Our very last day in Paris, and it rained like cats and dogs. We were soaked to the bone but determined to get through the last of our list. We went to a beautiful éclair shop. Eclairs here are about a third of the size of those in America, but three times the taste. We walked to Notre Dame’s ins and outs of tiny chapels and saw the big rose windows. We went to a café not too far away and tried to wait out the torrential downpours. Dad finally had escargot and we had ciders and beers and croquet mousier and salads with goat cheese at a cafe that took pity on us. We went to Orangerie, whose water lilies rooms had been closed previously. They were back open today. The water lilies were something really beautiful to see, but the rest of the museum? Will you hate me if I say medium? Last looks at the Eiffel Tower and obelisk, last rides to our metro stop, last picking up sweets, last crepes at the crepe place next door, and last bottle of champagne.
Was it fun? Oui.
Did my parents try to covertly murder one another? Oui.
Did my dad try to carry everything, walk everywhere, learn the entire mail of Paris despite a bum knee? Oui.
Was my mom a good follower? Oui.
Was Shawn better than me at French despite my studying for weeks? Oui.
Was I a bossypants? Oui.
Did we bicker the whole time? Oui.
Tres bien. We loved it.
Merci, Paris, and au revoir!
Saturday, September 26, 2015
Day ten- merci beaucoup, au revoir!
Day nine- bubble, bubble, toil, and trouble
Today was an early day. Daniel picked us up at 7, and after gathering the rest of our party of eight, we headed out to Reims (which none of us understands even after the all day tour how to correctly pronounce). We had a small stop in town and the cathedral, and then headed to Tattinger, a large champagne producer. They had a video, a tour to their storage caves underneath abbey ruins, and a nice taste of champagne. We felt so fancy. And then we headed to a smaller vineyard, a rogue champagne maker. It was so cool to see the different between the big houses and the smaller ones. The smaller ones have no marketing, and their champagnes rarely make it out of the country, but they become popular by word of mouth. We spent a few hours with the wife of the vintner, and a homemade lunch, and tasted three more champagnes. It felt so special. Our last stop was an organic vineyard. We walked through the vineyards and people were picking that day. There is a short window of harvesting grapes for champagne – less than two weeks – and we were lucky enough to be there to see it! Learning what it takes to make champagne was great, each vineyard we saw rounded out the industry, our guide explained all kinds of nuances we never would have known otherwise, the other people in our tour were fun, and meeting two vintners and their wives was so special. Once we got back to Paris, we headed to a tapas bar. For both last night and tonight, it was funny to see a menu in France and another non-English language, and we just had to muddle through. Whatever we ordered was yummy, even if it was a mystery.
Thursday, September 24, 2015
Day eight- It's alive!!!
Day 7-town and country
Day six- aloha mora
Tuesday, September 8, 2015
Day five - The wheel turns
Today we went up to Montmartre to see fun shops, artists, street musicians, have some nice crepes... And of course see sacre bleu! I mean, sacre ceour. ;) It is hard to compare yesterday's view with today's. They are two sides of the same euro. Montmarte was one of our most touristy stops so far, but it is lovely so it is no wonder why we flock there. Then we headed down to the orangerie, whose water lilies exhibit was closed. Um, no we are not paying 12 euro unless we get the good stuff! Le petit palais? Closed. Boo. We did get to tip our hats to Winston Churchill and started down the
Champs Elysees. We were good and only window shopped. Then we watched the ceremony for the unknown solider at the arc de triumph. We were tired after that. All we do is walk walk walk...and then stop and eat pastries, and repeat. So we shopped at a local store and came home and made dinner at our apartment. Never gets old.
Day four - I blow my nose at you, Versailles!
Our first day trip! We could not do it, we simply could not. Too many people even without the too many mirrors to double them. So, not to Versailles, yes to Fontainebleau. To the train at around 10, at Fontainebleau for free day. While was crowded enough that they ran a out of audio guides, it was not so much so that we couldn't see everything. The glitz, the glamour, tens of royals redoing the place so they could mark it? Check. Secrets all over the place, doors to who knows where? Check. Avoiding claustrophobic crowds, even though it was free day? A triumph.
We are getting good at the trains. And walking. We put today together a fun meal of cheese and baguettes and Chinese food (French Chinese food?) I wish we could have seen some of those pretty French countryside sunflowers on the train ride but it was not to be.







