France


After a wonderful, busy trip through parts of Belgium and northern France, we’re leaving tomorrow morning for our (long) trip home.

A.J. and I have joked that (not counting a lovely couple of couple of days at the CIAT Cuts) this trip has been our “war and peace tour” … We’ve visited major battlefields, front lines, and cemeteries from the Hundred Years War, the French Revolution, the Napoleonic Wars, World War I, and World War II. And we’ve visited about fifteen gorgeous and varied old churches.

One of those many churches, in Caen, had some old photos on display … including this gem.
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Yesterday, I asked what among the day’s various activities you might want to see photos of. I had only one response, but she asked to see everything. So here goes …

First, in the morning, we saw the open-air fish market in Trouville. I say “open-air,” but the market is actually in a building with all the various vendors having stalls that face the street. Their awnings were particularly useful yesterday morning, as we were there in the rain.

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Right smack dab in the middle of Caen are the ruins of William the Conqueror’s castle. These ruins are of William’s castle when he was duke of Normandy (before 1066), and of a slightly later version that was built — next to the original — with stone fortifications instead of a wooden wall.

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… The current castle’s walls and gates were added by laters inhabitants.

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And across the street from all that is this magnificent church …

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From there, we wandered down a pedestrian zone and happened into a small church with two naves and these unusual ceilings, which look like the (upside-down) insides of boats.

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Last night and tonight, we’re in the adorable (tiny!!) village of Crepon …

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Yesterday evening, we drove toward the beaches before dinner and happened onto a preserved-as-it-was-left German gun battery.

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Today we drove to Omaha Beach. This evening, the beach and, at one end, the dunes (now a nature preserve) were beautiful and remarkably peaceful … but when you stand on the beach itself and contemplate the huge expanse of sand those soldiers had to run across while being shot at from the tops of the dunes and hills, it’s simply heartbreaking.

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Just FYI: These are all photos that I took with my phone. Except for the few CIAT Cuts photos I posted recently, I haven’t even begun to sort through all the photos I’ve taken (and continue to take) each day with my “real” camera. We have two days of vacation left, and I’ve already got nearly 1,300 photos! Stay tuned …

I have so many and such varied photos from our fabulous day that I’m not sure which one(s) to post.

Early this morning, we went for a lovely, rainy walk in the adorable coastal town of Trouville (across a river from Deauville, which happens to be a sister city of Lexington). There, on the “main drag,” down the street from the big, fancy casino and the huge ferris wheel, I took pictures of the open-air fish market.

After breakfast, we drove to Caen, which will be the main host city for next year’s Alltech FEI World Equestrian Games. While there, I took photos of the huge castle (or what’s left if it) that started out as William the Conqueror’s when he was duke of Normandy. I also took photos of the outside and inside of two old churches. One of these has two naves, both of which have wooden ceilings that look like the upside-down inside of boats. And we visited the abbey founded by Matilda (William’s wife), and where she’s buried.

This afternoon, we drove to Crepon (population only about 200) — where we’re staying tonight and tomorrow — and walked around the village for a bit. Then, before dinner, we drove a couple of miles over to the Normandy beaches. While at one of these, we happened onto the preserved remnants of a German gun battery. Surprisingly, except where things were clearly dangerous and therefore blocked off, visitors are free to wander around and through all of it. A.J. was like the proverbial kid in a candy store.

Sooo… What would you like to see?!

The CIAT at Cuts is a really, really beautiful event. The setting is perfect — in a park, in front of a chateau — and the dozens of participants (around sixty this year, I believe … I’ll have to double-check) have a wide variety of horses and ponies, and three donkeys this year, put to an even wider variety of vehicles.

I bought a new, much larger, memory card for my camera before we left on this trip, and it allows me to take A LOT more photos than I could with my old card, so I don’t ever have to worry about running out of photo memory at an event. In just four days, I’ve taken more than a thousand photos. So, needless to say, I haven’t had time to sort through them all yet.

Until I can sort through them and give a full CIAT Cuts report, here are just a very few photos from the past two days, to whet your appetite …

These ponies were approaching the second of three stations where they would be judged on all aspects of the turnout (i.e., standing presentation). The judge at this station was Raimundo Coral Rubiales of Spain.

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This pair of ponies was at the third standing-presentation station on Saturday, being judged by Richard James of England.

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This lovely restored vehicle was made by the Page Brothers Buggy Co. of Michigan.

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We saw this pair of horses on Sunday’s drive.

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After the prize-giving on Sunday afternoon, most of the turnouts trotted in a parade of sorts past the chateau.

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In both Brussels and Noyon, we’ve happened onto the most fascinating exhibits / tours of underground spaces. We’ve been underneath a portion of a Brussels palace to see the gothic-arched cellars of a chapel that was once part of an earlier version of the palace. On that visit, we also saw and walked on a narrow, cobbled medieval street that’s been buried underground for a few hundred years.

Here in Noyon, we visited the town’s beautiful cathedral, which is considered the earliest example of the gothic style in France.
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While there, we discovered that that very evening was an installment of occasional underground tours of this cathedral. For nearly two hours that night, we and just three others learned about Noyon’s early history, visited numerous medieval and later cellars, saw an ongoing archeological dig (underneath a hotel!) of the town’s Roman and medieval market, and more. Absolutely fascinating, and it gave us a better appreciation for and understanding of what we were seeing above ground.
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The gorgeous international driving event at Cuts began yesterday and continues today. Both A.J. and I took (and will continue to take) tons of photos, but I haven’t even begun to sort through them yet, so I don’t have any to post at the moment. Stay tuned.

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