Our flight left Knoxville
about 11:15 AM on May 10, 2012 but we had about a three hour layover in Charlotte . The Charlotte
airport is fairly nice and we had a sandwich at Quiznos and a truffle apiece at
the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory and a yogurt at another place. Our Paris
flight left around 5:30 PM. Regrettably,
we had an older model Boeing 767 without individual monitors so we couldn’t
amuse ourselves watching movies.
Moreover, the screens for the cabin movie were very small and the movie
wasn’t something that interested us. We
arrived in Paris
around 8 AM. Customs was very
perfunctory and they just stamped our passport without asking any questions. The Charles de Gaulle airport itself was very
modern when it was built but it is dated now.
The design is odd with several circular terminals and off of each
terminal there are about six satellite terminals that are reached by moving
underground walkways. These walkways in
turn are accessed in the main terminal by several transparent tubes containing
moving walkways in the inner atrium. We
took a taxi from the hotel for about $95 since we weren’t familiar with the
train/bus system. But now that we know a
little more about Paris
we could take the train/bus and save some money. Besides, the traffic was just horrible going
into Paris and
was at a crawl much of the way. A
non-rush hour trip is about $20 less.
Our hotel room at the Hotel Tour Eiffel was
very small with no end tables nor chairs and the bathroom was so small that the
toilet was set at an angle so that you could actually sit down. The TV only received about 12 channels and
the only English channel was CNN. The room did have a safe to keep valuables
but when I tried to operate it, I promptly broke the aluminum key off in the
lock. Hotel rooms are small in the inner
European cities but this one was much smaller than other rooms we had stayed
in. However, the room was clean and
functional. And there were five bakeries
within a block of our hotel so that partially made up for the small room. We always had at least one pastry per day and
sometimes had a large meringue as well.
Fortunately we walked 6-12 miles per day to burn off the calories. The hotel was about 1 mile from the Eiffel Tower
and we tried a couple of times to go up in it.
However, the lines were always incredibly long since only one of four
elevators was working to go to the top and we would have had to wait a couple
hours in line. There are stairs to the 1st
and 2nd level but you can not take the stairs to the 3rd
level, i.e., the top. Our hotel was also
next to the Romanian embassy and we had a nice view out of our 4th
floor window into their garden behind the hotel.
The highlight of our trip was ironically a
daytrip to Brugges , Belgium . This is an old city a little ways inland from
the coast and did not see industrial development of 19th and 20th
century nor much war damage so its many old buildings are very well preserved. The are also many canals and it is called the
Venice of the
north. Interestingly, the southern part
of Belgium
speaks Walloon which is really French and the northern part speaks Flemish
which is dialect of Dutch. The two
groups don’t get along and our French guide said she is better off speaking
English in Brugges which is in the Flemish part of Belgium even though people can
speak French and usually English too. As
another side note, the border into Belgium
is pretty much invisible although there is a border control point and the Belgiums do
occasionally check identity of people entering.
Hence the reason for our tour company, CityRama, saying that everyone
should carry their passport. One fellow
didn’t and so had to get off the bus in Paris
before we started and run back to his hotel.
He delayed our start by about 10 minutes. In Brugges our guide took us through the city
and talked about the history of the city and many of the beautiful old
buildings. Her English was very
good. Then we had a couple of hours on
our own to shop, take the canal boat tour which was included in the tour price,
and eat. We did take a canal boat tour
which was fun. We also had some truffles
at the Godiva Chocolate shop. Godiva was
originally a Belgium
company but then was bought by Campbell Soup and then sold to a Turkish company
a few years ago. We ate our main lunch
at Casa de Patatas (Spanish for House of Potatoes) and had a big hamburger and French
fries. Of course we had to stop at the
one bakery and have an Apfelflap. There
weren’t many bakeries but lots of chocolate and lace shops. We also met a nice retired couple who live in
Charlotte , NC .
He used to be president of University
of Montana and we had a
nice talk about life in academia. To get
to Brugges, we took a double decker bus and we sat in the top level to have a
nice view of scenery. We made one stop
half way to Brugges and then again coming back to Paris .
France is like Britain
in that along the freeways there aren’t shops, gas stations, etc. at the exits
but rather there are little built up areas periodically along the freeway itself
with a little shopping center containing restaurants, groceries, gift shops, a
hotel, and gas station. Our group was
mostly Americans but with about 30% Spanish too. When we got off the bus in Brugges we were
told to be back at bus by 3:45 and that the bus would leave at 4:15. One couple didn’t get back in time and even
though the bus waited for 10 minutes, they didn’t show up and were left
behind.
We enjoyed walking around Paris .
The area we stayed in was a richer area since that’s where many
embassies are located and government workers live. There were also lots of small shops and
cafes. Interestingly, it seemed like all
the small bakeries and sandwich places sold only a few soft drinks but always
had Coca Cola. It seemed like Coke was
very popular. We also soon found out
that the scale of the city was much bigger than we had realized. What looked on the map to be not too far away
were usually a couple of miles. Paris is very big and
12,000,000 people live in the urban area. It has many wide boulevards, many
trees, large beautiful stone buildings and was very clean. To get around, the metro (subway) was
essential and relatively easy to use.
What would have taken 1 ½ hours to walk took only about 15 minutes by
metro and tickets were about $2.20 for one trip.
Here are some day-by-day highlights:
·
Friday: We got to the hotel about 10 AM but the room
not ready until noon. So we tried to
walk to meeting place for a walking tour Janis had found on the web and that
started at 1 PM. It was raining and
chilly and we realized we couldn’t easily make sure that we had our room and
also make the tour so we had to abandon the tour.
·
Saturday: We went to Louvre and saw some of the famous
works including the Mona Lisa, which was surrounded by a throng of people, the
statue called Winged Victory and the Venus de Milo plus Hammurabi’s Code. As much as we love art (though not at all
experts) it does get to be too much after a while. We also saw the famous glass pyramid which was
designed by I.M. Pei and serves as the museum entrance. It is in the central plaza of the museum and
surrounded by wings of the Louvre. It
received a lot of criticism when it was built but it seemed to work as a design
to us. Ironically, the Eiffel Tower
was heavily criticized too when it was built.
·
Sunday: This was our Brugges trip and we had to be
ready to be picked up at 6:30 AM and did not get back about 9 PM. Regrettably we woke up the hotel clerk when
we left since he sleeps on the couch in the lounge area. Since we got back to Paris
so late, we had the tour driver drop us off at the Eiffel Tower
to enjoy it at night. At night it has a
beautiful orange glow from lights on it. At the top of the hours it has hundreds of
bright white lights that go off randomly and look like hundreds of camera
flashes and make the Tower sparkle.
·
Monday: We did the Notre Dame cathedral on this day
which was sunny and the temperature was in the high 60’s. It was a lot of walking even though we took
the metro to Louvre in order to buy a tour ticket for Versailles and then
walked over from there and then back to the hotel. We did find a used book store that stocked
only English titles but we didn’t buy anything.
We also ate lunch at one of the street cafes although we ate inside and
had omelets. All the parks were full of
people taking their lunch and soaking up the sunshine. Interestingly we did see several soldiers
with automatic weapons walking around and also saw some at the airport and
around the government buildings.
·
Tuesday: We took the subway to one of the big shopping
streets and went to the Galleries Lafayette.
This is a huge upscale department store similar to Harrods and has a
beautiful atrium in the center. The food
court had incredible selections of meats, cheeses, desserts, etc. From there we went to the Centre Georges Pompidou
which is devoted to modern art. It is a
museum often shown on TV which is distinguished by having most of the
mechanical equipment and escalators on the outside. There were some interesting works on display
but had a lot of works that we just didn’t get.
We did have a nice savory chicken pastry on the way there though. We took the metro back towards our hotel but
stopped on the other side of the river in order to see the Grand Palace
which has a big glass atrium. But it
didn’t seem like it was open to the public without paying. But we did find ourselves in the midst of
dozens of police vans full of police and many others milling about. We didn’t realize that this was the
inauguration day for France ’s
new president, Francois Hollande, and that the Elysee Palace
was just north of us. For dinner we went
to a nearby grocery store and bought some lettuce, sliced cheese, and slice
turkey to make some wraps.
·
Wednesday: We took a guided tour of Versailles in the morning. Travel again was by a double decker bus and
was about a 40 minute trip to the south.
The Versailles
Palace and gardens are
magnificent although all the furniture was sold off during the revolution and
so the furniture there are pieces from that period but not the original. The Hall of Mirrors is of course the most impressive
part. The palace is huge and we saw only
a part of it during our two hour tour.
Both at the Eiffel Tower and at Versailles
there are dozens of what seemed to be immigrants from former French African
colonies selling trinkets – mostly little colored Eiffel Tower
key chains that were stored on a big steel ring.
·
Thursday: We tried to go to the Maritime Museum
since we’ve had good luck with enjoying such museums. But it was closed since it was a holiday
(Ascension). We did walk around the nearby
Passy Cemetery which is an above ground cemetery
with many famous people buried there. The
above ground vaults were quite striking and “hauntingly” beautiful. We also went to the Hotel Invalides which was
built by King Louis the XIV so that his wounded and old soldiers could be taken
care of. It’s now a war museum and we
toured the WW I and WW II museums as well as the museum of old armor and
weapons and also saw Napoleon’s tomb.
For dinner we had probably our only authentic French meal at a brasserie
nearby. We shared a pumpkin and chestnut
soup, a salmon club sandwich for me and a potato omelet for Janis. They were all exceptionally delicious. Our other meals included Italian restaurants,
Panini’s, and sandwiches.
·
Friday: We left the hotel at 8 AM for our trip back
to the U.S. Although our flight #787 was uneventful, the same
flight four days later was the one on which a woman told a stewardess that she
had a device implanted in her body which caused the plane to divert to Maine
escorted by two F-15 fighters.
Some further comments:
·
Most people in the small shops
did not seem to know much English. Many
people have said that they really can speak English but just don’t want
too. We’re not convinced that is
true. From our experience, it is very
hard to learn another language if one isn’t immersed in it. But most of the restaurants and tourist areas
had fluent English speakers. So we were
disappointed in not being able to talk with Parisians and French people about
their views of what was happening in France
and Europe .
Our hotel clerks were very nice and polite but just weren’t very chatty
unlike other countries. And even if the
bakery shop clerks could speak English, there were always lines of customers.
·
We also read that the French are
very well dressed but that was misleading.
There certainly were many well dressed Parisians but there were also
many dressed very casually but not as casual as Americans. There also not very many obese French.
·
We had visions of dining
casually at an outdoor café but the streets in the area we were in had a lot of
car traffic and narrower sidewalks than imagined. It didn’t really seem that much fun. Admittedly, there are a lot of restaurants in
the areas we visited.
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