Easter Sunday
A few more pictures from Easter Sunday in the South of France…
There are definitely worse places to spend a Sunday afternoon…
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A few more pictures from Easter Sunday in the South of France…
There are definitely worse places to spend a Sunday afternoon…
Even with a broken wrist, Jerome manages a smile with Liher in town
After eleven hours of sleep, I feel like a new person. I caught a few hours of sleep on the train coming down on the train, then managed to sneak off for a few hours’ nap after lunch as well.
We arrived to discover that that Jerome managed to break his wrist the other day when he was skiing, and Aude’s mother that I had picked up a few creative expressions for suggesting that it would have done less damage if Jerome had landed on his backside rather than his hands! I haven’t had time to organise my formal language lessons yet, so I have to learn all my French from the teenagers on the metro. What do you expect?
Woke up this morning to a glorious Easter morning, filled with sunshine and hopefully some warm weather – at least in comparison to Paris.
It’s my first day of vacation since my honeymoon six months ago, and it couldn’t come soon enough. The last week has been filled with lots of late nights and early mornings as we prepared a series of four-day workshops for a client. The three-day weekend is just what I need to recharge my batteries.
As I write this, we are once again enjoying the magic of the French rail network. It takes about 4h30 to get down to the coast by train. We left a cool, grey morning in Paris and snow-covered fields just outside the city. I closed my eyes for what felt like just a few minutes (but was in fact three hours) and the next thing I knew, beautiful Mediterranean sunshine was outside my window. I don’t think I will ever grow tired of the TGV network – it really is one of the marvels of France.
We have three days in the sun with Aude’s parents, then she will return to Paris and I will fly to London for the week – it seems the office is really determined that I won’t spend any time actually living in Paris! As we move from winter to summer, the base for the project over the next months is likely split between Geneva and Barcelona rather than Zurich and Paris. At least I’m getting to see a lot of Europe – given that we have a significant part of our client base in North Africa, you have to be thankful for what you have sometime.
Let the long weekend begin…
Everyone in the UK may be moaning about the weak pound, but I am smiling. The weakening pound has certainly taken some of the sting out of negotiating a French salary in Euros — when I negotiated the salary, the exchange rate was about £1 = €1.55, today it is £1 = €1.28.
Or, in other words, a 19% pay rise in Sterling terms.
I decided to try something a little different this weekend. I haven’t really had a good chance to play with my new toy, so I decided to mount it on my camera and take a few shots.
These were all taken with my new manual focus, 45mm pancake lens. The lens is a reproduction of a 1960s Nikon lens, and dates back to the Tessar design from the 1920s. I really like the shots from the lens – I think they have a great vintage feel to them. Just to complete the illusion, I set my camera to in-camera black & white.
Manual focus, 1920s lens, B&W. Old school, baby. Henri Cartier-Bresson, eat your heart out.
It’s another Monday morning and I’m whizzing across the French countryside at 260km/h on my way to Zurich, courtesy of the TGV. I’m nibbling on a lovely pain au chocolate and a hot espresso and thinking to myself what a civilised way this is to travel. Breakfast in Paris, lunch in Zurich, and none of the associated aggravation that comes from having to deal with security at the airport. My only complaint is some slightly misleading advertising – my “window” seat isn’t a window at all, but the pillar between two windows. I can just about see out the window if I lean back far enough. Maybe this is my company’s way of encouraging me to work on the journey.
It’s been a busy week. I started off in the Paris office on Monday, the last time I’ll be in before Easter. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday were spent in Blois, in the Loire Valley, holding a series of meetings with my client’s finance team. Our accommodation was less than glamorous, even making allowances for the fact that it was the middle of the off-season and we were the only ones in town. The hotel was right out of the 1960s (which was probably the last time it was renovated, or the duvet changed) and was only just clinging on to its three-star rating.
The factory was interesting – as factories always are. I was busy with a workshop when everyone else got a factory tour, which was a little bit disappointing – I was expecting something very much out of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, right down to the Oompa Loompas, but it turned out that most of the factory was staffed with normal-sized men and women wearing green boiler suits. My colleague was a little too interested in the rejection chute of one of the production lines – he got such a fright when one of the chocolate bars shot out that he jumped back and landed on one of the other machines, setting off the alarm. Way to keep a low profile, fella.
As promised, the entire site smells of cocoa, which they bring in by the truckloads and load into enormous silos. One of these days, someone is going to drive in with a truckload of milk…
I’d barely unpacked on Thursday night when I had to head to London on Friday morning for another workshop. I’m earning Eurostar points at an alarming rate and can now recite most of the timetable off by heart, and I find myself wishing they would change their menu more frequently as you can only eat the same meal so many times before you become desperate for a change.
London was a day trip – I caught the evening train home, which ended up being part of the “Snow Train” service (which carries British skiers down to the French ski resorts) and was loaded with noisy Brits carrying cases of beer and doing their best to get in the spirit. Not exactly the relaxing end to the day I was hoping for. I slumped down in my seat next to a similarly-dismayed investment banker about my age, and we both did what anyone would do to remain sane – we pulled out our Blackberries and started a game of Brickbreaker.
I got home about 10pm and headed straight for bed, shattered from a long week.
After a sedate start to Saturday, we went out exploring, me with camera in hand. We had lunch at our local (a nice steak), then headed down towards Notre Dame to explore some of the bookshops. I ended up with a few French textbooks to improve my business French (which currently consists mostly of me pointing and asking whether “I can do the stuff with the thing, or whether it would be better to use the other thing instead? In England, we used another thing to do the thing.”). I continued my walk up the Seine while Aude headed back towards home for a haircut. Saturday night was dinner in and a movie (Juno) – in “V.O.” because 1) I hate dubbing and 2) I wouldn’t understand the dubbed French, anyhow.
Another sedate start on Sunday, then off towards Chinatown for a big bowl of Pho at a restaurant called (wait for it…) Pho. It was pretty miserable outside, so we headed back home for a leisurely afternoon and evening. And like that – it’s Monday again.