It’s cold here. High-humidity cold. It seeps into your skin like a nicotine patch. It’s as persistent as a senate filibuster and as welcome as a letter from the IRS.
Today we were supposed to be under our favorite palapa in Puerto Vallarta, slurping margaritas and wiggling our toes in warm sand. You know the story. Instead, with hardly two weeks to adjust, we trundled off to live for three months in an eighty-year-old French farmhouse, constructed of solid masonry that retains cold like a numismatist collects stamps. Outside, a grousing heat pump tries to salvage heat from air that has none. Inside, eighty-year-old radiators, once bristling with steam from an oil-fired boiler, now circulate lukewarm water from the heat pump, warming the air with a whisper rather than the shout of ancient fire.
Thus, today we meet the second of five words that I’m using to describe our French experience: cold.
We have defensive measures. A butane stove, disguised to look like an antique French coal burner, occupies the living room. Its viewing window discloses flickering flames within and its output, while effective, is no doubt illegal by most building codes, since it has no chimney. Wotthehell: warmth trumps asphyxiation when desperation is as clamorous as ours.
Another defensive measure: two hot-water bottles, provided by our hosts and enclosed in cozy sweaters. We fill them with the hottest water imaginable and slide them under the covers when we retire in the evening. They’re an ancient remedy but remarkably effective. I wrap my feet around mine and within minutes I’m as content as a colt in clover. Blissfully, the heat lasts all night.
Then there’s the bathtub. The water heater here has all the enthusiasm that the heating system does not. Hot water from the tap is scorching and almost immediate. I fill the tub, grab a magazine (never read a Kindle in the tub!) and I’m good for an entire afternoon.
January is drawing to a close. Back home in Portland, daffodils and crocuses are emerging. The days are getting longer and the nights are getting warmer. The cold won’t last forever. The way I figure it, the temperature here should be just about right when we leave in late March.
But hey: we have our stove, and our water bottles, and our tub. Margaritas and warm sand? Where’s the adventure in that?
(At top: The view from inside the car in the morning.)
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Oh dear. I HATE to be cold, have kind of a seasonal affective disorder reaction to being continuously cold. Sounds like you are being ever so flexible and creative and of course, nearby as it does finally warm there are such great things to see and explore, things that make me truly jealous. But, for the moment, I think I will go to the thermostat and push the heat up an extra degree. Here is a bright piece of info, at 45 degrees latitude, (you are at 46.8) we are gaining approx. 3 minutes of daylight per day.
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Anita, you’re certainly right about places nearby. Today I have been researching Amboise and the Château du Clos Lucé where da Vinci lived. Gotta go there. And then there’s Georges Sand’s home in Nohant-Vic, the Automobile Museum of Valençay — there’s so much to see! I’m glad we’re here for three months!
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Well, I am sorry that you are cold! At least there are two of you to cuddle! That kind of high humidity cold is miserable. Sometimes it seems as if there is no way to warm up. But don’t asphyxiate yourselves! At least the view is beautiful in the morning. And it is almost February. And you are making memories.
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Right you are Linda, about the cuddling. One of the five words that I’m using to express our French experience is “companionship.” Be watching for it.
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Chere Cousine: Chin up. You could be where I am (West Warwick) wrestling with the snow-blower!
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No snow blowers here, J.P. In fact, a tour of a nearby hardware store the other day resulted in no snow blowers for sale at all. Guess there’s not much of that, in spite of the cold. Also, in spite of the cold, today is sunny and (relatively) warm. Spring can’t be far away!
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Superawesomespectacular play on words. esp, Numist matist used with icy feel of the place. Ways cool. The other several plays were excellent also.
big fan,
Kap
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It isn’t often that I get to use a word like “numismatist.” Thanks for noticing.
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Doubting that it will be of any consolation whatsoever, but it actually rained last night in Puerto Vallarta.
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In fact, Jim, one of fondest memories of PV is one of a severe rain storm. A warm rain is something of a dichotomy where I come from (and where I am). It provoked a post in this blog a while back. Click here.
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Sounds like New York right now… Never fear.. Share lots of hugs, body heat works…. And keep planning a Mexico trip… Adventures!!!
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Thanks for the encouragement, B. With Louise out of town (shopping in Paris), I’ve been depending on Mimi the cat for body heat. As you know, I am NOT a cat guy, but this cat is positively doglike.
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Hi Tom,
The walls do not retain the cold then? I even looked it up, but it seems to be as I thought it was; a numismatist collects coins, and philatelists do stamps.
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And here I was so proud of my big word! Of course it would be Gerard who tripped me up. When it comes to readers, I gotta aim for a lower common denominator.
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Hmm. I thought I told you that in private responding the e-mail announcing the new post.
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I did e-mail, but it didn’t go where I assumed it would, sorry!
The Expat Almanac It automagically converted to a comment.
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In the reply above there was an between “Almanac” and “It” but WordPress suppressed the code. I’ll try again with quotes and brackets.
“The Expat Almanac ”
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Square brackets ][ with “code” and “/code” in between will do the trick.
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I’ve done a bit of winter in France Tom and can relate to the cold. Masonry walls are delightful in the hot days of summer, but in winter, I’m convinced that they can somehow amplify the cold. They never warm up, and the cold just seeps in and stays. But look at it this way, you don’t have to worry about mosquitos. ~James
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Indeed. Mosquitos are not a problem. Contrary to the tone of my post, this is really a lovable place, simple and kind. Travel, we have learned, is best accomplished with a focus on the positive. Today I will meditate on mosquitos — or the lack thereof.
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