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Susan_and_me_in_hats_catalog
 
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a photo of Susan and me wearing felt hats, on a Paris street

Taken decades ago...when I see this photo, I remember walking around Paris with Susan and John. Our friendship was in flower then, but of course, who can resist maintaining a friendship with someone who lives on a boat on the Seine, your personal free hotel whenever you can get over to le grand raisin? They'd come over at least once a year, and we'd flâner around Paris, eating and drinking, taking a few train excursions here and there. I remember one up the Seine into Normandie, marveling high on a cliff how different the meandering Seine looked in that countryside from within its stone embankments in Paris, and another to Monet's home in Giverny.

On one trip in winter, I remember John was so cold that we'd walk, stop in a bar for a cognac, walk a little more, have another cognac, spending the whole day like this, never really blotto, but never really warm either. Maybe because we weren't wearing north woods clothing for the historically cold temperatures.

Susan and John happened to be in Paris to help me move from my first péniche, the Connexus, to my second one, the Alphonse. Those were the days--moving was a matter of walking from one boat to the next, directly in front, making only "several" trips, not endless, with only as many possessions as I had at that time--which, when I moved from Paris to New York after six years, fit into two duffel bags plus a bicycle. Imagine. After we got me moved, we had a picnic on the floor of my new salon, the downstairs central space in the cabin, about eight by twelve square feet, below my timonerie [plus the view en face]. We have a photo of that, too--it may have been the same trip as the hats photo--though I can't now remember why we had to sit on the floor. Oh, maybe this--the "furnishings" included a beautiful mahogany table, its trim and the cut of its legs matching the decorative elements of the solid mahogany-paneled interior, but no chairs. Later, I bought two folding wood and canvas captain's chairs, space-saving always essential to living on a boat. Or maybe it was the reverse--I had the chairs but my landlord did not move the matching table from his front part of the boat to my cabin till later.

So surely, even though our friendship seems past its most abundant flowering, it is a friendship for which one would drive a mere eight hours in holiday traffic.


Susan_and_me_in_hats Timonerie_w_wheel Susan_and_me_in_hats Scan001002 Boat_picnic_john Alphonse_salon Susan_and_john_at_giverny Timonerie_cooking_corner