Next stop was Notre Dame, the grand cathedral on the Seine, compulsory for every tourist, even if you just sit in the middle and look at all the stained glass windows.

We had a typical Parisian lunch of ham and cheese sandwich and salad while sitting outside a boulangerie under the plane trees watching the world walk by, then as it came on to spot with rain, wandered up the hill to the Luxembourg Gardens - formal in blue and yellow.
We met the group in the lobby for a bus tour at 3pm. Most of them know each other from previous trips - one lady is on her 14th trip with Merryle: we are the only ones who are not return customers. "You'll get hooked, just like the rest of us," she said.
Merryle of Country Farm Perennials is the tour leader with Lucy from Bristol UK as historical consultant and Fabrice from Italy as bus driver (Lucy and Fab are alleged to be an item) and our fellow-travellers all seem to be nice garden-loving Australians, some with garden-tolerating husbands attached, others like David know resignedly that they will get to do the hard work.
The bus takes us around the main sites of Paris with a short camera-stop at each. (No, Denise, I did not get to climb the Eiffel Tower, so no photo.) In fact I left my camera's card on the bed at the hotel so no photos of Paris till I can download David's photos. Lucy turns out to be a tireless and interesting raconteur and 2 hours fly by as we drive around a Saturday-afternoon quiet Paris - though the traffic belted around the Arc de Triomphe like bats out of hell and we were glad to use the underpass to get there and back.

Sorry about the camera card. They are tiny. Photos look good. What is a boulangerie?helen2
ReplyDeleteGreat info and photos so far, hope we get more of Paris!
ReplyDeleteAny evidence of a liason- Lucy & Fab. I mean, but whoever!Trish