jeudi 18 octobre 2007

So close to Swiss

The following pictures were taken during a MTB tour in the south of my parents house. Our village is 20 km far from the border outer switzerland.... And during a ride it's easy to cross the boundary at the checkpoints or not!!!! But in this part of Switzerland the main language is german or a swiss-german dialect... So I often don't understand the people after crossing the boundary!

On this map (I know google-map is my friend now!!!) you can see the village called Berentzwiller and have a look to the south and the south-east to see the Switzerland limits.


Agrandir le plan



This one was taken from the garden, and you can see my quiet neighbourhood... And our milk factory!


A typical track in the forest

Panorama taken from the top of the last French hill!!! The little village called Roggenburg is already in Switzerland....

Maybe the last french cow...

On the top of this last French hill we can find some bunkers which are the end of the Maginot line. They were built in the 30's in order to prevent France from a German invasion across the Rhin river, the Belgium and the Switzerland. But I'll tell you more about these constructions in another post.

An artillery observatory

A troup shelter

mardi 16 octobre 2007

My city; Strasbourg!!!!

For the nexts posts, I'll try to show the place where I was born and where I live at the present time; the city of Strabourg!!!!!
I'll order them from the oldiest places to the newest! But let me tell you a bit about its history.

The first known occupation of this place was in the year 12 BC when the Romans established a military outpost of their empire and named it Argentoratom. This settelment belonged to the Germania Superior Roman province. Following the fall of the Roman Empire, the town was known under the new name of Stratisburgum, and its political and economical influence started to grow . The town is located in the middle of the most important northen european trade roads.
From the 4th century the town was the seat of the archbishopric of Strasbourg. In the 5th century the town was occupied successively by Alemanni, Huns and Franks, and the french name of Strasbourg appeared in the 9th century. It became a part of the Holy Roman Empire in the 10th century, but the city was declared as an imperial free city exempted of tax in 1262 by the king after a battle led and won by the citizens. They broke free from the ruling bishops. After this event it became an asylum for many artists, free thinkers, reformists, and it helped the city to grow culturaly. But It made many profits on the duties levied on numerous commodities, so the city obtain further indepedance and power.
Around 1430 Johannes Gutemberg, the inventor of the printing press, moved in Strasbourg........ And a plaza has his name with his statue in the middle! The french hymn "La Marseillaise" was written and composed by CJ Rouget de Lisle in Strasbourg on April 1792... Funny isn't?
During the french revolution, Strasbourg lost its free city status, and the Jacobins revolutionary ruled the city. Its highest monument; the cathedrale was threatened of tearing its spire down, on the grounds that it hurt the principle of equality. The tower was saved, however, when citizens of Strasbourg proposed to crown it with a giant phrygian cap (the revolutionary cap). So at that time Strasbourg was a part of the french republic...
After the 1871 war between the German empire and Napoleon III it became part of the German empire. Many buildings and monuments of the city were destroyed after a six week siege. The city only returned to France shortly after World War I in 1918.
During the 30's the province was rebuilt and the Maginot Line against a possible invasion from Germany was built. World War II again caused mass destruction in the city and the aggressive occupation by the Germans shaped the city once more with its germanization policy. After the end of World War II Strasbourg regained its status as the crossroads of Europe when in 1949 it was chosen as the headquarters of the Council of Europe. Since 1979 it has been the seat of the 15-member European Parliament and the European Court of Human Rights since 1994.

Oufffff thanks Google & Wikipedia for some information.... Now with this "short" history you can have a small idea about my city and my province. We have both French and German roots and not just one of the both. Nowadays some Parisians still think that Alsace is in Germany... What have they learned at school???
There's a lot of traces and influences from all the different occupations. The Romans brought wine, Gutemberg the books, and all the others built lots of houses, churches, monuments,.....




Agrandir le plan


So let me show you some pictures taken in the center. You can see on each of them the cathedrale of Strasbourg which was the world's tallest building from 1625 to 1847 at 142 m.




From the Rue Mercière ("Sewing-related's street")


From the quai des bateliers (boatmen's quay)


Oups it's time to go for me.... Dinner time!!!!

vendredi 5 octobre 2007

A scholarship somewhere in the south....

Sorry I didn’t write any post during the last week.... I was in Villefranche, a village close to the city of Nice (south of France close to the italian border) for a training course focused on offshore seismic surveying... I was two days on the boat to see how an offshore survey works and I spent the others days in the oceanic observatory of Villefranche which is managed by the university of Paris. But I found some time to have a look around because Villefranche is an old harbour/port. It was an important place for the Sardaigne kingdom in the 14th century so the king decided to build an fortress to protect his ships, and it was also a sort of “penal colony”. So I couldn’t be in this place and don’t share this experience with you! So I took the following pictures in order to show you the old citadel (fortress) and some aspects of this beautiful place.


Panorama of the Villefranche harbour

On this picture you can see the bay and some buildings of Villefranche on the right. The red one was one of the palaces of the princes of Savoie. The jetty of the royal harbour is on the right in the background.

View of the old royal harbour of the Darse

This one was taken from the citadel. On the background, at the end of the jetty, there is the old jail, the naval dockyards and the forge. Now it’s a univerty laboratory... And our rooms were in the jail... But nowadays the atmosphere is really different in this place, and the cells are more confortable!!!!! No we weren’t whipped by our professor...

The construction of the citadel was finished in 1557,and restored in 1981. Since this date we can find 4 small museums there and the town hall.

The citadel from the end of the jetty

One of the bastion from the access bridge

The access bridge

The only access gate to the citadel

The town hall

A view of the harbour from one of the tower

One of the tower hidden by a bougainvillier (the plant with the violet flowers)

Who knows the mushroom!

I don’t know if it’s very usual in Autralia to search mushrooms for dinner... And I don’t know if the australian mushrooms are dangerous or not... In my family and with my friends we go often in the forest to find them from the end of the summer to the middle of the fall. If we’re lucky, we can find enough for one dinner and we freeze the rest.
Like my grand father did, I took a train on saturday morning in order to reach the Vosges mountain close to Strasbourg. 40 min after leaving Strasbourg the train stops in a little valley where we can find the good secret mushroom places “lost” in the forest!!!! The best time to find them is when there was some rain two days before and one sunny. Luckily we can find a lot of eatable species in Alsace but we need to be careful because some of them can be dangerous. We just took species we’d already eaten. We have found the following; girolle (yellow and really tasty, one of the best), chanterelle charbonnière (deep yellow foot and brown head,the shape is close to the girolle, and one of the bests too), chanterelle(deep yellow foot and brown head, and one of the bests too), pied de mouton (light to deep orange), and amethys (violet, but the taste is not very special)


Chanterelles


Girolle and some Amethys in the background

A mushroom hunter

BIIIIIG Girolle

One big Chanterelle Charbonnière and some Chanterelles

We were lucky because we found some big Girolle and the weather was dry the days before. and this slope was still wet enough because it’s in the shade the most part of the day. On the way we walked through some small typical villages and we found some bunkers from the first world war because the front was in these mountains where the border between France and Germany was.

The entry of a German bunker

A village called Wackenbach

The same village

The church from the 18th century




And enough mushrooms for a good dinner.....