Friday 15 June 2012

Salon Cote Sud 2012: "Sous le signe d'Helios"

Some pictures of Salon Cote Sud 2012: 
keeps getting bigger and better, many interesting stands, noticeably Brocantes, manufactured goods, and landscape.

This year again, the main Cote Sud Stand is dedicated to culinary demonstrations, which again attracts crowds, even under the midday sun, which is the theme of this year's event anyway..

The staircase is this year open to public, installed with cushions and parasols, and decorated with sunflowers that somebody forgot to water....this definitively not the Chelsea flower show, oh dear!!


The basin was this year colonised by a couple of sun decks







Poterie Ravel, with his recently reborn fabric shop Philogene Ravel that sells gorgeous linen goods


Francois Passolunghi, stared in last Cote Sud edition: his furniture is absolutely unique and the hand-made-in-France takes all his meaning here



I want those!!!!!


The glassware are creations of next door stand: Julienne Daniaux


Views from the stylists corner





"La caravane estivale", Tesserault caravan from the 70's, decorated with furnitures and carpets from the Andes by Veronique Valdes... South America is everywhere those days, so proud!!


The Brocantes, obviously my favorite spot:

Les Ours




Bernard Roux et Annie Gravezat









And a little stroll in Aix, with my own private paparazzi.....








Sunday 10 June 2012

Atacama's last adventure

I know you might start to get bored with all those pictures of the desert, but bear with me, this is the last Atacama post: a 5h horseback ride through a Canyon and then up a cattle path, the one the cattle used to take to walk from Argentina to Calama and Antofagasta, that's up a very steep climb to a plateau, and then back down through a sand dune to the local Death Valley, a bliss!!!

Pukara de Quitor, 
ancient indian fortress before the Inca conquest

through the Valley to Catarpe: my guide looks like a real cow-boy


and through the Canyon:


 I look like a real tourist..


Some scenes of "The motorcycle diaries" telling the story of Che Guevara, were filmed in that Canyon




and up the cattle trail,  the pics don't really show how steep this path was, even more impressive when being at riders' heigth.



On top of the plateau


and looking at the sand dune to Valle de la Muerte


So, I don't know if it's the Valley's name that inspired them, but I think that at this point our horses were whispering something I didn't ear in each other's ear, like "I'll race you down" or "the first one down gets a free beer", as a few minutes later, going down the dune, my horse who had been pretty relaxed until then suddenly took off like a rocket and over passed the guide without showing any signs of slowing down......Thank god my very ancient riding skills came back to me at that point to save me and my camera from landing in the sand!


managed to take a couple of pics before loosing control of my cheeky beast




That's it for Chile, see you back in Europe!

PS: in case you are travelling to San Pedro and are looking to horseback ride, I do recommend Rancho Cactus, they are nice and have very good horses for all levels: http://www.rancho-cactus.cl/



Monday 4 June 2012

Adventure in the Atacama: madmen in action

Awesome landscape wasn't the only draw for this trip. It actually all started with a conversation about what to do next, i.e. after the Mont Ventoux climb, and the Alpes d'Huez etape (of the tour the France for those who don't bike nor have a biking freak in the family). So my husband Christophe came up with this idea of biking up the Paso de Jama, the road that links the Chilean to the Argentinian Altiplano through the Cordillera de los Andes, and culminates at 4250m (the road, not the mountains, they peak nearer 5500)...

So here they are training @ Taltal, at sea level..


...and after a few days of training at 2600 m on the Altiplano, here's the D day:

on departure, just outside San Pedro


...just a bit to go..


...and about 25km  up the road...



..getting very close...


...and there...


...the cheering crowd:



... bravo to our happy madmen...



 don't even try to imagine what's going to be next.....