Looking for Rock Dolls - Gorge du Tarn, France
“Just 10 minutes down the road”, he said, indicating walking time
with his fingers. He came back minutes
later and said, “Maybe 20”. Our waiter
was very helpful, always trying to please with a wan smile on his face but his
command of English was about as good as mine is of s the French tongue so sign language was
often employed.
“Just follow the river”, he managed to blurt out. Excellent I thought, the chateau I sought was
just down the road.
Next morning, with my adrenalin rushing out of control, I stepped out
into yet another crap day. There are
only two kinds of weather in France, raining or windy.....actually, make that
three, sometimes it’s windy and raining.
Today was such a day.
I walked past the car a short distance and thought I might go part of
the way with it so I returned and drove.
Drove a surprising distance until I got to a dirt, sorry, mud, carpark
and pulled up.
There was a sign I’d dreamt of indicating Roquedols, the reported
ruin of a chateau that I wanted to see.
I looked down the road at a farm house, obviously not it, and turned
onto the trail that led uphill, steeply uphill until I came to yet another
carpark with a Roquedols sign and a road with a gateway that was open. I headed off, light of foot, checking the
time.
In addition to our waiter, I’d also read somewhere that it was 40
minutes and had a picture in my mind of a zig-zag road up a hill. This must be it; so I splashed on my way
until I had to ford a stream that was running across the roadway. I was well over 10 minutes by now and carried
on in the misty rain; carried on for another half hour, frightening some local
deer before I finally reached the conclusion that maybe this wasn’t it after
all.
So I turned around, disconsolate at not having achieved my goal. Two thirds of the way back I stepped off onto
a narrow well worn side path that I thought might offer a photo opportunity or
two. I had walked but a few hundred
metres when there, almost hidden by the shroud of dampness, was the
chateau. It transpired that the “farm
house” I’d seen earlier was an outhouse of the chateau and I had parked,
unknowingly, just 300 metres from the front gate!
After breakfast I took the girls there before we climbed the road to
Dargilan, a highly rated cave system not far from Meyrueis. Quite apart from what turned out to be a
memorable limestone cave taking nearly 90 minutes to tour, the view from the
site was also yet another fabulous vista down the Jonte Gorge.
Across the canyon was a mysterious ruin set beside a cave at the base
of a sheer cliff. We imagined someone
living there staying awake all night waiting for rocks to fall; extraordinary.
Then it was off to Peyreleau, quite the cleanest and well maintained
village I’d seen in all of France. Every
dwelling was spick and span and I took much joy wandering the narrow lanes that
seemingly wanted to try all directions in a random manner; no doubt dictated by
the solid rock they were built on.
Then it was time to drop Cheryl off on the train that looked
remarkably like a bus and went on the road.
Apparently the service to Montpellier isn’t that well patronized out of
Millau so they've substituted a coach.
Perhaps not surprisingly, no sooner had we waved goodbye than the
weather started to improve. In fact it
turned into the best afternoon all trip.
Cloud breaking up, big patches of blue, it was almost like spring. Shame it had taken three weeks to
happen. I knew we shouldn’t have had a
Victorian along for the trip, they always bring their weather with them.
We drove home back along the Dourbie Gorge. All gorges are named after the river that cut
them and they all flow into the Tarn making the system one of the most dramatic
on the planet.
The Dourbie was no exception and we never tired of seeing stunningly
sited villages perched on cliffs or against sheer rock faces or raging rivers
beneath us. The prize winner though was
a house built, literally, on the riverside.
It even has its own place name, Le Moulin de Corp. We stood on an ancient stone bridge beside it
(you have to walk through their backyard to get to the bridge) and marvelled at
the volume of water constantly rushing past the foundation brickwork. Still can’t work out how they waterproof it.
Labels: Dargilan, Dourbie Gorge, France, Gorge du Tarn, Gorges du Tarn, Jonte Gorge, Le Moulin de Corp, Meyruis, Millau, Peyreleau, rivers, Roquedols
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