Sunday, April 29th
The group awoke to another grey, rainy morning. Paul, Dan, Cullen and Alice shouldered umbrellas and headed into the rain for Paul’s weekly 9 KM stroll with Sydney, the 11 year old Labrador that is never far from Paul’s side. The stroll took the group through some lovely countryside spotted with cattle (les vaches) and down to the lake where they took a small break for coffee at the clubhouse and spa, Etang Vallier. The countryside leading to the lake resort is a mixture of textures: swaying grass and herds of cows border vineyards and rolling hills topped with stone houses and fields of flowers.
While at Le St Bernard the group learned that, though the record amount of rain that has fallen has been beneficial in filling the lakes and watering some of the crops, it has left Chalais flooded and many businesses closed.
In the afternoon the group took an excursion to AUBETERRE-SUR-DRONNE, Charente. With its red-tiled roofs, steep cobbled streets and typically French town square lined with linden trees, it is one of the most popular of the Les Plus Beaux Villages de France. The once fortified town saw battles against both the English and the Huguenots during the Wars of Religion and was a stopping point for travellers on their way to Santiago de Compostela in Spain. Little known to many people, the small village was the birthplace of Roger Vivier, the inventor of the stiletto. However, it is the beauty of the village, with the pottery and other crafts of its local artisans, in combination with its pilgrimage history that make Aubeterre a well known and much visited town.
The group sat in Place Trarieux, a tree-lined square named after Ludovic Trarieux, the founder of the League of Human Rights who was born there, and had crepes and coffees while watching the world bustle by. Gerard, the owner of the clubhouse and spa in Brossac, met the group and he and Paul led a small tour of the town, as the rain had stopped and the sun had come from behind the clouds. C’etait une bonne journee.