Hornfleur then Home

Now at the end of our cruise.  With all the worry of the the dreaded Bay of Biscay and it’s reputation for unsavoury weather yet it was a millpond.  I wish I could say the same about the rain.  Once we left Portugal it followed us around like a wet blanket.  It cloaked everything in its grey haze and whilst we were lucky on the thunderstorm days to get some dramatic skies and strips of light the last few days have been colourless.  The misty calm made for some good shots in St Malo but at Honfleur yesterday it was like every photo I took was like chasing the light.  The sun never came out the whole time we were there and as you will see from the photos the colour is missing.  However I am sure you will get the picture.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Chasing some colour

43250A8A-B297-4E27-A533-625415BCB0F2.jpeg

It was hard to find art of the day up this way as there is little graffiti and back street wandering doesn’t yield any treasures apart from pretty gardens and quaint buildings.   Hornfleur had an incredible amount of art galleries and studios and some of the work was stunning, especially if you had a big suitcase, deep pockets and somewhere to put it when you got home.  Few opportunities to spot anything outside of what was in the galleries, as the bronze men on horses or standing with sword in hand gets tired quickly just like yet another church steeple.  This dude looked quite interesting the other half was inside the shop.
The stories of these couples are different, but most of them cialis generic price are suffering from the problem of erectile dysfunction. However, this judgment varies from culture-to-culture, country-to-country, and expert-to-expert. cheap viagra 25mg It is recommended that you best prices on sildenafil take this medicine an hour before and start with your sexual activity. Give cheap levitra supplementprofessors.com Tongkat Ali a try and relish in the results just like the Malaysians do.

As I said all the churches do get wearying despite their magnificent splendour, we did however have to pop our heads in this one as it is the largest wooden church in France but also it was built by the local shipwrights in the town back in the 1600’s as they couldn’t afford to pay the architects and stonemasons and it is quite something. I think it will have to be art of the day. This shot is taken from the middle.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

%d bloggers like this: