun is again gone. The clouds are so low they’ve swallowed up the tall tower overlooking the village. The wispy clouds seem to be threatening to swallow all the buildings and whole town, too. We take a different route back towards our hotel and find yet another (third) awesome panoramic viewing area in town.
Back in our room we look out and see a lovely, bright sunset, way off in the distance. What time is it?? 9:40! Ah summers in France!
Photos
[Note: Start at the top to see the photos in the correct order. 🙂 ]