| During the early days of Autumn, I had a chance to dip a  paddle in the Boutonne River, about 20 miles south of the in-laws’ place in France.  It is a pretty little river, wandering through the flat countryside on a rich  alluvial plain, though not what one could   call a wild river. There were many dams and weirs, and in places the  waters were held back by dikes so old I didn’t even notice them until I saw  that the land sloped down from the river bank, in one or two places as much as  10-15 feet.  
                
                  |  |   Rachel helps out with Papa’s thrift-store double  paddle. The paddles were made in the old East Germany. The ferrules are  solid brass tubes machined to such a close tolerance that they simply slide  together without any spring buttons.  click images for larger views |  It was a nice drive down,  through the rolling countryside, past the occasional hunter and the odd Chateau  or semi-fortified farmhouse. I could tell we were getting close to the river as  the land flattened out and we passed the village  of Petite Grenouille (Little Frog) and  then a sign for the village   of Grand Grenouille (Big  Frog). I put in near the town of Saint    Serverin-Sur-Boutonne. 
                
                  | Rachel gets her first boat ride.  |  |  To put in, we found a little  park that had built around the village lavoire, a little stone building with a  sort of big stone tub open to the river where the women would come to wash  their clothes. The water was only a foot or so deep with a sandy bottom and no  current, so I decided it was the perfect place to give the girls their first  boat ride. They loved it, and weren’t at all afraid. We paddled across to a  pasture full of the local Parthenaise cattle. A couple of them were drinking  from the river. The girls were entranced, the cows less so. I was a happy man.  It looks like maybe next year, Rachel could be up for an afternoon trip on a  calm little river like the Button. Have to dig out the life jacket I bought for  her a couple hours after she was born though. 
                
                  |  | Maia digs the ride. |  
                
                  | The Parthenaise cattle. They are raised for their  excellent beef, and are mostly found in the region around Parthenay, the city  from which they took their name. They are not at all common, but the herd is  growing because of the new “foodie” emphasis on eating local and as well as  possible. Kind of makes me hungry just looking at them -- a nice fillet,  grilled rare and covered with a cognac gravy... |  |  After unloading the girls, I  paddled off down the river. The day was warm and overcast, and the river, if  rivers can be said to sleep, was like my father-in-law dozing off after a big lunch  washed down with the gamay/chardonneret red wine he makes. I paddled slowly  along, past bunches of grazing cows and the ubiquitous plantations of poplar  trees. I was getting kind of sleepy too. It was just that kind of afternoon on  that kind of river. But then I came around a bend and there, for no reason that  I could immediately see, was this wild black steel Picasoesque statue on the  river bank, apparently for the edification of the occasional canoeist. Only in France. 
                
                  |  | Wild Black Steel Picasoesque Statue for the  Edification of the Occasional Canoeist. |  I went on and soon I was  paddling on a sort of liquid alley that ran in several courses through the village of Dampierre-sur-Boutonne. A moment later,  I found myself paddling in the moat of a huge castle that had obviously been  rebuilt sometime during the Renaissance. Big towers and walls built for defence  but now sporting lots of windows. Nice.  
                
                  | Entering Dampierre-sur-Boutonne.  |  |  I found a place to get out  of the boat and in one of those lovely moments that happen sometimes in France,  the first thing I saw when I reached the street was a sign with an arrow and  the words “Asinerie National.” What on earth could that be? An asinerie is a  place where there are asses. Maybe the castle I saw was some sort of medieval  Parliament of Toffs? But the arrow was pointed in the wrong direction. Then it  hit me, ass as in donkey, not as in idiot human or part thereof. And sure  enough a little later I saw another sign that explained that the asinerie was  dedicated to the protection of a kind of donkey, the Baudet du Poitou, the  asinine, as it were, version of the Parthenaise cow. Apparently plenty of  people like eating the Parthenaise cow, and so there are a fair number of them  around. Practically nobody eats or otherwise profits from the Baudet, however,  and the race is in danger of dying out. Hence the Anisette National. They are  kind of cute. A farm a couple of miles down the road from the in-laws has a  bunch of them and they are very well-mannered little beasts. Take grass and  carrots from your hands all day long without even an accidental little nip. The  same sign told me that the Chateau de Dampierre dates back at least to the 11th  century, and was essentially rebuilt in the 16th century, changing it from a  primarily defensive structure to more of a palace.  
                
                  |  | Baudet du Poitou.  |  
                
                  | Paddling in the moat of the Chateau de  Dampierre-sur-Boutonne.  |  |  
                
                  |  | An old photo of the Boutonne a little downstream  from the section I paddled.  |  After Dampierre, the river  ran through the countryside. Lots of little weirs to control water levels for  mills and the like. So I spent quite a bit of time portaging. Luckily I wasn’t  loaded down for a week, or it would have been a real pain. As it was I could  just set my drybox and paddle aside, and then pick up the boat and walk it  around.  At one weir, I met an  English woman, and her daughter and granddaughter fishing. The woman had sold  up in England and used the  cash to buy a picturesque old house in France and was fixing it up and  planning to run a bed-and-breakfast there. Got to hand it to her -- from the  way she spoke to me in French before she realized I was American, she was still  learning the language. Fixing up an old, old stone house is a real job, doing  it in a country where you don’t speak the language very well must be three  times as hard. She helped me carry the boat around the dam and hinted that  although her inn wasn’t officially open, if I was looking for a place to stay  for the night, she would be happy to make me her first customer.  I was tempted, but hadn’t  planned on a two-day trip and my wife was planning to pick me up in a town  downstream, so I declined. The future innkeeper said that in any case, she was  going to put up a little sign for other stray canoeists, and maybe talk to a  couple of the local rental places. A little while later I  paddled out into a small pool built up behind a low weir. There was a small  panel truck outfitted as a camper parked on a level area and a couple of guys  were hauling speakers and a gasoline generator out of the back. A young woman  in the truck’s kitchen looked startled to see me paddle up. I stopped to jaw a  bit, to try to figure out exactly where I was, and to see what they were up to.  They were setting up for a DJ party, and had apparently been wandering around  the countryside doing their thing. The guy in charge wasn’t overly friendly (he  told his girlfriend to go find something else to do besides check out my boat)  but the other one gave me a beer and invited me to stay for the party. I was again  regretting that the plan was for this to be a simple day trip, and again had to  beg off. As I paddled away, the guys were rummaging around in the truck, but  the girl stepped out and stuck her fist in the air, in a sort of salute, as I  paddled away. Maybe the all night parties, or a boyfriend who tells her to  vanish when somebody turns up asking for directions, were wearing a little thin  and she was thinking a nice paddle on a sweet little river might be a good  change of pace.  
              
                | An old mill dam, recently reinforced. |  |  One of the interesting  things about the trip was realizing how little water there actually was flowing  in the river. After a portage, I was often confronted by a tiny little stream,  a couple of feet wide and a couple of inches deep. Sometimes it got so narrow I  couldn’t even paddle. I just had to sort of float along and fend off with the  paddle to avoid strainers or rocks. One of the things I thought of when  designing my boat was that I wanted a minimum draft, and the flat bottom  certainly helps in situations like this. I wasn’t overly loaded up, but even so  I was floating along in about 3” of water many times during the trip.  
              
                |  | Thin water. |  In one shallow stretch  through a forest, I was drifting along daydreaming and noticed a young Roe deer  on a small point just in front of me. They are tiny things, a little under 3  feet at the shoulder when mature. The stream was only a foot or so deep and maybe  15 feet wide with a bank a couple of feet high on one side, and the deer was  tensed up to jump off the bank and cross when he saw me. It was a little like  being in a car barreling along, seeing the deer, and hoping it doesn’t leap out  in front of you and get itself killed while tearing up your bumper and grill...  And sure enough, in this case I froze and the current carried me along until I  was almost under him and then something snapped and the little beast leapt into  the air and just about landed in my lap. Why it didn’t just melt back into the  forest I will never know, but it landed so close to me that I had to dry off my  glasses after he had run off into the woods on the other bank. If it had waited  a little longer, and I had been a little hungrier, I could have grabbed and  strangled the thing and eaten well that evening.  Hmm. That was an odd little  aside there. See deer, think lunch. France  does things to me somehow: even just thinking about it brings out the carnivore  in me. But when one reflects on what, say, a ragout of venison cooked with a  red wine, apple and wild mushroom and thyme sauce would taste like, it becomes  a little more understandable. Or maybe not, but anyway, my mouth is watering. All good things must come to  an end, and the afternoon was getting on and so I pulled up under a bridge to  figure out where I was so I could call my wife and let her know where to pick  me up. I was in a town called Nuaille-sur-Boutonne. A fisherman was trying his  luck from the bridge, and I asked him if there were any dams on the river  between there and the next town, Saint Pardoult, about a mile down river. He  said no, and so talking to my wife, I decided I could squeeze in another little  stretch of the river and meet her in St. Pardoult.  Bad idea.  It was getting dark fast,  and I found not none, not one, but two dams. The second was tricky and involved  carrying the canoe down through a patch of ankle-breaking broken stones the  size of footballs. It was getting dark, so I gave it a miss, and decided to  head back to Nuaille.  It got darker and darker,  and it was the dark of the moon, and pretty soon I realized that not only was I  not going to be able to get to St. Pardoult, I was also not going to be able to  get back to Nuaille because I was lost in a section of the river where there  were a a maze of little channels in a place that a quick inspection of my map  told me was called the “Little Swamp.” I could barely see my hand in front of  my face.  There wasn’t any real danger,  the river was slow and shallow, and there were a couple of houses and a road in  sight. But I was wondering how to meet up with my wife, and if she was going to  strangle me when we finally did.  It is funny, being married.  I only got hitched a couple of years ago, and I am still learning there are  things I wouldn’t have thought twice about when single, like lingering a little  too long on the river, that have the power to turn a normally sweet and gentle  woman into a raging typhoon, a cyclone and anticyclone all in one. Not of  course that I am always entirely blameless or that it is unreasonable, when one  has graciously agreed to drive a half an hour in the night to pick up one’s  husband to, you know, actually be able to pick him up. Then I had the brilliant  idea of calling my mother-in-law to tell her, in case Valerie called wondering  where I was (we only have one cell phone -- this is nice most of the time  because I hate the filthy things, but a second one would come in hand in times  like this) that the plan had changed and I would meet Valerie in  Nuaille-sur-Boutonne. The problem is that my mother-in-law sometimes struggles  with my French and Nuaille sounds remarkably like the French word for drowning.  Pierrette heard the words Valerie and Nuaille in the same sentence, and  promptly lost it. So I calmed her down as best  I could, and was looking around for a place to park the boat so I could walk  out to the road and walk back to the unfortunately named Drowning-on-Boutonne  when Valerie called. Mercifully she had not yet spoken with her mother, but she  was pretty fired up never-the-less. Apparently I had about two minutes to get  my butt to Drowning, or I was going to have to hitchhike with my canoe,  forcibly implanted in my anatomy, all the way back to Germany.  OK. So I walked out to the  road and headed off, stopping occasionally to stick out my thumb. Amazingly,  nobody stopped in the night to pick up a scruffily dressed bearded man in muddy  boots carrying a neon orange dry box and a canoe paddle. Go figure.  Then a pack of adolescent  Hells Angels wannabes on unmuffled 40 cc scooters turned up. They didn’t bat an  eye at the American wandering through deepest France  in the middle of the night carrying a canoe paddle, and helpfully pointed out  the long way around when I asked them directions. A little while later I was  lost, somebody having decided to rewrite all the road signs in the  neighborhood, with a 12 gauge shotgun by the looks of it. Maybe that’s how the  local kids who weren’t old enough to drive a scooter had fun evenings. The damp rubber boots were  grinding exquisitely painful open sores on my damp feet and I was starting to  lose my enthusiasm for adventure when, Hooray!, I saw a woman outside in her  courtyard. I didn’t see the pack of savage hunting dogs scattered around in the  uncertain light, but a “Bonsoir” later they were leaping at the yard’s fence in  a frenzied but fortunately vain attempt to tear my throat out.  The woman was very old and  bent over from a lifetime of work on the farm, and was wearing an old-fashioned  white frilly housecoat and knee-height rubber boots like mine. She gave me a  little wave and shuffled back toward the house. My heart sank. But then she stooped  over a little more, picked up a long flexible piece of bamboo, and, calling on  startling reserves of enthusiasm, energy and agility, proceeded to beat the  dogs, and they were a noisy dozen or so, into whimpering submission. It was a  remarkable performance: something like a five minute whirlwind of snarling,  howling beagles bouncing off the walls, fences, each other and occasionally the  old women as she lashed around with that bamboo stick like a Shaolin swordsman  in some martial arts flick and all of it only sporadically lit by a tiny  flickering fluorescent tube. I might be mistaken, but I think for the last two  or three minutes she was mostly just revelling in the sheer, atavistic thrill  of it all. Or maybe she was just more of a cat person.  In any case I will certainly  carry the scene with me to my grave. So, after giving one of her  favorite dogs a last and not strictly necessary kick, she walked over to the  gate and, not even breathing hard, asked me what I wanted. I asked for the road  to Drowning, and she said, “You aren’t from around here, are you?” I explained  that I was an American and had been canoeing. She nodded and smiled as if to  say: “Sure, I have heard that there are people who do that sort of thing and  many of them are no doubt Americans.” She said “That would explain the paddle.  Did you get lost in the Little Swamp?” She didn’t wait for my answer but told  me that Drowning was about a kilometer down the road.  I trudged off, and about 20  minutes and several kilometers later, while I was wondering if it might not be  a better idea to take off the boots and go barefoot, I spotted our car parked  on the edge of Drowning-on-Boutonne. I walked over. No wife.  I walked into the village to  look for her. It was well lit, but devoid of life, and I noticed a truly  wonderful old Romanesque church. So I stopped to look at the amazing stone  carvings around the door. The region where my wife is from underwent a brief  flowering of culture and construction in the 12th and 13th century. Eleanor of  Aquitaine who divorced her husband, Louis VII, the king of France, and married  Henry II, the king of England,  (and set off several centuries of war in the process) pretty much ran the  region throughout her long and varied life. Along the way, she created one of  the earliest traditions of literature, and she and her father, the Duke of  Aquitaine, ruled well and many wonderful churches were built. The region  languished after this time, however and so there are many churches that were not  later enlarged or rebuilt in the gothic style in a more theologically orthodox  age, as often happened. The stone carvings reveal a Christianity that was still  heavily influenced by local pagan and Celtic mythology and symbols and even, on  occasion, Crusader imports like the signs of the Zodiac. Wild stuff, if one is  interested in that sort of thing. 
              
                | The door of the Church of The    Assumption in Nuaille-sur-Boutonne. |  |  Anyway, I was standing there  wandering through the iconography of 12th century Poitevan Christianity and  trying not to pay attention to the seeping feeling that my boots were filling  with blood from the open blisters on my feet when my cellphone went off like a  smallish but infuriated weasel had woken up in my pocket and wrenched me back  into the 21st century.  “Where the &@$%^*^&  %$&*^&$@, @#$#$@ are you,” my wife asked. I said: “In Drowning. I was  looking for you and found this wonderful old church.” She said that she had  noticed the church and it was indeed a jewel of its kind and that she was happy  that I was enjoying myself at the church and hadn’t been devoured by wild  beasts or sunk to a watery grave but that she was fed up and had almost driven  the car into the river looking for me and that it had taken her ages to find a  house in which she could talk the people into allowing her to make a call to  our German cell phone, and that when she found me she was going to inflict  punishments that were in direct contravention of the Geneva Conventions. She  was just starting to get into the ghastly specifics of what I had in store for  me, when, apparently figuring that threats carry more force when they are left  vague, she instead paused to take a breath. On the upside, it turned out that France’s rugby team had, against all  predictions, just beaten New Zealand,  who had been favored to win the Rugby World Cup, so I was lucky. And in fact, I did feel  lucky. What a day.  
              
                |  | Afternoon idyll. |  |