Pages

Sunday, May 10, 2015

Museum Heaven

We've  been really busy this week! Excluding last Sunday, we've visited seven museums, plus have visited numerous other historic and cultural sites and and have walked to every site we've visited - and have been on our feet at least 8 hours each day!  We needed a little exercise and we're obtaining it!  Of course, we definitely need to work off those wonderful lunches/dinners and all that rich food. Plus, we have the added benefit of seeing the city first hand.  We literally fall into bed at night.

Here are some of the highlights:

The Orsay museum has to be one of our favorites - for its style (a converted train station) and its incredible collection of impressionist and later paintings.  We started on the 5th floor with Monet, Matisse, Gauguin, Pissaro, etc. and worked our way down.  We are glad we did. There was so much to see here.

The Orsay museum - a converted train station - Parisian style - a magnifique impressionist collection!

We were mesmerized by these paintings!

The old train station clock

Paul Gauguin

Orsay rooftop view

Peek-a-boo view of Paris at the Orsay

Me before coffee in the morning - Orsay
Eiffel Tower blues

Spring is here

Lunch in the Rue Cler district
The Hotel de Ville - Administration offices - can you imagine working here?

BHV - a huge department store down the street from us - provides anything you want and much more

Playfully poking at a snake...is that a good idea? A sculpture at the Orsay

We visited Versailles mid-week in order to avoid the crowds and the thundershowers also definitely helped reduce the visitor count.  Let's just say that we wouldn't want to visit there on a crowded day. This palaces were ornate (to say the least) and the French people definitely needed to rebel. The gardens were spectacular - even on a rainy day - and perhaps we'll return next week just to see them on a warm, sunny day. 
H
"Honey; I'm home!"

Front doors...

Versailles chapel...not sure who was being worshipped...

The artistry and gold!

Hall of mirrors - to admire our ensembles

Which door was it?

Cottage garden

They start young here learning their history - and they need to....


Room of battle paintings

Adding more gold leaf

Charming village style restaurant in the gardens - we'll return there!

Ahhhhh...the serenity

Gorgeous landscapes surround you here

Happy trees

Ernie's deciding where to place the furniture - Petit Palais
Everywhere we looked, there was beauty
There's more, but we'll catch up on these tomorrow...

Monday, May 4, 2015

2015 Gay Paris!

We're visiting France this year!

Notre Dame cathedral interior nave

Carnavalet garden

It's May, 2015 and we have just arrived in Paris!  We've planned our trip as an eleven week tour of France - focusing on Paris and the southern and western French countryside. Why did we decide to stay in France?  Because close friends and family absolutely love this country and recommended it highly because of its culture and history.

We're not camping on this vacation; instead we're touring first class (for us) and are renting apartments and cottages for one or more week stays while we will be visiting Paris, and the French countryside including Burgundy, Provence, Dordogne, Loire, and the Languedoc areas. Our intent is to tour where we want, maintain the independence that apartments provide, yet have a home base in each locale.  We will be leasing a car once we leave Paris so that we can be spontaneous in our choices, can visit the less touristy local sites and can drive the back roads to view the countryside.

We've planned our trip itinerary based on the many recommendations from our family travel experts (Al, Doug and Mary Jane) and good friends (Chloe, Heidi, Susan, Donna and Adele), we have all the backup information provided by the Rick Steves and Eyewitness books, plus we referenced the Secret and Most Beautiful Villages and the Ina Carrow books for their recommendations as well.

We've arrived!

We arrived in Paris on a rainy Saturday afternoon, May 2nd - jet lagged and exhausted, but the flight over (via Delta airlines) was perfect with impeccable service and connections, and our ride into town (via the Inter-Service Prestige bus service) was comfortable and easy.

Our Marais retreat
Our room with a view

Our Parisian apartment is located in the Marais district on Rue de Rivoli close to the St. Paul cathedral.  It's quaint with aged charm (complete with creaky uneven herringbone floors, our own tiny WC, a frighteningly narrow/steep four-floor wooden spiral staircase, but we have views of the sky and the busy Rue de Rivoli below, so we can quickly check out the weather and how warmly people are dressed).  Yes, we can hear the motor bikes, the energetic garbage truck pickup in the morning and we have our own personal homeless gentleman on the doorstep right outside our door, but this location is perfect for us.  It's central to great historic sites, museums, Notre Dame, the Marais and a variety of shops and cafes are right around the corner.  What more can you want?

There is so much to see in Paris; we're working our way gradually around the city to enjoy and explore as much as we can.  Here is a sampling of some of the sites so far:

Directly in front of Notre Dame, this marks the center of Paris from which all destinations are measured

One of many Notre Dame stained glass windows

Place Dauphine - small quiet retreat on Ille de Cite - we enjoyed our lunch here on Monday
Model of the Notre Dame cathedral and its flying buttresses
17 Century business advertisements - Carnavalet museum

Hotel Sully garden

Locks of love - Seine

Whipped cream, meringue and chocolate melt-in-your-mouth decadence

Each day we encounter little challenges, like learning basic phrases and words in French and continually trying to be very polite and formal, which is the expected behavior here. And we're adapting...We're discovering that eating a nice lunch out at a cafe or restaurant is wonderful; then we can enjoy a light dinner in our apartment and can go to bed reasonably early.

Tonight's project was to figure out (by reading the Swedish manual) how to operate our induction cook top - task accomplished with trial and error.  Our next task - to work the microwave/oven - but that's for tomorrow...along with resisting those yummy desserts.
More church decals

Pompidou center chaos
Pablo Picasso - cat with tweety

Picasso museum - artwork lovingly displayed

Old world charm; new world fixtures




Sunday, September 21, 2014

Our Final Few Days, then Home!





Our personal path to the lake
Val and Hatch at the base of the Cayuse Crater  - Broken Top trail
Ernie and Hatch enjoying Senoj Lake

In the Three Sisters Wilderness, we had a wonderful visit with Val and Hatch and we were able to take several hikes and visit a local museum in Bend while she was there.  (Unfortunately, Joe was unable to join us due to a broken hand and foot.)


Thursday, September 4, 2014

What a Diffference a Day Makes!




Crane Prairie Reservoir next to our campsite

Quinn River birding area

Cow Meadow area - Deschuttes River
 The Labor Day celebrations have passed and suddenly, the campgrounds are empty, the resorts are closing, and the nights are getting colder (last night - into the mid-20's here in the Three Sisters Wilderness area).  And - this magic all happened on Tuesday!  What a wonderful difference a day makes!

Timberline


Mt Hood - up close and personal

The magestic Timberline Lodge
 From Mt St Helens, we drove to the small town of Cascade Locks on the beautiful Columbia River and there we stayed two nights at a small KOA campground (where the nightly train whistles reminded us of home.)

We're used to being the smallest rig in these private parks