LT 9 July Paris
Saturday morning we got up early (-ish) and got organised to
head to Paris. Peter was keen not to
return to Paris with a suitcase behind his seat and his knees up around his
ears like Mr Bean, so he spent a while packing the car just so… managed to get
everything in the boot this time. (But no chance at all we could have fitted
the last big suitcase as well!)
Paris is about 2 ½ hours away and quite a reasonable drive, though
expensive – about 25 Euros ($40-odd) each way in tolls! The traffic issues start at about the ring
road and beyond that the traffic is just unbelievable. Roundabouts have multiple lanes with cars
criss-crossing everywhere. There are
often lights to get onto the roundabout, give ways marked on the roundabout (at
each new entrance, i.e. you give way to traffic coming on), and/or pedestrian
crossings immediately as you exit the roundabout. Basically it’s a total free-for-all and you
somehow come out the other side, and sometimes even on the right road. The junctions between the various highways
and ring roads and main roads are like Auckland’s spaghetti junction x 1000,
and several times we took the wrong piece of spaghetti. Oh well, more of Paris.
We travelled straight to our accommodation for the weekend,
which was another home booked through Airbnb.
The family were still at home, getting organised themselves to head away
to the south of France for their holidays.
The house is a funny little rabbit warren of rooms and corridors, some with
makeshift roofs, some very strange looking electrical wiring and a somewhat
disorganised family (the flat was described as a ‘work in progress’ but I think
some of the anti-features are more to do with the family themselves…. Hippy is maybe
a term that could be used here?, I think they may have used the word Bohemian). In Paris terms it’s quite a large apartment,
but so cramped and ‘efficient’ compared to what we have at home. There is a small concrete patio out the back
and no garden or lawn at all. There are
also two cats here (which haven’t been particularly interested in us, much to
my disappointment) which we are responsible for feeding.
When we arrived we were offered a lunch of organic bread, a
cheese platter and some red wine. OK
that will be great thanks! We then just
rested and relaxed for an hour or two while the family did their last
preparations and headed out. The weather
was quite miserable and it rained quite heavily on and off for the rest of the
day. It was too late to go into the main
part of Paris by this time, so we walked down to the local shopping centre to
get a few groceries and check out the trains etc so we were all ready for the
next day. The train station is about 10
minutes’ walk away, then it’s about 15 minutes into the centre of Paris.
That night we did a bit of research about the Eiffel Tower,
to see if you could pre-book tickets or any such thing. Normally you can (though not the night
before), but right now there are only one or two of the lifts working, out of
four, so the queues are much longer than normal. Actually going up the Eiffel Tower hadn’t
been on my list of “must-do’s” – luckily! Here are some amazing things we learned though:
The Eiffel Tower has about 7 million visitors a year (my maths tells me that’s
about 20,000 a day), is 324m high, and it takes 60 tonnes of paint to repaint
it every 7 years. Now you’re ready for
your next quiz night!
That night there was the most terrific thunder storm – the skylights
in the bedroom and the clearlite corridor roofing meant that the rooms lit up
like a spotlight – so between that and Caelan’s itchy bites and our bed that
was so hard it was like sleeping on the floor, it wasn’t the best night’s sleep
for anyone. We didn’t race to get up on
Sunday and headed into Paris proper late in the morning.
We had decided to spend the day ticking off a few of the main
Paris sights - the Arc de Triomphe, the Eiffel Tower (bottom of) and Notre
Dame. We started at the Arc de Triomphe,
which was actually very very cool. It
wasn’t that expensive to climb up (about 15 euros for us all, kids under 18 are
free) and the views from the top are really impressive. The arch is in the middle of a big roundabout
that has 12 roads leading onto it. One
of the roads comes down the Champs Elysees and you can look straight down
towards the Louvre. Directly back the other way is the archway at La Defense.
It’s very central, you can see for miles and the great thing is that you still
have the Eiffel Tower on the skyline! Win
all round. There weren’t many French
voices at the top though, just mainly Americans, so that was a bit of a downer J
Next stop was the Eiffel Tower. This is just a massive
structure, way bigger in real life than you imagine. The legs on it are about 80m apart – the scale
is ridiculous. There were swarms of
people everywhere, as you might expect, and very longs queues for the
lifts. We did walk across the bridge to the
big palace-y thing on the other side (forgive my geography) to take some
photos, but it was a bit difficult to get a good shot as there were those temporary
fence barriers all around that were in the process of being removed, and in
fact we couldn’t even go down the far side down the Champs de Mars for all the
fencing etc. There must have been a big
event on a few days before – as well as the fencing there was lots of rubbish
everywhere. It was quite cool to see the
Eiffel Tower in real life, but the visit to the Arc de Triomphe was probably better.
Notre Dame was next and last on the list for Sunday. There was quite a queue there too but it was moving
basically at walking speed so we joined the line and headed in (no entry fee,
bonus!). We didn’t realise until we got
inside that there was actually a church service taking place. There were signs
up to be silent, and the main seating area was roped off, but you could do a
full circuit of the church around the seating area. It must be so distracting for the people in
there to have hundreds and thousands of tourists snapping pictures and trying
and failing to be silent. Add to that
the clanging of the machine selling the little souvenir coins that was doing a
roaring trade! We completed our circuit
just about when the church service finished, so we then made a painfully slow
exit. It was an amazing building, inside
and out – the architecture and all the stained glass windows everywhere were so
beautiful, a real treat to visit. The organ
sounded great too!
Before we visited Notre Dame we had found a nice little
street selling all kinds of food, so having had chips and waffles for afternoon
tea we returned there after the visit to grab some tea before heading home.
Public toilets in Paris are a bit of an adventure… if you
can find one at all. They are few and
far between, when you find them there is usually only one, and its condition
ranges on a scale from very unpleasant to entirely vile. Often you have to pay, but the money
definitely doesn’t go towards cleaners. Even
in the railway and metro stations, you will be lucky to find a single
toilet! Perhaps consequently, some of the
metro halls and stairwells have a smell that makes you walk nice and quick. Sometimes
(as I discovered) there is a knack to getting out of the loo and you can get
stuck in there.
We have been managing the trains and metro quite well. It is
all well signposted and logical – sometimes you need to be quick with your
decisions though if there is a train on the platform as you arrive. We noticed heaps and heaps of people dodging
the ticket machines – jumping over them, walking through close behind someone
else (we had this happen to us a few times) – different techniques for the different
gates. We didn’t see any security
anywhere keeping a watch on it, and at some stations and times it was happening
as much as 1 in 5 people! Makes you feel
a bit over-honest for actually buying a ticket!
On Monday morning we had to return the rental car we had
collected last week, in preparation for getting our Peugeot back tomorrow. Although the depot was only 10km from our
accommodation, it still took over half an hour to drive there – crazy traffic
here! We dropped the car off, then, once
reunited with our suitcase, we returned to our accommodation by train to drop
it off (seemed more practical than dragging it around Paris for the day). This took up most of the morning so we planned
to have a quick lunch at home then head back into town. We had intended to pick up some bread for
lunch at the bakery that had been open all day on Sunday, at least until 7pm
when we had walked past it on the way home… but in a cruel twist of French
logic it was closed on Monday at lunchtime!
After a lunch of whatever we could pull together at home, we
headed into the centre of Paris to walk by the Louvre and around the Tuileries
Gardens. Now this was the Paris
of romance novels and chick flicks! All around were these beautiful picturesque
buildings, you walked into the square with the pyramid and there were big
fountains, then further down the way beautiful gardens and huge trees and
flower beds and fountains and ponds and deck chairs. All very lovely to look at, and the weather
was entirely pleasant. There was one
area where there were lots of people selling all kinds of junk souvenirs, but
they must not have been permitted down in the gardens, so it was quite
peaceful. There were some pretty odd and
arty sculptures though! We couldn’t
quite get all the way down to the Place de la Concorde with the obelisk (because
of more of those fence things) but we went as far as we could. Wandering back down the side of the gardens
there was a big summer carnival going on, and there was also a lovely little
(free) children’s playground. What summer
bliss, watching my daughter frolic in the sun at a playground in the centre of
Paris!
It was a lovely relaxing way to spend the day – and especially
nice to discover the ‘attraction’ of Paris, as distinct from the ‘attractions’
of Paris from the day before.
Just as well you've made this amazing record - you have packed so much into your six weeks. Not sure if we could cope with the insane spaghetti roads but you seem to be surviving them. Piccies of Normandy and the D day beaches are wonderful. I have a feeling that that may be included in the route of our next big adventure. Hopefully you'll have been reunited with your pet Peugeot when you read this. x
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