… this morning that I said I wouldn’t ever do willingly.
So while you admire Thora coming into port this afternoon, let me tell you about it. In fact, what it was was that when I heard the alarms go off, I consciously and willingly settled back down under the nice clean bedding and stayed there.
Until all of 07:45 too. I wasn’t in any hurry. But there’s a lot to do and I thought that a decent rest would give me a head start.
There was nothing on the dictaphone either, as I discovered when I went to check after the medication. It must have been a really deep sleep, that’s all that I can say.
Most of the morning was spent tidying up in here, putting some stuff away, doing some sorting out and tidying up. Yes, I have one or two cunning plans going around in my head right now.
And all of that took much longer than I was expecting. I have no idea where the time went. I haven’t done half as much as I intended to do, that’s for sure.
All of that took me up to lunchtime when I finished off the last of Sunday’s bread.
That was a shame because it really was good and I was well-impressed with that loaf.
This afternoon I finished off the first week of my web development course. At this stage I know most of it but we spent a lot of time working on forms and that’s something of which I haven’t really done much so I’m already making some headway
Next week we’ll be doing some *.css. I have a rudimentary knowledge of that so I’m keen to see what I don’t know about it.
There was the afternoon walk of course – I do that every day.
It looks as if the shoal of mackerel is still there. In the first photo of Thora above you saw half of the town with their rods out on the harbour wall, and all of the boats that we saw yesterday are out there again tonight.
Here’s just a few of them. In total I counted at least 20 altogether having a good go at the fish. And I still haven’t seen anyone catch anything.
The air was pretty busy today too.
It wasn’t that particularly windy today, but windy enough for the hordes of hang-gliders to be hanging around in the field next to the cemetery at Donville-les Bains.
This one here is quite interesting. It’s a tandem one, that carries a passenger. And before anyone says anything, no I am NOT going to be having a go at it. Any flighted craft that takes off from a field with a cemetery at the end of the runway is not for me at all.
And here’s something else that I’m not going to be doing either.
Jumping off a diving platform into the sea seems to be such a popular activity right now that they have fixed the one at Donville-les-Bains that was derelict for quite a while. But here at the Plat Gousset in Granville, the crowds were gathering.
One or two people seemed to be more adventurous than the ones yesterday and it didn’t take too long for them to start leaping into the drink.
So that’s all of the people in the air and out at sea. What about those on terra firma?
Everywhere was thoroughly crowded today. The beaches, the footpaths, everywhere. As you can see, down on the beach with the tide well in, the crowds really were congregating.
Those on the beach might just have the correct amount of social distancing between each family group but I wouldn’t like to bet on it.
Numbers of the infected here in France are rising quickly and we’ll be having a second wave of confinement before long. I don’t want to jump the gun and get myself infected by going down there amongst that lot.
My baby seagull seems to have gone definitively. Both parents were on the roof today with no sign of the little one.
On the other hand, the others seem to be coming along nicely and growing very rapidly. But I thought that this was a lovely touch. One of the residents has placed a ladder at the side of his house and put a bowl of water up there for the babies.
They were making the most of it too, enjoying every drop. And they needed it too in this weather because it was starting to become really warm by now.
You saw the photos of Thora coming in to the harbour and tying up at the quayside underneath the unloading crane.
The big ferries to and from the Channel Islands are still not running, so it seems, so there is only one way to bring your car over to France.
This is the kind of procedure that takes me back many, many years to long before the days of ro-ro ferries. Cars had to be lifted on and off boats by cranes and despite the advances in modern techniques and modern equipment, there are no real facilities for that here at Granville.
So what worked in the 40s and 50s and early 60s is still working today. Particularly when there is no other alternative.
Thora wasn’t the only boat out there this afternoon.
One of the Joly France boats was out there too with a load of passengers. And it wasn’t easy to say where they were going. It was rather late though to be taking so many people out to the Ile de Chausey.
The boat is actually the newer one of the two. You can tell that because the windows are deeper and there’s also a smaller area of superstructure on the top deck.
She has a step cut in the stern too, but you can’t see that from here.
My walk continued around the walls until I reached the highest point where I can see down into the yard of the Foyer des Jeunes Travailleurs.
It looks as if the film crew is packing up for the weekend now. All of the vans and lorries are here, most of the stuff is outside and some of it has even been loaded up.
We’re told that they will be back on Monday to finish off. That should be interesting. And as I noticed later on when I went for my evening walk, the mobile canteen is still here. So they do mean it.
Back here I finished off the first week of the interactive web page studies and then spent the final hour trying desperately to speak to someone at the bank about my bank card that won’t work.
Eventually after holding for 45 minutes I spoke to someone who had no more idea that I have about why it isn’t working and they agreed in the end to send me a new card.
No idea what’s happening here.
After the guitars, it was tea time. Rice and lentil burger with veg and gravy, followed by more of my delicious apple crumble
Off I went later on, struggling up the hill on my evening run, falling short yet again of the top.
Walking up to the top and recovering my breath I ran on down to the clifftop to see what was going on, but there was nothig happening out at sea. All of the seagulls were there though, hundreds of them. Evidently the shoal of mackerel is still there and they are all fishing for supper.
“Are they having more luck than the fishermen?” I asked myself. I’ve not seen any of them catch anything as yet either.
All the way back down the other side I ran.
Thora has gone now, back out to sea. That was a very quick turnround. Marité is there though, although I understand that she has plens to be on her way soon. And in the gloom and doom the Big Wheel looks impressive. It will be even better when it’s darker and the lights will stand out more.
My run down to the viewpoint in the Rue du Nord was uneventful, and I missed the sunset too which was a shame.
No-one picnicking on the beach tonight either although there were a few people hanging around here and there. I didn’t wait but ran on home.
Now there’s some tidying up to do and then I’m off to bed. It’s going to be a long day tomorrow and I can’t afford to hang about.
























































































































































































































