I am really out of shape. I am rusty. I once prided myself on my ability to get through an airport quickly and efficiently. But I now realize that my whole game is off. I need to go into training. I travelled this past weekend back to YYZ from MRS. Give then dearth of flights…

Read More

Sad. Sad but necessary. Janny and I returned earlier this week from an overnight to Nice, to visit her Mom at Baycrest Sur Mer. There was nothing else to do in Nice while we were there, quite literally. Closed up tighter than a drum, like all of France. Sad. We realized that one of our…

Read More

  In many parts of the world, November is Movember, a time to grow a moustache to raise awareness of men’s health. In Marseille though, November actually seems to be Mowvember. While only off by one letter, it is fundamentally different. Here during Mowvember, it is time to cut and prune and shave every branch,…

Read More

My mother-in-law, Lydia, has lived for a few years now in a Jewish retirement residence in Nice called La Colline. That said, I refer to it as Baycrest Sur Mer in homage to Baycrest, the Toronto Jewish retirement residence on Bathurst. I could alternatively call it “Baycrest with a View”. Janny and I go often…

Read More
Photos of Mazargues Commonwealth War Cemetery and a soldiers headstone therein

Yesterday, on Remembrance Day, I attended the Mazargues Commonwealth War Cemetery. I was the only one there. At 1100 am, I played The Last Post from my phone. I stopped at the grave of Lt. Greenberg of the SAAF. I had been at his grave before. He died at 28 in a plane crash while…

Read More
examples of parking in France

Driving in France is bad enough, but parking is a whole other story. It is impossible. I am anxious enough about driving in this country in the first place (I am generally not an anxious driver) but it is the thought about parking that puts me over the top. At the thought of going out…

Read More
Jay and The Girl cycling west of the humber

Some people think that I live in a bubble. When it comes to Toronto though, it is more of a rectangle. I figure I spend 99% of my life in Toronto, COVID or no COVID within a rectangle with Front Street to the south, Yonge Street to the east, Eglinton to the north (and only…

Read More
Mazargues Commonwealth War Cemetery

At a bit over 900 metres above the blue and turquoise waters of the famed French Riviera, the Col de la Madone, a narrow twisting mountain pass road, beckons professional and not so professional cyclists alike. It is where now disgraced Lance Armstrong trained and gauged his readiness for the Tour de France. This past…

Read More
Marseille restaurant tables surrounded by parked boats

I have been coming to the South of France, and in particular, Marseille, for about 15 years. In truth, Marseille would not have been my first choice of French towns to have a second home in. That said, it has grown on me. France’s second city is not really the city of the opening scene…

Read More