Sunday, 20 August 2023

Deal me the card that takes my blues away, take me away to Marseilles ...



Marseilles is too big, too chaotic, too busy, too sprawling, too hot, too dirty, too smelly, too loud, too crass, too dangerous, too foreign!

And it is utterly intoxicating.

It is Darwin and the Northern Territory at its tropical maddest, made madder by French, Arab and African, put in a blender, then a centrifuge, nutrients added, that has mutated, replicated uncontrollably, overcome and devoured the scientists and broken out of the lab! 

Marseilles isn’t perfect Love Island bodies. It’s a large brown roll of well-oiled fat hanging out of a diamanté g-string.

Marseilles most certainly isn’t a delicate ceviche of octopus. It’s an octopus pulled fresh from the sea by hand, bashed against the rocks and gutted, thrown on a red hot grill with a sprinkle of oregano and salt, roughly chopped, drizzled with olive oil and lemon juice, and eaten with burning fingers.

Marseilles is rocky Mediterranean coastline desecrated by concrete corniche and the smell of piss.

Marseilles is paired-up barely dressed adolescents weaving through heavy traffic on underpowered scooters, one driving and the other perched on the axle astride the rear wheel, the journey a series of near misses, ropey muscles glistening with sweat and tits bobbing up and down, scarcely contained in their bikini cups.

Marseilles is best approached not with an open mind but a closed one.

Arrive looking down on it and it’s peoples with a sense of snobbery, with a liking for perfectionism, with a superiority complex, if a few ugly class and racial stereotypes come to mind let them brew. That way Marseilles can break you, perform surgery on you without anaesthesia, and you get to experience the full exhilarating, life affirming effect, as it pulls you from your ego like a blood covered newborn. 

Where I slept: nhow Marseilles: Great views right on the water, away from the main port.
Where I ate: Chez Fon Fon: A top notch bouillabaisse.



Sunday, 13 August 2023

GR70 - Le Chemin de Stevenson Part 2



GR70 - Chemin de Stevenson

Day 7 (20.4 km), Day 8 (23.8 km), Day 9 (29.5 km), Day 10 (20.7 km), Day 11 (30.1 km), Day 12 (18.5 km).

So, Robert Louis Stevenson.

Stevenson, still a young man, undertook his travels in the Cevennes to distance himself from a love affair with an American woman of which his friends and family did not approve and who had returned to her husband in California. No wonder the French loved the story!

While Stevenson was a celebrity in his time and admired by his contemporaries, he was discredited after WWI as being ‘too Victorian’ by EM Forster and Virginia Woolf, and excluded from 20th century cannon. Seems a bit snobby to me. Cheap shots are easy, here’s one now - thank goodness in a post-Demidenko world we can comment on the flaws of feminist writers like Woolf, too!

Travels in the Cevennes is a classic of travel and outdoor literature. Jeckle and Hyde sits easily in the company of gothic novels Dracula, Frankenstein and others. In fact it’s probably better.

Anyway, the trail gets notably higher, hotter, drier and more rugged south of the ridge line where it crosses the summit of Mount Lozere. High summer in an agricultural region that hasn’t changed much.

Last words go to Stevenson:

“For my part, I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel's sake. The great affair is to move; to feel the needs and hitches of our life more clearly; to come down off this feather-bed of civilization, and find the globe granite underfoot and strewn with cutting flints ...To hold a pack upon a pack-saddle against a gale is no high industry, but it is one that serves to occupy and compose the mind. And when the present is so exacting who can annoy himself about the future?"

Self-guided Tour Organised Through: Macs Adventures: Great accommodations and track notes.






Monday, 7 August 2023

GR 70 - Chemin de Stevenson Part 1



GR 70 - Chemin de Stevenson

Day 1 (23.5 km), Day 2 (24.7 km), Day 3 (26.3 km), Day 4 (26.1 km), Day 5 (29 km), Day 6 (12.7 km).

One of Robert Louis Stevenson’s earliest works is the aptly titled Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes (1879). His story proved wildly popular in France to the point that the route he took was assigned a GR number.

I am now at the halfway point.

It is very much more agreeable hiking than this time last year in the Pyrenees. No scree or kast and temperatures half the 40C experienced there.

The trail cuts across the Massif Central, a vast volcanically raised region in the south central part of France. It is very fertile, has a cool climate and gets quite a bit of rain. The area is much less touristed than Provence or Bourgogne and you will be disappointed searching for a swish restaurant in these parts. The markets and local produce, however, are unrivalled - a good thing for vegetarians and those that don’t dig on swine.

I learned about this trail from a French film called Antoinette in the Cevennes. The premise of the film is that Antoinette, feeling abandoned, decides to follow her lover Vladimir on his family hike in the Cévennes with a donkey. Only the French could make that a romantic comedy rather than an intense bunny-boiling psychodrama.

More on Stevenson and why he was here later.

Self-guided Tour Organised Through: Macs Adventures: Great accommodations and track notes.