Two kinds of beer on tap in the outdoor keg. |
A personal six month journey toward self discovery, enroute to the vineyards of Southern France.
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Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Monday, September 20, 2010
A different kind of "bucket list"
Lou and Jean-Marc taking a breather. Photo by Elizabeth Parker. |
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Touring Provence
The centre ville of Villedieu. |
Colorful homes in the town. |
Zayra, me, Elizabeth, Caroline and Sara. Photo courtesy of Elizabeth Parker. |
Le Chateau Comtal |
Saturday, September 18, 2010
A weekend respite
Our apartment in St. Cecile les Vignes. Sainte-Cécile-les-Vignes is the hometown to Domaine Rouge-Bleu. For our two week experience, six of us are staying in some local apartments within walking distance of the town center. |
The natives are friendly here, easily chattering with strangers about the particular items they have for sale. They are proud of what they produce and are quick to point out exactly where their products are raised, sometimes even pulling out photos to better detail the steps involved in their operation.
Friday, September 17, 2010
It's what we do.......
Felicia and Daniel making quick work of this vine. Friday arrived bringing with it a definite chill in the air as we headed off to the fields in a light drizzle. We had been blessed with wonderful weather all week but were now starting to wonder if our luck had run out. Suiting up in jackets and whatever raingear that we'd brought with us, we drove over to today's harvest site and braced for the worst. Although the wind blew harshly, the clouds could only muster enough moisture to sprinkle a few drops our way. By 1130, the sun came out and the jackets came off, as we settled into our by now normal routine. "Don't you get bored, standing outside in the sun all day long doing such repetitive work?", some may ask. I can't answer for all the others but for me, the hours seem to fly by. I use the solitude and the silence as a time to listen to the wind blowing through the trees, letting it clear my mind of unwanted clutter. Often I think about what I want to share on this blog. At other times I let my mind wander as random thoughts take shape in my mind. Because we work in close proximity to each other, often with two persons to a row, we are able to converse easily as we progress across the field in an even sweep. |
photo by Elizabeth Parker |
Thursday, September 16, 2010
The Beauty Around Us
Looking as we did after finishing a hard but satisfying day's work, we were in no condition to make new acquaintances when we encountered Madame Hubert walking across the courtyard of the apartments upon our return.
She greeted us like her children, with hugs and a "bise" on each cheek, plus one extra. (This part of France follows the 3 kiss tradition upon greeting.) She quickly introduced us to her friend, a vibrant lady "of a certain age", who was her neighbor and had stopped by to pay her a visit while out riding her bicycle. Madame explained to me that she and her friend had known each other all of their lives, but since the village was small and everyone still lived there, this wasn't unusual.
I apologized for the dirt covering me from head to toe as I reached out to shake her friend's hand. No, no, no, Madame said as she waved her hands excitedly to put me as ease. "That is good!", she said. Dirt is good.... I puzzled.....hmmmmm, ohhh......DIRT IS GOOD! Looking at it from a different perspective, in the fact that I'd worked hard at a task that would ultimately bring pleasure to so many people........dirt IS good.
Then I thought back across the past few days, about the beauty that I would have missed had I not taken the time to look around me. There IS beauty in dirt, in the changing color of the leaves on the vine, in the heavy, rain filled clouds that threatened to soak us as we worked,
....in that one cluster of white grapes which dared to be different from the millions of other, darker clusters.......
There is a quiet beauty in the empty nest that I found tucked within the branches of a vine, as I searched it for hidden purple treasure.
The smell of a fresh, new morning as the sun streams across the fields, invites me to breath in this timeless beauty before the opportunity is lost and I have to clean the dirt from under my fingernails once more.
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Winemaking 101
We're into the 3rd day and my body has finally realized that it will not get a break from the constant onslaught of bending and stooping. It tried to intimidate me with its aches and pains, stiffness and swelling but it received no mercy. There were to be no excuses to sit on the sidelines and let others do the work. As a matter of fact, the extra work seem to have helped and I've now turned the corner on my pain.
The knee is still causing difficulties, refusing to bend when it should so I do everything I can to remain in an upright position. We were working a different field today with different grapes, whose vines were trained upon wires stretching from one end of the field to the other. There is less crouching and most of the work is easily done standing. These are my favorite vines.
The Mistral died down for a day but the heat took its place. The heat in southern France is not of the same caliber that you would find in Arizona or Oklahoma. The brightess is intense but the temperatures are not. Wearing my sun visor hat and my long sleeves to avoid a burn, I could easily work all afternoon and not break an obvious sweat.
Sucking the crushed grapes up into the holding tank.
Our day starts at 0800 and ends somewhere between 5:30 and 6:00 PM, but the work doesn't stop when the buckets are emptied. Back at the farm, the most important work begins in the cave.
The cave contains all the concrete tanks that hold the grapes when they are brought in from the fields. The tanks are probably 15 feet high and each hold several days worth of crushed grapes.
The grapes are collected in a large, deep trailer which is pulled through the fields behind the tractor. An enormous screw running across the bottom of the trailer grinds the grapes to release the juice, much like the grape stomper did in years past. A large flexible hose, resembling that which is attached between a lav truck and an aircraft, is attached to the grinder and shoots the maserated grapes throught the tube and up into the holding tank chosen for that particular wine.
Two people stand on top of the holding tanks and direct the stream of grapes into it. A small amount of sulfur solution is added to the mix to guard against oxidation when the bottle is opened. The grapes then sit the prescribed amount of time, depending on the wine being made. The final product will be drained from the bottom of the tank through a spigot.
The only thing left to do is grab a couple of bottles of wine from an earlier harvest and head back to our apartments, where we will enjoy the fruits of our labor before starting the process over again the next day.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
The morning of the second day dawned all too quickly for those of us who were suffering from the stiff muscles of a backache caused by the constant stooping over the tops of the grapevines the previous day. It appeared that all of the exercising that I'd done over the past six months didn't stand up well to the exercise we'd received from just one day in the field. Over compensation by squatting and standing only added insult to injury. By the end of the day my knee decided to repay me for all the years of sports abuse it had taken by swelling up and refusing to play anymore.
The grapes wouldn't wait however and there was work to be done, so we all carried on. Team America was conspicuous by their silence this second morning, as the strength of the Mistral made the the cool morning seem even colder. Team France however, kept us going with their animated chatter, sometimes breaking out into what I imagined was a French harvest song, although reality told me that it was a contemporary tune.
The wind howled, our muscles ached and the occational nip of a finger with the sécateurs caused us to question our sanity for putting ourselves through such a exercise. All we had to do though was look around us at the beauty of the endless rows of grape filled vines, the profile of cypress trees in the distance and the ancient villages atop the hills which dotted the landscape in every direction, to knowt that we had made the right decision to come to this place.
Sore muscles are temporary but memories such as these will last a lifetime.
Monday, September 13, 2010
No grape left behind.....
Day One of Vendange 2010 began with an apology from Jean-Marc for all the things that he would do to us during the next two weeks. He might push us to work harder, he might raise his voice, he might be impatient.....he did say, after all, that this was going to be boot camp.
One could hardly blame him for any imagined irrational behavior, since these next two weeks would be the culmination of all of the work which had gone into the vineyard during the past year. It was important to him, therefore, it was important to us.
Boot camp is a learning experience and we learned plenty that first day.
1. "Sécateur" is the French word for clipper.
The harvest team was made up of Team France, four ladies who had worked the Rouge-Bleu harvest in previous years, along with a young man who was interning in the wine business; and Team America, five gals and a guy who had no vendange experience whatsoever but were keen to learn.
As would be imagined, Team France's harvesting skills were impressive. These four gals and guy could work a field quicker than a Frenchman could make his way around a crowded room with a kiss for every cheek.
We were envious but this wasn't a competition, so we didn't mind the obvious gap in performance. Our rival team even finished up our rows for us after they had done theirs, thus cementing Franco-American relations.
The first four hours flew by quickly and we really appreciated the French custom of the two hour lunch. Kristi and Jean-Marc provided pizza, pate, cheese, baguettes and several salad selections. Rouge-Bleu wines and beer on tap rounded out the luncheon menu.
When we returned to the field, we moved into the grand-daddy of the vines, the Grenache. These vines had been here for 77 years and were as gnarly as you would expect a 77 year old to be. The vines were low producers (I would be too at that age) but the tase was sweet when I slipped a few of the dusty blue grapes into my mouth.
We were warned that this field would be more difficult to harvest due to the grapes growing lower to the ground hidden under a dense cover of leaves. It was. For the rest of the afternoon we groveled and stooped, knowing that our bodies would betray us by the next morning. They did.
After the grapes had been crushed and stored in the concrete vats, we headed back to the apartments for a shared meal prepared by the men in our entourage. Four bottles of wine later (graciously donated by Jean-Marc and Kristi), we were back at our apartments before midnight, grateful that we had made it through the first day.
Sunday, September 12, 2010
Prelude to a harvest
The day was a busy one at domaine Rouge-Bleu and the harvest didn't officially start until tomorrow. Jean-Marc and one of my fellow harvesters, Daniel, were busy cleaning the wine making equipment and tidying the area in anticipation of the arrival of the rest of the crew.
We had volunteers from California, Illinois, Arizona, Australia, Scotland, myself from Oklahoma and several from various areas in France, all converging upon this organic vineyard via the proverbial "trains, planes and automobiles". Among our group were a professional photographer and teacher, a student, bartender, wine seller, wine making intern and numerous other professions, who had come together to work the fields, share their stories and find a common bond in spite of any language barriers.
Before the others began to arrive, Kristi and I had the opportunity to visit the nearby town of Tulette, which is in the middle of the wine making area of the Rhone Valley. Its ancient stone buildings dated back to the 12th century, with pastel facades and clay tile roffs completing the picturesque scene.
We spent a spirited hour or more discussing our lives, politics, families and the monsier's experiences during WWII, while he used this time to "size" us up and ultimately declare us to be "aimiable", thus giving us the seal of approval to stay within his walls.
With pastis and other French aperitifs flowing freely, M. Hubert's speech became more animated, picking up speed with every drink he consumed. His wife finally convinced him to leave the table at the same time that Jean-Marc arrived to take us back to the vineyard for a pizza party to open the 2010 harvest season.
With wines from previous harvests flowing, we mingled with new friends as we polished off close to 20 pizzas, various crudites, salad and dessert. Jean-Marc gave us an impromptu tour of the wine "cave", where the just harvested rose was fermenting and where we would be spending part of the next two weeks.
The evening soon wound to a close and we all drifted back to our temporary homes to prepare for the 8am start to our new adventure.
Making tracks to the South
I'm finally at my journey's end, having arrived at the vineyard of my friends, Kristi, Jean-Marc and their children, Max and Jackie. It was a six hour journey which began at the train station in Rennes, connected through the city of Lyon and ended with a sigh of relief as Jean-Marc met me at the station in Orange.
Mark and I drove the almost two hours from Lannion to Rennes this morning, having just enough time for a coffee (hot chocolate for me) before making the mad dash to the train's platform. Since the actual "voie" is not announced until the train pulls into the station, all the passengers wait upstairs, hovering around the television monitors until the departure track is posted on the screen. At the appointed moment, the crowd moves in mass, either to the only elevator or to the massive staircase, which leads to the departure area below.
Luckily, since I was riding the TGV (high speed train) between Rennes and Lyon, I had my own specially assigned seat so there was no need to hurry once I'd made it to the correct train. The TGV is the SST of the French rail system and travels smoothly and quietly along the tracks at speeds up to 300 km per hour. As a bit of trivia, once the brakes are applied at this speed, it takes the train 3.2 km to stop. Luckily they did not need to test the accuracy of this statement on today's ride.
I imagine, however, that they may have had to take our particular "car" out of service once it reached Lyon, since the window on the opposite side of my seat decided to explode while we were enroute. Even with my Bose headphones in place, I still heard the impact of whatever it was which smacked into the glass. The two fellows sitting next to the glass looked over at me with eyes as big as saucers while I tried to figure out what had just happened. I thought it was a spray of water that was covering the window until we moved into the sunlight and then I could see that the glass had been completely fractured, although it still hung intact in the frame of the window.
A train agent quickly appeared and ushered the passengers, who had been sitting next to the window, to a safer area upstairs. Those of us on the opposite side of the aisle were left to keep an eye on the damage, hoping that it didn't decide to weaken over time and fly in our direction.
The connection in Lyon was as smooth as glass is supposed to be. I made the dash to the next train with the skill of a native, using an elbow here and stepping on a foot there. No reservations on the TER, but empty seats were plentiful as I made my way halfway along the car and settled into a window seat.
I counted the stops until I'd gotten to the eighth one, which was my stop at Orange. The announcements sounded as if they were being issued through a string and a tin can, so I verified the station with a passenger seated near the door, just to be sure I didn't miss my stop.
Following the "sortie" sign, I descended a long flight of steps, then just as quickly, ascended an even longer one, all the while trying to bounce my baggage along each step. The French apparently don't believe in moving walkways or escalators.....maybe that's why they stay so slim.
It was a welcome sight seeing Jean-Marc appear at the top of the staircase and even more welcoming when he took my bag the rest of the way out of the station, heading toward the car.
A warm greeting awaited me with hugs and a glass or two of the famous wine, who's grapes we were soon to harvest in just over 24 hours.