We did enjoy coming home at night and watching a little TV in English. It was fun to see "Bones" dubbed in German or French but better to see it in English. I do think you can learn a lot about a place based on the TV programs locally produced or available there. You can also pick up on colloquial speech patterns that are charming. One of our favorites was the use of "cloud" in the weather reports to mean cloudy or clouds, as in "there will be lots of cloud today".
The purpose of this blog is to share pictures of our travels with friends & family all at once rather than by individual message. Caveat 1: not all my travels are with Trout & not all his are with me. Caveat 2: I'm beginning with 2007, but the posts may not be in chronological order. Caveat 3: Travels may have a broader meaning than most expect.
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Just Chunnel It: Paris to London and on to Brands Hatch
We did enjoy coming home at night and watching a little TV in English. It was fun to see "Bones" dubbed in German or French but better to see it in English. I do think you can learn a lot about a place based on the TV programs locally produced or available there. You can also pick up on colloquial speech patterns that are charming. One of our favorites was the use of "cloud" in the weather reports to mean cloudy or clouds, as in "there will be lots of cloud today".
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Paris: Jim Morrison's Grave & Notre Dame
Here's my bus map again. We were staying the in the 7th Arrondissement near the Champ de Mars. The cemetery is in the 20th Arrondissment near Gambetta. They are catty-cornered across the map from each other. In case you didn't know, Paris is divided into 20 municipal districts called "arrondissements." They start in the center of the city and spiral out, so small numbers are in the older parts of the city and large ones are in the newer, at least by Parisian and European standards.
The #69 bus route is a famous tourist one not only because it's pickpocket heaven but also because it passes by a number of main attractions and takes you from the Eiffel Tower (near our hotel) to Pere-Lachaise Cemetery. You may be able to follow it a little better on this section of the bus map. Read the Wikipedia article linked for more detail on the cemetery and the reasons for its location outside the city, at least at the time of its founding in 1804.
It took a long time to get there and of course we got our usual late start, but we got to see a lot along the way.
Pere-Lachaise Cemetery is significant because so many famous people are buried there. More fun than the Wikipedia article linked above is the virtual tour. If you go there, you can find the graves of many of the famous, click on their flashing crosses and see pictures of their tombs. The easiest way to do that is to scan the alphabetical list. A more serendipitous way is to just mouse over the crosses. The name of the person buried there will appear. Then you can click on the cross and see the tomb.
Probably one of the surprises to many Americans who go to Europe (and other places) is that the cemeteries tend to be chock-a-block with graves and tombs. Land is at such a premium that no cemetery we saw anywhere, except perhaps in Iceland, had much space around any of the graves.
This is what it looked like walking in. The Wikipedia pictures are good, but too nicely photographed to give a realistic view of the crowding in Pere-Lachaise.
Our one goal was to find Jim Morrison's grave. Armed with a map, we finally did. Once again I wished we'd had more time because I would like to have visited the graves of some other people as well. Maybe next time. As you can see, his grave is very modest and crowded in among a bunch of other much more impressive tombs. It's very popular, though. Even in the middle of the day on a Wednesday, there were people looking for it like us and standing there when we found it.
Many ignorant people think that the inscription on it, KATA TON DAIMONA EAYTOY, has some evil meaning. It really means, True to His Own Spirit, but perhaps Jim would enjoy people thinking that he's a demon. He's always been one of my spirited favorites.
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Paris: Arc de Triomphe & Toyota Showroom
We wanted to go from here to the Arc de Triomphe, but not underground. Our Paris bus and Metro maps were indispensible in finding our way around town. This is straight from the RATP's website.