Monday, February 16, 2009

Trip to Paris

First things first. It was a great trip and we have very few complaints. So, to the country of France, or at least the Parisians, you have earned a truce. That doesn't mean we're (America) gonna come bailing you out of any wars in the near future, but it does mean i'll go easy on the French jokes for a while.

The city of Paris is magnificently built. It has beautiful buildings and architecture mixed in with a ton of semi-fascinating history. The way the city is put together is fairly traditional European in that it surrounds the paramount church, Notre Dame cathedral, however over the past few hundreds of years it has expanded considerably.

Our first night was spent in a very Parisian restaurant, small and packed with tables making it next to impossible not to say something to your neighbor at least once, very French. We were blessed with some light entertainment which included two men, one with an accordion and the other with a guitar playing mostly French love songs with a splash of good 'ol rock & roll to keep it upbeat. The two men did a great job including the patrons of the restaurant in their show. They demonstrated a great sense of humor with a hint of perversion. This wasn't our first time in France, but it was our first opportunity at traditional French cooking which of course included escargo. If you want to know what that was like, you'll have to ask Alicia.









After our meal we were taken on a bus ride tour of Paris by night where our guides weaved us through the streets pointing out buildings and explaining their historical significance. One thing the Parisians have done a great job of is keeping some of their architecture in tact by revamping retro buildings for modern usage. Their oldest buildings have been rehabilitated as museums, hotels and government buildings, which keeps them in use and open to the public.

On day two we continued our bus ride tour tracing much of the same route as the night before but also included some new routes and stops for taking pictures. Still to this day many of Napoleons markings can be found throughout the city on arches, bridges and monuments. We stopped at a military parade ground where they have a monument to peace, go figure. It was a place for some photos of the Eiffel tower. The tower itself is very grand when your standing under it. It stands almost one thousand feet tall and was built by Gustave Eiffel, a bridge engineer, around 1889. Many people of his day though it was hideous and fled the city in protest (that worked). It's definitely unique and nothing is more fitting in Paris than a giant phallus seen by the entire city. After the tower we grabbed a bite to eat in a restaurant before heading into the Louvre Museum. The Louvre was originally the royal palace of Phillip II and was expanded many times over again into the building that we know today. It's huge! Our guide told us that if you spent one minute on each item in the Louvre, it would take you a month to see everything. We had only a couple hours, so we checked out the top ten: Mona Lisa, Venus de Milo, and a bunch of others... It would be great to go back when we have more time.

This was Valentines Day so once everyone was ready, we went back to the hotel and freshened up for dinner at another Parisian restaurant. No snails this time, but we did try some Foie Gras (fattened duck liver pate) which wasn't too bad. There were no perverted musicians to entertain us though, so we had to entertain ourselves and each other, oh well. After dinner we were treated to a boat cruise of the river Seine.

On our final day we headed to Le Sacre-Coeur which is a roman catholic basilica that overlooks Paris. Around the corner is Artist Square where you can purchase some local paintings or have your portrait sketched for a small fee.

When all is said and done, Paris is a great big city that would take a lot more time than two and a half days to explore, but the time we did spend was well spent. The food was good (except the rhum cake) and the people were nice and i'm sure we'll go back soon.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Afghan-Games '09?


Skateboarding in the U.S. was often a sign of rebellion from the status quo, with close ties to alternative music and an appearance that Ronald MacDonald would hesitate to hire. So is it possible that this same activity that unites so many of our youths could also be as beneficial to the youths of Afghanistan?

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/26/sports/othersports/26skate.html

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Best of the Bushisms (CNN Video)



This video is awesome. I miss him already.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Is this the end of London? OMG!

"London buckles under worst snow in 18 years"

"Britons are shaking their heads at how 8 inches ground one of the world's busiest cities to a halt."

http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0204/p07s02-woeu.html

...It's just a bit of snow, right?

Monday, February 2, 2009

Snow, snow, snow

Here's a view out my front door window. They say it's the worst snowstorm in years. What a bunch of little girls!

Happy New Year, if you're Chinese

Yesterday we went down to London for the Chinese New Year celebration. It was of course held in "Chinatown" and was packed full of people. Not cool. It was freezing cold, snowing on and off all day. We wanted to see the dancing dragon but the crowd was so big we couldn't see anything, but went back later and got to see it doing it's thing. The highlight was the firework finale. Aside from the cold it was a pretty good trip.

Italy










On the way to Italy we went through France (they can keep it), Belgium (mini-France) and then we stayed the first night in Switzerland. Amazing! They should film every "save the earth" commercial in Switz. I especially like this photo because it makes it look like I was backpacking through Europe, we rode a bus.

Italy is dirty. It's true. Not all of Italy, but certainly the tourist areas. I think our favorite place in Italy was Assisi. It's a monastery town up in the hills, and it's clean. We also saw Venice, Rome, Florence, and Pisa.

Stonehenge

The marketing director for the Discovery Channel deserves a raise. I've watched those hour long shows on this pile of rocks, who hasn't? But that's all it is, really.

Bath

The tour in Bath was really good. It was free and it was all about the history of the city. There were some old buildings and a lot of shops. I didn't care for Bath, but of course the wife liked it.

Lands End

If you need an explanation of "Lands End", then I don't know what to tell you... not much there really. There's some tourist shops and a farm.

We learn to surf

You have to laugh at the irony, right? I mean, two people from the great state of Cali have to move to England to learn how to surf? It was awesome, and we will be back. Oh yes, we will be back.

Minack Theatre


The Minack is an outdoor theatre set on the coast of England. It was a cool idea, but once it started raining, we left.

Trip to Eden


Welcome to Eden. Eden is a couple of bio-spheres out in the middle of nowhere, nowhere on the south west of England, each one housing a different environment. The first is a rain forest and the other is a desert. There's also a bunch of other stuff like a zip-line, tons of plant life to walkabout, a stage and more. Cool place, definitely worth checking out.