I recently bought a book of walks in the Côtes d'Armor, which is my region of France, not to be confused with the Côtes d'Armour which is somewhere else entirely. My region is lush and fertile, wild and rugged, and with a beautiful coastline. Parfait!
I've chosen a couple of walks that should be lovely, but here's one that I took often while I was living in Brittany full-time, and one that holds good memories for me of walking with three dogs and someone who was, at that time, rather special to me...
One day, when I'm done with protecting cyber space and have had my fill of complex, obfuscated, malicious code and trickery, I will return to Brittany to live a quiet, peaceful life. Perhaps I'll run the B&B that I'd planned when I first moved to France, perhaps I'll just take people on trips and tours around Brittany, perhaps I'll write, perhaps ...
Well, who knows what's around the next corner?
A Sunday stroll around Les Landes de Locarn
This land has been inhabited since the Paleolithic times when hunter gatherers stalked these hills. When they evolved into the first farmers and homestead builders of the Neolithic period they began to erect megaliths.
This menhir served a purpose, had meaning for those people over 2000 years ago, today it stands like a crusty old spinster, cold and aloof.
ignore her, pass by respectfully, you don't want to catch her eye....
A conifer stands independent and alone, like a young adolescent poised on the brink of adulthood
The walk takes you down from the moorland to the gorge where huge granite giants lie in a mass of confusion amid fertile green maidens
clamber over the rocks with caution, a sudden slip could snap a mere mortal's limb
this stone sculpture pushes aside the feminine trees like a dominant male interloper
walk on dry brown leaves up the slope and ignore the crusty old man...
Like the lace veils of young girls attending their first communion
gaze upwards until you feel as giddy as these giggling girls....
Matronly conifers stand in a gossiping huddle on the heathland as you emerge from the gorge
don't try to listen as you pass them, the muttering of matrons is not for your ears...
Finally walking past an ancient woodland
The branches on these trees hung like feathery fronds, mosses draped over outstretched limbs like the tattered tassels of a cheap woman's wrap, bracken at their feet like torn fishnet stockings
and in the green, green depths all is silent and still as if holding a huge collective arboreal breath until the walkers have passed by
It looks wonderful, I must look it up. I hope you do get to come back for good, we could meet for a walk there...
ReplyDeleteHello Lucy, that would be lovely, and I am working on it :)
DeleteThis looks lovely.
ReplyDeleteI am opening this post just in from exploring the wildland right behind our cabin. I took some photos quite similar to yours, and might post them in my blog tomorrow.
Greetings from Oxfordshire on a rather wild and windy weekend. It IS a lovely place, but then Brittany is full of such lovely places and they seem to bring out the poet in me :) I look forward to reading your post tomorrow Britt Arnhild.
DeleteWith Love Julia