Tuesday 19 July 2011

Cassis and Queenslanders

One of the most surprising, and wonderful things about southern France:  Eucalypts! Everytime I caught a whiff I got very homesick.  It's a funny thing memory - so inexplicably triggered by our senses, we forget about the impact a smell, sound or sight can have on our memories and then suddenly - BOOM!  My stifled feelings about my sense place and home took a direct hit.  Just as I'm starting to feel like maybe I could stay on in Europe indefinitley, I realise that I have no control over that part of my mind's insistant yearning for sensory familiarity, and how susceptible I am to the emotional associations that make those familiarities so important. 
Still, whatever I feel about the 'Australia V Europe' question and my future, I cannot help but be enchanted by a European past that is still so very much a part of its present. 1785 and still standing, you can't hep but be impressed.   

The town of Cassis was recommended to us by Bec as a lovely place to stop between Nice and Marseille.  We decided to stop for dinner there on the way back from Corsica, as we were staying that night in some god-awful motel close to the airport in order to get Kate on her early morning flight.  So so glad we did stop here, the charm of the place is barely captured in these shots.




The seafront was lovely, and the number of potential dinner spots to choose from bordered on overwhelming.  We decided against the seafront however, in favour of exploring the restaurants lining the cobblestoned lanes just behind the harbour.


As an afterthought to the first paragraph of this blog entry that might as well be summarised as: 'There's No Place Like Home', it's probably worth mentioning that there are definitely aspects of Australian life I don't miss in the slightest.  Without wishing to provoke undue offence, I'd have to say there are definitely certain social attitudes prevailing across a section of the Australia population I find both confusing and thoroughly distasteful. I just can't believe we still live in an age where it's ok to think (let alone say out loud) some things. 

We chose a really cute little restaurant for dinner, it just happened to be situated right next to an amazing wine bar.  So while we waited for our table, we sat at the bar next door to sample the first really really good wine we'd had all week (Corsican 3 euro bottles are fine when you're camping, but my godfathers, the astringency of a cheap bottle of red really becomes apparent when you get your hands on a glass of the good stuff).  Stu's heart melted when they also brought forth complimentary tapas.  His expression of delighted disbelief was hilarious.  Within seconds the olives, chorizo and bread were gone.  It was almost as if he was afraid the waitress would realise that she'd made a mistake and come to take the food away - he'd be damned if he'd let that happen. 

When our table was ready, we sat down and ordered more wine ('once it hits your lips'!).  I happened to catch a few words from the table next to us and realised that the older couple we were sitting next to were Australian.  Turns out they were from Queensland, but I could've guessed that from their seriously ocker accents.  I could've also hazarded a guess based on their hard core Liberalism.  They were Old School, and while this was in one sense extremely entertaining, it was also pretty troubling.  You forget just how large a segment of Australian society is till like this:  Obstinately narrow-minded.  Par Example:

(I quote):
Yeah, I have my suspicions about those Aboriginal (sic) rock paintings.  I reckon it's just spray paint - you can tel they're not that old.  It's a total tourist trap.

We decided to go ahead and buy this campervan for our trip.  We saw it online, so we spoke to the bloke who was selling it, and we saw a piccie of him next to the van, and he looked trustworthy.  He was a proper scottish guy, not dodgy-looking at all.

This last sentence was later clarified by the pair as meaning that, 'you know, he was from Scotland'.  He was white, and he was British.  He wasn't some ne'er-do-well man from Africa/Asia/Poland out to make a quick buck off the backs of a couple of erstwhile tourist types.

I think the greatest problem for me was that I found this couple really lively, chatty and fun before I found out they were Queenslanders, you know, they were from Queensland.  Changed everything.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

You're right. Classy people say things like:

Fred kid had a better time at the show than I've ever had. Mainly because I'm disgusted by fat parents with their fats kids blocking my way with their 50 showbags in the stroller shit.

You forget how much of society has opinions like this.

Mezzle said...

Show time! Ah, the memories. Heather, why are suddenly so annon?

Alex and Alex Aranchikov said...

buy a eucalyptus plant for your apartment and soak up euro while you are footloose and fancy free.

OZ will always be there. Explore the world. Of course home is great but appreciate the amazing moments you are living in right now, because I am sure you will look back and remember them as some of the greatest of your life.

XOXOX