Friday, May 08, 2009

To The North Country! Champagne!

So yesterday we flew the coop...left to pick up our newest Godin wood stove that we bought on eBay for 42 USD! A fantastic price! These things go for hundreds and up into the thousands when new. Yet people wanting to just make a little money and with not-so-great photography skills in hand create a great bargain. This one is smaller and round but it was a Godin air-tight and hopefully in good enough condition that I could do minor repairs to and create a second warm spot in the maison blanche.

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The trip to Troyes (TROY), where we were to stay the night, went quicker than we thought. We got to the town in a bit over 6 hours and found the ETAP easily thanks to Jane the Tom-Tom. Initially it seemed the heart of the old medieval city were quite far away and would require a real over land hike to get to...but as we discovered, that was not so. The old part of town is wedge shaped and thus we were only a couple of blocks from it. We parked our car on the upper level and soon learned that the rear door to the ETAP was quite locked and not available to us to open. We needed to verify our reservation in the front lobby...actually at the front door computer kiosk that serves as the modern lobby at an ETAP. We entered our card and l'viola! We were in with a key code written out by the printer at the door. Cool! Up to room 207, enter the same code in the door lock and we were home for the day at 1:30 pm local time. Then out to lunch at a nearby Asian restaurant that looked promising. In, we were seated in minutes and provided with an extensive menu. We chose the Midi Special (Lunch Menu) and made our choices known to the speedy and efficient server. Soon lunch came and it was absolutely fresh and delicious and more food than we could ever eat! Truly generous portions! It's the one at the roundabout down the street from the ETAP on Rue 14 July. Well worth a visit!

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Afterwords we crossed the street and wandered into the old section of Troyes gawking unabashedly at the beautiful 15th century half-timber buildings that make up the largess of the downtown. Block after block of restored and ancient buildings that together make Troyes a more than worthwhile stop in a trip about France. We sat at a corner cafe where the plaza with a large merry-go-round served up a wonderful sight. The beers, hers small, mine large were almost 11 Euros, not cheap but the people watching and the sights made it worthwhile. Troyes has a multi-cultural population and it shows. People meeting people on the street, doing the kissing thing and chatting right in front of us sipping our beers. Lovely, just lovely. We spent about an hour there, then ambled in and around the old town area before making our way back to the hotel to rest and assess our day. Tomorrow...the Godin!
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In the morning I awoke before my duck at about 7 am, sat at the EeePC and read the news and emails. She woke at 8 and very quickly we got our stuff together. We headed out to see the local Gothic cathedral, have a coffee at a tabac nearby and local pastries from a boulangerie next door as is the way in France. Then off to Soilly, it being NW of Troyes in the low hills and verdant valleys that adjoin Belgium. Hilly country full of colza and the vines from which champagne are made, a regional production that produces the world's supply of the great bubbly wines. Colza's yellow flowers cover thousands and thousands of acres here as do the wonderful curvy vines. As we drive amazing vistas appear yellow upon green and light green of barley and wheat sprouting simultaneously. Beautiful. We take side roads thanks to Jane of Tom-Tom fame and witness the countryside in all it's glory from high on hilltops themselves covered with vines and colza. It is truly spectacular!

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Jane steers us towards our goal, the stove we bought from the gentleman in Soilly. Once there we found the address easily enough and amidst the turmoil of multiple guests arriving at the same time we paid our debt of 42 Euros for the unknown stove and with his help liften and laid it down in the rear of the Avensis. It looked in amazingly good shape, all the castings un=cracked and not chipped either. Beautiful indeed! Once packed we were off again to head back to Lignieres with a fine wood stove in tow from yet again a new spot for us in the French hinterlands.

Tuesday, May 05, 2009

Another BIG win on eBay.FR

Another Godin woodstove is ours, where this time? North of Troyes in NE France. It's a ways, a little over 200 miles sorta outside Paris a bit nearer Belgium than anywhere else. Condition of the item is unknown, nothing in the seller's description helped but it was CHEAP! 42 Euros worth of cast iron and rust. We take a chance you know, the sports we are. Like betting on horses cause you like their tails. It's a bit smaller than the one we won a week or two ago but is similar in style. Fingers are crossed.

Found the wallpaper for the guest bedroom today, trois in shades of grey, fanciful design full of wild animals and angelic people. Will go well in the room with black accents and bright colors. We'll start hanging the paper sometime next week.

Our buddies A&R dropped off about 1/2 a stair of firewood for us this morning, it's a secret where it came from but it is dry and ready to go. Surprisingly we still need heat in the evening as the temp drops into the 40's at night and the house gets chilly. Payment for said wood is in the form of a computer repair I'm doing for them after a power supply died a while back. The supply is on order from Amazon.fr and should arrive in the next few days. They probably need new surge protectors as the French power grid is NOT the best thing for these switching power supplies. The surge protection gizmos go to hell after they protect a device once or twice (if you are lucky) after that they are gone and no longer protect anything. Replace once a year to be absolutely safe, even then...it happens so often here that might not be often enough. And buy good ones, cheapies are worthless.

Sunday, May 03, 2009

The Warm Glow of Spring...

Who am I kidding? Cool and cooler nights are the rule here in the springtime, the days have the character they do, grey mornings, clearing to beautiful by noon or 1 pm then come the clouds, a rain shower or three and into the evening with light breezes and a disappearing sun. Amidst these facts we shiver at night in the 50 degree grande maison. Remember we lost the whole house heating system due to 8 cracked radiators from the -9C winter season. So my ever patient, curious and resourceful Kelly got into the wood stove search on eBay. A Godin... that was the stove of stoves for her and we were going to have one in some room of the house come hell or high water. Days of patient searches and hours of research online led to bids on some likely candidates. Prices were generally quite low but the stove, in many cases, lacked description of the grates and all important inner brick/refractory lining. One after the other was rejected as too small, too old, too risky, too large and, of course, too awful!


Eventually one showed up and seemed perfect for some room in this pile of rocks. A Godin about 95cm high with a few areas of light rust and we put in a bid via esnipe ( http://www.esnipe.com ). After a short wait, a day I think, while we mulled over this possible purchase, it,s time was up and we had won! Terrific! Now, where oh where IS this Godin and it's cousin freebee? In Chartre of course, about 150 miles north of us towards Paris. Oh. Well get out the trusty Tom-Tom GPS and let's go! The next day we had the address of a nearby L'Clerc market where the seller would meet us. Of course we had already entered his home address in the Tom-Tom, but hey...it's how he wants tyo do the deal, we willingly comply. So ff we went, up the A71 from St. Amand. Travel is fast on the A roads, speedy places that they are with few speed cameras to slow you down. The rain was falling briskly though and while quicker than we thought it did take us about 3 hours to traverse the countryside on that ribbon of concrete. Jane, the voice of the Tom-Tom was as accurate as ever and put us right on the L'Clerc gas station and his red, red scooter. '' Bonjours'' said, we followed our entrepid seller to his abode and the Godin of our desires. It was there in the garage, all 300lbs of her...Gloria is her name, all curvey cast iron and in darned good condition, ''bon etat'' as they say in the ads on eBay. We heaved and Hoed and with the able help of two African men from Togo that lived next door we shoved her towards the back of the Avensis and put her inside. The smaller stove was carried by the seller and placed along side. I closed the rear compartment and we went upstairs for a bit of celebrating with the seller and his wonderful and pretty wife. She told us that she had ventured to the US as a girl of 16. She had gone to visit relatives in Chicago...outside in the burbs but thats where she was and that was some 20 years ago! We had beers together and then out of the corner of Kelly's eye...a motion in a large cage like enclosure in a corner of the room. Ferrets! Oh my! Beauties, a white one that was pregnant and an amber colored one, the male. Kelly had never handled one but was soon petting the squirmy mom one and I had the male under tow...or he had me, one or the other. Terrific fun! And as cute as two animals could be!

Then goodbyes all around and off we headed homeward to the distant Lignieres. Rain poured down again but stopped as we got off the A in Bourges and headed across the countryside all aglow with huge fields of yellow colza.

Spectacular!