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[1] Place des Vosges

[2] Amboise Chateau

[3] Clos Lucé

[4] Bike from Hell

[5] Chateau Chenonseau

[6] Chenonseau Gardens

[7] Chenonseau Bedroom

[8] Chateau Chaumont

[9] Chaumont Chapel

[10] Sarlat Street

[11] Sarlat Statue

[12] Sarlat Pigeons

[13] Dordogne Vineyard

[14] Dordogne River View

[15] River Castle
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Bonjour!
This is my last day in France, and I'm a little
sad to be leaving so soon. I'm just getting to the point with
my rudimentary French to feel comfortable navigating around, just
today I navigated a bookstore and the post office (La Poste),
and I've really enjoyed my time here. Scotland and England were
a fun start; but France is definitely a foreign country for me,
with many, many new things to discover. I really like the French
language too, and wish that I was better at it (a small part of
me is plotting to take French language classes and to spend as
many summers in Paris (or somewhere else in France) as I can).
When I last left you, it was the morning of my last
day in Paris, and I was leaving early, having done everything
I'd wanted to do... well, that last day I did very little. I hung
out in the
Place des Vosges [1], a little public square a few blocks
from the busy Bastille Metro stop. I read some more in my book,
watched the Parisians lounging, did postcards and generally just
relaxed. Later, I had Berthillon's sorbet (which was very good)
and a nutella creperé, and realized that I'd finally discovered
the Paris that people fall in love with - it was only after I
stopped bustling around trying to see the 'sights' that I discovered
*this* Paris. So I made up my mind to try to come back soon :)
The next few stops were small French towns - Amboise,
Sarlot and then Carcassone. Amboise is in the Loire Valley and
at the heart of Chateau-country. I stayed at a hostel there, which
turned out to by my first bad-hostel experience. I poked around
Amboise the day I arrived, seeing the
Chateau d'Amboise [2] and the
Clos Lucé [3]. The chateau was beautiful, but small.
Apparently, at some point in its long (1000-year) history, four-fifths
of it were sold off as scrap stone in order to pay for the renovation
of the remaining fifth. If I recall correctly, it's known as the
royal chateau because it became the French royal residence (of
Françios I) for a brief period of time as well. The Clos
Lucé is where Leonardo da Vinci lived out his last three
years. François I gave Leonardo the little chateau so that
they would be able to chat on a regular basis - supposedly, there's
even a secret passage that connects the two chateaus. The following
day, I rose early and rented what might be the
most uncomfortable bicycle [4] I've ever ridden on! With it,
I rode to the Chateau Chenonseau [5,
6, 7].
This chateau
spans the river [5] on which it sits (you might have seen
pictures of it... it could very easily have been the set for a
fairy tale). Aside from being quite beautiful as well (it was
designed by Catherine da Medici and Diane something-or-other),
it also served as a key point in WWII because it spanned the river
delimiting free- and occupied-France, so sneaky things like prisoner
swaps supposedly took place here. Very cool. My second and last
stop on my uncomfortable bike was the Chateau Chaumont, which
sits high up on a hill overlooking (through a delicate screen
of trees) the Loire River and is much more castle-like than Chenoneau.
The views of the river from the chateau and the surrounding gardens
were breath taking, and I used-up an appropriate amount of film.
As I was traveling to Chaumont, I realized with some dismay that
the chateau I'd really wanted to see, Chambord, was too far away
to reach in the short amount of time I had left that day! Arg.
Again, I'll just have to come back and make a special effort to
see it.
Sarlat was my next stop and was certainly my most
expensive experience yet. After the bad hostel experience in Amboise,
I spent a little extra and stayed at a hotel that I hoped would
not have a long-term power-outage during the night (that's what
happened in Amboise). Sarlat is a medieval town that has grown
up a bit. The centre ville (city center) is very well preserved
from its medieval days - the
streets are very narrow [10] (about 10ft from wall to wall
in many places), some of the buildings have stone-shingled roofs,
there are bits of the town wall that still surround the centre
ville, and the buildings in general look like they're straight
out of the
16th or 17th century [12] (from XVIth or XVIIth, as the French
would write it). My first day there, I walked around the centre
ville and soaked up the atmosphere [13].
I also marveled that this little town is the world capital of
foie gras (goose liver) that's supposed to be good, but I didn't
end up trying any. I have, however, been enjoying French food,
which is very good. I imagine I'm missing out on a lot seeing
as I'm a vegetarian, but c'est la vie.
My second day in Sarlat, I rented (with only a little
bit of trouble in both finding the place and in conveying all
the appropriate information in broken French) a moped/scooter.
This was my first time riding any kind of motor-powered bicycle,
but after a slightly rocky first start, I was zipping along the
French secondary roads. I very much enjoyed the whole experience,
and even if I hadn't had other plans, I would have enjoyed spending
the entire day just riding it :). My first stop was to see the
cave paintings in the Dordogne area. I chose to see the Lasceaux
caves, which are closed to the public. Fortunately, after a ten
year project, France produced a near exact replica of the two
main galleries of the caves that contains 90% of the paintings.
It was a bit expensive to get the guided English tour, but the
paintings were still very enjoyable, and quite impressive for
being done in two- or three-color mineral paints under candlelight
some 17,000 years ago. My next stop was te Dordogne river, via
Gare d'Sarlat (Sarlat train station) where I bought my ticket
to Carcassone with no English!). Back on the Dordogne River, I
found a canoeing company, got myself a one-person kayak, stowed
my bag inside at my feet and headed down the river. The visual
panorama from the water was simply breathtaking - the unbroken
lush green of the trees carpetted the hills that rolled gently
back from the silky grey-green ribbon of water, the
Dordogne, that stretched out from my feet [14]. Capping the
scene was a baby-blue sky speckled with fluffy white clouds that
had only recently emerged from what had started as a miserably
gloomy morning. I used an appropriate amount of film as trees,
white-washed cliffs with the carpet of trees literally hanging
off the top, the castles and the towns of the Dordogne River Valley
gently passed by. Along the way, I met some interesting people
including a
pair of Brits [16] (one Scottish and one Welsh, and their
accents showed it) and a family of Americans who live in Buchurest(sp?),
Romania. Although Sarlat was my most expensive experience, it's
been one of my favorite so far as well.
The next day, I headed to Carcassone by train. Much
to my consternation, when I'd finally figured out how to actually
validate my train tickets, no one checked them on the whole five
hour journey! Still, I have one more chance to do it correctly
as tomorrow I leave for Barcelona. Carcassone used to be another
tiny medieval town. It sits very near to the Spanish-French border,
and you can tell by the heat. Modern Carcassone is two towns;
La Cité is the old medieval town, while the new development
(including a McDonalds... the first I've seen in over a week)
is across the river from La Cité. My guidebook told me
that there's lots of stuff 'nearby' to see, but it requires renting
a car, and since I really have no desire to do so, I'm only staying
the one day here before moving off to Barcelona. Never the less,
Carcassone offers some fun things to see too. I'm back in a youth
hostel (my wallet is still feeling hurt over spending so much
for those two nights in Sarlat), which seems nice. The guide book
also warned that Carcassone is big with the day-trippers, and
as I arrived in La Cité around lunch-time, I got to experience
the throngs of bussed-in tourists first-hand. By dinnertime, most
had either retired to their busses (coaches) or moved to another
locale, and the place assumed a somewhat less touristy feel. La
Cité itself is similar to Sarlat in that it's a well-preserved
medieval town, but the architecture and general feel were much
different from Sarlat: the buildings have less of a gothic or
renaissance design to them and looked more 'mediterranean', or
at least designed more to bear the sweltering heat of the climate.
The city walls also gave it a more rugged feel - the walls are
about forty-feet high, and there are two
sets [16] of them, with the inner set starting between ten
and fifty feet inward from the outer set. All in all, it gives
the place a very, ah... defensible feeling. The area was at one
time swept by crusades from the Roman church to exterminate a
local sect (the Cathars) that the church deemed a threat. Anyway,
I strolled the outside walls [17,
18]
and marveled at them and the endless miles of vineyards that are
tucked away behind La Cité.
Tomorrow, it's off to Barcelona!
Now reading: Fellowship of the Ring, book two. It's
been really interesting to read FotR after seeing the movie version
of it. I think about which of the numerous scenes made it into
the movie, which things where changed, etc. and I really do think
the movie is a good adaptation of the book, if a slightly overly
dramatic one.
Au revior! Aaron
p.s. I haven't heard from a lot of you, and I'm
curious to know how life is with you - so please write back! :)
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