We had to drive an hour south to Carcassonne, to fly RyanAir out of their small airport. We pulled out of our underground parking garage, the sun was shining bright and it looked like a beautiful day. The first thing Randi said was "it's too bad we aren't staying in France this weekend, the weather report looks like it will be nice here". Looking back, it appears Saint Randi Mae predicted the future.
When we arrived at the small Carcassonne airport the first thing the lady at the counter said was "you know your flight is cancelled, right ?...right ?...hello ?" We were in a state of shock. She shouldda just said "you know you're f*cked, right ?" Apparently, the French Air Traffic Controllers went on strike for just that weekend. The strike 'concept' in France is very different than we know it. They plan strikes. They have annually planned strikes. And I think they really equate to more like scheduled vacation time. This particular weekend strike may have occurred just because of the excellent weather forecast for the weekend...that's a guess.
So our flight got canceled. It seemed the luck of the Irish was bad. We felt like crawlin under a shamrock. I mean...where's me lucky charms ? It was so disappointing at first. But after maybe 20 minutes of phone calls and finding free wireless internet, where we know we can, anywhere in France ("You deserve a break today") at McDonalds, we were able to successfully rebook the entire trip (hotels, car rental, airline) for the following weekend, without any cost to us...things didn't seem so bad. It was really nice out that day (mid 60s and sunny), it was Friday and we had the day off already. So we decided we would just keep driving south and head for the Mediterranean coast.
We decided to make it our first stop and were not disappointed. As it turned out, we think we may have liked Narbonne more than any other town we visited that weekend. And we think the cathedral makes our Top 10 list of incredible number of cathedrals we've seen over the past year (it has to be on some kind of list). With the wind whistling through the walls and sun coming in and out of the clouds, at times beaming through the tall mountains of stained glass, the presence of God was plausible there.
From there we went to Beziers. This was a place we wanted to stop at for a while, along with Montsegor, as another part of our Cathar research. A very sad story took
The next morning we drove into the bigger city of Montpellier and walked the inner city for a short time, before we both realized we just wanted to go back to our place and relax. It was nice to get home on Saturday, not do much of anything and have Sunday to take a little walking tour of Toulouse.
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