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My second summer: WWOOFing


Hello again!  It’s been a long and exciting second summer for me (the first summer having been the Busking Tour, followed by a bit of Cumbrian July winter).  I’m back in Cumbria, at the parental landing pad.  I have internet here.  It’s nice… but I’m not here for long.  Tomorrow I’m off WWOOFing again, a bit closer to home, in Grasmere.  Which suggests perhaps, dear reader, that I haven’t quite had enough of my nomadic, almost cashless existence.  I say almost, because I hear there’s a pub down the road from my next stay.  But I’ll tell you all about that in a couple of weeks!

Let’s think all the way back to August, when I took the train all the way from London to Toulouse in the first leg of my voyage, where my film-maker friend Patrick met me.  I’m not going to give much away about the film yet, but I will show you this lovely view from the little chapel on a hill where we were filming:

Those are the Pyrenees over there…  I’m always so excited by entire fields of sunflowers.  I think it’s because I always had such difficulty trying to grow even just one or two as a child in windy weatherbeaten salty coastal Cumbria. Our poor little garden…

So, that was in the departement of Gers.  Two things I noticed in Gers (after the sunflowers):  1) There are lots of expat Brits.  You can tell cos when they speak French it’s easier to understand, like.  2)  Everywhere you go there is free alcohol to taste/drink lots of.

I wonder if the two are related…? Hmm…

That was a lot of fun.  And then I started WWOOFing!  Everyone had warned me that it would be hard work… and at my first farm, it was.  I knew before I went that they expected 8 hours of work, which exceeds the WWOOF guidelines by quite a bit, but since there was really not much else to do there it was all right, even though the temperature was above 30 degrees most days.  So I got myself some freckles and muscles (I think I heard that song once in Dublin..?) and after two weeks was ready for anything.  Which was absolutely brilliant, since the next farm, to the north of Toulouse, only asked 4 – 5 hours per day, with afternoons completely free and with bikes to borrow.  Luxury!

Here’s a nice misty morning scene from ferme numero 1:

There are orchards and greenhouses under all that mist.  Donkeys too!  My right foot was given the amazing opportunity to weigh one of the donkeys whilst we were ploughing the field with him.  Pretty hefty!

At ferme numero 2, between Montauban and Moissac (got your maps handy?) the work was almost entirely fruit related, picking apples (there’s a special french word for the bags you use to pick apples with in France, it’s really French, they call them “picking bags”…), picking figs (which is the best excuse for climbing trees that I have ever had), picking grapes, and the mysterious science of “ciselage”, which is trimming all of the less pretty grapes off each bunch.  Many happy hours can be spent listening to Radio Nostalgie and ciselaging.  But they’re happier hours if it isn’t Nostalgie.  Nos – tal – gieeee!

Here’s the view from the top of the grapes.  All that flat bit is brilliant for novice cyclists like me.

It was a pretty magical place, with a pond right outside the house, with frogs and toads singing all night, nestled between hills covered with fruit trees, and with clapped out old vehicles and ancient farm machinery becoming part of the earth here and there.

But wait, there’s more!

A la ferme numero 3, they had goats, for making goats’ cheese, which was categorically yummy.  Say hello:

This is Vanille.  She’s a lovely kind goat, and acts a bit like a dog:

She became my photographer’s muse during my afternoon goatherding time… especially whilst doing silly things, like eating mistletoe:

While I was at this farm, the only English I spoke was to the goats… we had some pretty off the wall conversations.  They’re very droll, these goats.
I also learned how to make goats’ cheese and yoghurts, which, being both edible and fattening, was really exciting.  Yum!
So after 8 weeks of rural WWOOFing I had met some really great people, some of whom I’m sure I’ll see again some day.  I’d also spent pretty much my entire summer outside, which was brilliant, I’d learnt a whole load of practical skills (like how to catch goats – 3 in one hand!), and my French was getting pretty alright.  Yeah!
On the way back to England I stopped off in Paris, where I had my first ever solo couchsurfing experience, which worked out wonderfully.  I absolutely love how you can arrive in a city where you don’t know anyone, and armed with an address and telephone number, you know exactly where you’re going, and you get there, your host is super generous and welcoming, you have tea, and everything is brilliant.  Except for the foie gras you’ve been carrying around for 8 weeks without realising it should have been in the fridge.

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Filed under Travel, WWOOFing

The busking tour comes to an end

After 5 weeks on the road the busking tour has finally come to an end. It’s been great fun, if a little trying at times, but I’m definitely glad we did it!

We spent our last few days in Amsterdam, where we experienced some terrible weather (extremely wet and windy), but we were able to meet up with our friends Bob and Becky (hi guys!).  We had one sunny day there, which happened to be a Friday, which led to some fairly profitable busking, and made up (a little bit) for being cold and wet for the last couple of days.  Then on Saturday we made the trek to the unpronouncable port of IJmuiden to board the boat for our ferry crossing.  Which turned out to be a mini cruise.  Not the best 17 hours of my life, all things considered, but we were on the way back to England, and the prospect of not having to carry such a ridiculous amount of stuff around any more.  Yay!

So now that we’re just about recovered we’re in a fit state to look back over the last 5 weeks.

Fig 1.

Total nights: 37

Nights spent couch surfing: 26

Total of couch surfing hosts: 12

Nights we paid for accomodation: 11 (including the overnight ferry…blergh)

Countries visited: 4

Towns visited: 14

Towns busked: 13 (missed Ghent due to inclement weather)

Trains taken: +/- 25

And now a round-up of some of the things we have either learned or proved through busking:

  • The hardest thing about busking is finding a good pitch (place to play).
  • The second hardest thing about busking is hauling your gear around whilst looking for a good pitch.
  • Smaller, more out of the way places (typically thought of as “boring” towns) make for the best busking.
  • Busking in tourist trap towns is generally not much fun and not as lucrative as one might imagine, unless you are doing something cliched.
  • Speaking of cliched, the smelliest (and least imaginative) living statues I have ever seen were in Amsterdam. I don’t think they were doing very well.
  • Many people, especially tourists, feel the need to photograph and/or film buskers.  Ok, it’s a sign of appreciation (although money is better), but what do they do with them?!
  • Most tourists don’t tip.  Even if they take your photograph.
  • Some tourists don’t even look at you while they’re taking your photograph.  That’s pretty dumb.
  • This one’s perhaps obvious, but people are more generous, and will listen for longer on sunny days than overcast ones.
  •  Busking in the late afternoon (around happy hour) is usually more productive than around noon.
  •  It’s usually not worth asking if it’s ok to play, especially in a competitive busking town.  People will say no, but if you just play, they might be glad to have a good busker outside.
  • As long as you sound good, you don’t need a permit to play, even if you are supposed to have one.  In Belgium, at least. (Don’t try this on the London Underground or Paris Metro!)
  • The biggest tips (and most paper money) come from locals.
  • There are gypsies (with or without accordions) everywhere.  Except Bruges.
  • Inhibitions are socially learned: All young children can dance! And when they do, they look a lot cuter than we do, so we get a bigger crowd.
Anyway, that’s pretty much it on the busking tour.  Thanks to everyone who’s been following our journey!

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Filed under Busking, Live music, Music, Travel