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The Terrace Yesterday

April 28, 2010
07:11 AM

Terrace copy 1.jpg

The terrace, from the dining room, last autumn.

The Terrace Yesterday

I don’t know that the concept of a terrace, as used in France, has ever reached us in Ireland.
The word itself has been appropriated in Ireland to mean a group of attached houses.
As a consequence we didn’t have one on our short list of essentials for the dream home in France when we started shopping.
Fortunately we bought a home that had one.

Our terrace, which faces due south, opens directly from the dining room and is about five metres wide at one side (about three at the other, the people who originally designed it, many hundreds of years ago, were not intimidated by right angles) and is about ten metres along its length.
It happily holds our large dining table and chairs, tens of pot plants, my étagère of herbs and the wood pile.
It has two doors leading on to it from the house and a Jasmine covered stone stairs which lead down to the garden.

It was certainly love at first sight for me.

From the moment Charles, the estate agent, flung open the doors to the terrace saying ; “You didn’t ask for a view but…” I was smitten.

About six months later, the house now ours but still full of old nuns’ stuff, and after a fraught journey with a sick friend through France (whom I had left in the tender care of a doctor in Beziers Hospital) I unloaded the van we had travelled in, removed a chilled bottle of Picpoul from the fridge, sat with it on the terrace and fell in love.

As our village is a circulade, a spiral , built on a little hill crowned with either a church or a castle (in our case a church) we are –as the old Presbytery -sitting pretty well on top of the village.

The thing about sitting on the terrace is that there is always something to watch so that, even though you remain totally supine you have the illusion that life is not passing you by.

Take yesterday for instance.

Sitting on the terrace you are immediately facing into our tree, a Melia Azedarach or Lilas d’Inde or Persian Lilac.
Just at the moment it is working hard to entertain us.
Having just had its winter pruning it is working especially on its greenery and tufts of leaves are visibly growing as we watch it.
It also is producing its blossom, purple scented bunches which will be in full flower in about two weeks time.
But more it is also providing a big top for the acrobatics of a crowd of adolescent swallows who seem determined to provide us with a constant display of brinkmanship.
Screaming with joy they dive bomb into the tree in a group, they just avoid the branches before flying around in a large circle to repeat the exercise.
As my brother-in-law Martin said yesterday ; “I defy anyone to tell me that they are not enjoying that”

Yesterday was actually a bit of a humdinger for the terrace anyway.
Yesterday it also provided us with a view of the Pyrenees.
Not admittedly a constant or perfectly clear view but a rather nice elusive and occasional glimpse of their majesties all of one hundred and fifty kilometres away.
They are still covered with snow, just as well really because the temperature on the terrace yesterday was in the early thirties, so when the south wind, the tramontane, blew up from the Pyrenees its occasional cooling freshness was most welcome.

Comments

  1. brian

    on April 28, 2010

    It looks lovely Martin! We’re looking forward to l’ambience du sud.

  2. Peter Dwyer

    on April 28, 2010

    If the aim of that post was to make us all a little jealous- success!

  3. Martin

    on April 29, 2010

    Ah nephew, you found me out.
    Brian, looking forward to the visit.

  4. Terry and Eilish Cunningham

    on April 30, 2010

    Yes! Terraces are a favourite with us, too. ‘Twas on a terrace in France that we had ‘fromage de brebis’ translated for us as ‘the cheese of the milk of the female of the sheep’. I proudly explained that ‘the female of the sheep’ was called a ‘ewe’, which I pronounced like ‘you’. One of the other guests on the terrace, a Dane who spoke excellent English with a Cockney accent, couldn’t figure how one got milk from a tree!. You meet all kinds on a terrace! Keep blogging!!

  5. Terry and Eilish Cunningham

    on April 30, 2010

    Forgot to tell you to keep an eye on the robins’ nest at
    http://www.rte.ie/radio/mooneygoeswild/features/mooneycam/

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  Martin Dwyer
Consultant Chef