Having decided to return Juniper to her home port of Saint
Jean de Losne to have her winter repairs, repaired. Since we are no longer
behind schedule we are now taking the time to fully smell the roses, even if
they are soaking wet.
Our first day we returned to Venarey les Laumes, a nice port
with power and water. The power is really important since the temperatures have
dropped back into the 30s at night and only making the high 40s to low 50s
during the day. With power, we can run our heater.
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14th Century - Château Bussy-Rabutin. From medieval residence to Renaissance château |
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Antechamber
- walls covered with damask (the red & gold fabric covering the
walls) and decorated with furniture from the Régence Period |
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The Hall of the Great Warriors - featuring 65 portraits of French and foreign military figures. Many of the rooms were similarly covered with paintings, just different topics. |
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Julie in the garden maze |
With rain scheduled for the afternoon we set off on our
bikes by 9:00 to bicycle to Château Bussy-Rabutin a beautiful building started
in the 1300s. The Château as it looks today is probably representative of how
it looked in the 1800s. After touring the Château we set out to explore the
gardens and maze. While outside the predicted rain began and we decided a nice
warm cup of coffee or food sounded better than getting soaked. As the ride was
primarily uphill going to, it was a much faster ride back to town.
In town we had, of all things, a hamburger with of course
pom frits. Then it was off to the MuséoParc
Alésia. The museum was inside, warm, dry and a perfect place to learn
about the battle between Julius Caeser and the tribal Gauls united by the
leader Vercingétorix. Even with the arrival of a rescue army of over 250,000
the Roman defeat of the Gauls in this important battle allowed the Romans to
include Gaul in the Roman Empire. The museum covered the story as well the
archeological work that has been done to verify what really happened.
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Recreations of the Roman battlements built to siege the Gaul's fortified hilltop |
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Very wet bikers |
Even after stalling all day, the rain outlasted us and we
ended up riding back to the boat, including a super marché stop, in very wet
weather.
Sunday was a short day, only ten écluse and a distance of
about 5km. Once again it was time to get the bikes down for a ride to a nearby
medieval city, this time Flavigny-sur-Ozerain home of les Anis de Flavigny the
aniseed sweets that have been made at the old abbey for over 100 years. The
building itself many years older yet. The ride to Flavigny had a 3km long climb to the ridge
and we were bucking a strong headwind to help us burn a few more calories.
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Fields line the road to Flavigny-sur-Ozerain |
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The medieval walled town to Flavigny-sur-Ozerain. |
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You might recognize this logo for the anis flavored candy. |
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Monday was our work day – the beginning of our staircase.
Today was 17 écluse in 6km. We showed up at our appointed 9am time only to find
an empty écluse. 9:15, still empty, finally about 9:30 our first èclusier
arrived and we got underway. A couple of locks later our second èclusier
arrived and it was game on. We were averaging about 10 minutes per écluse,
including the time to move from one to another. The two young keepers were
opening the valves to the locks all the way, right from the start, giving us
quite a ride and filling the chamber in record time. We’d no sooner leave a
lock and they would be zooming past us and have the next one ready. Before our
lines were on the lower doors were shut and sometimes the water would be
entering. To go along with this hurried pace we had a 20mph wind blowing – this
meant coming into each écluse fairly fast to maintain steerage and at quite an
angle, straightening out and slowing down once you were partially in the
chamber and somewhat protected from the wind. Julie got real good at snagging
the first bollard as we motored past it,
still slowing down.
Arriving back in Marigny-le-Cahouët (the town we found the
lovely château on our way out) we spent the afternoon again walking to the
château then walked through the outskirts of this very old village.
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