Marcilly-sur-Eure - near Tate's school
Departed camp onto empty roads, wondered why at first but then we found out. Two thousand sites of protest through France - see BBC
Detours on the way |
The first of many road blockages Spot the fuel gauge! |
For the first hour we happily cruised along empty roads wondering why there was no traffic. Coming to a roundabout at Decize we could see black smoke billowing and lots of yellow vests but not much happening otherwise. Entering the roundabout we discovered that the exit was blocked by a protest. They informed us that even if they were to let us through, the road was blocked at Nevers. As luck happens we only had twenty eight kilometres of range left and had planned on filling up at Decize. We headed off the only available exit and stopped a couple of kilometres along the road. While stopped a car with two yellow jackets as we now called them, got out and were good enough to direct us to a automatised service station further along the road. She also said that thought the protests are every day they finish at seven in the evening. Refuelled, we ended up coming back again through the roundabout and got a big cheer and a wave as we all waved back and tooted enthusiastically encouraged by the memory of the blood letting peasants a few years back.
Never went into Nevers |
Screen grab of the protest map |
The deserted motorways were strange |
On the A77 we were shunted off twice, see the video below. Once it was so that cars drove a couple of kilometres on local roads so that no revenue was collected by the toll booths. When we got closer to Paris the protestors were at the toll stations and had tied the barriers open. Unfortunately we have an electronic tag with deducts the tolls directly from my bank account and it is not easily removed from the windscreen, in fact I remember Ed breaking his bracket trying to transfer his tag to his Vito for the boy's ski trip a couple of years back, so I didn't try and remove ours.
Apologies for the 480dpi quality, that is all the blog would allow
Comparable price to many places in rural NZ, paying a 40 to 50 cent premium on city prices, AND we don't have mass transit rail or high-speed trains, so it is the only option.
ReplyDeleteHave you a yellow reflective vest Jon? You might send Jacinda a message....
DeleteDid you get back on the motorway?
ReplyDeleteYes. They turned us off the motorway so that the government doesn't get the tolls.
DeleteAh clever!
Delete