Europe trip (Part 1): Paris!


Part 1 (Paris) - Part 2 (more Paris) - Part 3 (Fonte de' Medici) - Part 4 (Montalcino and Montefiridolfi) - Part 5 (La Petraia) - Part 6 (Florence) - Part 7 (more Florence) - Part 8 (Cinque Terre) - Part 9 (Pisa, Fiesole and Volpaia) - Part 10 (Lost in Siena) - Part 11 (Siena) - Part 12 (Rome) - Final
The red-eye flight from Toronto to Paris went pretty smoothly. I used to love flying but the whole Philly commuting experience jaded me somewhat. Jeff and I met some interesting people at the airport, like the Air Canada employee who told us about an elderly woman who wanted to fly to London, Ontario about fifteen years ago (when security was obviously more lax) but accidentally got on a plane for London, England instead. She refused meals during the flight, saying her son would be taking her out for dinner when she arrived. The airline ended up calling her son and then sending his mother back the next day.
Anyway, we both managed to get some sleep on the flight. When we arrived in Paris, we took the RER (train system) to a station near Notre-Dame. It was only a short walk to our hotel, but I found the experience surreal...it seemed as if one minute we were lugging our bags through yet another long hallway and then BAM we're out on a busy street. I was focusing on not walking into anyone when Jeff tapped my shoulder and pointed. I turned and saw the Notre Dame Cathedral. I felt like jumping up and down and screaming, "HOLY COW WE'RE IN PARIS!" but I restrained myself.

We stayed at the Relais Christine (3 rue Christine, 6th arrondissement, Tel: +33 (0)1 40.51.60.80, fax: +33 (0)1 40.51.60.81) during our few days in Paris. The hotel itself is beautiful and well-maintained, plus the location was fantastic...in the heart of Saint-Germain-des-Prés and within easy walking distance of Notre-Dame and other interesting places we were hoping to explore.
This was the entrance to the hotel:

The hotel is a 16th century mansion built on the ruins of a 13th century monastery, and the management obviously went to great effort to preserve the building's character.
Jeff and I got over our jetlag pretty quickly. Our strategy: DON'T NAP THE FIRST DAY. We achieve this by walking around in the daylight and doing as little sitting as possible. Sitting is bad because then fatigue immediately sets in and you're overcome by a huge desire to lie down "just for a few minutes." So after dumping our stuff in our hotel room, we immediately set off to explore the city.
While we were strolling by the Seine, we ordered two ham, egg, tomato and cheese crepes from this fellow, who made the crepes right in front of us:

When the filling was cooked, he folded the crepe twice and then handed it to us in a paper envelope. YUM.
We explored the Tuileries Gardens, up to Place de la Concord, and the outside grounds of the Louvre, where there seemed to be a lot of police and military types wandering about (or rollerblading, as you can see from the photo below):

A few minutes later we heard a loud bang, and then most of the military and police left. Our theory is either some movie crew was filming, or there was a bomb scare and they were exploding some suspicious-looking package.
That afternoon we also visited Cacao Et Chocolat (29, rue de Buci - 75006 PARIS, Métro : Mabillon ou Saint Germain des Près, Tel : 01 46 33 77 63, Fax : 01 46 33 80 29), a chocolate shop that Mark Bernstein recommended, and Mariage Frères, a tea shop that Kristen Chew recommended and is apparently the oldest tea importer in France. We only had a short time in the tea shop and had planned to go back to explore the teas as well as their tea room...sadly, we ran out of time.

We had dinner at La Jacobine (59-61, rue Saint-André des Arts, Tel: 01 46 34 15 95). After poring over the menu (it was my FIRST DINNER IN PARIS, after all), I ordered the lamb shank with honey and figs with vegetables; it was delicious.
The next day, we visited the famous Notre Dame Cathedral. The stained glass windows were gorgeous:

Every panel depicted a different scene, a retelling of Bible stories. The amount of craftsmanship and number of man-hours that must have gone into this building floored me. Plus the fact that this building was over 700 years old...as far as I know, the oldest building in Toronto is merely a couple hundred.
I imagined the thousands who had walked on this same floor, the historical events that had taken place here, the lives that been devoted the building of the cathedral, the celebrations and the pillaging. But the windows were the biggest delight for me, sunlight illuminating the stained glass in such brilliant colours.
My friend Bill Sutton said that he and Brenda fell in love with Paris when they visited the top of the Eiffel Tower at sunset. For me, it happened in Notre Dame.

More about Paris in my next Blathering...
You can see my Paris pics here and all my trip pics here.

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