Saturday, May 31, 2025

A Soggy Walk Along the Delaware & Raritan Canal State Park

 



Meant to publish this before my recent trip, but never quite got around to it.

So here it is now:




Been meaning to do something about posting regarding my walks along the Delaware & Raritan Canal State Park.

It will have to wait until I get back, however.

Still, it was extremely rainy and cold a few days ago when I went. It was very green, and there were some incredible flowers which really looked like they stood out. All of it seemed worth sharing some pictures, so here they are:














Book Review: Slaughterhouse-Five Graphic Novel

 




Yes, another Vonnegut book.

Well...sort of.

This one appealed to me because it takes a well-known work of his - indeed, his most iconic book, actually - and presents it in a very different format.  A graphic novel.

And I have to say, it is fitting. It seems to me, as I think about it, that Vonnegut's works, and his overall weirdness, lends itself quite nicely to such a different format. Especially a novel as strange and unorthodox as Slaughterhouse-Five.

That said, don't get me wrong. I am glad, in fact, that I read the novel first, and got familiar with that a long, long time ago, and with rereads.

Still, it had been a while since I had last reread that particular Vonnegut work. And so reading this particular version was beneficial on two levels. Firstly, it got me reacclimated with the story, and it admittedly surprised me how much of it I had forgotten. Guess that it had been longer since the last time that I reread Slaughterhouse-Five than I had previously believed.

Secondly, and most importantly, it allowed me, as a fan of Vonnegut, to appreciate a whole new style and approach to this classic work. And again, the graphic novel (comic) format does indeed lend itself well to Vonnegut's style, which itself is a bit strange and off normal.

Now, I figured that this was not the place to recap this story. Think that I have reviewed the novel version here before. And in any case, even if I have not, this made me want to open that book up once again and give it another read.

Yet, this stands well on it's own. Really, it is a unique approach to this work, and actually being able to see visuals while familiarizing myself again with this story was a...pardon my saying this...novel approach. 

That was particularly true of the book's central event, which of course was the infamous firebombing of Dresden, which Vonnegut pointed out became the biggest single overnight massacre of a whole population in European history. And that's saying something.

If, like me, you are a fan of Vonnegut's works, or if you just want to familiarize yourself with this most famous Vonnegut work in particular, this is a good one to pick up/ It's a quick read. I deliberately took my time, wanting to really enjoy this. That said, it felt to me that if you really want to, you could probably finish this from cover to cover in one sitting.

Highly recommended!



A Close Encounter With a Citroën DS in Paris




During my recent visit to Paris, I managed to get up close and personal to a Citroën DS. It was parked in front of what sure seemed like an exclusive hotel, or some building. 

That this hotel would be truly exclusive, and obviously quite pricey, was not all that surprising. After all, this was located right at the Place de la Concorde, which is kind of one of the ritzier spots in all of Paris. It is the largest square in Paris, placed in between the beginning of the Champs-Elysées and the Tuileries Gardens, which lead to the Louvre Museum. The Seine is not far away, and neither are some major sites, including the Madeleine and the Palais Bourbon, which now houses the Assemblée Nationale. From this spot, you can see the Marly Horses, the Eiffel Tower, and the Arc de Triomphe.

So yeah, this is where you might find some of the most obvious largesse in the French capital. Not surprising, then, that this is a spot where you might find some exclusive cars. There were hot and expensive sports cars parked nearby, although these were admittedly of significantly less interest for me than this particular car. 

There was a time when you could see the Citroën DS on the roadways often in France. In fact, I can remember seeing quite a few of them back during our visits back in the 1980's. So these cars bring back some personal memories of times in France, as well. 

This one was parked by the main entrance. There were security guards and chauffeurs of other expensive cars standing around (you can see some of them in these pictures. They looked at me curiously while I took pictures, although before long, other people joined me in taking pictures of this particular car. It was the first real close-up picture of this particular model which I can remember ever taking. 

Below are the pictures.

Enjoy.









May 31st: This Day in History

 



Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!



Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!

This day in history was particularly important in southern Africa. The HMS Beagle, with Charles Darwin inside of it, anchored by the Cape of Good Hope. The doomed Conference of Bloemfontein was on this day, and a year later, the British occupied Johannesburg on this date. The Boer War ended on this date, and South Africa  The Union of South Africa was proclaimed, and the Cape of Good Hope became part of South Africa. Much later in the century, South Africa signed an agricultural treaty with the Netherlands. Later still, it became a republic, and withdrew from the British Commonwealth on this date. Zimbabwe declared it's independence. The civil war in Angola ended. A busy day in history for southern Africa indeed.

Other interesting things that happened on this date: Rameses II became Pharaoh of Egypt. Rome captured walls of Jerusalem. Massachusetts annexed Maine. Big Ben went into operation in London. There was a treaty between Hawaii and the United States. American troops entered China to help put down the Boxer Rebellion. The Titanic was launched. Babe Ruth had a disappointing last at bat. British Prime Minister Churchill flew to France to meet with Petain and, two decades later, American President John F. Kennedy went to France to meet with Charles de Gaulle. Eichmann's sentence of hanging was executed in Israel. An earthquake in Peru killed over 50,000 people. Guatemala approved a new constitution.


http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/big-ben-goes-into-operation-in-london

May 31, 1859: Big Ben goes into operation in London

The famous tower clock known as Big Ben, located at the top of the 320-foot-high St. Stephen's Tower, rings out over the Houses of Parliament in Westminster, London, for the first time on this day in 1859.

After a fire destroyed much of the Palace of Westminster--the headquarters of the British Parliament--in October 1834, a standout feature of the design for the new palace was a large clock atop a tower. The royal astronomer, Sir George Airy, wanted the clock to have pinpoint accuracy, including twice-a-day checks with the Royal Greenwich Observatory. While many clockmakers dismissed this goal as impossible, Airy counted on the help of Edmund Beckett Denison, a formidable barrister known for his expertise in horology, or the science of measuring time.

Denison's design, built by the company E.J. Dent & Co., was completed in 1854; five years later, St. Stephen's Tower itself was finished. Weighing in at more than 13 tons, its massive bell was dragged to the tower through the streets of London by a team of 16 horses, to the cheers of onlookers. Once it was installed, Big Ben struck its first chimes on May 31, 1859. Just two months later, however, the heavy striker designed by Denison cracked the bell. Three more years passed before a lighter hammer was added and the clock went into service again. The bell was rotated so that the hammer would strike another surface, but the crack was never repaired.

The name "Big Ben" originally just applied to the bell but later came to refer to the clock itself. Two main stories exist about how Big Ben got its name. Many claim it was named after the famously long-winded Sir Benjamin Hall, the London commissioner of works at the time it was built. Another famous story argues that the bell was named for the popular heavyweight boxer Benjamin Caunt, because it was the largest of its kind. 

Even after an incendiary bomb destroyed the chamber of the House of Commons during the Second World War, St. Stephen's Tower survived, and Big Ben continued to function. Its famously accurate timekeeping is regulated by a stack of coins placed on the clock's huge pendulum, ensuring a steady movement of the clock hands at all times. At night, all four of the clock’s faces, each one 23 feet across, are illuminated. A light above Big Ben is also lit to let the public know when Parliament is in session.


1279 BC - Rameses II (The Great) (19th dynasty) becomes pharaoh of Ancient Egypt.

70 - Rome captures 1st wall of the city of Jerusalem

1223 - Mongol invasion of the Cumans: Battle of the Kalka River - Mongol armies of Genghis Khan lead by Subutai defeat Kievan Rus and Cumans.

1417 - Jacoba van Bavarian becomes countess of Holland/Zealand/Henegouwen

1433 - Sigismund was crowned Holy Roman Emperor (Germany)

1495 - Emperor Maximilian, Pope Alexander VI, Milan, King Ferdinand, Isabella and Venice sign anti-French Saint League

1531 - "Women's Revolt" in Amsterdam: wool house in churchyard aborted

1564 - Battle on Gotland: Lubeck and Denmark beat Sweden

1578 - Martin Frobisher sails from Harwich, England to Frobisher Bay, Canada, eventually to mine fool's gold, used to pave streets in London.



The Tower of London

1621 - Sir Francis Bacon thrown into Tower of London for 1 night



1634 - US colony Massachusetts Bay annexed Maine colony

1659 - Netherlands, England and France sign Treaty of The Hague

1665 - Jerusalem's rabbi Sjabtai Tswi proclaims himself Messiah

1669 - Citing poor eyesight, Samuel Pepys records the last event in his diary.

1696 - John Salomonsz elected chief of Saint-Eustatius

1727 - France, England and Netherlands sign accord of Paris

1744 - French troops conquer Kortrijk

1759 - The Province of Pennsylvania bans all theater productions.

1790 - The first U.S. Copyright Law was enacted, protecting books, maps, and other original materials.

1790 - Alferez Manuel Quimper explores the Strait of Juan de Fuca.




Flag of Australia

1813 - In Australia, Lawson, Blaxland and Wentworth, reached Mount Blaxland, effectively marking the end of a route across the Blue Mountains.

1821 - Cathedral of Assumption of Blessed Virgin Mary, first US Catholic cathedral, is dedicated in Baltimore



British Botanist Charles Darwin

1836 - HMS Beagle anchors in Simons Bay, Cape of Good Hope

1837 - Astor Hotel opens in NYC, it later becomes the Waldorf-Astoria

1847 - Rotterdam-Hague Railway opens

1849 - Last edition of Orange sheet "Journal de La Haye"

1853 - Elisha Kane's Arctic expedition leaves NY aboard Advance

1854 - The Kansas-Nebraska Act passed by the U.S. Congress.

1859 - The Philadelphia Athletics were formally organized to play the game of "Town Ball", which would eventually become baseball some twenty years down the line..




The tower where the Big Ben is housed, right next to the Parliament in London, United Kingdom


1859 - In London, Big Ben went into operation. The name Big Ben initially referred to the bell inside the tower but later came to refer to the tower.



1861 - Gen Beauregard is given command of Confederate Alexandria Line

1861 - Mint at New Orleans closes

1862 - Battle of Seven Pines VA (Fair Oaks)

1864 - Raid at Morgan's Kentucky

1868 - First Memorial Day parade held in Ironton, Ohio

1868 - Dr James Moore (UK) wins 1st recorded bicycle race, (2k) velocipede race at Parc fde St Cloud, Paris

1870 - Congress passes 1st Enforcement Act (rights of blacks)

1870 - E.J. DeSemdt patented asphalt.

1875 - Reciprocity Treaty between US and Hawaii ratified

1878 - German battleship Grosser Kurfurst sinks, 284 killed

1878 - US Congress accept decrease in dollar circulation

1879 - 1st electric railway opens at Berlin Trades Exposition

1879 - New York's Madison Square Garden opened.

1880 - The first U.S. national bicycle society was formed in Newport, RI. It was known as the League of American Wheelman.

1883 - French fleet under Pierre begins siege of Tamatave, Madagascar

1884 - Dr John Harvey Kellogg patented "flaked cereal"

1889 - Johnstown Flood: 2,209 die in Penn after heavy rains caused the South Fork Dam to collapse, sending 20 million tons of water into Johnstown, Pa. The town was nearly destroyed.

1891 - Work on trans-Siberian railway begins

1893 - Whitcomb Judson, Chicago, patents a hookless fastening (zipper)

1899 - -June 5] Conference of Bloemfontein fails

1899 - Bronx acquires Keltch Memorial Park

1900 - British troops under Lord Roberts occupy Johannesburg

1900 - U.S. troops arrived in Peking to help put down the Boxer Rebellion.

1900 - Piet de Law captures Lt-Col Spragges Irish Yeomanry

1900 - Tom Hayward scores 1,000th cricket run of season (sets record 1074)

1902 - Australia Cricket all out 36 v England, Edgbaston, their lowest ever



The Voortrekker Monument in Pretoria, South Africa.

1902 - The Boer War ended between the Boers of South Africa and Great Britain with the Treaty of Vereeniging. The Treaty of Unity signed, Britain annexes Transvaal





1905 - Emperor Wilhelm II lands in Tanger

1906 - Attack on King Alfonso XIII & Victoria von Battenberg in Madrid

1907 - The first taxis arrived in New York City. They were the first in the United States.

1908 - Miss Pottelsberghe de la Pottery is 1st airplane passenger (Belgium)

1909 - The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) held its first conference (United Charities Building, NYC)




This was a picture (which I have since cropped) of the new South Africa flag of the post-apartheid era. I actually took this one at the apartheid museum, as this was the final display, if you will, of the museum, the symbol of the emergence of a "new South Africa."

1910 - The Union of South Africa was founded. Cape of Good Hope becomes part of Union of South Africa



1910 - Glenn Curtiss flies from Albany to NYC




1910 - Union of South Africa declares independence from UK




1911 The hull of the R.M.S. Titanic was launched in Belfast. At the ceremony, a White Star Line employee claimed, “Not even God himself could sink this ship.”

1912 - US marines land on Cuba

1913 - Alexis Ahlgren runs world record maraton (2:36:06.6)

1913 - The 17th Amendment went into effect. It provided for popular election of U.S. senators.

1914 - Chic White Sox Joe Benz no-hits Cleve Indians, 6-1

1915 - A German LZ-38 Zeppelin makes an air raid on London

1916 - Battle of Skagerrak: Brit-German sea battle at Jutland (10,000 dead)

1916 - British battle cruiser Invincible explodes, killing all but 6

1917 - 1st jazz record released (Dark Town Strutters Ball)

1919 - NC-4 aircraft commanded by AC Read completes 1st crossing of Atlantic

1921 - Suffy McInnis (1st base) begins an errorless string of 1,700

1923 - China and USSR exchange diplomats

1926 - Portuguese president Bernardino Machedo resigns after coup

1926 - Sesquicentennial Exposition opens in Philadelphia

1927 - Ford Motor Company produced the last "Tin Lizzie" in order to begin production of the Model A.

1927 - Tiger 1st baseman Johnny Neun makes an unassisted triple play

1928 - 1st aerial cross of Pacific takes off from Oakland

1928 - Charlie Hallows scores his 1,000th run of Cricket season

1929 - Atlantic City Convention Center opens

1929 - In Beverly, MA, the first U.S. born reindeer were born.

1930 - Bradman gets his 1,000th run of the English Cricket season

1930 - Building begins on Albert Canal in Belgium

1930 - Comet 73P/1930 (Schwassmann-Wachmann 3) approaches 0.0617 AUs of Earth

1931 - 7.1 magnitude Earthquake destroys Quetta in modern-day Pakistan: 40,000 dead.

1935 - Babe Ruth grounds out in his final at bat

1935 - Quake kills 50,000 in Quetta Pakistan

1937 - 1st quadruplets to finish college (Baylor University)

1937 - Bkln Dodgers snap NY Giant Carl Hubbell's 24-game winning streak

1937 - German battleships bomb Almeria Spain

1938 - Bill Edrich scores his 1,000th run of cricket season, all at Lord's

1940 - Gen-major Bernard Montgomery leaves Duinkerken


Statue of soldier, author and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in Parliament Square, London

1940 - Premier Winston Churchill flies to Paris to meet with Marshal August Pétain who announces he is willing to make a separate peace with Germany




1941 - -June 1) 32.0 cm rain falls on Burlington Kansas (state record)

1941 - The first issue of "Parade: The Weekly Picture Newspaper" went on sale.

1941 - 41 U boats sunk this month (325,000 ton)

1941 - British troops vacate Kreta

1941 - German occupiers forbids Jews access to beach and swimming pools


1941 - A Luftwaffe air raid in Dublin, Ireland claims 38 lives.



1942 - Luftwaffe bombs Canterbury

1943 - "Archie" (best known for comic strip) was aired on the Mutual Broadcasting System for the first time.

1943 - Cards Mort Cooper pitches 1st of back-to-back one-hitters

1944 - Allied breakthrough in Italy

1947 - 79th Belmont: Ruperto Donoso aboard Phalanx wins in 2:29.6

1947 - Communists seized control of Hungary.

1947 - Eastern DC-4 crashes between Ft Deposit & Perryville Md, kills 53

1947 - Italian government of Gasperi forms

1948 - Tommy Lasorda strikes out 25 Amsterdam Rugmakers (in 15 innings)

1949 - Charley Lupica begins stay on 4 foot square platform atop a 60' pole, vowing to stay until Indians clinch pennant. (They don't, and stays 117 days)

1950 - Due to rain, Indy 500 shortened to 345 miles, Johnny Parson wins

1950 - Laker takes 14-12-2-8 in Test Cricket trial




1951 - Neth and; South Africa sign cultural accord

1953 - Lebanese president Camille Shamun disbands government

1953 - WSUN TV channel 38 in St Petersburg-Tampa, FL (IND) 1st broadcast

1955 - Construction begins on Soviet cosmodrome launch facilities

1955 - Great Britain proclaims emergency crisis due to railroad strike

1955 - The U.S. Supreme Court ordered that all states must end racial segregation "with all deliberate speed."


1956 - Mickey Mantle HR just misses clearing Yankee Stadium's roof

1957 - Great Britain performs nuclear test at Christmas Island (atmospheric)

1958 - Dick Dale invents "surf music" with "Let's Go Trippin"

1958 - US performs nuclear test at Bikini Island (atmospheric tests)

1961 - Benfica wins 6th Europe Cup 1 at Bern

1961 - Chuck Berry's amusement park, Berryland in St Louis, opens








French President Charles De Gaulle

1961 - JFK visits Charles de Gaulle in Paris




1961 - Judge Irving Kaufman orders Board of Ed of New Rochelle, to integrate





Flag of South Africa during the apartheid era


1961 - Union of South Africa becomes a republic, leaves Commonwealth




1962 - Adolf Eichmann was hanged in Israel. Eichmann had been a Gestapo official and was executed for his actions in the Nazi Holocaust.

1962 - "Tell It To Groucho" last airs on CBS-TV

1962 - The West Indies Federation dissolves.

1964 - Charles Schmid kills first Pied Piper victim

1964 - SF Giants beat NY Mets, 8-6, in 23 innings (2nd game) (7 hrs 32 mins)

1965 - Jim Clark becomes 1st foreigner in 49 years to win Indy

1967 - Bayern Munchen wins 7th Europe Cup II at Neurenberg

1969 - "Dear World" closes at Mark Hellinger Theater NYC after 132 perfs

1969 - "Gitarzan" by Ray Stevens peaks at #8

1969 - John Lennon and Yoko Ono record "Give Peace a Chance"

1969 - Stevie Wonder releases "My Cherie Amore"

1970 - An earthquake in Peru left more than 50,000 dead. At 03:23 PM, Yungay Peru levelled by 7.75 earthquake (50-70,000 die)

1970 - KDUB TV channel 40 in Dubuque, IA (ABC) begins broadcasting

1971 - WDXR (now WKPD) TV channel 29 in Paducah, KY (PBS) begins broadcasting

1972 - Ajax wins Europe Cup 1 in Rotterdam

1973 - Glenn Turner scores his 1,000th cricket run of English season

1974 - Israel and Syria sign an agreement concerning Golan Heights

1974 - USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR

1975 - "Goodtime Charley" closes at Palace Theater NYC after 104 performances

1975 - Fred Newman makes 12,874 baskets in a one-day exhibition

1976 - Loudest PA (76 KW) for Who's Quadrophenia in London

1977 - "Beatlemania" opens at Winter Garden Theater NYC for 920 performances

1977 - Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani becomes heir apparent to throne of Qatar

1977 - The trans-Alaska oil pipeline was finished after 3 years of construction.

1979 - "I Remember Mama" opens at Majestic Theater NYC for 108 performances

1979 - Radio City Music Hall (NYC) reopens


Flag of Zimbabwe


1979 - Zimbabwe proclaims independence




1980 - "Love Stinks" by J Geils Band peaks at #38

1980 - Police and youthful rebels battle in Zurich

1982 - "Best Little Whorehouse in Tx" opens at Eugene O'Neill NYC for 63 perf

1983 - 37th NBA Championship: Phila 76ers sweep LA Lakers in 4 games

1984 - 57th National Spelling Bee: Daniel Greenblatt wins spelling luge

1984 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site

1984 - Viv Richards hits 189* (170 balls) v England, ODI cricket record

1985 - 41 tornadoes hit Northeast US, killing 88

1985 - Guatemala adopts constitution

1985 - New Orleans Saints are sold for $70,204,000

1985 - Tornados in Penn, Ohio, NY and Canada kill 88 and injured more than 1,000

1985 - 1985 United States-Canadian tornado outbreak: Forty-one tornadoes hit Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, and Ontario, leaving 76 dead.

1985 - Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) became a Schedule I drug in the United States.

1987 - Cindy Rarick wins LPGA Corning Golf Classic

1987 - Saul Ballesteros drives 3 golf balls off Mt McKinley, Alaska

1987 - Stanley Cup: Edmonton Oilers beat Phila Flyers, 4 games to 3

1989 - "Rambling with Gambling" 20,000th radio program on WOR-AM (NYC)

1989 - First International Rock Awards

1989 - First presentation of rock n roll Elvis awards

1989 - Speaker of House Jim Wright resigns

1990 - 63rd National Spelling Bee: Amy Marie Dimak wins spelling fibranne

1990 - BPAA US Women's Bowling Open won by Dana Miller-Mackie

1990 - NYC's Zodiac killer shoots 3rd victim, Joseph Ponce

1990 - Seinfeld starring Jerry Seinfeld, debuts on NBC as Seinfeld Chronicles

1991 - Sides in Angola sign a treaty ending 16 year civil war

1992 - 46th Tony Awards: Dancing at Lughnasa & Crazy For You win

1992 - 5th Children's Miracle Network Telethon raises $1,060,000

1993 - President Dobrica Cosic of little Yugoslavia flees

1994 - Padres scores 13 in 2nd vs Pirates

1994 - The U.S. announced it was no longer aiming long-range nuclear missiles at targets in the former Soviet Union.

1995 - Bob Dole singled out Time Warner for "the marketing of evil" in movies and music. Dole later admitted that he had not seen or heard much of what he had been criticizing.


1996 - Mark Van Thillo and Abigail Alling, former biospherian win $100,000 lawsuit against Biospheric Development for Space Biospheres Ventures

1997 - "Once Upon a Matress," closes at Broadhurst Theater NYC after 187 perf 1997 - Donovan Bailey beats Michael Johnson in 150m race

1997 - The Confederation Bridge opens, linking Prince Edward Island with mainland New Brunswick.

2002 - The New Jersey Nets defeat the Boston Celtics 96-88 in Game 6 of the NBA's Eastern Conference Championship, winning the series 4 games to 2 to advance to their first NBA Finals appearance.

2003 - In North Carolina, Eric Robert Rudolph was captured. He had been on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted list for five years for several bombings including the 1996 Olympic bombing.

2004 - Alberta Martin, 97, one of the last widows of a U.S. Civil War veteran, died. She had married Confederate veteran William Martin in 1927 when she was 21 and he was 81.


2008 - Usain Bolt breaks the world record in the 100m sprint, with a wind-legal (+1.7m/s) 9.72 seconds.

2010 - Nine people are dead after an Israeli navy commando attacks a flotilla of cargo ships and passenger boats on their way to Gaza to provide aid and supplies for the area.  Shayetet 13 soldiers tried to stop the flotilla that wanted to break the blockade on Gaza Strip. During the boarding on the MV Mavi Marmara ship, a violent confrontation had started. It caused the death of 9 activists who were on board, and several more injured activists. Moreover, several israeli soldiers were injured.



2012 - Egypt formally ends its 31 year state of emergency



The following links are to web sites that were used to complete this blog entry:

http://www.historyorb.com/today/events.php

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/may31.htm

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory

Friday, May 30, 2025

The Other Picture of a Renault 5 (Le Car) in Leffond

Yesterday, I posted something about a Renault 5, having spotted one during my recent visit to Marly-le-Roi. 

Somewhere in that post, I had mentioned that I had seen some others, and even managed to take a picture of another. That one was in the rural village of Leffond, which is technically a part of the bigger town of Champlitte. 

I had almost passed it when I noticed it, but decided to come back and take pictures of it. That wound up being a mistake, because once I actually came back, there were people around, including the man whom I assume is the owner of the property. That made it awkward, and so I was kind of forced to take a picture without the luxury of taking my time and focusing.

Still, under the circumstances, the picture came out better than it probably should have. The guy is actually visible in the picture. He can be seen, interrupted in the work he had been engaged in, and looking in my direction. Guess that it was a little bizarre that a complete stranger in a car no one in town had ever seen before would be driving slowly by and pointing the phone camera in their direction, clearly taking pictures.

Nothing to see here, right?

Anyway, here is the one (and only) picture of that other Renault 5, although it is admittedly at an unusual angle. It looked a lot more immediately identifiable when I was right in front of it, as those Renault 5's tend to have an instantly recognizable look to them, don't they?

So here it is, imperfect though it may be, admittedly.

Enjoy.




A Little Bit More About My Recent Visit to Montréal in Bourgogne (Burgundy), France



Okay, so I know that I posted something already about the recent (surprise) visit to the town of Montréal in the Yonne district of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, France. Obviously, it happens to share the same name of the more famous, and slightly larger, largely Francophone city of Montréal across the pond in North America. Just that alone was enough to pique my interest once I actually heard about this town, and saw some pictures.

Admittedly, it never occurred to me that I might be able to pay this charming little village a visit on this particular trip. As it turns out, I was very fortunate. It felt almost like a happy accident, really. Having just pulled away from my cousin's frankly very isolated town (she lives in a hamlet of a larger town, which itself is quite small and isolated), I had to do a doubletake when I thought I saw the name of a village on a sign on the side of the roadway which I was driving along.

Surely that had not read Montréal, right?

Truth be told, I was quite sure that there must have been a mistake. My eyes were playing tricks on me. Besides, I was on a schedule. Needed to get back in the Paris area soon, and of course I had to return the car by 2:00 PM at Charles De Gaulle Airport. So I would not stop and reverse to see if I had indeed seen that name correctly, figuring that if it was actually that town, I would see more signs along the way.

Well, I went ahead. Sure enough, there was another sign. This time, I slowed down enough to see that there could be no mistake this time. Indeed, it seemed like I was heading right in the direction of the village of Montréal. The sign (which I took a picture of) indicated that it was 11 kilometers away (the first sign had suggested that it was 18 kilometers away). 

Being that close to a town that I had long wanted to visit decided it for me. Even if it took me out of the way - which as it turns out, it did not, because the route that the GPS was taking me went right through it - I was determined to stop and pay at least a short visit to this town.

As it turns out, my visit lasted quite a bit longer than merely a short visit. I kept walking, kept taking more pictures. Soon, I largely forgot about this town's appeal regarding the name, because the town itself was appealing just to be in and look at. There was beautiful architecture and historical landmarks seemingly at every turn.

However, since the internet access at the last hotel (the Hôtel du Roussillon, near the Place d'Italie) in Paris that I stayed at right towards the end of this last trip to Europe, the internet was spotty at best. It seemed that uploading pictures was too much. It took far too long, and seemed to interrupt internet access consistently. So that forced me to keep the pictures here on this blog to a bare minimum.   

Now I am back in Hillsborough. Feeling nostalgic already for France, and Europe more generally, even though (technically), I was only there yesterday.  

So it seemed to me that the top priority should be to post pictures of this Montréal. Partly, because it was such a (pleasant) surprise. Also, however, the town proved to be quite appealing and attractive, as were a number of towns which I visited in Bourgogne (Burgundy).

As it turns out, this town dates back to the 12th century. Understandably, then, it has a distinctive medieval charm to it.

There are old gates, and the architecture has that old feel to it, as well. There are cobblestone roads, and there are the remnants of walls. The church, which is called Notre-Dame-de-l'Assomption, and also known as the Collégiale de Montréal, also proved to be quite picturesque.

All in all, a town which I was very pleased to have visited, for several reasons.

And now, here is the chance to publish the pictures which I never quite got to the first time around. So even though I just posted something about this town (just a few days ago, in fact), it still seemed like something which I really should post about far more extensively. This time, including many of the pictures which I never quite got around to the first time, because I couldn't.

Here are those pictures.

Enjoy.



***Side Note: After some brief research, I learned that there are, in fact, two towns in France that go by the name of Montréal. This one is, of course, one of them. Then there is another one, which sure enough, is in southern France.