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Posts Tagged ‘weddings’

Wedding bells

Obviously my time working at an audit firm has paid off and fostered in me a new-found attention to detail. Only a few short days after posting our wedding dossier to the Mairie in France, we just heard that the dossier is complete and correct, and our wedding banns will be published later this week. While this is a good achievement under any circumstances, the fact that we managed to get all the right documents, certifications, translations, and endorsements in the face of conflicting guidance from the French authorities makes it an even greater achievement. I’m actually shocked they didn’t find a reason to reject it just as a matter of principle.

One of the nice things about getting married overseas is that you get the chance to celebrate everything at least twice (or in our case, thrice – England, USA and France!) Since we were going to be in Washington for a few days, my parents took the opportunity to throw an impromptu engagement party for us. Some peanuts and cocktails, perhaps?

Nope. Six racks of lamb and all the trimmings. You know, a spur-of-the-moment kind of thing.

We had a great time – a great excuse for a party and a chance to catch up with lots of old friends.

Jim and Sima listen to Raymond tell a story

Jim and Sima listen to Raymond tell a story

Marta, Aude, Carol and Jim

Marta, Aude, Carol and Jim

Andy smiles for the camera

Andy smiles for the camera

Joanne, looking like she’s about to get into mischief

Joanne, looking like she’s about to get into mischief

Carol, captured by someone’s storytelling

Carol, captured by someone’s storytelling

The cat is unimpressed by the whole affair…

The cat is unimpressed by the whole affair…

Now that I’ve had time to go through my photographs, I thought I would include a few of the Abbaye de la Celle in Brignoles, where we will stay after our wedding in September.

Posh cars

Our rather tired looking Renault Clio with missing door trim looked right at home next to the Ferrari in the parking lot. I had to point out to the porter that the Ferrari wasn’t ours…

Aude at hotel

Aude clearly approves of her surroundings!

Pissing statue

Frankly, he looks as shocked at his own behaviour as we were… After a few drinks, I was tempted to challenge him to a duel — until Aude suggested that we might not be welcomed back afterwards.

Hostellerie de l'Abbaye de la Celle

Hostellerie de l’Abbaye de la Celle

Aude

Aude poses in front of the fountain

Matt in front of fountain

Photo opportunities abound. Matt in front of the same fountain.

Reception room

The reception room inside the old abbey.

Matt & Aude in the gardens

Matt & Aude in the gardens

Matt on the lawn

Matt on the lawn outside the hotel room

Aude on the lawn

Aude on the lawn outside the hotel room

Old post box

The hotel comes complete with old world charm. Or should that be olde worlde charme?

Cart

More old world charm. Or someone’s spent too much time at Pottery Barn…

Saturday morning we were up early to visit the town hall in Roquebrune, where we need to submit all of our paperwork for our civil ceremony. Part of the process is an interview with the mayor (or his delegate) to ensure that the marriage is genuine and to go over all the details for the day.

We were met by the adjunct mayor, a generously proportioned woman with an apparent predilection for sunshine and a disdain for soap. She was our first real brush with the French etat, and represented everything that is bad about the civil service in France. With little genuine power but a keen desire to demonstrate her importance, she decided to throw impediment after impediment in our way. “I’m not sure it’s possible” was her favourite response, and her interpretation of the laws governing marriage changed with the wind.

It was not the most positive meeting I’ve ever had. She seemed unimpressed when I asked whether it would be easier to elope to Las Vegas. I suspect Guantanamo detainees are treated with more respect than she afforded us.

The trauma of the town hall behind us, we headed to a much more agreeable lunch by the port in Frejus – moules frites washed down with a couple of beers. After a brief stop to look at some decorations for the wedding, we were off to Brignoles for a quick chat with the woman coordinating the details at the chateau and a champagne tasting – and then on to ‘test drive’ the hotel and restaurant at the Abbaye de la Celle.

The hotel was absolutely beautiful, with genuinely warm service and a lovely room with our own private garden. We were greeted with two glasses of wine from the vineyard in the back. After we’d settled in, we went into the Alain Ducasse restaurant and had a lovely dinner of asparagus with kumquat sauce, grilled fish with roast potatoes, caramelised pork with stir-fried vegetables, cheese, and a chocolate fondant. The food lived up to the hype – it was a lovely evening. Stuffed to the seams, we trundled off to bed.

Friday was all about wedding plans. And exploring the differences between French and English business practices. And me generally getting frustrated by being dragged around France without accomplishing much.

Our morning started out successfully enough. Aude was up early to get a blood test to get her medical certificate allowing us to be married. Afterwards, we went down to the local doctor together to ask if he would sign my certificate. Certifying precisely nothing, as no blood test is required for men. He signed it, seemingly a little confused with the whole procedure, and took my blood pressure so I didn’t feel like I was walking away empty-handed. 130/70, pretty good considering the stress of planning a wedding.

Apparently in this part of the country, a doctor’s job is more about funerals and less about marriages. Something about changing demographics and all that.

We jumped in the car and made our way to Lorgues to meet with the florist. After a little swearing and sweating on my part, a two-way trip down a one-way street, and a little honking and pointing by the locals, we’d found a place to park. We met with the florist, a colourful little man named Thibault with a partner who looked like a camp version of Gerard Depardieu in Green Card, and went over what we wanted.

Mission accomplished, we set out for our second appointment of the day. Wine tasting. Which, oddly enough, I expected to involve tasting. Of wine. How wrong I was!

No, I was told upon arriving, tasting the wine was no good. It was too early in the afternoon, too close to us having eaten lunch. It wouldn’t be a good tasting. Besides, we hadn’t chosen our wedding menu yet, so any tasting would be meaningless without context. Much better to buy several bottles and try them later with food. It seemed to matter little that I’d dragged myself halfway across Europe to be physically present to taste this wine.

I should probably explain some of the context here. We’re having our wedding reception at a chateau. Part of the deal is that we drink their wine – non-negotiable. So already the wine tasting is a bit of a farce, as we’re stuck with it whether we like it or not.

Second, we’re hardly taking Chateau Lafite. This is ordinary, everyday wine. So arguing about whether our palate was in a suitable state was a little like arguing that I was using the wrong glass and not appreciating the fullness of flavour in my can of Coors.

In the end, we took the wines home and tried them with dinner. The verdict? The Chardonnay was undrinkable plonk (which, even with my lunch-tainted palate, I could have decided in situ at the vineyard) and the blanc de blanc is suitably inoffensive and non-descript. A little bit like Two-Buck Chuck.

The Chateau

The Chateau

The chateau

The chateau

Still smarting from the wine non-tasting incident, we made our way to the chateau to meet with the caterer. In this meeting essentially we agreed that 1) what we’d been promised was possible on the telephone was now no longer possible and 2) that we would certainly have to meet again. It took 90 minutes to ascertain this, and despite my best efforts, the caterer seemed reluctant to simply allow us to sign the paperwork, hand over the deposit, and leave before we’d heard his entire marketing pitch and quite a few pleasantries as well.

The girls posing outside the chateau

The girls posing outside the chateau

Aude is very busy planning everything...

Aude is very busy planning everything…

Our meeting having overrun, cue frantic race down the autoroute in ten-year-old Renault Clio 1.2 to try to make it to Mass at the local church. We managed to slip in just a few minutes late, slightly conspicuously as there were only about 20 other people in the very small chapel. Without the benefit of a prayer book to follow along, I did my best to follow the French service. Thankfully, it was the Passion of Christ – the same reading we’d heard in English the week before in Canterbury. Confusingly, the Mass didn’t follow conventional form – hard enough to follow in English, but even more complicated when you don’t speak the language.

Too much

It’s all too much! Aude hides in the flowers

Woke up today to another beautiful March morning, a slight frost on the ground but predicted highs of 17C later today. The café at the train station has started to stock Cadbury’s Crème Eggs, a sure sign that spring can’t be far away now. We’ve actually had a very mild winter, so as nice as it is to have spring on our doorstep, it doesn’t feel like the long-awaited relief that it does in some years.

My week at work seems to be flying by. We’re busy pulling together all the write-ups from my client who prints money, and even I am surprised by how much we accomplished in such a short time. Two of my junior guys have been locked in a project room for three days straight cranking out the slides – I’m giving them the final review this morning, which should be a welcome relief. I’m sure they’re keep to put this to bed. I’ll go out to the client to present the findings later this week (hurrah – a day where most of my time will be spent on trains).

Wedding plans are continuing apace. As I wrote on my other blog (the one on our wedding website), the heavens seem to have aligned. After weeks of chasing various ‘Letters of Freedom’ from various Catholic parishes around the world, my prayers were (literally and figuratively) answered all at once, when all the parishes concerned emailed me on the same day (and within hours of one another) to tell me that they would be sending the required Letters in the next 24 hours. So we’ve managed to navigate the tricky intricacies of the Catholic Church’s bureaucracy. I’m not convinced that the French bureaucracy will be quite so straightforward.

In other news, Dara is coming to visit for the weekend. It will be a good chance to catch up with an old friend, and knowing Dara, quite literally swapping war stories. (For those of you who don’t know Dara, she spends most of her life moving from one war-torn country to another – currently living in Afghanistan). We were going to meet in London, but I’ve managed to lure her down to Canterbury with the promise of cooking a traditional Sunday roast.