Ah Paris, the smell hit us right as we left the train. This
was our first of many encounters of being at a non English speaking country. As
usual the food is our first priority when we have been traveling and for Paris
our first stop was to get a baguette. The bread was tremendous it was so
filling and had such a unique taste, very fresh. We then headed to our Host
Laurent’s Flat in a nearby town Clichy. The flat was something we had never
seen the entire place bathroom, kitchen, living room, and bedroom were the size
of a master bedroom in the states. It was very comfortable and gave us a sense
of the day to day lifestyle the French live.
We started our sightseeing at the worst traffic jam we had
ever seen. The road around the Arc de Triomphe is circular and there are lane
lines then to add to the mayhem there are 12 streets that shoot right into the
circle, and with all this there are no stoplights. Everyone goes every
direction whenever the want. On to the real spectacle the massive Arc, it was
built in the earl 1800’s to honor the French killed in Napoleon’s campaigns.
When you think Paris you think of the Eiffel Tower. A
tremendous structure that seemed to poke its tip out all over the city whenever
you looked in its general direction. We walked around the city for many hours
and every time we looked in its direction you could see some part of it poking
out. It was originally built in 1889 as the temporary entrance to the World
Fair. It was then supposed to be torn down after 20 years because the French were
outraged by its ugliness but it single handedly is the most synonymous
structure to a city in the world and gets the most paying visitors in the world
per year.
Our next marvel was the Notre Dame Cathedral, its located on
an island in the middle of the Seine River. We happened to be there on the day
they were celebrating its 850th year since being built. This
cathedral was adorned with magnificent gothic gargoyles outside and massive
stained glass walls inside. The most amazing thing to us was how long the
structure has survived, it made it through the French Revolution, hosted the
coronation of Napoleon, and even seen an English crowned king of France. It
took two centuries to build it was started in the 12th and finished
in the 14th, The entire Gothic Period.
Art history in college had nothing on being at the Louvre.
All those paintings and famous works of art you see on your computer that look
like they are 8.5 by 11 sheets of paper are astonishing 20 by 20 feet canvases
covering entire walls. We saw countless things almost to many to name but the
highlights for us were the Mona Lisa, Winged Victory of Samothrace, Consecration
of Napoleon, and the Venus de Milo.
Of course we had to indulge in what France had to offer so we tried some wine, ate a crepe, and had some macaroons, very delicious now off to Madrid.
Of course we had to indulge in what France had to offer so we tried some wine, ate a crepe, and had some macaroons, very delicious now off to Madrid.