I’ve mentioned before that I used to live in the mountains, in the tiny principality of Andorra between France and Spain, which is a many ways a slightly strange country. I recall one occasion when this observation was brought home to me fairly forcibly one afternoon when I was taking the dog out for a walk before we headed north through France to England. In a country where Alsatians and Huskies abounded, we’d kind of taken another route, and our hound of choice was a Yorkshire terrier. Not the most macho of dogs, but pound for pound every bit as tough as any other breed. That, at least, was my story, and I stuck to it.
The roads on our development only linked the houses, and on both sides of the fairly small urbanisation they deteriorated into rough stone tracks that wound and meandered their way through the high pine forest. And on these tracks, it was not unusual to encounter other animals, both wild and domesticated, ranging from the occasional snake up to wild boar, and occasionally cows and goats. Usually, the presence of domesticated animals was signalled by the ringing of bells. Not by some attendant or herdsman, but simply bells which were secured around the necks of some of the animals.
The terrier – whose name, not that it matters, was Ted – always took a somewhat jaundiced view of anyone and anything she saw on what she clearly believed to be ‘her’ land, and looked upon cyclists and joggers with particular disfavour. As indeed I do. But she wasn’t usually too bad with goats and so, when I heard the melodic tinkling of bells around the corner on the track in front of me, I decided to press on, to pass through the herd and continue along the route I had planned.
When I got around the corner, the terrier and I were confronted by about a dozen goats ranging from quite young kids up to full-grown adults, all of whom were busily eating just about everything in sight in the manner of goats everywhere. The animals were what I had expected, but the goatherd certainly wasn’t.
We exchanged friendly greetings in the way that one did in Andorra, and the terrier and I weaved our way around the animals and continued on. At the corner, I paused and looked back. The expression ‘goatherd’ conjures up an image of a scruffy and unwashed individual, probably leaning on a staff, and raises unspoken questions about where he sleeps and how and where, exactly, he attends to certain other bodily functions.
But this goatherd was wearing a pair of stout and clearly expensive brown shoes, neatly pressed tan slacks and what looked suspiciously like a Pierre Cardin shirt. On his wrist was a solid gold Rolex Oyster watch and he was smoking a large cigar. Not what you might call typical.
And it wasn’t as if he was just standing in for the regular goatherd: I’d seen him many times before and to the best of my knowledge those were his animals.
That was just one of the oddities about Andorra. If you go back a mere half century or thereabouts the population had essentially a subsistence economy, farming cattle, goats and tobacco, and living in stone houses where the lower floor functioned as a barn for the animals in the winter. And then a number of foreigners, principally English but some other nationalities as well, discovered that the Andorran government, such as it was, had no idea what the words ‘income tax’ actually meant, and promptly began buying up whatever land they could lay their hands on.
As a result, many Andorran families suddenly found a huge demand for building land from foreign investors, and land itself became so valuable in the principality that it was sold, not by the acre or even by the square metre, but by the pam, or the palm of the hand. Twenty-five pams make up one square metre, as a matter of interest. There was a sudden and pronounced influx of wealth, and farmers who until then had barely been able to scratch a living from the land suddenly found that they were able to buy new houses and drive Mercedes and BMWs and generally live the life of Riley. But the only profession that they knew was farming, and so despite their swelling bank accounts, they continued to grow tobacco and herd cattle and goats just as their fathers and grandfathers had done before them.
Hence our local goatherd. And personally, I still think it was rather sweet.
And there was one other interesting fact that I’ve just remembered, from the very early days when we first had a property in the country. I can recall seeing the local postman walking, and sometimes jogging, down the road followed – for reasons which I was never able to ascertain – by his wife driving a car. A little eccentric, perhaps, but there you go.
But that wasn’t the interesting fact. I learned later that this man, this postman, with responsibility for one of the most populous valleys in the country, could neither read nor write. Both, one might reasonably think, would be fairly important skills to possess if your job involved delivering mail. Apparently, he had obtained the job through his family connections – in Andorra it was often who you knew which was most important – and his technique for delivering letters was simply to compare the writing on the envelope with the writing on the outside of the building, and if they more or less matched, he would then stick the letter in the communal mailbox and walk away.
And I suppose the really odd thing is that the letters were usually delivered to the correct building.