Quiet, Please

Friday, 30 July
Incessant noise hews the mellow summer air and crushes the ability to think. In Paris yesterday, hands over my ears, I stared at our kitchen wall, expecting it to crumble at any minute under the deafening, juddering drilling from next door. In the Perche, the hammering and sawing, the workers' droning radio music come at me in stereo as, sandwiched in my temporary office, our bedroom, I try to write this blog or make progress on a new novel. I avoid the living room altogether because the dust collects as fast as it is removed. The disruption of renovations, ours and others, is beginning to seem a permanent state, our inescapable karma.
At least here in the Perche, after a long stretch of uninspiring changes—it’s hard to get excited about new pipes and electrical wiring—progress now sparks some enthusiasm when we open the door to the main house in the evening and inspect the day’s work.

Most notably, the enduit, the characteristic sandy Perche coating that leaves a hint of stone apparent, has been applied to the walls in the entry...
I approve...living room...
So do I...I think......and kitchen...
Yes. Very handsome.Upstairs the new layout takes shape. Partition walls have gone up.
Close your eyes and imagine an officeFloors are being laid in the bathrooms.
CorneredBut as you can see, my new office will not be finding its feng shui any time soon, and no guests are going to be showering chez nous in the coming months.
Beyond the aural distress, there is the visual affront. Work sites are messy and ugly and not just inside, as you see above, but outside too. There is stuff everywhere, dissuading you from pottering around the garden, or even wanting to be in it...

...whilst blighting the view beyond it...

Fortunately, as it so often does, the natural world comes to the rescue. Unlike much of the planet (think 50°C/122°F in Vancouver), our swath of Europe has had an exceptionally kind summer. Temperatures have only risen above 30°C/86°F a couple of times. It has rained and rained some more. In contrast to last summer, the leaves are still on the trees in the Tuileries…

…and the countryside is an explosion of green.

Our recently dredged pond is thriving.

And forging ahead after Tasha on our morning walk, I dodge flowers and duck brambles that have poked their heads into the path.
Wild carrot going wilderI often stop at this field of sunflowers. In fact, I could hang out with these life-size Perchois all day, maybe make some new friends.


Sunflower CentralLast week the wheat was harvested in the fields just beyond our property. It struck me this morning that I have been more fascinated than usual by the uncollected bales of hay. Balled up, tightly wound and spatially isolated, they are an apt backdrop for this second Covid summer.
Making hay and socially distancingThe angst I am feeling is not only due to the noise and unsightliness of the interminable building projects around me. With its Greek-ified variants spreading like the wildfires that are erupting around the globe, and the ever-changing restrictions imposed by governments in an attempt to control it, the virus creates its own inner din, a persistent thrum of uncertainty. Covid living too is beginning to seem like a permanent state.
Time to go hang out with the sunflowers for a while.
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If you like these photos, there are lots more on my Instagram account, @flemingm6


