It is funny how we slide into habits, isn’t it? Those little details that slowly vanish into nothingness or strengthen with ease day after day. The things that we have to choose or those we forget, sleepwalking style.
And so it was that I realized this morning, with a hiccup of surprise, that I hadn’t really roamed the Roquette neighborhood of Arles in…months. Now, for those of you that haven’t yet visited this small town perhaps you don’t realize how limited a space it is, easily traversable by feet in fifteen minutes or so. I wondered at my lack of wandering as I strolled with my furry companions and just then Kipling barked loudly, randomly as he is want to do. “That is why,” I nodded. For he is a bit of a handful, this creature and I have been keeping him to the quay in the mornings for several reasons but it was time to stop being so safe, so we took a left loop on the way home, threading the narrow streets of the Roquette.
It is one of Arles’ oldest neighborhoods and nearly every architectural style is present. When I first visited in 2003, it’s nefarious reputation was still intact, an area of drug deals and stray cats, where Roma families would pull their sofas and televisions into the streets to take in the night air. Like so many inexpensive urban areas, it has gentrified mightily over the years. Les bobos, aka the bourgeois bohéme, have come and gone and it seems as though the area has become the Park Slope of Arles, family-filled.
I turned on to the Rue Croix Rouge after having done a quick cat-scan for Kipling and was immediately smacked by the perfume of jasmine, one was so strong it seemed as though my skin was sucking it in. And there were flowers…everywhere. I zig-zagged back with the boys, picking up the pace as the heat began to climb. Upon delivering them to the shade of the apartment, I grabbed my camera and headed back to capture and continue to explore.
I was so delighted by what I found. While I appreciated the gorgeous renovations of many of the homes, this wasn’t about money but pride. For so many of even the most modest homes had some small touch of greenery from a lone cactus on the windowsill to outdoor gardens beyond the front door.
Walking slowly, I took in the quiet, this despite it being late Saturday morning, the market day. Kids playing ball stopped to let an elderly Algerian man pass. Moms gossiped in doorways looking on. The energy was good. No place is perfect. Certain streets still exude a rough around the edges air and friends living in the Roquette say that there can be a frustrating pressure to be neighborhoody, that folks are constantly showing up for the apero uninvited and if you don’t participate in the big get-togethers you are labelled a snob. But I liked it.
This morning I did the same loop with the boys and while the impression was not as heady, save for the jasmine, it was still positive. I am planning to do a little mini-series this week to share with you more on this area of Arles, one where the tourists seldom tread…



















Aw, I love you Sister!
Actually the museum is very kid-friendly (you'll see 🙂 so is the Cuisine de Comptoir that I wrote about last week–yummy tartines!
One address that I have always wanted to try near you is:
http://www.lhuitreetlavigne.com/index.php/en/
I can't remember if that was in the Cote Sud on Uzes or not but it looks amaaaazing.
It looks charming and rustic. I am sure it would be wonderful to spend a month there, communing with the muses.
You are PRETTY under the radar, alright! More like BEAUTIFUL! : )
Your pictures are sublime as always Heather. I love that you don't give us the standard expected photos of the region…PS I think that black cab must have taken a wrong turn of Hyde Park Corner 😉 xx
No kidding Arles is a hike from Hobart yet close to Uzes! Loved the Cote Sud article on Uzes so had high hopes for using it as a tour guide to Arles…..glad to hear that it is in fact reliable! Would love to see the Rodin exhibition….mercifully my children have been well and truly conditioned to museums…or we could always go on a schoolday! Rx
Heehee–if they know me at all it is definitely as the "Lady with Two Goldens"!!! Otherwise I think I am pretty under the radar. I am glad you liked the flowers Sister and wish you were here to share them in person too…waawaaa…
Romy, I had to check on your blog because I thought "Gee, Arles is great and all but quite a haul from Hobart!" 🙂 Yes, I was planning on mentioning the Cote Sud article in my next post–really, all of the locals are super happy with it because it lists the addresses that we all adore–the good stuff.
One thing that is going on right now that is exceptional in Arles is the Rodin exhibition at the Antiquities museum–amazing. And don't forget that we have the biggest market in Provence on Saturday mornings…
Wow – you're right – all the greenery is really striking! Love the enormous potted plants and ALL the flowers! I look forward to the rest of the mini series, seeing new parts of Arles through my sister's eyes! (wish I was there to see it through my own eyes – waa-waa). I wonder if the citizens of Arles know you as "that redheaded American with the camera"? : ) You have a wonderful week, too!
Stunning! Bought the most recent 'Cote Sud' and have Arles high on the agenda…hoping to schedule a visit in the next week or so. Shame those jasmine photos aren't in smellovision! Rx