On the edge of Astridpark |
Change is in the air!! The weather is unseasonally sunny and
relatively clement. Sunshine smiles everywhere; underfoot, crunching
carpets with a further tsunami of technicolour leaves racing to reach
the pavement first or the tables on busy cafe terraces set, alas, to
disappear tomorrow on November 15 by the usual decree.
The first Christmas tree, tall and proud in the Burg, has been in
place for a week now while Jan Van Eyckplein awaits the departure of
the fast food emporium-on-wheels to make space for its own lordly
Christmas tree to sprout. Chalets are already built on Simon
Stevinplein and nearing completion on the Markt where the
ice-rink-to-be is under construction. The Christmas Market is thus on
schedule for the opening in two weeks’ time and for the festive
crowds to arrive with eager faces and appetites.
townscape speak of Christmas while others sing of Autumn. It can seem frenetic at times in Brugge but to walk along the canals at 7.00 in the morning with the first sun promising or with the golden leaves reduced to rainy ochre slush or with a faint mist greying out lamp posts and gables into a Bruges-la-Morte kind of start to the day: then any variation in the weather is welcome in the solitude of the city.
Last Sunday was the Brugge Urban Trail; hundreds of runners were
organised to run, in carefully-controlled sections, through the city,
beginning and ending in the Markt. Somehow the whole show enjoyed a
carnival air with much shouting and singing among the waiting
runners, carefully choreographed by a strong, rhythmic disembodied
voice. There seemed to be fluorescent-jacketed marshals every few
metres and crowds of enthusiastic supporters and observers cheering
on anything that moved. It was all great fun to see and hear as a
slowly-moving watcher who need not exert herself at all.
Irrationally
it reminded me of the amateur Olympics I had tried to stage in the
wood and field next to our childhood home. Excitement had been high
in the run-up to the first Games since the void of World War Two and
we children were caught up in the anticipation of the unknown. I
can’t remember the details save the pain of the marathon [down the
lane to Waterson’s Farm and back] and the publicity material which
I painstakingly produced in red, mock-italic writing and which I was
secretly thrilled to learn had been praised by the local chemist’s
wife who lived nearby and whose two sons were in Our Gang. Would that
have been 1946 or 7? Oh dear, how clear some of these old memories
are bearing no comparison to very recent memories here which have
been almost greyed out!
Urban trailers queueing in the Startbox in readiness for
the Start Box!
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Die Swaene Hotel interior |
One half of Duo Aron |
And below, two more shots of Autumnal Brugge which seems more fulsome and prodigal this year than normal.
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