This was a multi-purpose trip to Europe that my lovely wife and
I took in the spring of 2012. We attended the wedding of a dear
friend in Harrogate, visited family in Cambridge and Cardiff,
and finished with a honeymoon in Paris.
We started off in London and picked up our rental car, a little
Skoda. I was a little worried about that, since it was my first
experience driving a Czech car and I had requested a VW Golf,
but it turned out OK. It was easy to park, got decent mileage,
and actually had decent power for an automatic compact with a
dinky engine. Plus I think they must get a lot of their parts
from the same supplier as VW anyway, since all of the interior
controls were identical to a VW!
Although it was probably not the most brilliant idea, given our
complete lack of sleep on the plane, we had scheduled ourselves
to sleep for the first night in Cambridge, so we hit the road.
Navigation via GPS (with updated maps) is just awesome, BTW.
Especially in Europe, where the road network generally resembles
a cobweb instead of anything logical :) We found our hotel with
no problems and it turned out to be very nice (
Best
Western Gonville Hotel ). It had the advantage of having a
parking lot, which is a rarity in Cambridge.
After a nice evening meeting some of my newly acquired
relatives, we started our next day with a walk around town
(after an inaugural full English breakfast of course :) ).
Cambridge has some very cool buildings with all of its various
colleges and churches, and more bicycles than I've seen anywhere
since Amsterdam. There's a very Hogwarts feel to the place.
I understand that
punting
in Cambridge is the thing to do, but we just went for a
walk. We had limited time, and it was raining off and on, and I
was getting over a cold (and I'm good at making excuses!). The
boats are nice and scenic though.
We spent the rest of the day and the next morning with
relatives, and then drove up to Harrogate. I gave S a quick tour
around part of the town center and we checked into our hotel. It
was a little weird being back, but it reminded me what a great
little town it is (yes, still a bit homesick for the
place!). We had a nice dinner at Thai Pavilion and called
it a night. The next day began with a tour of my old
neighborhood, and then we proceeded to the marvelous wedding,
which involved much eating, drinking and dancing (I really MUST
get back into a salsa class!). It was great to see so many
people in person again whom I have only been seeing online for
the past year or two! It was great fun, and thanks so much for
the invite, guys!
Unfortunately, our time was limited, so we had to leave the next
morning for the next leg of our journey and drive down to
Cardiff. This was a bit of hike, and involved driving through
some awesome off-again/on-again micro-monsoons. Gotta love that
British weather :) We made it down to Cardiff by late
afternoon and found our hotel (
Cardiff
Holiday Inn ) This is another one we chose because it had
a parking lot, although since it was Cardiff, we had to pay
extra for it. We had a nice evening with a new set of
relatives (new to me anyway ;) and planned for a day of
sightseeing around town the next day.
Unfortunately, we were there on the wrong day of the week to go
on the
Doctor
Who tour (D'oh!) , but we did manage to see several cool
things.
Look! A Dalek!
We got on one of the tour buses to see the sights of the city,
since we figured it would be a good way to get down to
Cardiff
Bay, because that's where we would find Torchwood
headquarters!!!! (Or the
Wales
Millennium Centre if you want be all mundane)... We were
seriously geeking out here, looking for some kind of plaque
honoring the place where Captain Jack or Gwen or Ianto walked.
We hung out in the bay for a while, stopping in at the
Norwegian Church to see an art exhibit, and giving S a
chance to try Nando's for the first time. (Yes, they have them
in DC and Annapolis now, but it's tasty :) ).
After finishing the bus tour, we had a few hours left in the
day, so decided to have a go at
Cardiff Castle. This
is an interesting site, since most of what you see today was put
up in the Victorian era by the
3rd
Marquess of Bute, who was something like the 5th richest
human being on the planet at the time. Other buildings on the
site are from Norman and Roman periods, so there's quite a bit
of history here. We took the super-duper behind the scenes
guided tour, which was pretty neat, and got us into some rooms
that weren't generally accessible. Seriously though, really rich
people do some ridiculous things with their cash.
This open-air fountain garden room was actually on the roof of
one of the castle towers! The fountain is currently turned off
because if they turn it on, it leaks onto the floors below now.
The Marquess was very religious, hence all of the imagery here
and in the other rooms as well.
The Norman keep on the grounds of the current castle...
The next we went for a visit of some more relatives outside
Cardiff, as well as some additional sightseeing. First was a
stop at the
14 Locks
Canal near Newport. This was a series of canal locks from
the late 1700s that has been restored into a park. They used to
use the canals to transport coal from the mines in the valleys
down to transportation links. We also visited the village of
Cwmcarn.
But that unfortunately brings the UK leg of journey pretty much
to a close. The next day we drove back to Heathrow to drop the
car off and spent the night at an airport-adjacent hotel, so
we'd be ready for our morning flight to...... PARIS!
w000T! :)
Ah, Paris, such a lovely city. This was my third trip and my
wife's first, so we had to play tourist. Plus, it was our
honeymoon, so we were allowed to be goofy as well. Our hotel was
excellent, not too far from the Eiffel Tower (
Hotel
Ares Eiffel ), a metro stop right around the corner, lots
of great restaurants nearby, and a big old church nearby that
played REALLY loud bell solos at odd times (why 6:40pm,
exactly?).
First order of business? Tour bus, natch, to show S the lay of
the land and how awesome the city looks. Of course, we brought
the rain with us from the UK, so we had to put an umbrella up
every now and then (yes we were on the upper deck of an open top
bus in the rain. We're rebels.)
Les Invalides
Place de la Concorde
Tourism in the rain :)
For our first meal in Paris, we decided on, oddly enough,
Italian food, mainly because the restaurant happened to be open
early (the French sure like to eat dinner late!). It turned out
to be a highly rated, fantastically awesome restaurant, and the
best Italian food I've had in ages.
Goldoni's.
Try it, if you're in Paris over by the Eiffel Tower. Seriously!
:)
First order of business on Paris Day 2 was the
Musee
D'Orsay, which in my humble opinion is the most awesome of
art museums. Mainly because of this particular painting:
Le
Moulin de la Galette, by Renoir. There's also tons of
other impressionist work by Monet, van Gogh, Denis, cool art
nouveau stuff, great sculpture, etc. and the building itself is
amazing. But that
particular
painting is probably my favorite. I can't say why. It just
is. :)
This
one's nice too, but it was out on loan or something at
this particular time... The museum has now forbidden all
photography inside the building, so I have no pictures, but I
got tons a few years ago (starting at the bottom of
this page),
and the official site of the museum has pictures of a huge
number of the works inside the museum (and you can order some
awesome books from their shop).
After spending a few hours in the museum, we took another bus
tour around the Latin Quarter to use up the rest of our bus
ticket, and then found a French restaurant for an earlyish
dinner.
Day 3 was a day to check out the spookier side of Paris,
starting with a vist to the
catacombs.
This place was downright creepy. Check out the link for details,
but basically they had to empty out most of the cemetaries in
Paris at the end of the 18th century to prevent disease, and
they transferred the bones to an underground quarry in this part
of the city. So what you have here is stacks upon stacks of
bones, semi-artistically arranged. Six million people worth of
bones. Eeep. And it's dimly lit too. Not really recommended for
the squeamish ;)
These first couple pictures are of sculptures of Paris landmarks
created by one of the quarry inspectors.
It was very dark, and you weren't supposed to use flashes
(although I think I was the only one obeying the signs!), so I
don't have too many pictures of the bones. There are
plenty of
pictures online though if you're keen on stacks o bones :)
We climbed back to the surface into a nice drizzling rain, had
another nice Italian lunch, and headed over to the
Montparnasse
cemetery, since they are always interesting places. There
are a ton of famous people here although we didn't spot any
famous gravesites when we were there.
Day 4 was
Louvre
day! We thought we'd be all clever and go in the back door to
avoid the big line at the pyramid, but apparently that's no
longer a secret. After about 45 minutes in line, we finally got
in and started looking at some art! I could spend a couple of
weeks in this place, particularly with their new multimedia
guide. They are using a nintendo 3ds now, that tracks where you
are in the museum and does a full a/v presentation on various
selected works and historical periods. Very cool. Of
course, since my lovely wife doesn't subscribe to my philosophy
of touristing whereby one utilizes every hour of a museum's
opening time and keeps going until the feet blister, the knees
ache, and one starts to beg for water and hallucinate, we missed
literally up to 9 hours of opening time at the Louvre and Musee
d'Orsay. So, I guess we'll have to go back to Paris or
something. :)
So, there you have it. Another fine adventure concluded.
Hmm, where to next?
Return to Hoytsworld....