The Traversane É and other things to like about
France
The traversane is a long thin pillow and, if
youÕre an
older sort of fellow with bad knees, and if youÕre lucky, you get to
sleep with
one. TheyÕre sort of pliable in a
good sense but firm in another so they can support your head as well as
give
your legs a break if you sort of hug them. I
needed all the help I could get from the bedding I had
last nightÑ200 kilometers, as Soluc, my new friend said, is too much.
I left Bayonne today at noon taking full
advantage of the
latest time to check out of the Hotel Lousteau (recommended by me: 1
Place de
la Republique, part of the Quality Hotel chain) and traveled the slow
way down
the coast past the opulent and frankly bright spirit of Biarritz down
to the
very end of France, Hendaye Plage.
At the absolute end of the road I saw what looked like a hotel
with the
name ÒSerge BlancoÓ and, on closer inspection, found it was a ÒCentre
Thallasotherapie.Ó ThatÕs for me,
I thought, and pulled right in.
For those who donÕt know, Serge Blanco was a great full back for
the
French national rugby team and is now the president of the first
division rugby
league in France as well as a wide-ranging entrepreneur.
His clothing line is quite chic and
usually bears his number, Ò15Ó. It
is fitting that, as I sit on my balcony in the hotel overlooking the
Atlantic
and the Cote Basque, thereÕs a very active game of beach rugby going on
below
me with more or less middle-aged men, quite fit, playing touch-style in
the
sand. ItÕs a perfect 80 degrees F
with not a cloud in the sky and a refreshing westerly breeze. Nice. Thanks
Serge.
The thallasotherapie thing is something very
French. Basically it means using sea water
to
heal your minor ills and keep you in form. All
around France and its Òoutre merÓ departments there are
these centers and they offer all kinds of water-based treatments. Diana and I stumbled into one in the
south of France a few years ago and they have been a good option for a
nightÕs
stay because they are invariably well-appointed, comfortable, and not
too
expensive. If youÕre in for
massage, water-blasting, a mud pack, or just a hot dip in a spa, then
these are
the places to go. When you do go
and try to use the therapies, you have to sign in and have a doctor
discuss
your regime. He (or she) then
prescribes your schedule and off you go.
The ÒprescriptionÓ for your ÒsoinsÓ (care) is made by a real
licensed
doctor and, thus, can be paid for by most of the medical insurance
companies or
mutualitŽs that provide funding for health care in France.
ThereÕs talk of some co-pays, but this
stuff is too much a part of the French social structure to be deterred
by a bit
of market pressure. As opposed to
cycling, this is not a gender-dominated thing and thereÕs lots of men
getting
blasted, boiled, basted and basically soakedÑbut the majority are women
who are
keeping up their form with this lightweight form of exercise and beauty
treatment. Oh yes, and you can get
a prescription for a facial if that seems appropriate.
I went to Spain today more or less by chance. Behind the hotel is a yacht basin (port
de plaisance) and there was a ferry service that crossed the river. I jumped on as it was leaving and for
1.40 euros I ended up in the very clean and scenic Spanish village of
Hondarribia. This was at 2:40 pm and that
is when
things simply shut down in Spain and I was greeted with many closed
shops and
restaurants until I wandered back into the smaller streets and found a
sidewalk
cafŽ that still had table settings outÑmeaning they were ready to
accept
customers. A beer and some seafood
was my thought and they had both.
This was a ÒgaragardotegiaÓ in Euskadi, the Basque language,
which is to
say the equivalent of a cerveceria, or a brasserie, meaning, they sold
beer and
food most of the day. Gambas a la
plancha were on offer (shrimps done in butter and garlic) and they had
draft
beer so I was set. The only thing
missing was a television to watch the end of the dayÕs stage of the
Tour. When I had my beer in front of me I
noticed that the man who was obviously the proprietor was nipping back
inside
fairly often and staring at the television. It
was the Tour and he was a fan. I ate my
shellfish, dipping them in the sweet mayonnaise they
came with trying to catch back up with the 5,00 calories IÕd left on
the road
the day before and, as I replied ÒnoÓ to his offer of coffee, asked if
I might
look at the television. By this
time he had figured that the best way to talk to me was in English and
his was
quite good. ÒYou a fan of
cycling?Ó he asked, and I said yes.
ÒCome and see,Ó so we went inside and watched the stage. It turned out that Soluc, the owner,
was a big cycling fan and heÕd spent 7 years in Los Angeles working as
a
machinist in the aircraft industry.
By the time the stage had ended with Flecha comfortably in
front, weÕd
shared a few tales and heÕd showed me his pink and blue Lampre team cap
signed
by the Italian team (with two Spanish riders included).
Soluc put in Ò60, maybe 80 kilometers a
dayÓ in the spring and fall. In
the summer, ÒI am here all the time,Ó and he said he gained weight. HeÕs got a new Cannondale and swears by
Shimano. I said I had a new bike
with Campagnolo and he dismissed it with a long discourse, most in
Euskadi,
about how the Italian stuff didnÕt shift so well. I
gained a little respect back after I told him I had a
cyclocross bike with Shimano components.
ÒThatÕs good,Ó he said, Òyou get home and ride that bike.Ó
ÒThereÕs gonna be a lot of Vascos at the tour,
you bet,Ó
he told me. ÒEverybody from hereÕs
gonna go watch the mountain stages, you bet,Ó he continued, making a
big
gesture in the general direction of east.
ÒThe whole mountain will be orange Ôcause Mayo is doing good and
the
Vascos are doing good.Ó
I believe him.
There were Basque (Vasco) signs scattered along the route of
lÕEtape,
including some E.T.A. signs, which are actually not allowed in Spain. The Tour was going to go on the lÕEtape
route in 6 days, through the heart of the French Basque country and
this was a
chance to make a political case, the ETA being the Basque separatist
folks. But there was no hint that
there would be any problems with the Tour. Cycling
is more important than politics in this part of the
world. It was the artists union
that had the little demonstration day before yesterday that delayed the
peloton
and, well, you know, they donÕt know much about cycling.
I mean, who would stop the peloton to
make a point when there was a breakaway group aheadÑthatÕs where the
cameras
were!
If you do get to Hendaye Plage (or anywhere in
that part
of France) and go on across into Spain, nip into the Garagardotegia
Kalifornia
(yes, he named it after California despite his dislike of the freeways)
and ask
for Soluc, tell him youÕre a rider and heÕll sport you to a beer (if a
Spaniard
wins the stage that day). ItÕs on
Santiago street, number 65, not too far from the ferry landing.
TodayÕs (the 17th) local paper (Sud-Ouest) was full of coverage of lÕEtape, a front
page
picture and two full pages inside.
Well, I must say, they report that poor old Miguel Indurain
didnÕt
finish. He had to stop and have
lunch with his family up in the mountains. Given
how long these meals can take in this part of the
world, he wouldnÕt have finished the ride until well after dark anyway. As it was, Loic Herbreta won with a time
of 6 hours 17 minutes 37 seconds (it is a race, especially for
the top
100 or so). He won in a sprint
finish with Laurent Marcon trailing by less than a second.
Takuma Sako, the first Japanese to try
lÕEtape had to quit early; they included a picture of the poor
guyÑperhaps the
local editor hadnÕt heard of the oriental notion of Òlosing face.Ó
The first woman, Stephanie Gros, from Paris,
crossed the
line in 7:27:15. Ex-pro and world
champion Abraham Olano finished in 79th.
The paper carried comments by riders that ran this way: ÒThe
finish was really hard with a multitude of small hills each of them
very hard
to negotiate, coming one after the other,Ó that from Mylene Julien, 41
years
old from Millau. And, Òon the
first big descent I didnÕt negotiate the turn well and lost confidence. The bike was in good shape but not
me. I gave up getting a good time
and just rolled on.ÓÑSerge Vanotti, 40.
But hereÕs the big news in the headlines: ÒIls
etaient 8 500 au dŽpart, ils seront 3 647 ˆ lÕarrivŽeÓ (There
were 8,500 at the start, there would be 3,647 at the finish). Goodness! That
doesnÕt seem right. Was it that bad? Am I
that crazy? Did they have enough
busses to bring all the ÒabandoneesÓ back? Hold
it, letÕs check out LÕEquipe.
The daily French sports bible reported these
facts in the
story they ran about LÕEtape (lower right corner of inside page with a
photo of
Indurain, Alain Prost and Olano): that it was IndurainÕs birthday, that
he
hadnÕt shaved his legs, that he stopped in Oloron to get a medal from
the town,
and he quit the ride after the little Larrau climb.
Now thatÕs reporting! of a sort They
also let us know, after all that, that there were 6,979
starters who got really tired, that they rode in small Òpaquets
compactsÓ all
along the Ònarrow and sinuous roads in a silence that gave an
impression of
being in a cathedral, sometimes walking in their socks to get to the
summits or
the saving feed stations.Ó (lÕEquipe is
known for pouring it on). Given
the threat of elimination at two points on the route, lÕEquipe also reported that the Òtension in the
peloton was
intense and palpableÓ but there were 6,391 ÒsurvivorsÓ with Dominique
Crosnier
finishing last in 11 hours, 26 minutes.
So I whomped him (or her) by a good two hours plus and might
have
finished ahead of a mere thousand (actually, I finished #5,395Ñnot
quite a
thousand behind me of those who did the whole stage).
Shoot, beating any French rider anywhere near my age who
dares to squeeze into their Lycra is, to me, a triumph.
Later, after the actual Tour finished
their own Pau-Bayonne stage, lÕEquipe called lÕEtape a Òcyclo-marcheÓ
(cycling
walk) making fun of its official status as a cyclosportive. In this case they didnÕt have to rely
on hyperbole.
With this bit of reduced satisfaction (I hadnÕt
read
LÕEquipe until just before dinner) I tucked into the hotelÕs seafood
buffet. This was all-you-can-eat
lobster, shrimp, crabs, mussels, oysters, whelks, smoked salmon,
crayfish and
other small briny things with shells.
I held off the option of complete gluttony and went four for
forty or so
with an emphasis on the shrimp and lobster with side notes of salmon
and
mussels. This Òsplurge marineÓ was
preceded by a very nice salad with leaf lettuce and ultra thin slices
of the
local ham and was followed by a refreshing dollop of raspberry sorbet
in a
passion-fruit syrup with bits of pineapple and a closing leaf of
peppery
mint. This all went quite nicely
with the local rosŽ, a cote de Basque.
In the background, the bar singer was going through ÒWhat a
wonderful
worldÓ accompanied by his computerized keyboardÐÐand I couldnÕt help
but agree.