Saturday, May 1, 2010

Plan B

So it turns out that May 1, is a major holiday in France and all the museums are closed. We got to the Louvre only be to turned away. The Musee d'Orangerie was also closed so we figured the closure would turn out to include all the museums, which was the case. We did get the chance to walk through Le Jardin Tuileries twice - once on the way to the Louvre and once on the way back toward the Musee d'Orangerie
We began to make our way over to the Eiffel Tower with the idea of going to the top since neither of us had ever done that. We strolled around the outside of Le Grand Palais; the building is highly ornamented with lots of bas relief sculpture and mosaics on the outside. We also took a picture of the main hall on the inside through the glass doors. The interior ironworks is beautifully decorated in the art nouveau style.

Across the street is Le Petit Palais. It is no less ornamented - in this case "grand" and "petit" mean large and small. In fact, the inside of Le Petit Palais - at least what is visible through the front door if you press your nose up against the glass - is even more grand. It has a mosaic floor, decorated walls, and murals on the ceiling.

We also saw Les Invalides, though the army museum housed there was closed, as was Napoleon's tomb. But again, the building itself is very interesting.

We stopped for lunch in a cafe across from the military school - Cafe des Officers (sp?). Our waitress was great fun; she opened bottles of beer by putting the opener on the top and then bracing the bottle over her shoulder. She definitely had young French attitude. We also observed a youth riding over the pave (paving stones) on a bicycle wearing what appeared to be a smoking jacket, pipe in mouth, and sporting long dreadlocks. He later took a table with two friends at our cafe! We were not sure what look he and his friends were going for, but they were certainly going for something. (Do we sound old, or what!?!)

We finally made it to Le Tour Eiffel after walking through Le Parc du Champ de Mars. The lines to go up into the tower were mind numbingly long. We did not stand in line. Knowing us, is anyone surprised? We plan to show up there at 9:30 am tomorrow when it opens. Instead we walked through a little garden in the shadow of the tower and watched baby ducks and some other baby swimming bird we did not recognize frolic in the pond. Much better than standing in line.

After we watched boat traffic in the Seine for a bit, we decided to head for home for a few hours. When Rob was in school here in 1989-90, he made friends with a classmate named Florent. We are going to Florent's apartment for dinner tonight.  We are resting and blogging before our evening out. And continuing to download those dang pictures. The problem is that we keep taking more!

Au Revoir!

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