Monday, August 10, 2015

Fougeres Pig Parade

Fougeres has a Pig Parade going in its beautiful city park. You've seen this before, cities buying horse or cow or pig or chicken (Bresse) or bear (Berlin) figures, and then getting local artists to paint them, and then display them as public art. I wonder whether the artists ever get paid in real money. Oh well. Recognition. Civic honor. Nonetheless, these things are often fun, and Fougeres had them all displayed in one place. PS. Why no camo-pig? Or pig-cuts pig??* Which always reminds me of the Porsche Pink Pig**
Personal favorite





























































In progress





























Stealth pig
















"Pig up"















For further information

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**

Fougeres 2

Our walk in Fougeres continues...
So we are walking along in Medieval village
















Appreciating the peach tree in someone's yard
















And the pear tree

















And...what's that?
















It's the Kiwi House; in France no less; really Thai'd things
together (running gag)
















And now we are at the bottom of the valley, at St. Sulpice's
chapel

















13th and quite weathered stone
















Thus
















Don't tread on me (by the door)




















The major relic here is Our Lady of the Marshes,
a sculpture found in the swamp as they were enlarging
the church; it's always a wonder the way these things
are found; one wonders also how such things found
their way into the swamp
























Thus
















Don't tread on me, episode #2




















Altar and some of the beautiful wood in this old church
















Sainte Viviane
















So apparently if your church was deficient in the relic
department, you could order up one from the Vatican; the
Pope or his agent would send someone out into the Catacombs
to fetch some martyr/saint or other; for a price, of course;
I wonder whether they had a catalog; if you could buy parts or
had to get the whole thing...




















Another interesting old church

Fougeres 1

After viewing the castle, we walked up hill to the old city, looked around, saw the big church, then walked back down to the Medieval village via the city garden.
Up in the town now, admiring pretty buildings




















Clock towers




















Statues of famous generals who are buried in Russia now
















Interesting signs




















Carefully watched by a 5 year-old boy with
binoculars





















Our next stop was the St. Leonard's parish
church; 14th mostly





















Flamboyant on the south side
















Less on the north
















Thus inside
















But with this astonishing detail: a remnant of the 12th century
windows from St. Denis' abbatiale church in Paris, the first Gothic
structure, saved from the Revolution

















We were now on the city walk, which is graced by the literary
notes of great authors about the town; as are so many French
city walks


















Thus, and many more
















The walk led through the city garden, down the slope to the
Medieval village

















Panoramic view










Down concrete stairs, from the 19th century, as
we saw in Paris





















A Breton shoe shows the way




















Nice garden (more in a subsequent post)
















Now in the so-called Medieval village














Fougeres Chateau

Our next castle and town were Fougeres, only a few miles down the road from Vitre. Another medieval castle and town, only this one dating back to the 1100's. Among the many who besieged, took it, and destroyed it, was Henry II Plantagenet. But it always got rebuilt. Historically, Fougeresians always knew it would become a major tourist destination and they'd get national funding.
One Fougeres' two aires is just below the castle; it was a warm
day, so we parked in the semi-shade and rested; don't want to
get castled-out before leaving France


















Next morning: a formidable looking place; but as Ghengis Khan once said,
no wall is stronger than the hearts that defend it

















The local river was re-routed to form a moat
















Not one of the vulnerable points, one supposes
















Moatley view
















Now we're trudging up the hill to the town; note wall
communicating with town
















Anyhow, here's a fuller view of the castle and environs; from
town; note hill behind castle
















Ditto











So now we have walked the town and the
Medieval village and two churches and are
back in the hole where the castle is located






















One of the precepts of military strategy is to
always seek the high ground 





















Pretty castle

















It's wall stretched right up into the city; attackers, one surmises,
could take the city, march along the wall right up to the castle,
and then rain arrows down on the castle's defenders from both
town and the hill behind; maybe call in an air-strike; during some
wars, even before gunpowder, Fougeres simply surrendered
without a fight; pretty castle, nonetheless