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Western Europe Trip — Paris

It was a long time coming, but I need to quickly wrap up the second big field trip. Over a month after it happened.. *cough*

Franktfurt
Paris
Brussels
Luxembourg

We got into Paris on November 4th. It was a Friday, and we arrived at about eight in the evening. The hotel was alright, although the elevator was broken and I was in a triple. This night we set out to see some sights. I was not feeling all that great, and after eating at a crappy Chinese restaurant, and seeing the Eiffel Tour lit up, I walked back alone. Paris was a bit intimidating at night – moreso than any of the eastern European cities.

But Paris’ subway system is amazing. I used it every day, and it was pretty easy to use / understand. Very nice.

Saturday, the 5th, we had completely free. I did all of the typical tourist things – Eiffel Tour, the miniature Statue of Liberty, the Arc D’Triumph, Notre Dame, and half a dozen other attractions. A lot of walking. And I still felt bad.

Sunday we also had free, except for a formal dinner in the evening (expenses paid, naturally). I visited the Louvre, and had the amazing luck to get in free (first Sunday of every month). The place was packed, but I saw some art. Mona Lisa. Woo. (I guess?)

The formal dinner was pretty bad, since the other vegetarian and I had to request “special” dinners, which meant crappy leftovers of the sides of everyone else. I’ll say it right now – French cuisine is bad, and overpriced to boot.

Sunday night I walked around the neighborhood around our hotel (NE of the city center area). It was sorta ethnic, sorta funky. A little creepy. Found a used clothing store, bought some pants and a couple shirts.

On Monday the 7th, we had two lectures, which were quite good. One dealt with the French rejection of the European Constitution, and the future of European integration, while the other was a meeting with a group from the EU Institute for Security Studies. The focus was on EU Common Foreign and Security Policy, and it was quite enlightening.

At about three thirty, we departed Paris for Brussels, and I was glad. The weather in Paris was bad, alternatively overcast with occasional rainshowers. I felt terrible the entire time, having some sort of stomach bug, or, more likely, just as a result of a terrible diet on the trip (vegetarian options in Paris are scarcer than any other place I’ve been. Only options were Italian, which I soon grew tired of). And Paris was just generally.. “EH”. The tourist attractions were alright – the Eiffel Tour and Arc D’Triumph being particularly impressive – but the general atmosphere sucked.

I had very low expectations for Paris, since it is such the typical tourist spot. Generally, I think it was probably better than I was expecting. But it still wasn’t all that much fun.

Wine Drinking; French Bashing

On Saturday we started off bright and early at 9am. I hadn’t gotten as much sleep as I usually do, so I was a little drowsy the entire trip — a bit of napping on the bus ride there and back. It was an hour’s drive into France, and the first stop was a castle, Le château du Haut-Koenigsbourg. It was pretty entertaining, and I shot a roll of film which should turn out pretty well. There were a few downsides, however. First off, we were in a group of about forty, and we kept irritating several groups of French who were taking guided tours. It wasn’t intentional, it’s just to be expected that when you have a group that large, there’s going to be a low-level, general din where ever they walk. Anyways, we got a few nasty snarls in French. Well, I didn’t, but afterwords I heard of some.

After the castle, we went into Colmar, one of the larger cities in the Alsace region (pop. = ~95k). Here, we toured the (tourist-hellhole) center, which was comprised of those typical, quaint European buildings (example). I branched off by myself, walking around aimlessly taking more photographs. I only had one extra roll of film, so after it was shot off, I had to break down and buy some Fujifilm (apparently the French don’t use Kodak. Hosers). At the end of this leg of our journey, we walked through a museum, the Musée d’ Unterlinden. Here, the collection seemed to be of mostly medieval iconic art. Including the crowning piece of their collection, the Isenheim alterpiece from the 16th century. Looking at decaying Christs on crosses isn’t really my bag, but some of it was actually quite interesting.

Quick footnote? Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi (1834-1904), the sculptor who created the Statue of Liberty (1886), was born in Colmar. We passed a miniature of the statue, and his birthplace is now a museum (I didn’t get to check it out).

After this, we got back onto the bus, and went to our final destination – a wineyard. It was the Wolfberger wineyard in Equisheim (a small typical Alsace village). After a tour of the facilities, we tried some wine. Some of it I honestly liked, some could of been better. The tour was interesting, but for a few things. Firstly, I couldn’t understand the woman giving the tour half the time — either because I was stuck in the back of our group, because of the monsterous machines crushing the grapes, or because her English wasn’t all that great. Still, it was reassuring to see that they don’t still crush the grapes by foot.

I ended up buying a bottle of wine that I tasted and enjoyed (Wolfberger Brut, a light desert wine (or so they say)), and a bottle of Pinot Noir 2002 (I chose this one on a hunch). The Pinot Noir was alright, not exactly what I like. But I showed it who was boss last night.