The Eyes Have It

In this week’s Nature Photo Challenge #2, Denzil has us hunting for eyes. That’s a bit tough, isn’t it, photos of eyes?

We’ll go back to last week’s peacock for a bit of help:

And there’s another kind of peacock who can help us: a peacock butterfly.

Here’s another butterfly with eyes to dismay predators: a Gatekeeper.

Since I’ve never been to the Amazonian Rainforest, I’ve never seen an Owl Butterfly in its natural habitat. But they have circled round me at the Butterfly House of London’s Horniman Museum, unnerving me with all those ‘eyes’ they have..

After all these dissembling eyes, it seems only fair to show two real ones. The header photo shows a fallow deer at Knole, Kent, and here is an elephant at Dubare Elephant Camp on the River Cauvery in India.

Butterflies III: Half an Hour of My Life revisited

It’s time for Flashback Friday again, and as butterflies have so far been in fairly short supply this year, I thought I’d return to a happy moment in France, in August 2013, when we had friends from England to stay …

Butterflies III: Half an Hour of My Life

There we were at Roquefixade, showing our favourite walking destination off to two of our Harrogate friends, when a butterfly discovered me.  Then another.  These two creatures played round my wrist for more than half an hour before finally dancing off into the sunshine.  They made our day.

I’m thinking they’re the Common Blue (Polyommatus icarus).  Any dissenters?

And if you’re wondering why this post is called Butterflies III, here’s why …

In the same month, I wrote about a Butterfly Bonanza, and at the end of July, about the rare Mountain Apollo

For Fandango’s Flashback Friday

Butterflies: Half an Hour of my Life Revisited

It’s time for Fandango’s Flashback Friday. I’m taking you to France, to a gloriously sunny day – 20th August 2013. Happy Memories.

Butterflies: Half an Hour of my Life

August 20th 2013

There we were at Roquefixade, showing our favourite walking destination off to two of our Harrogate friends, when a butterfly discovered me.  Then another.  These two creatures played round my wrist for more than half an hour before finally dancing off into the sunshine.  They made our day.

I’m thinking they’re the Common Blue (Polyommatus icarus).  Any dissenters?

Butterfly bonanza

I’ve never been all that good at butterfly spotting.  Back in the UK, I could manage my red admirals, peacock butterflies and cabbage whites.  Oh yes, I could certainly identify those pesky cabbage whites.  Their eggs were usually plastered over the undersides of nearly every vegetable I had on my allotment.

On Sunday though, we had a real butterfly bonanza.  We had a perfect day’s walking on the nearby Plateau de Sault, near Belcaire.  It was perfect because the scenery was friendly: gently rising and falling lightly forested slopes offered distant panoramas of the Pyrenees.  The wonderful weather was bright and sunny, without being too hot. The walk offered challenges but no real difficulty; good companionship too.  What made this Sunday memorable though were the butterflies.  At this altitude – about 1000 metres – the summer flowers were still bright and fresh, and the butterflies couldn’t leave them alone.  They fluttered ahead of us every step of the way, and we finally gave up exclaiming over their delicate beauty.

What we couldn’t do was identify them.  This evening I’ve pored over sites on the internet.  I’ve excitedly identified a specimen.  Then I’ve looked at the next image… and the next… and realised that my confident identification isn’t at all secure.  Tentatively, then, I’ve named my photos.  But I rely on you, dear reader, to put me right about the undoubted mistakes I’ve made.

In the end though, whether I’ve been able to name them or not, I carry with me the memory of a summer’s day made extra special by the presence of those butterflies  wheeling, turning, diving and fluttering, rarely still, but constantly engaging our admiration and attention

Mountain Apollo

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I just want to share a photo I took on our walk on Sunday, when we went to the Gorges de la Frau.  This butterfly seduced us all with its distinctive spots and white grisaille wings.  It turns out to be rare, a protected species, and known only in mountain regions, mainly in Southern Europe.  The French know it as Apollon, and its Latin name is Parnassius Apollo.  If your French is up to it, you can read about it here.  

And here’s a small taste of the Gorges de la Frau, only a few miles from our house.

 

An Ariège Alphabet

Accent –local:  If standard French is a challenge, how much more so is the local accent?  Remember school French, and being told that usually you don’t pronounce the final letter?  Doesn’t apply here.  ‘Pain’ is ‘peng’, ‘loin’ is ‘lueng’, and so on. ‘G’s happen a lot – ‘tous ensemble’ becomes ‘tous angsamble’

L’Apero, l’heure de:  Great custom

Bio:  – organic.  Buying organic food is ‘normale’ here, especially at the markets.

Bountiful free food:  The hoarding season’s pretty much past its best now.  We’ve been out looking for walnuts, almonds, chestnuts, rosehips, apples, sloes and coming home with the kind of quantities that will see us through the year.  It’s a full time job.

Butterflies: So many varieties, and seen everywhere, almost all the year round.  Even yesterday, November 22nd.

Courtesy:  Walking down the street here, it’s normal to offer greetings to everyone you meet.  ‘Bonjour Madame!’  With anyone you actually know, you shake hands, maybe exchange bises on both cheeks.  Small children greet you, surly teenagers greet you.  It’s one of the real pleasures of small town life.

This sheep is currently not on milk-for-cheese duties

Cheeses: Cows, goats, sheep, all busily producing milk for dozens of varieties of (preferably non pasteurised) cheese: soft, hard, creamy, runny, mild, stinky.

Dépêche du Midi (La):  It’s the local daily.  We don’t often buy it, as world events seem to pass it by in favour of the marriage of the local lass in La Bastide de Bousignac.

En cas où…….. Out walking, we always have a spare bag stuffed in a pocket.  En cas où we find some mushrooms, a handful of berries, some windfalls, a log for the fire.  Everybody does it.

 
 

Fêtes Festivals and Fun: No weekend is complete without its fête, or festival, somewhere nearby.  The other weekend saw the Fête de la Transhumance at le Sautel, with cows and sheep returning to the lowlands.  There was a food market, a vide grenier (see below), films, dancing, a barbary organ, a big communal meal on Sunday. Le Sautel is a hamlet rather than a village, but it hasn’t stopped it running a right good show. Recently, there have been la Fête de la Noisette at Lavelanet,  la Fête de la Figue at Mas d’Azil…. and in among, there are small local fêtes in nearby villages.  No need to get bored at weekends, ever.

Gallic shrugs and gestures.  I’ve posted about this before, and do you know, I don’t think my accent’s getting any better.  I’m rubbish (shakes left hand vigorously with floppy movement from wrist)

History: I love it that so many people, especially older people, seem to know so much about the history of the region.  They’re proud to tell you stories of times past, farming traditions and customs.

Ingenuity: The sort of make-do-and-mend that is such a feature of English allotment life is even more commonplace here.  Our garden shed is made of several old doors, a redundant polystyrene fish box, random bits of corrugated iron and plastic screwed together, ancient bits of wire netting and bits of string.  To our knowledge it’s been standing 20 years or more, and it’s not about to fall down.

Junk:  Freecycle may not exist here – yet – but one person’s junk is another person’s lucky find.  We take our household rubbish to central collection points – no dustbin collections here.  On Sunday evenings, lots of people (including us, naturally) will be hovering to walk off with and make use of discarded pans, empty packaging, toys, plant pots….

Kilometres and Kilometres of space…..  North Yorkshire, which always seems spacious by English standards, has a population density of 74 people per square km.  The Ariège has 28.  So there’s plenty of room

Lizards: Our garden companions on any sunny day

Lunar calendar: Planting by the phases of the moon is completely mainstream here.  Gardening magazines carry free lunar calendars early every spring, and anybody you talk to will give you unsolicited advice on which day the moon dictates you get those spuds into the ground

Monday market, Mirepoix

Markets: The best and happiest way to shop for fresh seasonal food.  Don’t be in a hurry though.

Music: So important here.  Concerts of every kind, cheap or free, in public buildings, market halls and squares, and churches everywhere.  Choirs (introduced to a large extent by the English apparently) in most communes – I belong to two.  Bands and singers at fêtes.  Even small towns like ours have their own music centres.  And lots of bars are home to groups of local musicians too.

Non!  Protest comes naturally to the French.  We’ve even been on a ‘manif’ ourselves, protesting at teacher cuts.  But you won’t travel too far in France before you see signs painted, very large, across the road. ‘Non à l’ours’ (bears are being reintroduced to the Pyrénées, to the disgust of the farmers). ‘Non à la déchetterie!’ (tip), ‘Non aux aeoliennes !’ (wind farms)

Occitan: The everyday language of south western France until well into the 20th century, the Lenga d’òc is little spoken now, thanks to the systematic imposition of the French language in the early years of the twentieth century.  Nevertheless, we do hear the elderly speaking it from time to time.  It’s once again taught as an option in schools, and in adult education classes. I love passing through the many places that celebrate their Occitan heritage by having town and street names expressed in Occitan as well as French – Autariba rather than Auterive for example. 

Patrimoine in the Pays d’Olmes et Pyrénées:  ‘Patrimoine’ translates I suppose as ‘heritage’, but it’s not quite as chintzy and twee as that word suggests. Everyone here is proud of their history, and there’s so much going on to celebrate it – talks, walks, conferences, often with a meal thrown in.  Just join the party!

Sunset over Roquefixade

Queuing.  Don’t let anyone tell you that only the English queue.  It’s part of life in neighbourhood shops and markets here.  But it’s not a problem.  It’s an opportunity to chat with friends and strangers, exchanging local gossip, recipes, scandals.  If it’s our cheese man in Lavelanet market, he’ll join in too, and you’ll never get away

Restaurants: I’m not thinking of the elegant once-in-a-blue-moon meal out.  I’m thinking of the ‘formule’ at midday,  when to a large extent you get what you’re given, in copious and well cooked quantities.  Take today, when we went to a fairly down-at-heel looking brasserie on a busy street corner at the wrong end of town.  Great salad, followed by tender tasty magret de canard and wonderfully creamy dauphinoise potatoes, a home made concoction of fromage blanc and crème chantilly, coffee, wine, all for 12 euros.  We shan’t be eating again today….

Shopping-centre-free-zone.  Bliss.  Also, though this has recently been partially undermined, almost no Sunday shopping.  AND shops usually close for between 2 and 4 hours at midday

Temperatures: Proper seasons here.  Summers are hot, winters cold.  Autumn, warm, is a time of glorious colour and food for free.  Spring, warm, is a treat for its flowers

Underwear.  If you want to be disabused of the notion that the French are chic, that haute couture rules, go to any market stall selling women’s undies.  Turquoise knickers, orange bras, lime green or luridly lavender matching sets…..  And while you’re there, check out those lovely pinafore dresses so beloved of French women of a certain age.  Wonder when I’ll be old enough to wear one?

The Tour de France whips down our street in 2008

Vélo .  Cycling’s big here.  Any cyclist, old or young, is kitted out in skin tight lycra, and may well own a bike costing several thousand euros.  There’s a cycling club here that meets on Wednesdays and Saturdays.  Its runs are routinely 120 km. or more (and it’s very hilly).  The wimps manage some 80 km., but only ‘les ancêtres’ can get away with a mere 40 km or so

A lucky find at a vide grenier?

Vide Greniers;   People here empty their attics instead of filling their car boots.  Any Sunday in spring, summer or autumn some commune or another nearby will have a Vide Grenier organized.  One of the larger streets, and probably a few more besides, will have been taken over by the sellers, who display their goods from early morning till supper time,.  It’s the same mixture as an English car boot sale, with the addition of all kinds of rusting tools and junk that really HAS come out of the attic.  Nobody will buy it.  It’ll just appear at the next sale

A walk with our group, near Tarascon

Walking: so many walks, so much variety.  We love learning about new places to explore from books, from maps, from talking to friends, from walking groups.  We’ll never run out of fresh walks to try, ever.

Wood-burning stoves:  So cosy, we really looked forward to November chill.  As for foraging for wood, see ‘en cas où ’, above

Xmas.  In early September, a friend over from the UK said that Christmas had already started in the shops. We’re happy to report that nothing at all will happen here until the first week of December at the earliest.  Wonderful.

You: Here, there’s the whole tricky business of ‘tu’ or ‘vous’, and it’s a minefield. Children and your friends are of course ‘tu’.  The shopkeeper, the bank manager and those adults you really don’t know, are obviously ‘vous’.  But there’s a whole grey area in between.  Fellow randonneurs and choir members generally settle for ‘tu’ from Day 1, on the grounds we’re all in this together.  But not necessarily.  Last year at Choir, I sat between 2 women, both more or less my age, both chatty and friendly.  To one I was routinely ‘tu’, to the other. ‘vous’. And I was supposed to pick the bones out of that??

Zero Neuf: 09, the Ariège, our department.  We love the space, the huge variety of scenery. There’s gently rolling countryside that wouldn’t be out of place in Shropshire with its orchards and winding lanes, oak and beech forests, gentle foothills with grey Gascon cattle, and stunning, awe-inspiring mountains with craggy outcrops and peaks.  And all within easy reach of our house.

A few minutes from our house...and this is the view

...and higher up, much nearer Spain, another view