And suddenly we were down to our last week. We knew that the month in Paris would go by quickly, and it flew. After returning from our whirlwind trip to Normandy, we had precious few days to finish off our checklist of must-do’s.
We realized as the days wound down that although we had many things on our to-do list, there were only a few things that we really, absolutely had to do before we left town. Upon our arrival, I was excited with all of the things I was going to see and do – so much time to accomplish so much. And I realized going into our last week that while I hadn’t checked nearly as many things off my list as I had initially expected, I didn’t care. We had done what we did when we lived in New York. We lived day-to-day, we got to know our neighborhood, we got to know the city a little bit better, we found our favorite restaurants, and we spent time doing the things that we loved. We didn’t live like the crazed tourists we usually are on our trips, running on 4 hours of sleep a night while cramming as much into every single second as we can. We just lived.
So many of my trips have been crazed because I didn’t know if or when I would be back again. But because we are choosing to make travel such a priority in our lives, and because I know we may many years of travel ahead of us, I don’t feel that way this time. Especially with Paris. This was my 10th visit to the City of Lights and certainly won’t be my last.
What did we decide to do with our last days? We made another trip to the Musee d’Orsay to visit the works of our favorite artists, we visited Sainte Chappelle for the first time for each of us (amazing!), we walked through the city – a lot, we went shopping, we shot photos of the sun setting behind the Eiffel Tower from the top of Tour Montparnasse, ate our favorite quiche at Café Le Flore, bought a bottle of my favorite perfume, and bought the latest CD of Enrique Iglesias so we can listen to that ridiculous song we love in the car on our road trips.
View towards Sacre Coeur from the balcony of the Musee d'OrsayOn the balcony of the Musee d'OrsayA Parisian gentlemanFlower shop in ParisSunset from the Tour MontparnasseNight view from Tour Montparnasse
Larry and I spent a good part of our second day in Normandy using various maps on our iPhones trying to find a way around the gendarmerie (police) road blocks to get to the American Cemetery at Colleville sur Mer. But, these guys were no Inspector Clouseau imitations. They had every conceivable route blocked, along with the freeway, so we couldn’t even travel in between the other towns easily. The area was closed until about 7:30 pm because of President Obama’s visit. Because of that, we were able to see a lot of the beautiful countryside in Normandy. The area is peppered with charming tiny little towns and narrow one-lane roads. It’s peaceful and still, very unlike what I imagine it was 65 years ago.
We stopped and spent some time in Arromanches, which is a gorgeous little beach town with majestic cliffs. It was filled with British citizens and veterans as Arromanches was part of Gold Beach, a landing spot for the British forces on D-Day. We originally parked up at the top of the cliff overlooking the town just to catch the view, but as we were standing there we noticed an old military ship and several pieces of the artifical harbor created during the Normandy invasion lying on the beach below, so we went to investigate.
View of Arromanches (Gold Beach) from above
When landing in Normandy, the Allied Forces were not able to bring their ships all the way into the harbor because of the obstacles the Germans had installed for protection. So, they did the next best thing. They created an artificial harbor which allowed them to unload vehicles and supplies while out in the Channel, and drive them straight onto the beach. The artificial harbor was left in place when the forces departed, and still sits there today. As this was low tide, certain pieces of the artificial harbor were lying exposed on the beach.
Remains of the artificial harbor, exposed at low tide
While we were investigating these interesting relics, we noticed a plethora of military vehicles driving up the beach toward us. We lucked into a parade of many of the vintage vehicles in the area. Every country that comprised the Allied Forces was represented along with every type of vehicle you can think of, including ambulance and emergency vehicles. It was a bit disorienting, I kept feeling like I’d stepped into an episode of M*A*S*H* (I know, wrong war, but the vehicles were the same). The French Resistance were even represented. It was great fun to see just how much the local people and people who travel there for the event get into it.
Military vehicle parade on Gold BeachThe French ResistancePlanning the next diversionary attack?Resistance photographerMade me think of my Grandpa, it's where he served in WWIIBig Jeep, little Jeep
We were also able to spend some time at the far western portion of Omaha Beach (the portion that was outside of the road blocks), though by that time it was pouring rain so we didn’t stay out and frolic in it for long. We went into a local souvenir shop and bought some American flags so we could display them in our car and show pride in being Americans. (Probably the only time you’d actually want to identify yourself as an American while traveling in France). We also visited an Omaha Beach Museum, which had a lot of interesting artifacts and equipment from both the German and Allied sides. Once the roads to Colleville sur Mer opened up we and many others raced to the American cemetery only to be stopped by an Army soldier who told us that they were cleaning up from the ceremony and it wasn’t open until the public until Sunday morning. Drats!
As there was a small break in the rain, we followed the road that ran alongside the cemetery down to Omaha Beach and parked near monuments to the 1st Infantry and 1st Engineers, two American batallions who participated in D-Day and who saw heavy casualties (the engineers suffered 40% casulaty rate that day). Of all the invasions on D-Day, Omaha Beach was the most difficult, the most tenuous, and the hardest fought. It was so bad that at the end of the day, General Bradley considered evacuating Omaha and moving the troops to Gold Beach. For this reason, Omaha Beach is often referred to as “Bloody Omaha”. The Omaha Beach invasion is the one which is depicted in the opening scenes of Saving Private Ryan, for those of you who have seen the movie. In fact, I’ve been told that Tom Hanks was in Normandy when we were there for the commemoration. He probably had the super special embassy pass to get him past the gendarmes!
As we paid our respects at the monuments for the engineers and 1st infantry divisions, we realized that we were standing on top of a bunch of German bunkers built into the hillside. In fact, the 1st infantry monument is erected right on top of a German bunker. Now most of them are covered with vegetation, giving the hillside a strangely lump look. Several of the entrances are still exposed and you can even climb into them. It is a bit surreal to realize that from these enclosed cement blocks German soldiers killed thousands of our own, and were killed by our own. These days they’re home to the swallows that nest there. A much better use of the habitation in my opinion.
We’ve realized that we are quickly running out of time here, and with a laundry list of things left to do. I’m never as productive with my time as I’d like to think I am. At least we emerged victorious from the last round of shoe shopping for Larry over the weekend. Yea for us! And we got to see a neighborhood that we had not previously been to on this visit, the 11th Arrondissement near the Bastille. It was not the well-manicured, looks-just-so, type of neighborhood that we’re living in. No Kenzo or Armani boutiques, no pricey hotels or restaurants. It had a lot more ethnic restaurants and stores, more graffiti, and felt just a bit more run down. We actually weren’t far from the Pere Lachaise cemetery but we were too tired after all the shoe shopping to trek over there. Oscar Wilde and Chopin will have to wait a bit longer for our visit.
Vélo (bicycle) + liberté (freedom) = Vélib. But not for us.
In the summer of 2007, Paris launched a grand undertaking in the form of Vélib. Vélib is a community automated bike rental system born of a symbiotic relationship between City Hall and JCDecaux, the French advertising company. JCDecaux has a contract with the city of Paris in which it has agreed to administer the Vélib program in exchange for free use of some 1,600 advertising boards around the city, and a share of the bike rental fees that it produces. You cannot walk around Paris without noticing the Vélib stations prominently featured at every Metro station and more – within the borders of Paris there are over 20,000 bikes at nearly 1,500 stations which are situated roughly 300 meters apart, and they are available 24/7. Vélib was an instant hit when it debuted and has only grown in popularity. The Vélib program is now being rolled out to many of the suburbs surrounding Paris. The idea behind the program is to increase convenience and mobility for Parisians, as well as provide a “green” form of transportation. The intent is for users to just take them to get from one spot to the other, or to run quick errands. You can subscribe to a one year pass for 29 Euro, and each time you take a bike the first 1/2 hour is free. I actually don’t know if they make money off of it. The bikes themselves are functionally designed for the program and certainly not the sporty lightweight mountain bikes that Larry and I are used to at home. But they get the job done.
Velib station in Paris
When Larry and I were here in July 2007, we noticed these community bikes parked all around town and decided to take a spin. Except we could not get the automated station to accept our credit card. Any of our cards. We went through the arduous task of selecting the type of plan we wanted (you have a choice of a 1 day or 1 week plan, which are 1 Euro and 5 Euros, respectively), agreeing to the terms and conditions, and inserting our card, only to be told each time that the card was not accepted. We got frustrated and gave up.
Now that we’re back for a longer trip, we decided to give them another chance. After having dinner at our favorite neighborhood brasserie, we went up to the closest Vélib station to check out bikes. And again could not get the computer to accept our credit card. The problem we had, and have had in other places, is that all European credit cards are implanted with a chip which is read by the machine, rather than the magnetic strip that US credit card readers generally rely upon. These stations were obviously designed to read the chip implanted cards, but could not read our plain ol’ magnetic strips. We tried a few different kinds of cards and gave up, vowing to return the next day with even more kinds of credit cards. One of them had to work, eventually. Defeated yet again by the Vélib man behind the curtain.
The next evening we returned with every type of credit card I brought to Europe with me. We were determined to make it work. And finally – the American Express came through for us! Go figure. Happily we chose our bikes and withdrew them from the terminals, and headed off in the direction of the Eiffel Tower. Riding these bikes is definitely not the same as my Trek at home – I felt like an unstable newbie who hadn’t been on a bike in 10 years.
We got to the Eiffel Tower quickly and enjoyed our ride down the Champs de Mars promenade and under the tower. Only the line to take the ascenseur (elevator) to the top was long. Very long. We had hoped that by going in the middle of a random weekday we would evade some of the crowds but our hopes were dashed. We are in full tourist season now.
We also couldn’t find a Vélib station to drop the bikes. Despite knowing there were several in the area, and despite running into them without trying on every other outing we’ve taken here, without knowing the exact location we could not seem to catch sight of a single one in the area. So, we decided to press on and take a little bike tour of the city. We crossed the Pont d’Iéna which runs just behind the Eiffel Tower, and rode up toward the Trocadéro area on the paths surrounding the Palais de Chaillot, where I happily collapsed on the grass and Larry took advantage of my exhaustion by snapping a picture.
Biking across the pontStopping for a few picturesTaking a rest
We were able to spend some time tooling around the rive droite before heading back across to the rive gauche and visiting Lady Liberty’s little sister. They are looking at each other across the Atlantic.
The French variety of pain, that is. Le Pain. Bread. Larry and I are quite enjoying it. If you are planning a trip to France at any time in the near future, just memorize this phrase: “Je voudrais plus de pain, s’il vous plait.” Trust me, you’ll be glad to have that bit of survival French under your hat. Everyone in France has a routine of going to the local boulangerie or epicerie to buy their daily baguette. It’s just what they do. Every day, without fail. First thing in the morning or in the evening on their way home from work. And while we Americans may wonder aloud at the daily pain that may be (pun intended), let me argue the other side of it. As Larry put up on his facebook page the other day “Fresh bread every day is what America’s missing.” We are quite enjoying buying our baguettes and other daily carbohydrate laden delights (pain au chocolate is my personal favorite, of course). This morning Larry even trudged down to the local boulangerie at 7 am for warm baguettes fresh out of the oven. I could get used to this.
Larry suffering from a carbohydrate and yeast induced high (I don't know that suffering is the word -Larry)
If The Shoe Doesn’t Fit, Get Smaller Feet
We have also discovered the pain of shoe shopping in Paris for an American male with size 13 feet. When Larry decided to leave his old Cole Haan loafers back in the states because they were ready for that big shoe rack in the sky (they weren’t in such great shape to begin with, and then they had to survive his abuse during our entire miserable move), we thought, no problem, we’ll just buy some in Europe. Except we forgot the fact that the average French man is 5’8″ with a corresponding shoe size. We’ve spent a lot of our time over the last few days trying to find a shoe store that sold shoes that would fit Larry’s big paws. We haven’t been so successful. Every grand magasin (large department store), a Mephisto store down the street (“Mephisto ne fait pas” – “Mephisto doesn’t make them”, asserted the sales lady there), and many other shoe stores in between have all said, “45 is the largest we carry.” Size 13 US is roughly equal to a 47 -48 in Europe.
We were so close to success on Monday we very nearly thought our problem solved. Friendly sales people at one shoe store directed us to another around the corner to a store that carries grande pointures (large sizes). Sure enough, up on the sign it advertised “36 á 50” – Larry’s size with room to grow! While the selection was not large he found a couple of lukewarm possibilities, and the friendly older French woman who has probably worked there her entire life ran upstairs to retrieve our hoped for solution. Larry had requested a 48 and when she brought the two different pairs he requested, one was clearly too small and the other was “parfait” according to the sales woman. She again went upstairs to retrieve a larger size in the too small pair. However, Larry liked the first pair best but thought they were too large.
Here is where a broader French vocabulary would have been helpful. I studied it in college and in business school and was fairly conversant at one point but my days of being a lazy American and expressing myself only in English have pushed most of my French language skills into that cloudy part of my brain that I can no longer access. Professor Federico would be so disappointed in me. Thus we are left with my vocabulary of a few hundred survival words, which works just fine in grocery stores and when ordering meals and buying movie tickets, but is apparently not enough to express myself in the intricacies of shoe fit and sizing.
I asked Madame if we could try the 47’s in the shoe Larry had on and Madame informed me that “a 47 would not work, the 48 was a perfect fit”. It was not a question, or a matter of opinion, it was merely the fact. I tried again. Again, she corrected me, and told me that the sock was the problem. Larry was not wearing regular socks and just had the chausettes that the stores keep on hand for customers to use when trying on. With a regular sock, she said, it would be a perfect fit. Except Larry didn’t plan on wearing them with socks given we’re on the verge of summer and that Larry only wears socks to work and church in the summer. “But he won’t wear them with socks” I tried to explain. “It’s required that he wear socks, it’s store policy.” she informed me.
Obviously my flawed French was failing me. Madame was “the expert” at shoe size and fit and she was resolved. “The 47 will not work. The 48 is the correct fit. It is not a question.” She broke off in rapid fire French – something about the arch of his feet and the width – I have no idea what she said but can assume it had something to do with the fact that his feet were too wide and his arch too high for a 47 to work. I think she also said something about him stretching the 47’s if he tried them on because his feet were obviously too big for them. Then she put all the shoes back in their boxes and put them in the back of the store, saying (I think) something about if we didn’t like them, it was not a big deal “ce n’est pas grave“. We both sat there a little shell shocked. Apparently in Paris, the customer is not always right. At least we got to admire the beautiful Paris Opera Garnier while we were in the neighborhood.
Opera GarnierOpera GarnierOpera GarnierOpera Garnier
Now I have done serious internet research to find places that sell les grande pointures and we have a few well-stocked stores in the Bastille neighborhood to try. Of course the brands they carry are all American labels, because apparently only American men have big feet. This time we’ll ask for a 47 first. Hopefully we get a sales person that speaks a little English.
Heat Wave
Saturday, Sunday, and Monday turned out to be quite the Parisian heatwave. For those of you who paid attention in the past when there have been screaming headlines about deadly heat waves in Europe, any time the mercury in the thermometer goes above 90 degrees, it’s a deadly heatwave by European standards. Continental Europe generally doesn’t get that hot in the summertime, and for that reason, many, if not most people, do not have air conditioning. Including our landlords. I think it was only in the mid-80’s but it was quite humid and that, combined with our 6th floor location, made for a pretty steamy apartment. Larry does get credit for being the ingenious inventor that he is, as he crafted our very own air conditioner by freezing water in old 1.5L Coke bottles and placing them in front of the fan. The result was a very pleasant, very cool breeze aimed directly wherever we chose.
We did our best to spend as little time as possible here (though we couldn’t escape it too much given the subways or buses didn’t have air conditioning either) and decided one night that it was the perfect time to take the Bateaux Mouches – the pleasant open-air tour boats that march up and down the Seine day and night. We decided to take the metro to Place de la Concorde and take pictures as we walked the rest of the way along the river to the Bateaux Mouches dock.
Sunset looking down from Place de la ConcordeObelisk at the Place de la ConcordeFountain, Place de la ConcordeLisa trying to get a perfect fountain shotPont Alexandre III and the Eiffel TowerSun goes down on the Seine
We ended up taking a 10 pm boat so it was nearly dark when we started. The full tour takes a little over an hour and goes past all the beautiful spots of the city, including Notre Dame, the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, and the Musee D’Orsay (my personal favorite, both for the spectacularly gorgeous building (which actually used to be a train station) as well as its contents).
On the Bateaux MouchesAssemblee NationaleMy favorite, the Musee D'OrsayLa Louvre, passing tour boat
We walked home in the dark, across the Pont Alexandre III, by far the most beautiful bridge in Paris, and past the Invalides, enjoying the beautiful stillness of the sleeping buildings and trying to inhale every detail so that it’s permanently imprinted on our DNA.
Pont Alexandre III, Eiffel Tower in the backgroundPont Alexandre III, InvalidesLooking across the Pont Alexandre III to the InvalidesEntrance to the Pont Alexandre III, Lisa as a tiny speckGuardians of the PontRelaxing along the PontInquisitive guardianPeek-a-booHanging around, foreverWalking home from the cruise near midnightNighttime brilliance
We’ve just realized that we’ve been here nearly 2 weeks already. Nearly halfway done with the Paris portion. I knew when we got here that a month was not going to be enough time, and of course, it isn’t. Larry, asked me the other day about the dream I’ve always had of living in Paris, “One month isn’t going to count, is it?” I informed him, no, of course not. It’s just a long-ish vacation. For it to count to me we would have to be here at least a year. Of course my preference is to have a second home here that we can come to whenever we want, but that’s some time down the road. I’d settle for a houseboat on the Seine, too.
Le Cid enjoying his dinner and some fresh air
I’ll have to re-learn French if I’m ever going to be allowed to own property here.
Larry likes to make lots of little word plays and jokes for places and names – the title of this post is his latest. As we approached our place at the end of a long day he said “Well, it’s good to be Rue du Bac home.” Our apartment is on the Rue du Bac, in the 7th Arrondissement, on the Left Bank. I couldn’t have asked for a better location. We are no more than 15 minutes’ walk from the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, Orsay, and Notre Dame. We are less than two blocks down the street from the most famous gourmet grocery store in Paris, La Grande Epicerie de Paris. Those of you who know me well know that I have what borders on a fetish for gourmet markets. I could spend hours perusing all of the gorgeous produce, meats, fish and exotic ingredients in each aisle.
The apartment is pretty much as I expected based on the pictures and floorplan we received from the owners. It’s a decent sized one bedroom + office, with a tiny little Parisian kitchen and a balcony that looks over to the Invalides and Le Tour Eiffel. The view is really great. We’re on the 6th floor, and our view is unobstructed to the West. We were both thrilled as soon as we got up here and opened the blinds.
View from Rue du Bac
We spent the first afternoon unpacking and settling in, then went out for one of my favorite meals in France, an omelette. Eggs are just better here – whether in quiche, an omelette, or on top of a croque madame. Probably because everything is made with a gallon of cream and/or butter. My cholesterol levels may need some emergency intervention when we go back to the States. We walked around the entire large block around our apartment on the way back to get a feel for the neighborhood, and found a Tabac and a convenience store where we severely overpaid for some Coke Zero. I think we’re going to have to cut back on our habit if we’re going to live economically over here.
The next day we got lost in the Grande Epicerie (at least for as long as Larry had the patience) and then went down the street to a regular grocery store to stock up on some regular items. Food is a lot more expensive in France. You’ve gotta love the T.V.A. (taxe sur la valeur ajoutee) or for those who know it by its English name, the VAT (value added tax). Invented by a Frenchman in 1954, it is a consumption tax that was originally directed at large business but really everyone pays the price (cap and trade, anyone?). VAT is currently 19.6% in France.
View from Rue du Bac at night
Our goal as it relates to grocery shopping is that we will never buy the same thing twice (except the basics like milk and bread), thus forcing us to try lots of new and different things. We also have a goal of buying two new types of cheeses each time we visit the market so we can spread out our cheese tastings among the more than 1,000 types of cheese currently being produced in France.
On Sunday we walked over to the Eiffel Tower. It was a beautiful sunny, cool afternoon and there were a lot of Parisians and tourists alike enjoying it.
Eiffel Tower on a Sunday afternoonRelaxing Sunday Children playing on the Champs de Mars
On Monday we ventured over to the Louvre for our first of hopefully many visits while we are here. We spent about 2 1/2 hours covering the Denon wing, which included the Mona Lisa, Galerie de Michel-Ange (Michaelangelo), the Victoire de Samothrace and Cupid and Psyche, which is one of my personal favorites.
Entrance to the LouvrePosing with the famous ladyVictoire de SamothraceCupid and Psyche
I love beautiful paintings but there’s something about the luminous, life-like, peaceful stillness of marble sculptures that entrances me. Standing near them feels like I’m standing next to a person who will spring into animation at any moment.
Rodin is one of my favorite sculptors – and lucky me – the Rodin museum is just down the road! We’ll definitely be spending some time there as well.
After we left the Louvre we wandered through the Tuileries, past the Place de la Concorde and down the Champs Elysees.
Relaxing at the Tuileries
We finished the evening off by seeing Angels and Demons in a movie theater on the Champs-Elysees and eating omelettes – again. Larry spent quite a bit of time in the middle of the Champs Elysees trying to capture the perfect blend of moving traffic with the Arc de Triomphe at the center.
Arc de Triomphe at night
Tuesday we explored more of the left bank as we searched to do a little window shopping and ended up at the chapel of Saint Germain des Pres which is one of the oldest churches in Paris. The bell tower was built beginning in 990. The tomb of Rene Descartes (“I think, therefore I am”) is there, among others.
Chapel of Saint GermainChapel of Saint Germain
After the church we stopped to eat in one of the famous left bank brasseries, the Cafe de Flore. We had the BEST quiche Lorraine ever (more eggs!) while sitting in the sun terrace and watching passers-by. Larry spotted who he thinks was Faye Dunaway leaving the cafe surrounded by a handsome male companion and a personal assistant. Unfortunately I only saw the back of her head.
Cafe de Flore
(All photos (c) Larry L. Hanson or Lisa Hanson, 2009)