Tuesday, June 12, 2012

We're home!!!

Good evening...or morning...or whatever it is!

Up around 5 this morning and out of the hotel by 6; car gassed up and dropped off by 7; checked in at Heathrow and through security by 7:30 -- all for our 10:25 a.m. airplane! (We like to leave plenty of time for contingencies...) No problems at all, and fortunately, the entertainment was individual for each seat, so I got to watch LOTS of new movies!! Let's see...Joyful Noises (Queen Latifah and Dolly Parton); Journey to Mysterious Island 2; Iron Man; Sherlock Holmes (newest one); a rewatch of This Means War and three episodes of Big Bang Theory! Whew! Arrived in LA around 2 p.m., cleared customs and immigration and got over to Southwest by 3 p.m. for our 5:50 p.m. plane for Tucson. Neighbors Bob and Stew waiting for us at the airport, and we were home by 8-ish! I had thought about going straight to bed, but couldn't resist the lure of unpacking...I have refrained, however, from doing ANY laundry; will save that for the weekend!

So -- thank you very, very much for joining us on our trip! As my sister Kitty says, it was truly the trip of a lifetime for us! We are SO fortunate!

Lots and lots of love, and I will close this trip with one last picture -- this sign was on the door of our hotel room last night, and for some reason, I think it's hysterical! (Maybe I've just been gone too long!)



m
xxx

Monday, June 11, 2012

Boy, is England wet and COLD!

Hi!

It's already past midnight, and I've just got time to post that we made it safely from Paris to Luton, and caught up with our Aussie friends Norm and Marg Cheale for dinner ... and it's really miserable here, and I can well understand how Prince Philip got sick!!

And, CONGRATULATIONS Brenda and Chris Lowder on the birth of baby Dara Margaret today!

Love to all!
m
xxx

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Au revoir (almost), Paris!

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Bonjour!

Well, it’s not exactly au revoir until tomorrow, but today is our getting ready day! But first – dinner last night! We decided to try right downstairs at La Vauban. Got there about 7 and got a very nice table with a view of Les Invalides Dome. We both decided to do their set menu, which included a starter drink, starter, main course, dessert, coffee AND a bottle of wine! So…the starter drink was a sparkling kir royale; excellent and nice to look at all in one! Robert ordered their cold avocado soup with shrimp, which was amazing (and we’re going to make it at home after a little recipe searching…) and I had their millefeuilles aubergene – several layers of roasted eggplant on a thin crouton topped with a small round of goat cheese – served hot; wonderful! We both ordered the same main course – planked steak (cooked rare) with frites (French fries) – amazing…And for dessert, Robert was incredibly boring and ordered fresh fruit salad (!!) and I had an entremets of pistachio and raspberries – a pistachio cream layered between small rounds of raspberries -- wow! We washed all this down with a lovely Bordeaux, and were very, very happy as we waddled out of the restaurant and then up the STAIRS to the flat!













It was a difficult night for both of us – this neighborhood is very, very quiet (unlike the 5th, which is always crazy noisy!) but last night – being a Saturday night, there were definitely some passersby who had been WAY over-served and wanted to tell the neighborhood all about it! I was interested to see how the security guards protecting the antiques downstairs would react, but nothing untoward happened and they eventually either went away or quieted down. Robert was also having a difficult time with mosquitoes – although neither of us saw or heard much of them, he has always been a favorite of theirs, and was doing some itching…so…up around 7-ish, feeling like we could use a few more hours.

Down about 8:30 a.m. to head towards the Louvre AND find breakfast. We took the 82 bus over to Luxembourg (we have found that the closest stop to the flat is the 82, which stops across the street, so have decided to take that back and forth to the Luxembourg and then head down St. Michel on the 21, 27 or 85 to get where we want to go…easier than schlepping blocks and blocks from the 28 stop…) Entered the Louvre via Passage Richelieu (“members” and group entrance) and we were pretty early, so the crowds hadn’t started building yet. We got sandwiches and fresh orange juice at the café under the pyramid, then headed toward Sully and the Egyptian wing.



Can only say WOW, they’ve finally finished their renovating, and they have done a great job with their collection! (They have been working on it for the past several years…) Everything is now uncovered, and we noticed many new additions to the collection; some very beautiful and interesting things. In places things are a bit crowded together, but we’d rather be able to see more things than have a bit more space. As always, the Egyptian collection draws a pretty big crowd, but really not too much of a problem, except that when we hit the Denon wing, it felt like the a/c had been turned off, and the HEAT turned on! It got REALLY warm in there!





















I have included some photos of interesting things in the collection, and these are followed by “ceilings.” (Figured that if I could do “doors” and “houses”, ceilings would be the next best thing!) For anyone unfamiliar with the Louvre, it started life in the 1100’s as a walled fortress to protect the small but growing city of Paris. In the 1300’s the fortress and protective walls were transformed into a splendid palace, which was built and rebuilt and redesigned into the 1690’s until Louis XIV moved his residence to Versailles, and left le Louvre deserted. The Royal Academy of painting and sculpture then took up residence, and the Louvre became a museum. (This is obviously the Reader’s Digest version of a huge structure over hundreds of years; suffice to say that this one-time royal residence still shows many of the traces of its former life as a palace, and I’m including photos of just a small fraction of the ceilings that still shine over the collections below!)

























By this time (lunch time and the museum is getting VERY crowded!) we had a sit down and I had what may be my last Magnum Classic of the trip! We really were feeling the effects of a broken night of sleep, so decided to head back to the flat for naps and possibly some Roland Garros watching!




Now up and about. R has taken on the incredible job of repacking everything for us, and has somehow managed to cram everything (including the two heavy books we bought this morning at the Louvre shop) into the cases and close them. (Hopefully we’ll be all right weight-wise, as we off-loaded so much book weight when we got to Phil and Dan’s – which may even now may be heading through the post towards Tucson!) We’re actually thinking pizza for dinner…

So…everything packed, and we’re ready to roll tomorrow. We can stay here until 11:30 a.m., at which point we will make our way via RER B from Luxembourg to Charles de Gaulle (actually, 82 bus to Luxembourg, and then down into the bowels of the RER). As our plane doesn’t leave until 6:15 p.m. we’ll definitely be in plenty of time – but rather too soon than too late, I always say! With the hour time difference, we’re supposed to be at Luton about 6:30 p.m., at which point we will hop into yet another rental car and endeavor (Please…Emmy I!) to make it to Heathrow and drop luggage, and then head back out to Ascot where we are hopeful of meeting up for a late meal with Norm and Marg from Australia! Out early on Tuesday morning, London to LAX, then LAX/Tucson on Southwest, with our wonderful neighbors, Bob and Stew meeting us at the airport! Whew!!

Lots of love and more later!
m
xxx

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Ah, laundry…

Saturday, 9 June 2012

Bonjour!

We woke to a nice and sunny morning – the forecast calls for rain tonight, but the day is supposed to be nice. I had to do two more loads of laundry – one because I wanted to, and the second because of necessities needed for our return home on Tuesday. I do have to say, the washer/dryer combination here is extremely frustrating…grrr… I ran the short wash cycle (“only” 39 minutes!) and the clothes were absolutely soaking wet when finished; I’m not sure if the spin cycle even works with the short wash, even though it is supposed to! So, reset the unit to “dry” for 20 minutes – still soaking wet; 20 more minutes – still soaking wet; finally, 40 more minutes – and guess what? STILL soaking wet! At that point, I had had quite enough, and bundled the soaking and steamy laundry into our extra bag and hightailed it downstairs and over to the closest Laundromat that I knew – next to the BNP Bank about 10 minutes away. Place was open, spotless and had DRYERS that actually DRIED clothes! What a concept!! 24 minutes later, I was heading back to the apartment with folded clothes. By that time, the second load had finished, and R had it on the drying rack in the apartment…hopefully it will be dry by the time we have to pack up and leave!

R had some quantity of Caltech work to complete, and when that was finished, it was almost 11. My idea today, as the sun is shining, to visit a few of our favorite gardens. So, across the street to catch the 82 bus over to the Luxembourg. Then to our local boulangerie (which we miss a lot!) for sandwich jambon et fromage (ham and cheese on baguette) and drinks, which we took into the park for a picnic. There weren’t actually as many people as I’d expected; must be because when the sun goes behind the clouds (which is happening frequently) the wind blows, and it is downright chilly! (R being the gentleman, as I was dumb enough to go out without my jacket, lent me his, which I thought was pretty wonderful of him!) Lots of boats floating on the pond; lots of children enjoying them, as always.









From the park, we returned to the apartment, and I made my 3rd trip of the morning back up those increasingly difficult stairs to pick up my jacket and both umbrellas! (Memo to the file: Since R retired from Caltech, and we have no stairs in our house in Tucson, R has been lamenting their loss in our lives; says they helped keep us in shape…he has now definitely changed his mind, and will nevermore be heard to say he regrets no steps…)

Took the bus this time back to Montmartre and up the hills in the Montmartre bus to Place du Tertre. We always enjoy watching the various artists at work in the square – and today, seemed like thousands of other people had also had the same bright idea! The place was PACKED! We did find a woman whose paintings of Paris we really liked, so two more prints heading home and then to Pasadena for framing…I think we keep the frame shop in business! No idea, actually, where we’ll put these…but we’ll find a place, I’m sure! Walked around Sacre Coeur and caught the funicular back down the hill.













From the bottom of the hill, we caught the 30 bus to Park Monceau, another of our favorite public parks in Paris. Had a good look round; the roses surrounding the pond are stunning! Also enjoyed watching the kids on the merry-go-round!

Bused back to the flat around 4:30 p.m. for a sitdown, as well as try to figure out what/where to go for dinner tonight! We’re thinking that it might be nice to try Le Vauban, which is right downstairs from the apartment – that way, we wouldn’t have to worry about night buses or metro schedules, and could just saunter/stagger back up all those stairs!













More later!
m
xxx

Friday, June 8, 2012

A walk at night!

Friday, 8 June 2012

Bonjour!

By special request of Robert himself, I am blogging that he is not ALWAYS a stick-in-the-mud, and that sometimes he is capable of going out in the evening after all! So! He had specially requested a week in Paris to “decompress” after Turkey; turns out, we didn’t really need decompressing from Turkey – rather, we needed a lazy, restful few days on a beach somewhere where we could have turned our brains to mush … NEVER happen in Paris; too much to see/do/eat, etc. After yesterday afternoon’s heavy rain storm, the skies cleared and we had a beautiful sunny, albeit very windy late afternoon, with huge clouds blowing across the sky. As sunset wasn’t until almost 10 p.m., we went out about 9:30 for the short walk over to Champs de Mars and the Eiffel Tower. From our flat, it is a fairly direct shot – takes about 10 minutes, and voila, there we were! (You may very well be sick of shots of the Tour from every possible angle, but bear with us, we couldn’t help ourselves!) Lots of other people – many of them young and obviously from out of town – were there as well. We walked past and through a “peace” structure – had “peace” written in many, many languages, over and over again; quite lovely and then found ourselves a bench to watch the Tour. I remembered from past times that it sparkles only on the hour, and then for 5 minutes, but R kept insisting that it would start sparkling “soon” – and it did – at exactly 11 p.m. A collective gasp went up from the crowd and thousands of cameras took picture after picture. At one point, we were watching the Trocadero across the Seine opposite the Tour, and flash after flash really lit up the sky. It was very beautiful, and certainly worth the walk and the wait. The weather promises more rain in the next few days, so we were happy to have been able to capture these non-rainy moments! (Also happy to report that Magnum Classics are available individually in France, because I had one on the way home…as we were paying for it, a small group of American girls were heading toward us, one saying: “If they have Magnums…” We agreed that nothing could be better!) We were back at the flat by 11:30 p.m. and directly to bed.

















Up around 7 this morning – wondering how the security guards did all last night guarding the antiques below our window. We’re not sure how many guards they have, but some of the items looked very expensive – will know in the next day or two, as we go down for a look! R’s turn to go for breakfast, and he this time got a baguette, which we combined with the provolone, eggplant, salami and artichokes that we got the other day at the Italian deli – great breakfast!

We decided to head over to the 4th this morning, to check out the Pompidou Center and a church that had been recommended. Once again it took several buses – one to get us across the Seine (which looked VERY chilly and gray in the morning light) – and the second to take us to the Hotel de Ville (City Hall). In front of City Hall they have a huge area set up with tables and chairs and a massive big-screen TV – to watch Roland Garros! Very fun – especially the orange mat made up to look like a tennis court! Wonder if they’ll also use the space to watch Euro2012 which starts tonight…(France plays England in their first game on Monday.)







We were very close to Pompidou Center, where we have only visited once before, many years ago – and I don’t remember at all the Fontaine Stravinski in front, which is filled with all sorts of wonderful sculptures – very fun! Took pictures and wandered through several shops (and managed to find a wonderful poppy print, which we eventually bought…) before the doors of the Center opened at 11 a.m. There was a special exhibition on Matisse, who isn’t one of our favorites, so instead we walked around and admired the collections, bookstore, etc. Then off to find a post office to mail home our new poppy print…fortunately, there is a post office directly inside of City Hall – and actually no line at all! However, they said they didn’t have appropriate tape for us to use, and directed us to the department store across the street. The store, called Bazar or BHV was great fun; we’d never been inside before! Who knew?!













We were able to purchase tape and a sharpie pen. Then back across the street and a sit-down in the tennis pavilion while R taped up and addressed the tube. Finally, the poster is on its way to Tucson; will it get there before we do??

It was now just about 12:30 p.m. and we had been told about an interesting daily prayer service at St. Gervais, (Thank you, Bill!) which is located directly behind Hotel de Ville. We were a few minutes late, but were able to very much enjoy an interesting service in a stunning church. The Catholic church is run by the Fraternite Monastique de Jerusalem. There were probably 7 or 8 priests and about 10 nuns, all dressed in traditional garb, conducting the service. One of the nuns played a solo flute as part of the service (this was the only musical accompaniment they had) and the voices together resounding in the space was magnificent. There were several really beautiful icons – it was a different kind of service; we enjoyed it very much. The stained glass was really lovely; some was old and other windows were very contemporary and beautiful!









It was now time for lunch, and we hoped on and off a bus and landed in Café Alexandre just off Rue de Rivoli – and guess what, they were Greek and had shishkabobs! Oh my! We got a pizza Regina (ham, cheese and mushrooms) and a tomato and mozzarella salad and split them. Excellent pizza! It was while we were eating that the heavens again opened up – torrential downpour for just a couple of minutes. Then, outside and on to another bus for the ride back to the flat…naps all around!

Up and out again around 6 to head back over to our old flat to meet Graciela and Alain, our friends (and former landlords!) for dinner. SOOOO good to see them; it has been too long! We went to “our” restaurant, Le Torchon. We both had avocado and prawns to start, with R having duck breast and me having Pintade (think: Chicken!) for mains. R had tarte with apples and rhubarb; I had tarte citron. It was really good to be able to catch up with them, and Graciela has promised to come visit us this fall, after visiting her daughter and sister in Atlanta!! Very excited!!



Back to the flat about 10 and will post now and then collapse into bed! Definitely some laundry tomorrow, then who knows what? At some point we want to go through the antiquities booths downstairs…hmmm…

More later!
m
xxx