Wednesday 26 July 2017

Mèze to Bezier – 45 km

The wind eased a bit in the night, but was already picking up when we awoke, rather early, this morning. So we decided to set off without hanging about: just a fill up with water and a cup of coffee, then out into the lagoon. Our exit was a little dodgy, with the wind pinning us onto the quayside, and boats moored fore and aft, but we managed without damage.


Our passage down the lagoon was uneventful, and surprisingly comfortable: no spray over the bows. After an hour or so we came to the Les Onglous lighthouse, which marks the start of the Canal du Midi.


From earliest times it was a dream to join the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, bypassing the Iberian peninsula. The Romans tried it, and Leonardo Da Vinci devoted some thought to it. But the genius who did it was a Beziers-born tax collector and self-taught engineer called Pierre-Paul Riquet. Starting in 1666, construction took 14 years, employing more than 11,000 men. There are 63 locks, 350 bridges, and a tunnel. Sadly Riquet died just six months before the opening of the canal, which is now a UNESCO world heritage site.


The entrance to the canal is not particularly impressive.



There are plenty of boats moored up, some wrecked, many apparently abandoned. Abandoned boats, abandoned dreams. They are also a real problem for the canal authorities.


We passed through our first small lock of this trip in company with some pleasant Australians in a hire boat. The photo shows the oval shape of the Canal du Midi locks, which is quite distinctive.


Next up was the round lock of Agde. This is a most unusual construction with entrance/exits to the River Herault, which the canal crosses on the level, to a side canal to Agde and the sea, and to the continuation of the Canal du Midi. Our Australian friends were finding it a bit tricky in the wind, and managed to clout us in the bows, but without doing any damage. We left ahead of them and have not seen them again, so far.



One of the glories of the Canal du Midi is (has been) the 42,000 plane trees, planted on either bank. Sadly, they are being attacked by an incurable canker, and the authorities are having to cut them down and replant. A major campaign is under way in France to help finance this massive operation, to which we contribute modestly. Anyway, some of the trees are still there. The pic also shows one of the many, many little electrically powered day boats you can hire – without knowing the first thing about water or waterways. They can be a bit of a hazard.


We saw many tree stumps as we went along, and I suppose there are many more to come.


We reached Beziers in good time, and found a comfortable mooring spot. It is just by the bus stop into town, so up we went: two people for one euro seems reasonable. With some difficulty we made our way to the cathedral, and found the plaza in front of it with magnificent views over the River Orb and the surrounding countryside.


Here is the cathedral from outside, though we should get a better shot from the canal tomorrow.


And from the inside.


This is the town hall.


And, finally, we found many of the narrow shopping streets had suspended colourful transparent umbrellas over themselves  - an initiative called parapluies en folie. Quite why, we did not discover. But they looked very decorative.

Tomorrow we venture up the seven-lock staircase at Fonserannes, just outside Beziers, then there is a long stretch without locks, so I don’t know where we’ll end up. Depends a bit on the traffic, too.



No comments:

Post a Comment