Before the start of this morning’s West River Trail run/walk. We officially met a neighbor we had seen around and some other people from around town. I ran a touch over 12 miles… Owwww!

Westminster Historical Society

I’ve made fun of the French for having museums that are only open a few hours a week. However, today we discovered a new low for hours of operation, and it was right here in Vermont: summer Sundays, 2 to 4 PM.

But today we were in the right place at the right time, and we got to tour the whole exhibit. It took 15 minutes. We were visitors number 20 and 21, and the volunteer ladies were very excited to see so many people in one day.

A daytime view of the old citadel where the fireworks were last night.

Just outside Corte, on the road to the Restonica valley, a roadside shrine dedicated to St. Roch, patron saint of hitchhikers, who makes his second appearance on this blog.

Bastille Day fireworks over the old Citadel at Corte. Totally worth staying up for…

Just two weeks ago, The great heroes of the Tour de France rode down the very road that I’m walking on. Even now, I don’t seem to care that they’re all bunch of egotistical prima donna drug cheats. It’s still the greatest race in the world.

Ajaccio

Of course there’s beauty and artistic achievement everywhere you look, but I had to look extra hard as I walked around Ajaccio while waiting for my train to Corte.

I think people come here for the natural beauty (basically central California coast country plus warm water…. and hot French babes) more than for the man made.

A Little Kulcha’

Last evening, we went to the Centre Congregational Church to see a flute and piano recital. It was the first time we’d ever actually been inside the church sanctuary, which turns out to be more beautiful from the outside than in.

The artists work Nicolas Duchamp on the flute and Barbara McKenzie playing piano. Both are serious professional musicians, but M. Duchamp is the better-known of the two. He plays and teaches in New York and Paris and all over the world all the time, holds principal soloist designations with half a dozen companies, and records frequently. Obviously, it’s a wonderful thing to be able to make a living doing what you love, but looking at his several websites reminds me how complex it is to be a freelancer… a cautionary note for some of my friends who sometimes consider going out on their own as consultants.

The un-air-conditioned church was dreadfully hot, but the music was serenely enveloping, with Poulenc, Debussy, and Franck on the program. We surreptitiously enjoyed a multimedia experience, by running a tiny slideshow of our pictures from the recent France trip on the iPhone during the Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun.

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