16 October 2009

Ventimiglia Market - the Peg Dolls


Presumably these are children's toys. In this climate, pegs don't need to be kept warm, so yes, they must be toys...

"All words are pegs to hang ideas on." ~ Henry Ward Beecher

15 October 2009

Ventimiglia Market - Emilia, the Carpet Dog

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

We're back at the Friday market in Ventimiglia today. So many of the stallholders have dogs. This one, a French bulldog called Emilia looks most indignant at having her photograph taken and her owner looks somewhat bemused.

They live in San Remo, just along the Ligurian coast from Ventimiglia.

14 October 2009

Ventimiglia Market - Fish Eyes

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

If you didn't care for yesterday's tentacles, today we have fish - all sorts of fish and all so fresh. And in the smaller photo - shellfish with amazing eyes, if indeed they are eyes and not a pattern as on a peacock feather?

"Govern a small nation as you would cook a small fish. Do not overdo it."

~ Lao Tzu

13 October 2009

Ventimiglia Market - the Cephalopods

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

We're in the Fish section of Ventimiglia's main covered market (fruit, vegetables, meat, fish, flowers) which is in the centre of the town - not far, though, from the famous Friday market.

We're in the fish section. Squid (calamari), octopus (polpi) and cuttlefish (seppie). Hard to imagine Italian cooking without them.

Do you like octopus , squid and cuttlefish?

12 October 2009

Ventimiglia - the Look

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

It's 10.30 a.m at a restaurant opposite Ventimiglia's Friday market. Empty tables. Too early for lunch.

No one notices these two as everyone is busy shopping.

11 October 2009

Ventimiglia - the Wild Kittens


Wild kittens under the footbridge we saw the other day. Mother cat looks up, never taking her eyes off them.

People had thrown down food and one lady stood for at least half an hour just staring at them.

10 October 2009

Ventimiglia - the Conversation

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

“There is no such thing as a worthless conversation, provided you know what to listen for."

~ James Nathan Miller

09 October 2009

Ventimiglia Market - Scarves


You want a scarf? They have a scarf. One of the many stalls in Ventimiglia's market.

In the smaller photo, a small part of the market, before it got busy.

The market is huge. It starts at the main bridge, runs alongside the river until it meets the sea and then continues for a long way along the beaches. It has a large section going inland too. When it gets busy you can barely move. All part of the fun.

08 October 2009

Ventimiglia Market - Table Linen

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

Ventimiglia's Friday market is famous. There are acres of stalls selling everything you can imagine from sundried tomatoes and parmesan cheese to handbags, shoes, clothes, table-clothes, coffee machine - I could go on and on - as does the market.

Gone though are the days of picking up a 'copy' handbag - a fake Gucci or Chanel. You used to be able to go to a specific stall and hidden under the counter were the fakes, and very good they were too. Now, the police have really tightened up on this and it's not only the sellers that get in trouble. If you buy a copy handbag and are stopped at the border, beware...you will get a massive fine.

In this photo, you'll see all sorts of table linen for sale and just beyond, a stall selling kitchen appliances.

07 October 2009

Ventimiglia: About Turn

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

We are on the same foot bridge as yesterday - this time facing the sea.

Do take a look at Catherine's blog The Five of Us for something most unusual on this footbridge. Welcome back to blogging, Catherine. You have been very much missed.

06 October 2009

Ventimiglia - the River

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

Ventimiglia is just 7 kilometres from Menton, across the border into Liguria, Italy. First stop is the small village of Latte, and next the town of Ventimiglia which has an amazing Friday market. People come from miles around to this market and over the next few days we'll take a look.

When you live in a border town like Menton it's as easy to hop across the border to shop, as to go to the local supermarket. I often shop in Latte or Ventimiglia.

We are standing on the footbridge which crosses the river, looking upstream from the sea towards the Old Town and the valley of the Roya.

05 October 2009

Hanging out to Dry

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

A wire fence in the medieval village of Gorbio.

“Nothing that grieves us can be called little: by the eternal laws of proportion a child's loss of a doll and a king's loss of a crown are events of the same size”



~ Mark Twain (American Humorist, Writer and Lecturer. 1835-1910)

04 October 2009

The Accordionist Plays

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

We've found an outside table in a small bar in a side street of Ventimiglia. We're drinking a glass of rosé and are waiting on our bruschetta to arrive when who should come along but the accordionist we met yesterday.

03 October 2009

The Accordionist

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

We are in Ventimiglia in Italy today - just across the border. This accordionist is about to walk around the bars and restaurants where he'll play and then hope for a few coins.

Remember those distorting mirrors at the Fun Fairs? The slim lady on the left is somewhat larger on the right...

02 October 2009

Menton's Pedestrian Street

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

October and still so many people. Visitors, locals, all out shopping, busy and living their lives.

01 October 2009

Theme Day: Contrast at the Procession Votive

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

It's Theme Day once again and the subject is 'Contrast.' Here we have the contrast of a medieval man and his modern daughter and of course, the contrasts in the photo itself - taken at the Procession Votive in Roquebrune Village. Papa played a scribe.

To read the history of the Procession Votive which dates back to 1467, please click on the link.

Don't miss other CDP bloggers take on this Theme - well over 100. You'll love the incredible talent and imagination that speaks of the CDP community. Click here to view thumbnails for all participants.

30 September 2009

Shutter decor


"Duct tape is like the force. It has a light side, a dark side, and it holds the universe together"

~ Carl Zwanzig

29 September 2009

Layers

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

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.

28 September 2009

The Veolia Boat

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

We are standing not far from the Italian border looking towards the Old Town of Menton. This little bay provides protection from jellyfish with a net and the man in the boat is checking to ensure there are no holes in the netting and that the water is clean.

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

Copyright 2009 Menton Daily Photo. All rights reserved

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.

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