As promised, we have an update on us! After 9 + years living in Indonesia and France with a brief stopover in Louisville (we refer to it as Louisville 2), we have left France and have repatriated to the US! In preparation for the move, beginning at the end of 2022, we began to sell all but a couple of furniture items we bought on arrival in France. We also sold our car, two smart televisions and some small appliances. Luckily a gentlemen who worked with Brad in Jakarta (and who is from France) wanted to buy most of the furniture and some of the accessories. He owned a property that needed upgrading. All of the items we sold were in "same as new" condition so folks seemed thrilled to be able to grab things up. We sold everything at a very reasonable price. One of the early items to sell was our IKEA sleeper sofa. As a result, we moved our balcony table and chairs into the living room next our IKEA chair/ottoman. (We kept the IKEA chair and ottoman so it was packed up with our other "stuff" to be shipped. We also decided to keep the dining room table and chairs.) The balcony chairs were not as comfy as the sofa had been, but it worked.
Items slowly disappeared from the apartment but several people were willing to wait a bit before picking things up. It made it a little easier. By mid-January we were pretty cleaned out and living out of suitcases. About the same time we moved into a temporary apartment with our few suitcases before the packers/movers arrived. We were packed up and all of our stuff was loaded into a truck on February 2.
Boxes were moved to the double balcony door to be loaded onto the elevator truck down to the street level for loading.And then there was nothing left.
The next step for our goods was to be loaded onto a container ship in La Havre. The ship would be bound for Charleston, SC with stops first in New York City then Newport, Virginia. The ship left La Havre on February 19.
While our permanent apartment in France was located in the center of the city, our temporary apartment was located in the historic center. We lived across the street from the Cathédrale Notre-Dame-de-l'Assomption. I wrote a blog post when we first arrived in France about this Cathedral, but the very short version is that construction began in 1248 and it is built of Volvic volcanic stone so the church appears blackish in color. For the full story see the blog posted on December 12, 2020. The rear portion of the Cathedral was right across the street.
This restaurant was also right across the street.
As I said, the temporary apartment was located in the historic center of town and it had tiny, tiny, tiny "roads" to go with the area. Our first attempt to drive our car to the apartment building was not fun. Our car (a Peugeot 3008) was small by US standards but rather large by French standards. We ( meaning the GPS) didn't select a good route for our first attempt.
Another turn.
Finally we see our parking spot. The tiny one on the right. With so little turn around space, B settled on backing into the spot to make it easier to get out. However, the space was so tight he would have to crawl over the center console and out the passenger door. The ideal car for this garage is something like a smart car size. We actually parked the car here as little as possible and ended up leaving it at the permanent apartment which we still "owned" until we sold the car. After that, we just walked everywhere we needed to go. It was not that far to walk between the two apartments.
The temporary apartment had several unusual lighting fixtures. This one decorated all of the walls in the room. It was an interesting effect. The main light in the kitchen was also very interesting. If you pulled down on a chain, the ball opened and expanded. It looked pretty but didn't provide much light. Thankfully there was an additional fluorescent light mounted on a wall.
We were gifted some lovely apple juice by a gentleman who works with B. He grew up near this orchard. Delicious!
Such interesting architecture.
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