No blog yesterday because really it was an extremely
uneventful day. The only thing of particular note was a small group of people
travelling in fancy dress with donkeys on the tow path. Surprisingly they were
carrying their own bags, rather than loading them onto the donkeys. Otherwise,
we arrived, found a good spot in the port, plugged in, did a wash, went
shopping and chilled out.
This morning was quite different. Eager tourists on the
first little train up to Carcassonne's citadel: apparently it is the second most-visited
site in France, after the Eiffel Tower, and it was easy to believe.
It is
certainly spectacular, though of course much restored in the 19th
century.
This is M. Eugène Viollet-le-Duc, responsible for the
restoration.
It was a grey morning, but that made for easy sightseeing,
and the sun was coming through by the time we had finished.
The restored figure at the gate is Madame Carcas, after whom
the town is named. She apparently rallied the population to Charlemagne’s
cause by ringing the bells, hence Carcas sonne. The original statue is rather weathered, as you can see, but I doubt if she would be very pleased with the replacement!
Inside the town, which somewhat reminds one of Mont St Michel
for the proliferation of tourist shops and gridlock of visitors in the narrow
mediaeval streets, the top attraction is the Chateau.
We queued up, paid our money, and took the tour. It is certainly
impressive.
We could see St Nazaire’s cathedral across town, and after
we had finished with the Chateau, we walked over. But of course, being Sunday,
there was a service going on and tourists were banned. We could hear the
singing faintly.
By this time the tourist numbers were building up, so we
paused for a little refreshment then returned to the little train stop for the
trip back to the boat.
First, however, it was lunchtime, and one of the randomly chosen bistro’s
specialities was paella.
Tomorrow we will start heading back down the canal, retracing
our steps, but trying to stop and explore different places on the way.
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