mardi 23 février 2016

Senegal and Gambia part 2

We left Mandina at the crack of dawn and after 40 minutes arrived at the ferry which crosses the river Gambia. We just missed one so had to wait for an hour for the next one. When it arrived it was packed with brightly dressed people, animals and vehicles ranging from bicycles to articulated lorries. 


The crossing took 40 minutes and after another short drive we arrived at the Senegal border. The Gambian president had imposed a tax on Senegalese lorries entering the country, so in retaliation our Gambian vehicle was refused entry. We had to wait for a Senegalese car to come from our next destination 'Fathala' to collect us. Fortunately this only took 10 minutes. Fathala is a nature reserve and we'd booked some more excursions. Our accommodation was in an amazing "tent" complete with bath, four poster bed and air conditioning!



Our first trip was walking with lions - a rare opportunity to be with a couple of hand reared lions (their mother had had an litter of 5!). The lions were nearly 4 years old and in another year they will be too unpredictable to carry on this type of proximity to humans.




Next came a trip by boat to a nearby village school and hospital, then onward to an island where we had a fish BBQ, did some swimming and sunbathing, before a return by boat during which we spotted a small crocodile.




We were up at dawn for the next trip, a walk through the bush spotting warthogs, zebra, monkies and many, many, more birds.





The final trip was an evening game drive. From the open topped vehicle we saw at close quarters, a lot of bigger game including a white rhino, giraffes, derby elan, waterbuck, roan, warthogs, zebra, green vervet monkies, red colobus monkies, ground squirrels, baboons and many birds.

white rhino

young roan

the very rare derby elan

giraffes (we saw 6)

black-headed lapwing

cattle egret

red billed hornbill

That evening we heard heavy footprints outside the tent and were amazed to see the rhino going for a stroll in the moonlight!

Next morning it was back into Gambia, across the River Gambia once more to our final destination on the beach at Bijoli.  This part of Gambia has a lot of tourists arriving for winter sun and empty beaches. We were 30 mins walk from the main area of hotels in a hotel with lovely gardens, once again full of birds and other exotic animals.

lizard lounging around


deserted beach near the hotel

whimbrel

market at Serekunda

long tailed glossy starling

harrier hawk eagle

lappet faced vulture

pelicans (note the huge fish in bill pouch of bird on right)

siberian terns

One night a local african drum and dance group played at the hotel. They picked some women from the audience to try and dance with them. Of course when Susie stepped up and started to dance the dancers were gobsmacked! The Gambians kept coming up to me and asking how she knew their dances? Each time there was a dance the dancers kept grabbing Susie from the audience and pulling her onto the stage to dance with them - it was lovely and probably the best birthday present!

On her actual birthday we went to walk along the coast to Tanji to visit the birds reserve and the fishing village with market and huge number of fishing boats. Before returning to the hotel for some relaxation and dinner with champagne which I managed to buy from another guest staying at the hotel.

fishermen at Tanji


only scraps for the vultures

Gambia part 1

For Susie's half century I organised a holiday of a lifetime (shoe horned into half term) to Gambia and Senegal. It would be Susie's first visit to Africa and only my second. The first part of our stay was in Gambia with 3 nights at the amazing Mandina Lodges situated on a mangrove lined creek. The birdlife in Gambia is amazing and this is one of the best places to see them. On the whole 9 day trip we saw and identified over 50 species.

At Mandina as well as lazing around by the pool, we did a open canoe trip through the mangroves to a nearby village and a walk through the jungle during which we saw a huge monitor lizard.


A huge tree

female beautiful sunbird

white crowned robin chat

male beautiful sunbird

children of the smiling coast

pied kingfishers

unknown fruit bats hanging over the tables of the alfresco dining area

Western grey plantain eater

White throated bee-eater

unwanted bathroom guest

In the mangrove jungles around the lodges were two troops of baboons each about 200 strong. Occasionally they would try to storm the property only to be chased away by the dogs. It was amazing to witness their social structure and behaviour when we stumbled across them on walks.

baboon - adult

baboon - child

baboon -baby

yellow crowned gonolek

Susie soaking up the equatorial heat

Abyssinian rollers

mardi 2 février 2016


A rush on Monday to try and get everything finished. All the volige were fixed and most the missing wall panels too  The vapour barrier was hurriedly fixed and temporarily held down with battens (hopefully this will keep any rain out for the time being). We just couldn't finish the wall felting before we had to dash for the airport (no photo's it was that much of a hurry)...very frustrating. A few more hours and we would have had the building wrapped, a couple of extra days and we'd have been truly waterproof.

dimanche 31 janvier 2016

Some poor weather at the weekend slightly hampered progress, but the biggest problem was that the beams were too short! I ordered 3m lengths but forgot that the upper timber clad part of the barn gable is set back from the stone face. Also, here in the Ariege you must state the lengths of timbers ordered from the sawmill to the nearest metre. Usually if you order 3m you get 3.1m or 3.2m sometimes 3.3 or more. I ordered 3m and for once I got 3.0m!! I needed 3.09.



I don't have time to re-order, so after some searching I remembered I still had the remnants of the H.T overhead power cable assembly that came down in the 2012 snow storms. I cut it up to make some shelf angles, reducing the span sufficiently. I added a few extra bolts for lateral restraint and beefed up the bearers to stop them twisting. Not my first choice, but it works.


Lifting the ridge beam was also problematic as it was heavy, the ladder short and sky hooks were in short supply! Sandrine arrived just at the right moment and whilst her and Jasper hauled on a rope attached to a pulley in a sling looped over the gable apex, I climbed a ladder with the beam on my shoulder, somehow it was manhandled and nailed in place!

Today (Sunday) Jasper had a day off, whilst I tried to get the remaining beam, rafters and some volige in place in mostly pissing rain. 


Tomorrow is our last day and we need to get everything watertight, might be a tall order!!

vendredi 29 janvier 2016





Plenty of progress in the past few days. We ran out of steam a bit today, not helped by a cold wind and some drizzly rain. We did get the partition up inside (which you can't see in the photos) and fixing the top of the gable was tricky as until the ridge and beams are fixed the gable is still a bit wobbly.

mardi 26 janvier 2016

Gite works again


Back to France with Jasper...for a refill of light, sunshine and quiet. Hopefully we'll get the gite extension walls and roof erected, ready for cladding and slating, before we leave in a week's time. Weather is set fine for the week and more.

dimanche 24 janvier 2016

mercredi 20 janvier 2016


At last a respite from from the wet and stormy weather in the UK and some frosty dry mornings. Back to France next week with Jasper, who's going to be lending a hand with the timber frame.

mercredi 13 janvier 2016

Another beautiful day!



After moving most of the rest of the wood down to the barn - some on the tractor some on my shoulder, I mixed up some mortar and laid the sole plates (weighted down with rocks for good measure although they are strapped to the concrete slab).




mardi 12 janvier 2016

A strange day which began and ended with wintry showers - but the middle was warm and sunny! The wintry weather is slowly closing in though. Most of the day I was moving the timber, I've done about half of it. The bigger longer pieces had to carried one by one on my shoulder, the shorter pieces (3m) I could stack against the roll bar of the tractor and transport in the back box in bundles. 

I also dug and filled the foundations for the three posts which will form the porch/veranda of the gite and trimmed the holy bush which was becoming unmanageably large


Around 4.00 Paul came by to see the progress. He's 93 this year but still strong as an ox!

lundi 11 janvier 2016

Wood and weather

The materials for the barn finally arrived today. I transported the insulation and some of the smaller section wood to the barn by hand and by tractor. The wood in the picture below is still to move. I need to build a wood transporter to save my back.


A trip to St G for provisions, oil for the car and tractor, some cement and to see the D.D.T (planners). Apparently our commune (Aleu) is now under the Reglementation Nationale d'Urbanisme, so the old Plan d'Occupation des Sols (zoned land-use maps) are obsolete. Applicants must now make their case and await the decision of the statutory consultees...interesting times.

By the time I got home it had turned decidedly cold. The wind (of change) is blowing and the sky is clear...snow is on it's way!