~ Carl Zwanzig
30 September 2009
29 September 2009
Layers
Shrek: Ogres are like onions.
Donkey: They stink?
Shrek: Yes. No.
Donkey: Oh, they make you cry.
Shrek: No.
Donkey: Oh, you leave em out in the sun, they get all brown, start sproutin' little white hairs.
Shrek: NO. Layers. Onions have layers. Ogres have layers. Onions have layers. You get it? We both have layers. (sighs)
Donkey: Oh, you both have layers. Oh. You know, not everybody like onions.
Donkey: They stink?
Shrek: Yes. No.
Donkey: Oh, they make you cry.
Shrek: No.
Donkey: Oh, you leave em out in the sun, they get all brown, start sproutin' little white hairs.
Shrek: NO. Layers. Onions have layers. Ogres have layers. Onions have layers. You get it? We both have layers. (sighs)
Donkey: Oh, you both have layers. Oh. You know, not everybody like onions.
28 September 2009
The Veolia Boat
Veolia is the name of the water company - provider of household water but also in charge of keeping the sea clean.
27 September 2009
Procession Votive - Joseph of Arimathea
The procession is over. I made my way through the crowds and started walking down the donkey track to Menton and there, alone, I saw this man taking a rest, leaning against the village walls. He looked pensive and interestingly wasn't wearing the bright colours of the other participants. 'What part did you take?' I asked. 'Joseph of Arimathea,' he said.
Joseph of Arimathea is apparently the man who donated his prepared tomb for the burial of Jesus. Click to read more.
If you've come to this series for the first time today, please click to read the history of the Procession Votive which dates back to 1467.
This the last day of the Procession Votive -thankyou so much to everyone who followed the procession with me.
26 September 2009
Procession Votive - Time to Reflect
25 September 2009
Procession Votive - La Chapelle de la Pausa - Inside
So here it is. Frescoes everywhere. I love it. Do you?
24 September 2009
Procession Votive - La Chapelle de la Pausa
I've walked past this chapel hundreds and hundreds of times and have never been able to gain access to see the beautiful frescoes that we can almost see beyond the iron gates.
Tomorrow - the gates are opened and we enter.
If you've come to this series for the first time today, please click to read the history of the Procession Votive which dates back to 1467.
23 September 2009
Procession Votive - the Golden Effigy
Today, another look at the rather wonderful golden effigy. In previous posts we've seen it from the rear.
If you've come to this series for the first time today, please click to read the history of the Procession Votive which dates back to 1467.
22 September 2009
Procession Votive - Almost There
The Procession Votive, followed by villagers and visitors, is now on the final push towards the Chapelle de la Pausa.
If you've come to this series for the first time today, please click to read the history of the Procession Votive which dates back to 1467.
21 September 2009
Procession Votive - the Young Photographer
20 September 2009
Procession Votive - the Silhouette
You can see the crown and cherubs on top of the effigy in the smaller photo.
If you've come to this series for the first time today, please click to read the history of the Procession Votive which dates back to 1467.
19 September 2009
Procession Votive - Careful now!
The golden effigy has to be carried through this medieval entrance to the village without damage. It is lowered and, as in the main photo, carried through with great care.
If you've come to this series for the first time today, please click to read the history of the Procession Votive which dates back to 1467.
18 September 2009
Procession Votive - the Spectators
Looking down as the procession approaches, these two ladies are obviously enjoying the spectacle.
This photograph surprised me when I eventually saw it on the screen. The lady on the left is the double of my maternal grandmother. Perhaps it's simply the shape of her face and her hairstyle? It shocked me though. I'd clicked so quickly and not noticed her features when I took the shot.
I love taking photographs but then there is the moment to see the result, sometimes pleasing, often disappointing and occasionally a personal surprise like this. Trying to imagine my grandmother in the south of France doesn't work though - she lived a very different life.
17 September 2009
Procession Votive - the Archway
If you've come to this series for the first time today, please click to read the history of the Procession Votive which dates back to 1467.
16 September 2009
Procession Votive - the Effigy
If you've come to this series for the first time today, please click to read the history of the Procession Votive which dates back to 1467.
15 September 2009
Procession Votive - Mary
The strong Mediterranean face of this beautiful woman seems so right to take the part of Mary or Mary Magdalen.
If you've come to this series for the first time today, please click to read the history of the Procession Votive in Roquebrune village - dating back to 1467.
14 September 2009
Procession Votive - the Cross
There were four young men portraying Christ - all wearing wigs, of course, and all portraying different events in his life.
Why the costumes are so bright, I don't know but it made for a very theatrical experience and was so well done.
If you've come to this series for the first time today, please click to read the history of the Procession Votive in Roquebrune village - dating back to 1467.
13 September 2009
Procession Votive - the King
Here we see King Herod or is it Caesar?
If you've come to this series for the first time today, please click to read the history of the Procession Votive in Roquebrune village - dating back to 1467.
12 September 2009
Procession Votive - the Hat
11 September 2009
Procession Votive - the Bad Man
The horse came from the village of Gorbio and in the smaller photo you see him waiting for his big moment. He wasn't tied up and left alone. His owner and a friend kept a very careful eye on him and made sure he was comfortable.
If you've come to this series for the first time today, please click to read the history of the Procession Votive in Roquebrune village - dating back to 1467.
10 September 2009
Procession Votive - Introducing the Tableau
The Procession Votive traces the life of Jesus. Each 'station' is introduced by a child of the village holding a sign - in this case, the Flagellation. The innocence and beauty of the young girl makes it all the more poignant.
If you've come to this series for the first time today, please click to read the history of the Procession Votive in Roquebrune village - dating back to 1467.
09 September 2009
Procession Votive - Anticipation
Tomorrow the Procession starts.
To read the history of the Procession Votive please click on the link.
08 September 2009
Procession Votive - The Olive Garden
We are looking across to Menton - you can see the church steeples of Menton rising up out of the Old Town. And beyond we look towards Ventimiglia and Bordighera in Italy.
The procession will go from the church in the village and finish at a pretty little chapel that is opposite this olive garden, when it will be full of people - but we'll see that at the end of this little series.
To read the history of the Procession Votive please click on the link.
07 September 2009
Procession Votive - First we Walk
Like this couple, we are walking to the Procession Votive in Roquebrune village. There's no point in driving as the car parks will be full. We've parked in a side street way below, with access to the old donkey track leading from Menton to Roquebrune. It's not a hard walk as the track is mostly restored but it's uphill all the way and as you can see by these people's clothes - or lack of them - it's a very hot day. Fortunately we'll find benches along the way and can take a rest if we need it.
To read the history of the Procession Votive please look at yesterday's post or click on the link.
06 September 2009
Procession Votive - the Trailer to the Main Event
Nobody knows the exact origin of the Procession Votive of Roquebrune village but it is known that during the terrible plague of 1467 (which ravaged the Mediterranean including Monaco, Nice and Ventimiglia) the villagers of Roquebrune organized a novena - nine days of prayers.
On August 5, 1467, the ninth and last day of the novena, the epidemic was over and every year since that day a procession from St. Margaret's Church through the village to the Chapel of Our Lady of Pause traces the life of Jesus. 150 members of Roquebrunoise families depict the Stations of the Cross as a mark of their gratitude for this miracle. The main roles are often passed on from father to son.
Here you see some of the participants before the procession starts - the little boy holds a very nasty weapon with which to beat Christ.
Tomorrow, we start at the beginning as we walk up to the village - we'd never find a place to park the car as everyone and his mother visits Roquebrune on this day. Do come back - this is one of the best, and most moving festivals, on the French Riviera and all in the beautiful medieval village of Roquebrune.
05 September 2009
The Cat I Forgot
A boy and his kitten. How proudly and tenderly he holds her. She's called Mimi and is 3 months of age.
They were at the recent Blessing of the Animals in Gorbio - I showed the horses and a dog and forgot the kitten - so this is for the cat lovers out there.
"Our perfect companions never have fewer than four feet."
~ Colette
~ Colette
04 September 2009
That Personal Touch
The displays at Restaurant Le Balico in Menton are as pretty to look at as the food is good. Anne-Marie, who owns the restaurant, with her husband Franck, finds old paintings like this, arranges fruit and vegetables in a bowl, a tall vase of gladioli, a bottle of Fernet Branca alongside et voila! On some of the tables, you'll find a book on a stand - perhaps about a French movie star or gardens of the Riviera. All little touches that make Le Balico my favourite Menton restaurant.
Note: Unfortunately Le Balico has been sold and is under new management.
03 September 2009
Heat
02 September 2009
The Dreaded Cicadelle
The cicadelle pruineuse is a tiny grey moth that covers the wood, the leaves and the fruit - it also leaves a nasty white sticky fluff. However, it doesn't harm the fruit. I won't use a chemical pray and anyway if you spray cicadelle, it simply jumps off and lands on the next plant or tree.
Picking the fruit tho isn't the best fun - dislodge the moths and they fly into your face. Reach for a fig and your hair is covered in this sticky mess.
No matter - the figs are delicious. I'm lucky enough to have a 100-year old fig tree in the garden - it's loaded with fruit so each day I pick them, wash them, and eat them - and I give an awful lot away. And the figs that fall from the higher branches get scoffed by the dogs.