Sunday, June 15, 2014

Paris – New Sights and those Revisited – Day One/Two


Our flight left Austin on Monday, at half past 4 o’clock arriving in Atlanta a few minutes late.  My concern for the slight hour between our Paris flight quickly diminishes as a mechanical concern delays the departure time.  Torrential rain at Charles De Gualle airport delaying all flights landing there, further assists our later departure as we sit on the tarmac waiting for the word from Paris control tower that we are clear for take off.

We touch down in Paris on Tuesday, two hours later than scheduled and wait for our EF tour transfer.  Since our group is small we manage to ride in what by European standards, would be called a large van. Through crowded, rain soaked streets to Magenta Hotel, our centrally located Paris hotel, we arrive just in time for dinner and the rain to cease.  Perfect timing.

We are four groups of travelers from Oklahoma, Illinois, Arizona and us, from Austin, Texas.  The other groups are made up of high school French classes and together we are about 40 people on this tour.  

After a typical French meal of salad, beef and potatoes and a cream puff for desert, we head back to the hotel, exhausted, jet lagged and ready for, hopefully, a good night’s rest.

Our first tour packed day begins with a bus tour, directed by Veronica a local Parisian guide. Snaking down busy streets, she quickly points out monuments, fountains and buildings as we breeze by in our air conditioned bus, slowing, but never stopping as the lucky few snap photos from the bus.  Later, we might recognize some of these locations either from one of our walking tour, viewing from the top of the Eifel Tower or our evening Seine River boat ride.

We pick up Magali, our official EFTour Director at Trocodero Square which serves as a viewing platform and gateway to the Eifel Tower.  From this point we take the short drive to Versailles where we have a quick lunch before our tour of the gardens and palace.

On the self-guided tour of the gardens, we learn the difference of a proper French garden vs. an English garden.  The French garden consists of symmetry and geometry where the English garden is left to its more nature state and arrangement.  Versailles being most definitely a proper French garden!
Inside the palace, history comes alive.  We learn that it was Louis the XIV, the Sun King,  who built the castle outside of Paris, leaving the Lourve vacant as an insult to the Parisians who had so badly mistreated  his mother.  The sight in Versailles had originally been a hunting lodge, built by his father, as it was a favorite leisure time of the nobility to hunt out in the woods surrounding Paris.

The palace at Versailles would house only three kings and their court for a little over a hundred years, ending with Louis the XVI and Marie Antoinette. And we all know how that story ended.

Veronica continues guiding us through the palace adding bits of information, describing the function of each room, while navigating us through the crowds in a little over an hour.  Much of the original furniture did not withstand the element of time, however, she points out an original chandelier and rug, among a few others. 


We learn that the hall of mirrors was originally used for dancing, designed long and narrow as the style of dance at the time was in linear form – men on one side and women on the other. The hall itself was so impressive at the time since mirror (glass) had to be imported from Italy when it was built. 

Back on the bus and a short ride into Paris, we leave our local guide and began a walking tour that leads us to Pont de Arts, the infamous “Locks of Love” Bridge.  Magali informs us that two panels had fallen off the bridge two days earlier from the weight of the thousands of locks on those two panels. Crossing over to the  R/L bank we take a short tour of Notre Dame, the church where Napoleon and his wife, Josephine, were crowned.

Today we all learn how to travel with a large group on the Metro by fanning out along the track so that everyone can get on.  Everyone is told the stop to get off at which a quick head count determine if everyone has, in fact made it on the train.  If not, everyone wait for the next train, until we are all present.  It works perfectly, even if not everyone makes the same train.

Dinner consists of a big salad, complete with, off course, potatoes fried into chips, among other typical items of cheese, ham and tomatoes, piled on top.  After dinner we walk through Montmartre eating crepes. A quick trip to the Sacre Coure ends our walking tour, back on the metro to our hotel on Rue de Magenta.

On the descent down the hill, from the Sacre Coure we pass by the flat that Jackson, Violet and I rented three summers ago on our stay in Paris….sweet memory revisited.


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