We had yet another leisurely morning, sipping coffee and relaxing; Susie had leftover pastry treats from the previous day's safaris in search of the not-so-elusive "really good pastry." The truth of the matter is that they are not hard to find at all. But, and this is a bit but, but one does need help to weed out the mediocre, of which there is, in fact, a great deal.
About noon we got our act together and, locking the apartment we walked downstairs, out the door and turned left heading for the no. 2 metro at Menilmontant. After crossing much of the northern half of the city we got off at the Blanche Metro stop in Montmartre, and walked the long block to rue Rachel and into Montmartre cemetery.

Sadly, the answer was not forthcoming since the information we had was limited to just the year of death and apparently due to the record keeping they need the month at least as well. A method to the madness there somewhere I'm sure.
So we left Montmartre and strolled over and down rue des Abbesses breathing in the life force of this very dynamic part of Paris. ("Life force," pretty good, eh?) we doubled back taking rue Durantin all the way back to near the cemetery, and eventually finding our way down several quiet side streets to the Metro no. 13 at Guy Moquet. We took the no. 13 outside the city, getting off at the second to the last stop, the basilica of St. Denis, last resting place for the kings and queens of France. (photo below: place in front of the basilica.)



Anyway, we met up with our friend Marie outside the church -- she was kind enough to give us a tour of some of the more interesting aspects of the "necropolis."




We eventually said au revoir to Marie -- she headed off for the Metro and Susie and looked for the tramway that runs around the northern edge of the suburbs. We soon found it, and after a few minutes wait, boarded the tram -- similar to the ones in Strasbourg and identical to the one that runs along the southern edge of the suburbs.
After seeing a bit of "outside" Paris, we got off a few stops later at La Courneuve where we switched to the no. 7 Metro.
A few stops later and we got off at Jaures to change to the no. 2 -- big mistake since we had to walk up several hundred flights of stairs (maybe an exaggeration) to connect. we then got off at Pigalle in Montmartre, where we connected to the no. 12, getting off at Madeleine.
After browsing the desserts at Fauchon -- slick, very slick, great packaging -- we strolled down Blvd. de la Madeleine which of course became Blvd. des Capucines and naturally that became Blvd. des Italiens (Italiens!) where we stopped, said enough is enough, its time for an aperitif.
We popped into a cafe, bistro really, or maybe a restaurant, anyway we had a wonderful glass of Alsatian pinot gris and warmed ourselves. Late in the day with the cloud cover occasionally dropping rain in tiny does and keeping the sun at bay, we found ourselves getting a bit chilled. This stop made perfect sense to us.
It was a short stroll down rue Gramant, just across the street from our cafe, to rue Saint augustin and to our dinner for the night: Kintaro noodle bar.
After consuming the better part of a 50-lb bowl of noodles each, along delicious gyoza, fried dumplings, we strolled to the nearby no. 3 Metro at Quatre Septembre, and got off just a few minutes later at Parmentier, just a few short blocks from our apartment.
Another grand day in one of the world's grandest cities.
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