Life Lessons


"Figuring out our gifts in life is part of our journey to becoming enlightened human beings.” – Allison DuBois

Saturday, June 2, 2018

Returning to France Day 10

Song -  L'Indifference by Cafe Accordion Orchestra



Last day in Paris with my girlfriends Jackie & Sydney.  Mr. B will arrive from Biarritz later this afternoon. He has been visiting some old neighborhood friends there for the last few days. My friends will be flying back home early tomorrow.




Sydney has decided that she wants to see Sacre Coeur before leaving while Jackie and I keep packing. We have so much stuff crammed into our room safe that it gets jammed and we can't open it. The manager tries to help but then she has to call a technician.

And he has to disassemble our entire closet to break open the safe!




It's a lovely, warm, sunny day so I grab my camera and head over to the Luxembourg Gardens.



 It is just bursting with flowers and people!



Kids are playing while a grandma watches over them.




 It's so nice that the boats are coming out for the day!






 It isn't long before there is a line at the boat cart.





 They are so excited with getting their boat across the pond and if a breeze catches the sails they really move!





I get a text from Jackie and she wants to meet Syd and I at Les Deux Magots and she is holding a table for us. Time for lunch!




Parisian's are all outside enjoying the sunshine.  It had been raining a lot prior to our arrival so everyone was ready to be outside for a bit.



Nothing like quality and simplicity.......butter from Normandy, Italian San Daniele ham and bread from around the corner - Polaine!




Returning to our hotel I bump into Mr. B in the lobby.  He is just checking in and starving!  So we sit outside in the courtyard and he has a bite to eat. Then we head over to the Luxembourg Gardens to watch the petanque players and take a stroll.





Each player has their own technique for throwing the ball.....some roll it like a bowling ball and some shoot it high so it drops down on the opponents metal ball and sends it away from the cochonnet.








An older Frenchman starts talking to Mr. B about petanque and life.  Mr. B has been practicing his French for just such an occasion.  His goal was to get to know the people instead of just being able to order food or hotel rooms. It is so nice when people are patient with you and ernestly try to help you with your language skills.

I scoot off to snap some photos around the park.




 Bee hives.....





....and tulips!




Later that night all four of us head back to Dumonet for dinner because it was just so yummy!


Jackie and Sydney have the duck confit..............



Mr. B orders the lamb chops and spring veggies...........and I have steak with Hollandaise sauce but I forgot to photograph my plate.  It was delicious!



And look what's for dessert!!!! A pointy one and a flat one!




And I had the Strawberry Pistache tartlette.............mmmm.........again!



This time we closed down the house!





But don't worry as our evening was just beginning.  Jackie had asked the manager to place her jewelry, passports and cash into the main hotel safe as our room safe was broken.  The man on night duty told us that the safe had been locked for the night and he had no access to it until 8 the next morning! Jackie & Syd were catching a 6 am flight in the morning!!! After a few phone calls and an hour later, the manager returned to open up the safe for us!



We had wine served by our friend Deni in the lounge to celebrate!




"The red ones are very rare and not quite in season yet." 
-- Deni

(when Mr. B ordered a Gin & Tonic earlier today with a slice of  "citron rouge"  - you know are with  a good person when without missing a beat he covers for your language faux pas!)

Friday, June 1, 2018

Returning to France Day 9

Song - A Thousand Years by the Piano Guys


 Welcome to Parc de Bagatelle which is located in the forest of the Bois de Boulogne in the 16th Arr.



The day we arrived at the park the groundsmen were working on the ornate front gates built in 1860.
(We entered through the East gate - Vers l'allee de Longchampe Porte Maillot)





They were actually painting them gold over a pinkish undercoat!
I asked one of them if I could take a photo of him at work.




He happily said "Oui"



Depending on which gate you enter the park through and if you meander enough
 this is what you are likely to see.......




Louis XV Pavillion







We always head straight for the Chinese pagoda where the peacocks like to hang out.




And show off their beautiful plumage......



...to any pea hen that happens to be walking by!



During courtship they not only display their feathers but they also rattle their back feathers against their display and it makes quite a vibration noise.



Ruins from the Abbey of Longchamp - c1255 - a convent of Poor Clares


This park was built in just 64 days in 1777.  It began as a bet between Marie Antoinette and her cousin. It took about a thousand workers and was designed by Scotsman Thomas Blaikie and feels like your very own "secret garden".





 The rose garden now has close to 1,200 varieties of rose bushes.
Unfortunately it was still to early for them to be in bloom but 
hopefully Mr. B and I will come back here in May on our way home.



Up a small hill overlooking the roses is another pagoda.





This is the view from inside the pagoda.



The Presentation Garden

If you look carefully at the statues at the entrance to this garden, 
the little girl on the right has cute little wiggly toes
while the little boy left has cloven hooves.....
mmm....coming from a mom who raised three boys I think I may know why!













These gardens were filled with tulips, peonies, roses, narcissus, clematis,  forget me not and pansies.
It brought you through to the potager - or kitchen garden.



The potager garden was surrounded by espaliered apple trees forming a fence.




And who can't live without a pink chateau 
with a formal courtyard & garden & 2 sphinx awaiting your horse drawn carriage?




I love the hand painted interior shutters.




There is so much more to show of this amazing park 
- waterfalls, iris gardens, grotto's, lakes, a bamboo forest, 
an orangerie where they hold concerts, streams with fish, etc. 
but I am running out of space!




We had lunch across the street from the Opera House or Palais Garnier.




After eating, Jackie & Sydney wanted to do some shopping and I wanted to go back to the Musee d'Orsay.  When I arrived, it was closed......it was a Monday!  So I walked back to our hotel to do some packing.  Mr. B was arriving the next day and we had to move into our own room the next morning.




On the walk back home I took some photos of various door handles......















'nuf said........it's Paris!



"In France we have a saying, 'Joie de vivre,' 
which actually doesn't exist in the English language. 
It means looking at your life as something
 that is to be taken with great pleasure and enjoy it."

--Mireille Guiliano





Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...