It is midnight on Sunday, temperature is currently at 14° in London (and not a very warm 14°), pretty much the same it was two days ago when I left for work with a backpack, my camera and an empty memory card. Here are some images of what happened in between:
The weather wasn't the only thing cold and depressing about that morning in London. The news being unfortunately full of car-bombs and renewed terror alerts, my decision to go away for a couple of days seemed like an even better idea
Sitting on the Gatwick Express, mentally preparing myself for two grueling days off work.
The small HMV store in the departure terminal was nice enough to offer £5 PSP movies, and I promptly obliged. "Are you suggesting that coconuts migrate?"
"Hey, ho, let's go"
A nice view of Marseille from the plane. My uncle lives in the Luberon region, and I hadn't been there since he moved from Paris. My cousin now lives with him, and it was great to see her too.
Speaking of views, this was the one from my uncle's house. "Oh well, it'll have to do" thought I.
How to feel at home in 4.3 seconds.
A typical house in my uncle's village.
I got my first taste of the local lake, it was tremendously refreshing.
On Saturday morning I played my first game of tennis of the year, needless to say I was a tad rusty.
The lake was about 30 meters from the tennis courts. As Borat would say, "I liiike" (no, Borat jokes are still not played-out).
Apparently, when you leave your sunglasses and car keys on the roof of your car, you can look for them for 10 minutes in the trunk without figuring out where they are. Like mother, like son it seems.
La Tour D'Aigues' old castle, which burned during the revolution and was never rebuilt, although they renovated the old entrance, which dates from the mid-XVIth century.
Lakes are great and all, but if you're a water-enthusiast, the sea is where it's at. Although I'm partial to the Indian Ocean myself, the Mediterranean is pretty cool. Literally, since the water was at no more than 18° on that day. Which is where the 30° temperature comes in handy.
Not having been to this part of France before, it was nice to go on a small-scale pilgrimage of some of my dad's family history. This was the site of the house (Captain Obvious: now destroyed) where they lived for a year in the late 50s.
As always, the time to leave came all too soon, so back to Marseille it was. Which is where I learned that different countries have different items on their banned-from-airplane-cabins lists. In France, that includes spreads, which means I had to throw away a brand new mega-size jar of Nutella. It didn't put a damper on the weekend, but I did have to buy two packs of Regal'ad to make up for the emotional loss.
Oh, intermittently-functioning Tube system, I almost missed you.
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