Quand la mayonnaise prend….

We don’t often hold “group” evenings – with only 7 gîtes it seems to work best if they just happen naturally when “la mayonnaise prend”,  as they say in French!

BBQ at our dordogne gites

The men are feeling the heat!

Last week 4 of the 7 families have been before and everyone was getting on famously so a big communal BBQ was arranged at the beginning of the week. It also happened to be someone’s significant birthday so it was a good excuse for some celebratory bubbly too!

Tom Wyllie is a regular guest at Les Crouquets and when he was last here in 2011 he sang for our guests, delighting everyone with his rich baritone voice. Since then he has launched his singing career and has recorded 2 albums. As luck would have it he is here again this week & he agreed to entertain the troops! What a fantastc job he did, rallying everyone around in great party style singing everything from Copa Cabana (while leading a snaking conga all around the gardens) to a brilliant rendition of Nessun Dorma. Classical music is Tom’s forté and he sings these impressive arias exceptionally well!

tom Wyllie and Emma Elle Jo

Tom Wyllie & Emma Elle Jo

family fun at our dordogne holiday cottages

The conga !

Emma is also just beginning to dip her toes in the singing waters and she joined forces with Tom for a couple of duets as well as several well received numbers on her own. Ed (Tom’s brother ) and Alistair manned the mixing deck…theWyllies and the Djelils – 4veryproudparents.com!! A huge thanks to all of our guests too – children & adults alike, they all joined in in some way and helped make the evening a great success!

dancing at our dordogne gites

The boules pitch is turned into a dance floor!

Very much looking forward to the next time the mayonnaise takes…!!

Feu de St Jean

Last Saturday (29/06!) was Jayac’s Feu de St Jean…yes, it has taken me more than a week to find enough time to write this. The Summer season has well & truly kicked in, yet again disputing the myth that running gîtes is all about making a few beds on a Saturday and relaxing for the rest of the week!

The Feu de St Jean is traditionally a religious festival to herald the Summer and culminates in a big bonfire. Luckily for us and unlike some other communities we weren’t expected to jump over the burning pile!

Not so lucky for us is that  most of the neighbouring villages hold their celebrations before Jayac and by the time our turn arrives most people are all bonfired out. Jayac doesn’t usually get a good turn out for this event which is exceptional as the community spirit here is very strong & most events are well attended.

Still, we soldiered on – as usual Amar was at the helm of the BBQ, turning out chipolatas for French style hot dogs (expected low turnout = very restricted menu) to accompany the jugs of Sangria and endless bowls of nibbles. The band which normally provides the music were attending a wedding so after Emma’s successful first contribution to the Soirée Moule Frites she was asked to provide the entertainment.

Emma Elle Jo singing at Jayac in Dordorgne

Emma Elle Jo

No mean feat this as the bulk of the attenders were stoic French pensioners.. Emma is barely 16 and pop & rock is her thing so she feared they’d be a hard audience to please! She needn’t have worried – with a shiny new PA system (many, many thanks to Tom Wyllie, North East Singer and his family for all the help and advice they gave to us music newbies!) and Alistair at the controls of the mixing deck, fancying himself rotten as the next big thing in DJs, it all went exceptionally well. Emma managed to provide enough French music to oil the wheels and by the end of the night even the oldies were up on their feet and begging us for mercy !(Duffy 2008)

With the music and the eats all wound up the bonfire procession began. This involves a short walk up to the field where the massive bonfire is prepared days in advance. Traditionally everyone carries lit torches to light the dark counrty roads but this year the Commitée de Fête splashed out on some fancy coloured lanterns with little candles inside making the whole thing feel more party and less pagan!

candle lit lanterns

coloured lanterns to light the dark country lanes

Up at the bonfire even the health & safety rules had taken on a new feel. The usual precautions consisted of men, women & children getting up as close and personal as they could to the waiting woodpile while someone doused the whole thing with copious amounts of petrol and tossed in a lit match. Everyone would then wait until they could feel their eyebrows just beginning to singe. At that point someone would shout that it was now time to get back and the crowd would obediently ebb away – or something along those lines.

bonfire at Jayac

This year"s meagre crowd as the others sat well back eating doughnuts!

This year though, benches were provided, set well back from the fire and baskets of doughnuts and drinks were handed round which had the automatic effect of keeping the spectators away from the flames, eats & treats being a much more attractive option than burnt facial hair!

doughnuts

Baskets of doughnuts handed round to the waiting crowd

There is talk that next year Jayac will join forces with Paulin, a neighbouring village, for this event which makes sense for economies of scale. Paulin however has everything on the same site so no candle lit procession and no strolling along the country lanes at midnight… a little more convenient perhaps but no doubt also a little less charm ….