A very pleasant day and at only 19 km, it felt like a rest day. I was in no rush to leave, so a visit to the local bakery, which was only a 3 minute walk from the gîte, provided a fresh baguette for breakfast. The coffee in the gîte was not quite so fresh. Then a pleasant day strolling through the countryside, mostly on paved farm lanes, but one forest section was actually a hiking trail. Yikes! The key to the next gîte was held by the tourist office, and as they opened at 1400 after their lunch break, there was no point in hurrying.
Forest fotos. The top one shows the red & white GR route markings, the lower photo leaves the path up to your imagination (pun intended)
Tonight’s town, La Salvetat sur Agout, is/was a fortified town on the river Agout. The defences are gone, but the old town still commands a dominant position above the river and surrounding valley. There are several artificial lakes nearby, so this region is a popular family vacation destination. The lakes were built for hydro electric power generation in the 50s & 60s. Beautiful countryside without being spectacular, and very pleasant walking.
Tonight’s gîte. Very old and quaint from the outside, old and dank on the inside. My room indicated by the laundry!The view from the ramparts: The smart money has left town, where you get modern amenities, a yard and parking. Old towns are for tourists!Question of the day: which died first – the car wash or the ambulance that needed cleaning?
In yesterday’s post I was puzzled about the economic activity in the town of Boissezon. Last night’s gîte had a poster on the towns of the Camino in this region. If my translation is correct, the town was a centre for the textile industry, with the mills powered by hydo. The water power is still sourced, but the textile industry has been outsourced I suspect.
In 2009, we embarked on a one-year family sailing adventure aboard a Grand Soleil 39, "SV Mulan". Our original sailing blog is linked on this site.
In 2017, Susan, Andrew, Sam & Max walked the Camino Frances from St-Jean-Pied-de-Porte to Santiago de Compostella (and rode bikes from Burgos to Leon as a blister recovery strategy), and in 2018 Jack also joined the crew as we waled the northern section of the Camino Portuguese from Porto to S de C.
In 2019 Andrew, accompanied by Max for the first few hundred kms, and Susan for the Tiscan section, walked the via francigena from Canterbury to Rome. That journey is blogged in this site.
This blog is planned as an alternative to the endless instagram posts used previously to communicate with those interested in our travels - although there is a linked instagram account as well!
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One thought on “Via Tolosana/voie d’Arles day 24: heading towards the hills”
I think the fellow in the back of the ambulance died first.
I think the fellow in the back of the ambulance died first.
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