image

Who's Online

We have 1 guest online

Latest Comment

Clermont L'Herault & Villeneuvette
Looking well Lizzie!
Almost there
Sounds like a good year for guest behavior. Pleasant hosts m...
Le Couvent, Roujan Guest blog No 4
...when it comes to the getting in the tank in your speedos ...

Diary Tags

Le Couvent Roujan's Facebook profile

Log-in for Le Couvent administration only.





Lost Password?

Le Couvent Diary

The day to day of a B&B and vineyard in the Languedoc region of southern France.

Another wine-blending day

Posted by: LizzieBG in WineSunshineCooking on

Hey, you remember me telling you about the fantastic day we all spent learning to blend wines at Domaine Bourdic ? Well they're doing another one on August 10th - it's a Sunday - and I can't recommend this tooooooo highly. It was truly memorable day and if you have nothing planned you really should consider it.

 

 
If you're one of the eight lucky people booked into Le Couvent that weekend we can make the arrangements on your behalf - just let us know that you'd like to do it.

 

Meanwhile, the sun continues to shine hot and bright here in the Languedoc. The first of our grapes are ripening - a bunch even appeared on the breakfast table this morning. Mmmm, sweet and gorgeous and there are still at least six weeks to go to harvest time. We're going to make some wine from our own vines for the first time this year. In preparation I've bought two 1000 litre wine tanks and only now, as they are being slung onto the transporter, do I realise that they won't fit in through the door, nor windows, of the space I'd intended to put them. How come we live in the only house in Roujan with no wine-making facilities. What were the nuns thinking of?

And for those who've asked, the diet is going very badly. It's now a month of being absolutely rigorous & a fully fledged member of Slimming World's online thingy, yet I have managed to lose a measly four pounds. I'm still optimistic though and am quite sure that I'll miraculously lose five kilos overnight any time soon. Meanwhile Kit the dog is looking svelte as there are no longer stodgy left-overs and Ali makes up calories with wine, ice-cream, chocolate, crisps and biscuits when I've gone to bed. How depressing!


 

If you're free in February 2009 and you fancy a heap of hard work in exchange for free bed and board, we're running two Volunteer Weeks . We haven't done this before, but we have had some wildly successful volunteer weekends and now that we're in danger of using up the goodwill of our friends we're hoping to spread the net a little wider. Our friends tell us they have loved the weekends, so we hope you would too.  If you're interested follow the Volunteer link on the menu at the top of this page, or click here .


Idyllic???

Posted by: LizzieBG in Le Couvent RoujanLe Couvent roomsGuests on

'Is your life really the idyll it looks?' ask many of our guests. Without hesitation we reply that for us it is. We work for five months meeting and accommodating fantastic people and that means we are able to live in a beautiful house all year, seven months of which we have completely to ourselves. Now how hard is that?


Yet this morning, as we were in one of our cleaning blitzes, I realised something. Both Ali and I hated cleaning and housework before we moved here. But in the process of running the house as a B&B we've become so accustomed to it that neither of us ever thinks about it. We just get on and do it. We have seven bedrooms in the house, plus three sitting rooms, two offices, two kitchens and a huge gallery space - oh, and seven bathrooms. We have the lovely Patricia, our cleaner, to do our own apartment, but all the rest we do ourselves. We never get tetchy about it - indeed I don't think we even think about it - it's just another job.


But if you're considering running your own B&B, you have to be able to get over the fact that you'll have other people sharing your house and that there'll be a heap of cleaning, washing, gardening, restaurant-booking and wine-drinking to do. The pool has to be more spotless than it would be if it was just you using it. You can't leave jobs until tomorrow because the sun's out - it's almost always out. And you really must like people. Not tolerate them. Really like people - you know, genuinely find them interesting. Now, we're super-lucky because we have a stream of very interesting people who pitch up at this quirky old house. And they are super kind to us. The rooms are always left spotless, so we have a pretty easy job of it. Thanks to all of you - and come back soon eh?

An idyll? Most certainly. Work-free? Most certainly not. Fun - absolutely definitely. Personally, I wouldn't swap my life for any other in the world. As for the cleaning, I still don't relish the thought, but I love seeing the house in it's finest, cleanest clothes.


Tour de France in Roujan - 2

Posted by: LizzieBG in RoujanHappinessGuestsFriendsEntertainingBike-rides on

Whoops - I've kept you waiting. Sorry. Glad you're back though. So four days ago the Tour de France chose to gallop through Roujan again after a 50 year break. And what fun we had.

Two of our poor guests had to leave early on the day of the tour to avoid closed roads and traffic jams. This was particularly rotten luck since one of them had broken her foot whilst here and had the 24 hour journey back to Western Australia to do encased in plaster. Hope you got home safely John & Julia - sorry you missed Le Tour. Maybe the whole of Roujan should be protected thus:


The fun starts some two hours before the actual cyclists show up, when a cavalcade of advertising vehicles rattle past lobbing freebies at leaping spectators. Grown adults diving like Grobelaar to rob tiny children of the fourth peaked cap or a triangle of cheese. Some of the vehicles are spectacular, like this one on top of a car.


Some aren't quite what they claim to be - for instance - what's eco about driving the whole of France in a big square box on wheels?

 



This poor women spent her entire time trying to avoid being decapitated by overhanging trees.

Whilst this chap looked none too enamoured to be spending half of July sitting in a cup of coffee. A career in PR anyone?

Mme Mas came out onto her balcony to wave, sporting a very appropriate and fetching Nike cap.

 Ali made sure we got our own bit of marketing in.

Our lovely French neighbour brought us out a plate of delicious stuff to stave off hunger (we were none too successful at catching the cheese triangles).

 Nicola & Ali bought silly hats.


And eventually the cyclists came in a sweep and a whoosh. All very exciting. We shouted for them to thow us drugs, but they seemed to have kept them all for themselves. Hey ho, you can only ask.

  

 So we all had a silly, noisy, friendly and lovely time. Wish you'd been here.

 Thanks Tour de France - see you in 2058.


A week like no other

Posted by: LizzieBG in WineHappinessGuestsFamilyEntertainingChateaumalaudos on

Wow, it's been a momentous week. My lovely brother Justin (known in the family as Freddie) had his 50th birthday.


His kind wife, Michelle, organised a secret party for 60-odd people (important hyphen). It was nearly a well-kept secret until Joel the local carpenter asked him what time it started just two days before the event.

I gave him one of those super-duper self-published books you can do so easily on a Mac & Ali gave him a day learning how to taste and blend wine. We all went off to Domaine Bourdic and had a fantastic time creating our own blend. By the end of the morning we all had blue tongues from tasting so much 'raw' wine.


But the real panic came during the afternoon when we had to blend, record quantities, taste, adjust, blend again and eventually come up with our very own assemblage which was bottled and given a label with our name on.

 

It was a truly fantastic and memorable day. Hans & Christa are gifted teachers and each one of us said we'd learnt more about wine in one day than could be imagined. We'll keep you posted about the next chance to do the same assemblage day.

Yesterday we had a real Jean de Florette kind of a morning. For some time we've been lugging 120 litres of water up to our vegetable garden in the vineyards as there's been no water there. But it all changed yesterday thanks to Ebay (where I found the perfect pump), Ib and Andreas. More about it on Ali's blog about our vineyard .

Meanwhile the guests have just been hanging about in hammocks.

 


Another guest blog - Rachel

Posted by: LizzieBG in Guests on

From time to time we ask a guest if they'd like to write the blog. This time Rachel's taken up the keyboard - and provided the photos. 

It was a tough week at Le Couvent, Roujan.  Firstly there was that hot weather – pretty much a constant 35 degrees in the shade, which coincidentally is where I spent most of my time.  Then the long periods of pool management, often unaided, where I had to make sure that nothing untoward happened either by or in the pool. 

Huge breakfasts for which it would have been rude not to have shown some enthusiasm.  I particularly liked the fresh fruit salad, the juicy melon, the luscious pineapple, the perfect peaches, the pouting pastries, the dark seductive coffee, the still warm baguettes, the home made jam, the eggs laid by the cackling hens only hours before… the other stuff was fairly average.

 

 


Oh, and we had to go to this restaurant in Vailhan set on a hillside in an old monastery overlooking a lake, hills and the most spectacular sunset.  A table on the terrace where, lets face it, there was a strong wind.  Tough.  And the food… smoked salmon to start, daurade in foaming mayonnaise for mains and chocolate gorgeousness for afters.  Hard. 

I walked - fast - each morning in the already baking sun to try and maintain some semblance of moderate body size.   I focused on routes Dechetterie (look it up), Monastery and Margon and I would have to admit to taking in some rather beautiful scenery. 

 

 

 

 The locals seemed to wince at my breezy pace in such heat.  “Non, non, non,  Trop chaud pour marcher…”  Having brought my sports bra and short lycra shorts, it seemed the right thing to do but meant I built up a fairly deep all over tan.  Again, that might not be to everyone’s taste.  Sometimes I just had to lie on the garden bench in the shade and watch the world go by.  

 

 

Oh, and we squeezed in a visit to the market in Clermont L’Herault where there was a sort of whiny music in the air as we got out of the car.  I commented how it sounded like someone playing the saw… 

 

 

 

The market was full of bright colours, intriguing stalls and pungent smells – none more so than the air of wet dog that emanated from one of the charcuterie stalls.  I’m sure it was very nice…  A little hot but I managed.   Oh, and I bought a new lilo.  A new swim toy had appeared by the pool, a sort of hammock on the water, a cocoon on the lagoon, and I was feeling very sad that I had to leave it behind.  Obviously tricky to wrap and send home but I made the best of it…

Oh, I could go on and I will.  Obviously I jest.  Le Couvent is just about my favourite relaxing sanctuary in the whole world.  Ali and Lizzie have created a haven – or is that heaven – for all comers.  A place for relaxation, for contemplation, for aperitifs and peaceful banter in the courtyard, regular dips in the pool, favourite rooms (mine is the yellow room, i.e. that’s my room, mine…) and bountiful jaunts – can you have a bountiful jaunt?  I mean plenty of places to visit, explore and of course, to eat. 

I also made my first trip up to Le Chateau Mal au Dos, the vineyard where Ali and Lizzie create and share more experiences with friends and strangers alike.  

 

 

 

Wild fennel and rosemary, peach and pomegranate trees, fig and olive trees, a vegetable garden, a tumbling pool waiting to be filled, a crumbling stone cottage to host summer barbecues, winter sleeping bag snugglings and gatherings galore, and of course a few thousand vines.  What a place.  

But it’s not just the joy of being there.  My mind was also flooded with memories of the times I’ve been there before – this was my sixth visit - wafting over me as I melt into a state of pure contentment.  I was sitting by the pool one day when one of the other guests came over to me and said “You look very relaxed in your own skin – is that because you’re here?”  Such perception.  And what a lovely thing to say.  

 

 

 

That was just a week but it has set me up for a good while to come.  And I can always go back…

Thanks Rachel - you're welcome back whenever you can squeeze in a jaunt to Roujan. Lizzie & Ali xx