...so Christ, having been offered once to bear the sins of many, will appear a second time, not to deal with sin but to save those who are eagerly waiting for him. Hebrews 9:28

Sunday 18 March 2012

"La Ville~Lumiere" ~ The City of Light

Despite our excitement to get to Italy, our days in Paris seemed too few.  It is a wonderful city with so many sites, the beautiful River Seine, and amazing food.

This is a picture of our hotel, the Hotel Luxembourg Parc ~ it was right across the street from a huge park called Luxembourg Gardens.




 Ben and Chris on the street right outside of the hotel ~ they are ready to hit the city.  Having been here before, we all felt pretty comfortable navigating.  The Seine runs right through the center of Paris, so using that as a landmark and navigating around it makes it easy.  


We were all starving and went to lunch at a cafe near our hotel.  This is me with a cappucino.  We had been looking forward to Croque Madame ~ which is basically a grilled cheese sandwich with a fried egg on it ~ one of our favorites from the last trip.


One of our favorite French treats is macaroons.  We have been to Laduree in London too and were excited to see one between our hotel and the river.


I LOVE their window displays ~ SO elegant!




Chris and Ben enjoying their macaroons... we are hoping to try to make these once we get home.


We did a lot of walking that afternoon, starting outside the Louvre (above), through the Jardin des Tuileries with its beautiful gardens of purple and yellow flowers, past the Obelisk, to the Eiffel Tower.




Then we took a cab to the area known as Ile Ste. Louis, behind Notre Dame, to go to a restaurant recommended by a friend of ours who has visited Paris multiple times.  The restaurant is pictured below.


It was a very unique restaurant, run by the same family for three or four generations.  I wish I would have gotten better pictures of the decor but it was very dark and they didn't turn out.  It was very narrow in front, but then the back opened up into a beautiful, rustic room, which is where we sat.  Below you see the first course ~ "the vegetable course".  They DO NOT mess around when it comes to vegetables. They served you this basket at your table and you ate from it, cutting up the vegetables you wanted for yourself.  I wish I would have realized from the get~go that it was going to be a six~course meal, because the veggies were delicious and I ate a ton of them, not leaving room for much more.   I love the expression on Chris' face below ~ it is the moment when they placed the basket on the table. :)


You filled pitchers of wine for your table right from a barrel ~ as much as you wanted!


Chris thought he should have a turn!


Mike (or Amy), if you are reading this, thank you SO much for the recommendation.  We would have never just stumbled across this place and it was not just a meal, but an experience.  Although I would have liked it better if they had toilet seats!  This leads me to digress a moment about what I have discovered about French, and now Italian, public bathrooms.  They are very different than our separate, proper, WELL-EQUIPPED American bathrooms.  First of all, they are usually either up or down a couple of flights of stairs ~ ground floor space is too valuable for bathrooms.  In a couple of the restaurants we visited in Paris, I thought I had walked into the men's room (wouldn't be the first time!) because the urinals were right out in the open.  Most of the time you go into a main room with a shared sink/sinks with separate rooms/stalls (walls go all the way to the floor and ceiling) for the men and for the women right next to each other.  It feels very awkward!  At Nos Ancestres, the men's room had a hole in the floor for a urinal and the ladies room toilet had no toilet seat.  Apparently they do not want to encourage you to spend much time in there.   Thank goodness none of us needed to. :)

After a delicious and incredibly filling dinner, we walked around the island a bit before heading back to our hotel ~ had to walk off some of that food!


Notre Dame from the back at night ~ it is such a beautiful example of pure Gothic architecture.  The boys and I spent some time prior to this trip studying architecture and I am so glad we did.  It is helping us appreciate and enjoy everything so much more.  I just wish I could get them to stop giggling about Notre Dame's "flying buttresses".  Guess I have to remember they ARE 8 and 10.


We spent one morning at the Musee d'Orsay ~ it was amazing.  It is right across the street from the Seine and just up the street from the Louvre.  I took some pictures on my iPhone but every time I try to upload them my computer freezes up so I am just going to have to tell you that we saw some breathtaking art by Monet, Van Gogh, Degas, Rodin, and many others.  My boys, like most others, would rather be out in a park throwing their football around than going to an art museum, but I guess because we have always taken them, they handle art museums really well and actually do enjoy them.  We study three artists in-depth per school year, so with each year of homeschooling that passes, they have more of a framework on which to place all the things they are seeing and experiencing when we travel.   It is such a good feeling to go to a museum and have them recognize and get excited about some of the pieces they are seeing because they KNOW them.  Makes all the effort of homeschooling worth it in a second ~ I DO love my job.


Next we went to a section of Paris called Montmarte, from which you can see much of Paris.  It really gives you a feel for the immensity of the city.  


 This is a famous church called Sacre Coeur ~ it is beautiful inside with an amazing painting of Christ on the dome.


This is the view at the base of Sacre Coeur.  There were tons of people just sitting outside ~ eating, chatting, watching the singers and dancers that were performing ~ just relaxing and enjoying the beautiful warm, sunny weather.



A view of the Eiffel Tower from Montmarte ~ it was pretty hazy the farther away you got.  There is a lot of pollution.


I loved the feel of the area around the back of Sacre Coeur ~ it is just what I always pictured Paris to be like ~ so quintessentially French.


Then we headed back to the area around Notre Dame to find dinner.  We stopped to take a few pictures because the light was so gorgeous.


Ben and Chris burning off some energy.

Back to Ile Ste. Louis.....another area that is "So Paris" ~ a maze of streets filled with cheese shops, flower shops, candy shops, fruit markets, little boutiques, etc.....LOVE this area.





The Mitchell Family at dinner at a creperie ~ gotta love being able to have a butter and sugar crepe for dinner.  Our waiter was SO nice and friendly ~ I love how you can see him in the mirror as he was taking our picture.


I will try to post soon about Milan.  Tomorrow is our 5th day here and we are loving it.  I was so focused  on Rome and Florence that I really hadn't given "Milano" much thought, but it is an amazing city with much to offer.  

Ciao for now!

1 comment:

  1. Amazing! I love every word you wrote and every picture!
    ~ Kris

    ReplyDelete