Monday, October 31, 2022

Smoking in the boys room in Paris



We are staying in a "boutique hotel" in Paris . Here is the definition of a boutique hotel:  

  a small stylish hotel, typically one situated in a fashionable location

This hotel has 142 rooms and I guess that is small by hotel standards. Is it stylish? Ok, it's stylish. Is it in a fashionable district? I wouldn't call it fashionable. It has lots of restaurants with a few sex shops thrown in. You and your friend Pierre can be eating a burger and fries at a table outside and across the street people are doing who knows what in "luxeux salons " at the L'ODYSSEX.  Kinda bizarre, but I'm just a naive little old lady from the midwest.(!) I guess that's just how they do things in this den of debauchery they call Paris. Har. 

So the hotel itself has a theme: art. There were 3 artists chosen to design 3 floors each. The floor we are on has a bit of  a dark theme. The halls are black with ghost looking animal figures in white. Our room has the same theme. It sounds more bizarre than it is. It's really kind of cool. The lobby has interesting artwork. They have art classes, cooking classes and different things here. 

The room itself is designed different than a gal from Minneee-soda is used to. First of all, the bathroom is a six by six coffin like box with a door (appropriate since we are close to the Paris catacombs). It is separate from the rest of the bathroom around the corner. The shower is in a corner and there is a short hallway in front of it. In the very short hall there is a sink. There is no door on this part of the bathroom. Very little privacy.  Weird design.

By the way, last night some naughty hotel guest either above or below us were smoking in there coffin like bathroom and we smelled it in ours, if you're wondering about the smoking in the boys room reference.

One interesting thing here, the people at the desk emphasized that there is not only a bar, but a speakeasy too. This place is just too damn hip.

I'm making this hotel and neighborhood sound weird, but it isn't at all. It's all kind of fun and different. That's what life's all about.




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October 31, 2022 at 06:06PM

Sunday, October 30, 2022

Never tie your shoes in Paris


Oh what an interesting city Paris has been on the first day.

So even though we're tired this morning we decided to go see NUMER UNO, THE BIG ENCHILADA, THE STAR OF  THE SHOW !!!- Ladies and gentlemen - you seen it in pictures, on TV- THE EIFFEL TOWER!!!! (applause

So it's a two mile walk- a mere pittance in our long list of walks we have taken over the months. On the way, I stop at a small bakery for another French institution SI VOUS VOULEZ!  - the Parisian CROISSANT!!  Yes people, I got a croissant and a cappuccino and it only cost 3.50 euros!

I have found the Mecca and it's a bakery  on a non-descript corner a few blocks from the hotel. This place had all kinds of eye catching delights that could put back the weight I've lost on this trip in a couple days. The cappuccino and croissant were of course perfect. 

Getting back to the EIFFEL TOWER..we start on our journey. go about a block, turn and there it is in the distance- THE EFFEL TOWER!! Have to admit, all kidding aside, it's an impressive sight. It's almost like it's not real. That's not really the THE EIFFEL TOWER, but it is....and we really are in Paris.

So off we go, finally arriving and it is of course, teeming with people. So we join in the crowd, moving down the street and immediately are met by blanket after blanket of GITTERING miniature EIFFEL TOWERs for sale. Oh they have smaller, non-glittering ones for sale too, for those who are more boring and cheap. For the cheapest tourist, every blanket has a small corner of EIFFEL TOWER keychains, 5 for one euro. 

BTW, who is selling all of these EIFFEL TOWER trinkets? It's the same group as Barcelona, Madrid, Valencia - Africans. 

As you move along, the blankets start selling berets, some vinyl hat wit a chain in front, PARIS ball caps, PARIS shirts, totes, backpacks, umbrellas. EVERYTHING PARIS for todays modern tourist. 

We cross the street to the bridge over the Seine and on the bridge are purveyors of that ancient hustle - the shell game. Fascinating to watch. This was not for a dollar or five dollars, this was for 50 or a hundred dollars. 

It was obvious that the few people around the guy were part of the hustle. They won some but lost once in a while to make it look realistic. The thing is most of the time the ball was never under any of the cups but in the guys hand. I wonder how much money they make in a day?

Moving on, you could take your picture with a with a bouquet of red balloon hearts for a price of course. Meanwhile people were out in the middle of the street between lanes of traffic taking pictures of  with the EIFFEL TOWER in the background for instagram.

So here's the thing- I bought a beret (and PARIS ball cap for tomorrow), PARIS tote bag and backpack, PARIS umbrella, PARIS t shirt. I attached the glittering EIFFEL TOWER to the top of the beret (not an easy feat) and had my picture taken in the middle of the street with the bouquet of red heart balloons with the EIFFEL TOWER in the background. That was after I dropped  $500 on a couple of shell games. 

That folks was my first day in Paree.



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October 30, 2022 at 06:35PM

Saturday, October 29, 2022

One thing social media got right



Google maps is a gift from the Gods. We never would have been able to navigate our way through these months of travel without it. 

When we get off trains or planes, it tells us exactly where to go to get to our next bus, tram or train to take us to the next place to rest our weary bods. We were never gonna be people who took a taxi from the airport. Too much money. 

So today we took a 45 minute train from Chuck De Gaulle airport to the neighborhood we're staying in and walked .7 mile to the hotel on a bag drag. 

We each are traveling with a suitcase and a backpack and even though I have left things behind, they never get lighter. I would only take a suitcase next time, forget the backpack. Or maybe just a rolling back pack. It's hard to know how much to pack for a months long trip. I role everything up to fit it in the suitcase. I put toiletries, jewelry, chargers cords, in zip lock bags. I have a cellphone and a tablet. Could have left tablet home. I packed too many clothes and have left at least 5 items of clothing behind. 

We don't buy souvenirs really. Mike bough a Arsenal soccer shirt and an Ireland shirt. I bought an Ireland shirt. That's it. My pictures will be the souvenirs.

Some things we haven't done is pay to get in many places. I have gone to a couple of free art museums, many free cathedrals. Paid to get into Gaudi Park in Barcelona. I just can't see spending a lot of money on tourist stuff. Paying to get into a church seems wrong. Cant do it. You could spend so much money on all of that and people do. Free stuff is more interesting anyway.

We could have took a train from Barcelona to Paris but it would have been a six hour ride with 3 train changes. Ah at this point, no. We took Easyjet and it cost about 50 dollars a piece. 

At first I was kind of leary of the low cost airlines like Easyjet, Ryanair, Transavia but after having used them, they are fine. A cheap, easy, reliable (for us anyway), to get around Europe.




Google maps and public transport get us around cities. And also our feet.  we walk to and from if it's less than a mile. 

We don't do much on the day of arrival. Just too tired. Between getting to train or airport, riding 2-4 hours, getting to next spot once we get there, ready for rest. 





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October 29, 2022 at 08:38PM

Thursday, October 27, 2022

It's time to go home



This trip ends December 1st. We originally planned to it for a year spending a month in 12 countries. That didn't work out because it was just too expensive. When we end this we will have spent 26 weeks traveling.

Why are we ending it? Yes money is definitely a factor.  We could probably have squeaked by with money. The biggest reason is that we are tired. Just plain tired. 

This is not an easy way to travel, going from place to place all the time. Constantly changing where you are staying wears on you. Riding trains wears on you. You really start to long for the comforts of home. Your own bed.Your own stuff. Familiarity. 

This has been a juggling act of trying to figure out where to stay, how to get there. As I have talked about,  staying in airbnbs is a crapshoot. Mediocre most of the time. We've had a couple real bad experiences with them. You never know what you are going to get. Europe is old and with old buildings come problems. 

I don't know the process of becoming an airbnb host. Im sure that there are criteria you have to meet. I doubt anybody comes to inspect your place. I think once you are approved there is very little monitoring of their places. We have stayed in 11 airbnbs during this trip and there were only two that I would even think of staying in again. 

The hotels have been better. We have stayed in 6 and they have all been OK. Wow, we have stayed in 20 places by the time this is done!

Taking trains has been, shall we say interesting? On our first train ride in London, they didn't post the platform until ten minutes before the train left. When they did, there was a mass stampede as people ran for the train. We have sometimes been on 3 trains in one trip., having to run to the next platform to make the train. One time, they suddenly announced the train wasn't going any farther, we would have to get on a new train. Platforms have been changed at the last minute and there is a mad rush by everything to get there. Seating can be confusing, sometimes it's chaos.

I have to say, despite all that, the scenery on the train trips have been a highlight.

Every time we arrive at a new place we have to figure out how to get to our new home. Bus, train, tram? Where's the stop? How much is it? How do we pay for it? Where do we get off? In Europe, all this is in a different language. How are we going to get around the city? How much will that cost? 

When we get to the stop, how far to the place? We have walked a mile sometimes up steep hills to reach where we are going to stay each dragging a backpack and suitcase. 

Where is the nearest grocery store? Are there restaurants around? Is the area safe? 

In between all this, we have seen speculation sights, beautiful scenery which made it all worth it. Would I do it again? Of course. But alas, we are tired. I say this with a lot of sadness: It's time to go home. 

BTW, we will be spending last month in Paris and Lisbon.




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October 27, 2022 at 10:31PM

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

the nooks and crannies of Barcelona



I really love Barcelona! It has grown on me. What I love most is that it has a lot of nooks and crannies just like Edinburgh. You go down a narrow street and there's always something interesting. You might come to a plaza with restaurants, an old church. There are vintage shops, strange little shops along its narrow side street. I found a shop that only sold condoms. Won't be needin' any of those but interesting... Then I found a shop that sold crucifixes, baby Jesuses, saint statues, etc that was 104 years old. 

The Roman city of Barcino was founded in 15 BC. A wall was built around the city at that time. In the 3rd Century and 2nd wall was built incorporating more land and in the 13th century yet another wall. Apparently you can never have too many walls.

I love this ancient history. It's so cool that there are parts of ancient walls from 15 BC that you can still see. In the Placa Nova in the gothic quarter there is an entry point, which was one of four, to the original walled city. One of the main roads of the original city started here.There are still two towers there. There is also evidence of the arches of  2 aqueducts that came together here that provided the city with water. 

A bishops palace is attached to the wall here. There is also a cathedral. This where Barcelona began


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October 26, 2022 at 09:

Tuesday, October 25, 2022

selling on the street in Barcelona





There is a phenomenon that apparently occurs all over Spain but I've just seen it in Barcelona. It's called top manta (top blanket). It is the illegal sale of counterfeit products on the street. 

Ive seen it along the beach in gava on the boardwalk/sidewalk. Sellers lay out a blanket and put their products on it . In this case it was blanket after blanket of sneakers, purses, sports jerseys, belts and the list goes on. These products all look like the real thing with nike swoops and jerseys that look like the real thing. 

These products are produced in factories in China, India, Spain. They are sold mostly by  illegal and legal African immigrants. They are know as manteros. Some  work for larger scale criminal organizations and make very little. Others do it because finding a job as an African migrant can be impossible.

This was a huge problem pre-pandemic in central Barcelona along streets frequented by tourists. It would often be set up near subway stations. When the police approached they take the blanket in a bundle and run down into the station to escape. 

They have met with mixed reaction in the past, sometimes ignored by city officials. There has been a crackdown after a couple violent incidents and they are much less present in the central area. 

I've seen them in parks, at landmarks selling on a much smaller scale selling jewelry, fans, water. 

 Anywhere there are tourists, you will find them. 




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October 25, 2022 at 09:39PM

Monday, October 24, 2022

Barcelona is just about perfect



 Let's say some old bat American decided to move to Europe for a year. Where would the old fool be better off living?

Having travelled to the UK and Europe for 153 days, 8 hours and some odd seconds, I would choose Spain. Spain is by no means perfect but it is beautiful. And lush. And tropical. It has beautiful beaches, mountains. It's cheap by American standards. Great public transportation. Nice people.

Now where in Spain? Barcelona. In my humble opinion,  living outside the city would be ideal.The city is big, busy, lots of traffic. It reminds me of New York but with more space. 

Barcelona has everything big cities offer-culture, restaurants, shopping, great architecture, beautiful parks, historic places, more diversity than other places in Spain. It is in a good place for travel to all of Europe, the middle east, Africa by train. Cheap flights here. 

The thing is Barcelona has all that and it is physically beautiful with all the lush vegetation and flowers. That's the difference. 

I think where we are right now, Gava or the area near it, would be a really nice place to live. You have beach, mountains, beautiful neighborhoods. You are close to Barcelona.

The only downsides I could see is the summer tourist season. It is busy now with tourists, can't imagine during the summer. It must be crazy. Another downside is summer weather. It gets hot. It's humid here now and with the heat it could get pretty miserable. 

So here's what you do: You travel north during June, July August and spend more time here the rest of the year. 

So that's my rose colored glasses analysis of where to live in Europe. No doubt actually living here is a whole other ball game. And no, I'm not moving to Spain anytime soon.



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October 24, 2022 at 08:10PM

Stranger in a strange land that's me