Sous le Mount Ventoux


The air is hot and is shaking my hand, pumping it like a madman. And yet I hesitate before taking shelter, sweetened by the prospect of a wide-open view.

A little shade gives respite despite the whistling that sings in my ears…

…with the clarity of the church bell ringing from Crillon-le-Brave.
I sit in the dust under an unripe fig tree, knowing that the wasps have yet to mate in their magic…
…and let my vision be torn between the insisting cypresses pointing heavenwards…
…and the light shorn details pulling down…
…to settle in this in-between where the olive trees whip in the winds that circle hawk-like under the Mount Ventoux. It strips me back to the bone – this beauty, this softened wilderness, kind.

20 comments

  1. this sounds like a perfect way to spend a sunday afternoon Heather….tucked up quietly with tea and a stack of good books….heaven….

  2. Mean Mistral. The wind and I are not usually on good terms. Of all the winds I have known, the only ones that I have truly welcomed and loved were the Trade Winds.

  3. The wind seems to make life exciting in the beautiful pastoral setting with the benevolent Mt. Ventoux not so far away.
    The church spire and the figs complement each other.
    It's May, a time for celebration.

  4. Santa Ana winds here, dry, hot, coursing along miles of pavement… I just want to say the Mistral has never looked lovelier

  5. Ah, the Mistral. Something we are lucky to avoid in our part of France, though the winds from the Atlantic work their own strangely difficult magic, and even havoc, at times. What a beautiful post.

  6. Oh my, is the air already hot chez vous? Est-ce que l'année a déja tellement avancée? Though the heat can sometimes become oppresive in your region this sounds too sweet to me. As well as your soul-soothing poetry which makes us forget the force and rigor of the Mistral.

  7. When I'm midst the grape fields and cypresses, all I can do is repeat over and over, "I love this place!"

  8. Hello my dear Jane and Lance!

    While these photos were taken some time ago, the Mistral wind is acting exactly the same today and it is a mean one. No wonder they say that it can drive folks mad. So I am staying in despite the sun and imagine that you both are tucked up quietly with tea and a stack of good books. What a fantastic way to spend the weekend. Oh! And especially is there is some lovely music playing quietly in the background and the prospect of friends dropping by later (for you two, I have my furry companions).
    Wishing you a lovely weekend as well,
    Heather

  9. Hello Heather:

    There is indeed a kind of wildness about this landscape, particularly so with the image of the olive trees standing amongst the whipped brown grasses which do themselves suggest the prairie, and yet it is not, or so we believe, alien in any way.

    How wonderful, Heather, to feel that warmth which here we knew a few days back but has, for what is a holiday weekend, been replaced with grey skies, a cool breeze and, from time to time, exceedingly heavy downpours. Your photographs are, as always, so very evocative and portray so clearly that wonderful part of France in which you find yourself living.

    Enjoy your weekend. xxx

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Protected by CleanTalk Anti-Spam