14th July celebrations
First, let me wish you a joyeux Quatorze Juillet. Today is la Fête Nationale in France and one of the most important holidays in the calendar. Today is sunny and hot. In previous years, we have been known to light a fire on 14th July. This year, the firework display in our local village seems to be going ahead, despite the sécheresse (drought). It has been cancelled before, notably in 2003, owing to the fire hazard.
Water restrictions
We arrived home the other day to find the message light on the phone flashing. This is unusual enough in itself, since the only calls we seem to receive these days are from cold callers (we don’t answer if we don’t recognise the number).
The message was a recorded announcement from the mairie, alerting us to the water restrictions now in force. No washing cars, watering lawns or open spaces or filling empty swimming pools (although we understand that topping up is allowed).
Currently, 51 départements in France, including ours, are under drought alert with water restrictions. A government website, Propluvia, charts the levels of drought for each département. Ours, 82, is shown as red, crisis level. If you click on your département on the website, it brings up a more detailed map showing the drought levels for specific areas. This shows that our immediate area is on yellow alert, but the areas east of Montauban and in the north of the département bordering the Lot are on red alert.

Low rainfall
We have had little appreciable rain here for over a month. The total for July so far is 8 mm, which is negligible, especially considering how hot it’s been. The thunderstorms have avoided us so far. Also, the winter was nothing like as wet as the previous winter, when we thought it would never stop raining. And we had some warm, dry spells in February and March.
The chart below shows that every month up to the end of June had less than average rainfall, except for January, and that was only slightly over average. The total rainfall to the end of June was only 272 mm, against an average for that period over 21 years of 471 mm.

Our garden is showing signs of distress. The lawn crackles when you walk across it. Some of the plants and shrubs are definitely unhappy, even those that are supposed to tolerate drought. Even the weeds, which were thriving this year, are less than luxuriant.
Brush fires
Brush fires, although thankfully not common around here, are becoming more so as the vegetation turns tinder dry. It doesn’t take long for a lighted cigarette tossed carelessly from a car window to ignite a blaze.
In late summer last year, which was very dry, we smelled burning outside and thought someone was having a bonfire. Private individuals are no longer allowed those. In fact, it was a brush fire about 10 km away, but the wind had wafted the smoke in our direction.
Such fires are, of course, much more common in Provence and on Corsica, where it’s generally hotter and drier than here. For some time, house owners in those areas have been obliged to cut back the undergrowth within a certain radius of their property to create a firebreak. That responsibility is now spreading to other parts of the country, although I believe it isn’t universal. In fact, I must check to see if it’s a requirement of our commune, although I think we comply anyway.

I don’t think summer drought is anything new here, although perhaps it has become more intense. The problem is that we are far more profligate with water than our ancestors. We are told that, before the well was sunk on our property, the people had to seek water at the nearest stream: a round trip of about 2.5 km. No wonder the éviers (stone sinks) in our house are so shallow. They didn’t want to waste a drop. Their jaws would plummet if they saw how easy it is to turn on the tap today. Even so, mains water was not brought to our hamlet until the 1960s. Some villages in the area had to wait until the 1970s.

You might also like:
Well, well, well: Finding Water in Bygone Days
Water, Water Everywhere – But not a Drop to Drink
French Country Life a Century Ago
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[…] Drought in Southwest France […]
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[…] Drought in Southwest France […]
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We’re in the 81, fortunately no warnings here yet. Does your town/village have a reserve water supply?
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I don’t know, actually. The source from which most of the water comes is pretty robust, but one shouldn’t count on it. We are trying to reduce our consumption as much as we can.
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Considering the amount of rainfall around these parts, adapting shouldn’t be too hard if the government puts a good plan in place. In southern Spain where droughts have been historically frequent, massive reservoirs to collect rain water have been placed outside most urban centres. Here in Mazamet I know crop irrigation is done from the water from the Lac de Montagnes, so that reduces pressure on the domestic water supply. Hopefully there are people in government on top of this?
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Yes, I’ve often wondered why France can’t get its act together. During winter 2017-18 we had huge amounts of rain, but now we’re approaching crisis levels again. Admittedly, the rainfall has been less so far this year, but you’d think this would encourage more far-sighted thinking. There is, of course, a new Ministre de l’Ecologie from today, but it remains to be seen if she will grasp this nettle.
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We are not in any drought risk area, and our grass is still green. I think we are less than 30minutes away. Amazing how localised the weather can be.
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It is certainly localised. The detailed map of Tarn-et-Garonne shows a lot of variation between areas. We are in the Bonnette “basin”, which flows into the Aveyron, and it’s running low at the moment.
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Stay safe, Vanessa!
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Thank you! No standpipes yet…
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Yes, it’s a bit worrying to have a drought in the normally rainy Aveyron! Makes it fairly hopeless trying to grow salad even, as it will bolt very quickly. Your husband’s weather/rain charts are always fascinating 🙂
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We are too lazy to grow any veg, but it must be very hard work making them grow just now. Even drought-resistant plants are struggling.
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The farmer up the lane from us still uses and drinks well water. We only use it on the plants…
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We also use the water from our well on the plants. It’s 12 metres deep, so we have to pump it up with a submersible pump. I’m not sure I’d want to drink it without having it analysed first.
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Ours isn’t that deep. Husband draws it up with a bucket—the thousand year old pump needs about an hour of cranking to free it up each time. I wouldn’t drink it either. Lizards and voles drown in it a bit too often.
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They must have had trouble drawing the water up 12 metres in past times. There was a cylindrical mechanism with a handle, which would have made it easier. Even so, the process was so much more elaborate than just turning on a tap! I dread to think what lurks at the bottom of our well.
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As long as you don’t have to drink it neat…
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It would add a certain je ne sais quoi to the gin, I guess. 🙂
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Maybe the alcohol would kill the lurgy. Or is that a myth?
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I don’t know, but I suspect it might be a myth. Some bugs aren’t killed by boiling, so they might be alcohol-resistant too. You try it and then report back. 😉
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Can I pass on that one, please? I’ll take the gin with a twist of lemon instead.
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🙂
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Pouring lime/chaux into the well is the classic way to clean the water and it works too, I understand. If there wasn’t a way, all those past people with only a well, would have been horribly ill all the time!
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I read that somewhere too, but the idea of drinking bleach, even diluted makes me feel queasy!
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It’s not bleach … it’s totally a natural way to clean it with the natural lime for making the plaster for fresco. You have wait a while a few days before you can use it though
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I thought it was the same as eau de javel. Chemistry was never my strong subject 🙂
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They were probably more resistant to bacteria than we are, with our more sanitised lives. Even so, as you say, they must have had some way of purifying the water. Chaux is pretty strong stuff and needs to be handled with care, so you probably wouldn’t need much to clean a well.
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