Life in a French Village

                               

Postcards from a French Village by Corey Amaro

                              

   Walking along the streets in the neighboring Provencal village, I was happily surprised to find an olive tree surrounded by pansies. The pink facade added a prefect touch.

 

 

Postcards from a French Village by Corey Amaro

 

 

 Midday and the shutter is half closed. Shutters in Frnace speak a language all their own.

 

Almond Green or "Amande Verte" is a popular color for shutters in Provence.

 

 

Provencal Green Water Jug

 

A classic 1800s Provencal water jug. These were carried out to the well then wrapped with a large wet dish towel "tourchon" to insulate the water jug keeping the water cool.

 

A piece of glazed pottery ….  over an hundred years old and intact, usable, practical … antiques are recycling at its finest.

 

 

 

 

Postcards from a French Village by Corey Amaro

                                

 

The hike up to the clock tower gave me this perspective.

Tiled roof tops called "Tuiles."

 

 

 

Postcards from a French Village by Corey Amaro

 

 

                                 …"ERIE" is on the end of many French words. This one has me stumped. And as soon as someone says what it means, I am going to say, "Oh Course!"

A facade with the old advertisement painted on it. Shopkeepers often had their business on the bottom and their living quarters in back or in an apartment above.

 

 

Postcards from a French Village by Corey Amaro

                               

  Up above the city, looking out from one church tower to another.

 

 

 

Garlaban

 

 

 

The foothills of Provence. Garlaban in the distance.

Marcel Pagnol  wrote stories of his childhood memories of these foothills.

Stories that echo the same sentiments, weave the same scenerios of family, life in a small town and living in Provence… Where Pastis, boules, and the blue sky pave a road ahead.

 

 

                                

Vin

 

 

I wanted to ask the man above if he sold wine. But then thought, he might think I was flirting and ask me up. As I walked away, I thought I should have asked.

 

 

 

 

Clock tower

 

 

 

Looking up at the stone clock tower with a clock face that I would love to hang in my house.

Can you imagine waking up to that chime!

 

 

                                

Side street

 

 

The  facade next to the town hall, called "Hotel de Ville".

 

 

                                

Olive jugs as planters

 

 

The massive, century old, olive pot, now used as a plant holder.

 

 

                                

French facade

 

I love the old facades, I love how the paint is peeling, and the old sign peers out. I love how things are left as is, given history a chance to show its face. I love how France has the "look" without trying. I love how the look has lived, weathered, become, and is. I love the roots it lets me feel, how it shows me a soul.

 

 

_Fountain-France

 

The sounds of running water from natural sources, not pumped in water. Fountains that speak. Fountains that people have gathered around and measured the seasons of their lives by….

Running water a source of daily life we taken for granted.

http://www.franceonyourown.com/AmaroVillagePhoto.jpg

 

Provencal-santon

 

Old streets were I imagine life being lived.

Were Santons Nativity characters are believable.

 

 

 

https://www.frenchlavie.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/6a00d83451cb9a69e20120a8a2ac34970b-300wi.jpg

 

Imagine these on your key chain. Yes, iron keys like these, that open many a front door in France.

 

 

 

Doorway France

 

 

Yet another thing I love, keys, locks and doors that don't change with the mood.

 

 

 

French-Pottery

 

Just alittle tour and some of my thoughts as I walk around the neighboring village.

What do you love best about where you live?

 

 



Comments

35 responses to “Life in a French Village”

  1. Perhaps the sign on the building is “cremerie”? Love the pictures. Almost like being there. Almost….

  2. I love the area where we live in Southern Cailifornia…the hills, the nearby vineyards, the trees. The afternoon breeze we can expect around 2pm each day, that blows inward from the ocean, keeping our air so very clean.

  3. C, your words & pictures feed that desire to visit those small villages of the south – but, next week I am going south USA to Charleston. My daughter dreams of going to college there. I remember reading your posts about Charleston, and plan to take my camera to capture as much as I can.

  4. Cremerie.. yep.. I love your photos and the journey they took us on! enchanting.. lovely. peaceful.. xo marlis

  5. I love the quaintness of my New England town. It is rich with American history. Right now the trees are yellow, red, orange and gold and the sky is crystal blue. The geese are honking as they fly south overhead and soon the smell of woodstoves will be in the crisp air.

  6. After years of knocking down historic buildings and ripping up old brick streets, the town I live in has finally come to some of its senses. It’s created a great park with an amphitheater/stage for performances recently, and it began a sculpture walk this year. The sculptures will change each year.
    But I still can’t get more people to come to my concerts. They’d rather go to the civic center and see Larry the Cable Guy….

  7. (See? See why I want to move to France for the sake of art/spirituality/inspiration/writing???)

  8. Brother Mathew

    Enjoyed your post and your village. Hope you can make it back to our village soon.

  9. Beautiful! My very favorite sites around here are seeing the ferries out on the Sound on a sunny day or walking to work and seeing the Olympic Mountains with a bit of snow on them (but no snow here).

  10. Yes I think like Susan it is ‘Cremerie’ over an earlier sign that said ‘Boulangerie

  11. Marie-Noëlle

    Thank you for this walk round your village !
    Just like Marlis and Susan, I think “your” word is “CREMERIE” even though the first 2 letters can’t be read as easily as the others. Maybe because the “crèmerie” replaced another shop and the older letters mixed up with the new ones…
    The other sign advertizes : “câpres… conserves”
    I love all your pictures but I am fond of your fountains !
    What I like best where I live : The river running at the back of our garden, the geese, the ducks, the swans that swim along, and the grey herons and all the other birds that fly by, and the quiet of the place …

  12. What I love right now is that our weather isn’t hot and humid like summer, nor sub-freezing like winter — that “4 distinct seasons” meme is highly overrated!!! The icing on the cake for me is that it’s even sunny today, and our autumn leaves are turning colors.
    Agree re “Cremerie” — is anyone else old enough to recall South Berkeley Creamery, technically located in Emeryville, on San Pablo Avenue? Natalie???
    P.S. Why is it that the peeling paint on OUR house doesn’t look poetic or artistic, just scruffy? LOL!

  13. Rebecca from the pacific northwest

    First, comments about your photos:
    1. I didn’t know that almonds are green! But love that color. Reminds me of what I call “1930’s green” as found in old quilts from then.
    2. The man above the VIN sign would probably have loved to think you were flirting with him. He’d have thought to himself, “I’ve still got it!”
    3. And of course, beautiful (and nicely trimmed) lavender in the huge olive pot. I’d like a pot like that.
    4. The fountain photo: on the far golden wall, I spotted a sign painted on the wall and thought, “Oh look! There’s even a store sign that has Corey’s name: Corey. Then I saw the Amaro. Then I thought, oh, woops. It’s her photo mark.” Pretty funny fake-out!
    What I love about my town is today: golden sunlight above the harbor, thickened slightly from fall haze. I need to get outside to enjoy it before grey winter sets in!

  14. Nothing like a trip home to invigorate the soul. Poking fun at siblings might be a great workout for the wrist as well.
    I love the green pottery.

  15. Good point about the peeling paint…our shutters need to be repainted; why don’t they have the charm like the ones on the French buildings 🙂

  16. I want so much to stroll through a French village! It looks so charming and relaxing and inspiring! I love the wheat fields and the awesome sunsets that we have here in KS! And the huge sky!

  17. I love the trees changing color on our street, especially our tree which will turn a burnt red and then orange and then yellow.
    I love going to the apple orchard and getting a half bushel of apples and then baking pies for my surprised neighbors.
    I love October.

  18. The village around you is so beautiful. In my neighborhood I like the alleys that travel behind the houses, the quiet, and the trees.

  19. I am glad that you didn’t filch the water jug, or the clock or the urns to take them home with you! I love all the trees where we live. The trees are hundreds of years old and they connect the entire town like sentinels. Now, of course, they are shedding their leaves and make a nice crunching sounds when we walk on the sidewalks.

  20. jend’isère

    Stars peeking through valleys and clouds floating over mountain peaks bring colorful spectacles daily over the Alps.

  21. Christine

    Beautiful photos…so relaxing. Loved the one with the olive pots as planters by the aubergine painted doors! How’s your hand doing? xo

  22. Brenda L. from TN.

    Loved the tour of the French village…I, too, like the color of the old water jug…
    Reasons why I like my city:
    1)Mainly ’cause it’s in the South
    2)Views of and from Lookout Mtn and Moccasin Bend…(TN river bend)…and Signal Mtn.
    3)Chickamauga Battle Field where so many brave
    men…both North and South…died for their country
    4)Many, many historical monuments up on Missionary Ridge
    5)Site of second oldest Military cementary in the nation…after Arlington.
    6)Rock City….you really CAN see 7 states if it’s a clear day.
    7)Ruby Falls…a former speak easy (30’s) in a cave with a waterfall.
    8)The Incline…up Lookout Mtn…longest steel cable rail incline in USA.
    9)Home of the Krystal Restaurant…founded in 1938 (I think that’s right)…same little square burger as White Castles.
    10)There are many more things I could list but this is just off top of head…
    PLUS the amazing scenery and our 2 months of cold weather (Jan and Feb…well,just maybe)…
    The summers are HOT and sometimes a tornado or two but basically a really nice biking,hiking,kyacking,boating town.

  23. I love that our fall and winter is warm. Planting flowers, listening to our birds, enjoying our weather now, when others are preparing for winter.
    This past weekend I should have recorded the birds in our trees. They were singing away and it almost brought tears to my eyes.

  24. RebeccaNYC

    In these troubled times, I am finding it difficult to love living in NYC, but I have wanted to live here my whole life. Now I am here, and I want to be where you are in the worst way.

  25. I love that we have 4 seasons (though I’m a bit sick of winters,) I love our yard-the gardens especially, and listening to the birds. I love hearing coyotes, foxes and owls late at night. I love that, in the country, I can see the stars and the moon, bright and full in the sky.

  26. North Idaho is absolutely beautiful and I love every little bit of it, down to the snow piled high in my front yard. The trees are changing into brilliant colors. The holly berry bushes are starting to show their bright red berries and the nights are bringing cool temperatures that lure you into cuddling on the couch. Ah yes I could go on and on. Blessings, Kimberly

  27. Corey, beautiful photos. I love the layers upon layers of history we see every day here in Provence!

  28. Love the old chippy surfaces of those last two jugs.
    Makes me want them in my courtyard! Thanks for sharing your walk!
    I love my neighborhood, built to resemble the Country French, houses not too close, not too far, and conveniences very near.

  29. (I was going to say cremerie, too!)
    Hello!
    I’ve read your blog for such a long time now and never commented. I even saw you once in Arles (last year) and my husband said I should say hi on your blog but I was too shy. How silly of me, I know! But the first photo of this post drew me out and said ‘That’s enough! Say hi!’. So here I am, because that image is stunning. The colors are so breathtaking! I love the colors of the south, so different from here in the north in gray Paris, so full of life and light. I once pointed out a lovely sunny yellow to my mother-in-law (from Orleans) and said “That’s a beautiful color for a front door!”. Slightly appalled she replied “Maybe in America.” 🙂 or maybe in the south?
    Anyway, what I love best about where I live is that my sweet Frenchman is here. Ok, and maybe all the beautiful museums aren’t too bad either!
    p.s. We share and undying addiction to brocantes! Wherever we travel I watch out for signs and I dream about my favorite brocante if it’s been too long between visits 🙂

  30. Sounds like Berkeley Farms (Farms in Berkeley? Moo! [the old radio ads]).

  31. Beautiful photo’s Corey…peaceful villages full of history and colour. I guess what I love about living in the country the most is the peacefulness of it…the sounds of tractors in the distance and cows calling their little ones. Farmers wave as you drive by. Life travels at a slower pace in the country. I think that’s what I like most Corey.

  32. Such a beautiful post today, Corey. Thank you! I love seeing where people live, especially when it’s in Provence! We used to call this “armchair travel”, but now I guess it’s cyber travel. Do you own that water jug? Because it makes my heart skip a beat!
    My post this week on my blog shows why I love where we live. For me, I don’t think there’s a prettier spot in America than Everafter Farm.

  33. Unbelievable that your village is so untouched by modern trends. Lucky you! Beautiful shutters, heavy doors with their hefty keys, peeling paint, and older men keeping an eye on the ladies. What a slice.
    Interesting how many commented on the trees in their towns and cities. Glad so many people appreciate them. They are the first thing I thought of, too. They are a spectacular addition to our lives. I am part of a group creating a ceramic mural of an 800 year time line depicting the Quercos rubur, or English oak.
    The other beauties in my city, Sacramento, include the rivers and many parks.

  34. You’re absolutely right, Natalie, South Berkeley Creamery became Berkeley Farms. I still remember those “Farms in Berkeley? Moooooo” commercials too 🙂
    I recall on a visit back home in the ’80s seeing a car with a bumper sticker reading “Farms in Berkeley?” “Moooooo” on it!!! When I phoned the Berkeley Farms corporate office in search of one for Farmboy Husband (who always thought the slogan was hilarious), I was informed that they’d been part of a promotional campaign a few years earlier, so there were none left.
    BTW, my parents told me that back when they were young (1920s-30s), there really WERE farms in Berkeley — they specifically remembered one at the end of Ridge Road (turn west off Tunnel Road = Ashby Avenue extended), a bit beyond the Claremont Hotel (heading toward the Caldecott Tunnel).
    Oh, now I’m getting so-o-o-o homesick for the Berkeley of my youth…

  35. One of the images that sticks with me from my last trip to Paris was watching the doors to the Carnevalet Museum being locked. A gigantic old key that she held on a ring that was big enough to be a necklace. The sound of the door shutting us visitors out. The oversized door knocker. I watched on and thought to myself-I wish that we had been given more time. More time to absorb one of my favorite places. (sigh) Until next year.

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