Saturday 19 August 2017

Les Roches-de-Condrieu to Lyon – 40 km.

No blog post yesterday because it was really a quiet day. The run up to Lyon was straightforward, with just a couple of locks. The views were pleasant – the countryside looks different when you are coming rather than going.


This desirable riverside residence was looking good in the sunshine.


And we were overtaken by this Swiss Miss as we laboured against a strong current up to the first lock of the day, which meant we slipped in behind and had no delay. Like the tortoise and the hare, we subsequently overtook them tied up at Vienne. Today we saw them tied up here in Lyon too.


It was good to see the confluence of the Rhône and Saône heaving into view, and know that the Rhône itself is behind us. People sometimes ask why we don’t keep Saskia down in the south, closer to home, and the answer is, quite simply, the Rhône. Either you confine your cruising to the south, which would become limiting, or face the Rhône every time you want a change.

Anyway, we found a comfortable spot to tuck ourselves into the harbour, and a quarter of an hour later there was a colossal thunderstorm, with lashing rain. So we made it just in time.


This morning it was sunny, and after various housekeeping chores, we set off to the tram stop close by, bought day tickets, and took a ride down to the Confluence museum. As luck would have it, they have a major show on about the Lumière brothers, natives of Lyon and pioneers of early cinema in the 1890s.


It was a fascinating show, with many restored film clips from the early days, though difficult to photograph, being mostly in the dark.


We also looked at the permanent exhibition, and were taken by this skeleton of a woolly mammoth, discovered here in Lyon. There was a dinosaur too.


We reached the end of the building and took the confluence from the other way. Then it was back onto the tram for a longish ride, and a change onto the (self-driving) metro, to the Lumière Institute.



But before engaging in any more culture, lunch beckoned, and we found a convenient bistro nearby, with a cinema theme, not surprisingly.


The actual museum is housed in a grand villa, though not as grand as the one the Lumière brothers lived in. Only a model of that remains, in the glass case here. The villa was torn down years ago to make way for a development that never happened.



We tried to get some shots from the fascinating early film clips, but it was not easy.


And we couldn’t resist this photo of the villa at La Ciotat, quite near to where we live in Provence, built by one of the brothers. La Ciotat also boasts the Eden theatre, which claims to be one of the world’s oldest surviving cinemas. We have actually been to a festival of short films there.

Tomorrow we will head up the Saône. On our way, we plan to make a side trip up the River Seille to Louhans, the capital of Bresse and famous for its chickens.


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