Sunday, October 28, 2012

The Chill

The chill is creeping into the mountains, trying to remind us that we live in the northern hemisphere and winter is approaching. Hmph.

A conversation I had with my driving examiner recently:

Him: "Oh, you're from the U.S. They're having elections soon, no?"
Me: "Yep."
Him: "Who's the guy opposing Obama?"
Me: "Romney."
Him: "Who?"
Me: "Romney."
 Driving Instructor: "Who?"
Me: Romney."
Driving Examiner: "Who?"
Me: "Romney."
Them: "Oh! Rrrrrromnaaay!"
Me: Yep.
The world is how you pronounce it.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Aquae Tarbellicae

 We had to use up a couple voucher tickets for the French train system, and since it was the ideal distance and I had once read that a special nut-merengue dessert originated there, we ended up in the city of Dax. Sadly we did not realize our pastry objective (though the pain au chocolat was really quite something), but we did take in an organ concert at the cathedral and we wandered around the city's natural hot sulfur spa. Dax is in the Aquitaine region and its founding myth involves a Roman soldier who had no more use for his dog, who had rheumatism, and so he threw the dog in the river (!) and went about his soldiering. Upon his next pass through Dax, the dog came running to greet him and had been cured of his rheumatism by the soothing waters of the natural spa. The lesson being that dogs are not that bright, and also that you should complain if you are made late by public transit because it will mean that you get to do more traveling. We also stopped by a deeply odd little art museum that was dedicated to a little-known impressionist painter named Georgette Dupouy. It was one of the few things open on Sunday afternoon and was run by a solitary older man with the very southern European tendency to stand very very close while talking who seemed to be nursing a long and slightly obsessive grudge about Georgette's lack of recognition by the larger art world. There's a gallery of her paintings on the museum's website, if, as the text says, "you are in a state of grace" to see them.

On another note, Basque parliamentary elections are taking place, which has brought an onslaught of advertising, perhaps the most entertaining of which is the Patxitrain. Giant billboards show the current lehendekari (president of the Basque Autonomous Community), Patxi Lopez. The election results are expected to be fairly punishing toward the conservative ruling Spanish party as well as a statement of independence, so we shall see.





Sunday, October 14, 2012

Kilometroak

Last weekend we went to Andoain for Kilometroak, which is an annual fundraiser for Basque-speaking schools. It was totally packed, which is good news for the school in question. There is inevitably a lot of baldly independentist sentiment expressed at these things. There was also a rare performance by Erramun Martikorena along with Mikel Markez. If the Basques had a nation, Martikorena would be a national treasure. He is from Zuberoa (which is known in French as Soule) which is famed for its excellent singers and for people who speak the rarest (and many people say the prettiest) dialect of Euskara. If folk music is your thing, check it out. Also see: Mikel Laboa.




Sunday, October 7, 2012

Sagardoa

There was an apple cider fest in Astigarraga last weekend. There were hard cider tastings and a demonstration of how people originally pressed apples. Behold:
55 varieties of apple, and I didn't recognize a one.
Pouring apples into a hand-cranked press.   
One cider house had oxen pulling a barrel as an advertisement. I have actually seen people use oxen for plowing and regular farm duties, though, so it isn't just for show.
Picking apples from the ground with spears.
Crushing it old school.

Assembling the press.    

Crushing apples with big metal weights. The crushers have a special rhythm for this task.
Txalaparta players announce that the cider is ready to surrounding villages.