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I knew we were going to dine well when I saw
the provisions being put aboard. Forty-eight cases of wine (and 20
tons of water). Dark red slabs of Charolais beef and baskets of
ivory new potatoes, pungent wild mushrooms, and pink and white
radishes, their leaves still moist with dew. There were whole Brie
cheeses that glowed like full moons and golden disks of Epoisses
cheese that reeked like dirty gym clothes. You might think that
all we did was eat. It certainly felt that way sometimes, but
there were plenty of other activities. In the mornings, we could
walk or bike alongside the barge on the towpath, or chat with the
éclusiers (lockkeepers). In the afternoons, the crew took the
passengers on field trips - to visit a winemaker, for example, or
a Renaissance château, or a 13th-century monastery .........
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