Skip to main content

Letter from Paris 1 May

May Day in Paris!

I left the apartment and made my way to Père-Lachaise arriving there a little after 10am. I hoped to spend the entire day and had arranged to meet with Marie Beleyme and Carolyn Campbell at the cemetery. Carolyn is working on researching her new guide map as well as putting together information for a possible mobile phone app for the cemetery and I was looking for clarification on my guide to the artwork in the cemetery.

So,  the three of us spent the better part of the afternoon in search of specific gravesites -- such things always go faster when there's a team involved.

And of course, with Marie's help Carolyn and I were able to track down quite a few of those elusive graves.

l-r: local guide Thierry Le Roi, Carolyn, Marie and some doofus with a camera
The cemetery was packed with visitors and at one point we crossed paths we local cemetery guide Thierry Le Roi who was leading a group of about 30 people. (He and Marie and Carolyn are good friends.)

About 4pm Susie texted saying she planned to join us for an aperitif but was caught in a protest demonstration at Gare d'Austerlitz so she was unable to get on line 5. She walked over to our old neighborhood to try line 7 but Place d'Italie was also closed because of the demonstrations. She turned back to our present neighborhood and got on line 6 at Nationale to Nation and line 2 to Père-Lachaise. We learned later that the Austerlitz demonstration turned ugly with lots of stone throwing at the police and they responding in turn with tear gas.

The four of us met at Rond-Point Casimir Perier in the cemetery and headed for the exit. We soon said adieu to Carolyn. Marie, Susie and I then walked to the nearby brassiere l'Amis Justin for an aperitif. After a couple of hours of lively conversation the three of us headed toward line 2 at Philippe Auguste but Marie was going in the direction of Porte Dauphine while we were heading toward Nation.

A good day celebrating life in the city of death.

That evening we made our way back to the 13th and the Asian quartier for dinner. This time we stopped at a Laotian restaurant, Lao Thai, 128 rue de Avenue Tolbiac, where we had another in a long line of delicious meals -- the beef in the first dish was so tender it seemed to melt in our mouths and the pork brochettes with curry sauce were equally tasty. And for dessert Susie had a coconut ice cream which she polished off with no help from me while I had a concoction of green vermicelli, pieces of something red and bubble bits in a luscious coconut cream sauce.





It was short pair of Metro rides back home and a little Avèze before bed.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Day 1 in Annecy Morning

 [20 April, Easter Sunday] OK, so our morning wasn't actually spent in Annecy per se. Still the bus said Annecy City Tour. . . We had our tickets in hand for a bus trip to Gorges du Fier  and Chateau Montrottier . It was raining lightly as we finished our breakfast and then made the five-minute walk to the town's Hôtel de Ville.  There we joined a few other tourists also waiting for the bus to take us to the gorge. Numerous vendors were undaunted by the weather as they were setting up for the day's big market of mostly gimcracks and geegaws with some food. The bus arrived right on time, and our little group of maybe 16 or so got aboard and out of the cold rain. It was a pretty quick drive out of greater Annecy and through the green countryside. As we pulled into the parking lot I noticed a restaurant I had seen from the train the day before -- and indeed we would see several trains speeding through the valley as we walked to and from the gorge. parking lot Once off the bu...

Wife saves husband

[from Susan VandenBerg, 1/7/1025] To those of you who know Steve (and are perhaps very fond of him) I’m reporting that on New Year’s Eve soon after we had finished dinner, he collapsed suddenly, unresponsive with dusky color and gasping breaths. I immediately responded with CPR and calling 911. Medics arrived in due time and continued CPR along with defibrillation which put him back into a regular rhythm and some return of respiratory effort. He was transported to Butterworth ER and stabilized with intubation and sedation.  I/medical personnel feel this was a dangerous and potentially fatal arrhythmia most likely caused by some scar tissue in the heart from Steve’s previous heart attacks. In that case the scar can interfere with the electrical circuits in the heart, disrupting the normal rhythms. There are a number of other details that I could share with you, although that really isn’t that important at this stage. The crux of the matter is that, if I hadn’t been home when he coll...

Off to Paris and Home

 [22-23 April] We were packed and ready to go by 9:00am. After last-minute tidying up we left the apartment keys on the table, hauled our bags down the two flights of stairs and walked the 10 minutes or so to the train station. Our train was on time and we got right on board without jostling with crowds.  The train ride back to Lyon was smooth and quick and we enjoyed the scenery just as much as on our way to Annecy. We made a point of looking out for the Gorges du Fier on our way out of town. That was pretty cool. Our train arrived in Lyon on time and since we had a couple of hours before our connection to Paris we grabbed a bite of lunch. Our TGV high-speed train to Paris arrived on schedule at platform G and boy was it packed!. Our luck held out though and our assigned coach stopped right in front of where we were standing! We walked on, stowed our bags and headed up to the top deck and our seats. The ride was fast, really fast, and we pulled into the Gare de Lyon in Paris...