One week in Paris and the world’s your oyster.
I’ve been missing in action for a bit more than a week because of a family trip to Paris, France. We visited my wife’s eldest sister and her family, and we celebrated our nephew’s 40th birthday, my wife’s sister’s husband’s birthday, and we got too meet our nephew’s and his wife’s 16-month-old daughter for the first time. We also spent time with an ex-pat friend of my wife and our niece and a friend of hers. She lives in Berlin, but she came to Paris to see us. Naturally we also visited several tourist attractions including several museums, Notre Dame, Montmartre, Sacré Coeur, the Eiffel Tower, and we took a river cruise with dinner and a few of Paris’ 44,000 restaurants. We also went to an opera.

Paris is a fascinating city with so much to offer and so much life. Paris proper/inner-city is 40+ square miles featuring large several hundred years old beautiful buildings, gorgeous esplanades and narrow streets, thousands of restaurants, cafés, bakeries, pastry shops, small stores, thousands of statues, and hundreds of museums, monuments, tourist attractions and parks. Paris is the city in the world with the most restaurants, and the food is great. Italy has been voted to have the best food in the world. I must disagree; it is France. There is culture everywhere and the streets are filled with people long after midnight, and the restaurants are open long after midnight. Paris never sleeps.
The city of Paris (Paris proper) only has 2 million people, but you must add the millions of people working there but living in the suburbs. Paris metropolitan has 13 million people, and the region of Paris called Île-de-France has 12 million people. The city I live in, Dallas, Texas, also has 2 million people (8 million people in the metro) but it has almost nothing to offer in comparison. Dallas has some tourist attractions and offers some culture, it is not bad at all, but Paris has about a hundred times more of that. In Dallas almost all restaurants close before 10PM, which is when Paris really wakes up. That is not to put down Dallas, but to point out that Paris is indeed one of the greatest cities in the world to visit.

I’ve been to Paris several times before, in 1986 after my Swedish army service, then in 2003 and in 2018. This time was different because I could converse in French with waiters and taxi drivers, read signs and instructions, and newspapers. However, unlike in 1986 and 2003 a lot of French now speak English, at least the younger generation, and they want to speak English. In 1986 even the French who knew how to speak English were kind of offended when you could not speak French. Now they want to practice speaking English, and I want to practice speaking French. The problem I had in 1986 has been reversed. I was so happy when I started talking to a taxi driver in English and he said “Je suis désolé, je ne parle pas anglais. Anglais non. Anglais non.”
I heard a lot of different languages spoken, in addition to French, English, German, Italian, Dutch, Chinese, Japanese, Arabic, Spanish, Swedish, Danish and many other languages, and it was all welcome. When I visited Italy in 1986 someone angrily shouted at us that this is Italy and we speak Italian, not English. In 1986 the same thing almost happened in Paris, but I don’t think that is likely to happen in Paris now. The current US government is not popular for understandable reasons. However, there were signs reminding people that the US government is different from US visitors, and I felt that people treated us in a friendly manner.
Anyway, below is an overview of what we did this time with the focus on my photos. In the past we’ve visited Moulin Rouge, Versailles and Le Louvre, which is the world’s largest museum. I highly recommend those attractions but since we have seen them a few times already we did not visit them on this trip.
The Eiffel Tower
The Eiffel tower is one of the main attractions in Paris. We’ve visited the Eiffel tower before. We’ve eaten at the restaurant on the first floor, and we’ve visited the second floor (halfway up), but I’ve been to the third floor (the top) only once before, in 1986. Unfortunately, it has become difficult to visit the Eiffel Tower top. You must buy the tickets beforehand in good time. My wife’s sister was able to get us all tickets from Paris City Vision (guided tours).





Notre Dame
Notre Dame is a very large cathedral located on the island Île de la Cité. The construction of it began in 1163 and it was completed in 1260, 865 years ago. It was severely damaged by a fire in 2019. We’ve visited Notre Dame many times before, but this was the first time we visited Notre Dame since the fire. It looked the same except the big, beautiful pipe organs were missing, and Notre Dame was still being renovated on the outside. We bought tickets beforehand, but you can buy tickets there, but the line is long.



River Cruise on the Seine
We also took a dinner cruise on the Seine. The boat / cruise was called La Seine Ducasse. I started right across from the Eiffel Tower and went a few miles up, passing by the island Île de la Cité and Notre Dame and then turning around. The cruise was a couple of hours long and the sun set during the cruise. The food was amazing (see the menu below). Unfortunately, the beer options weren’t that great, so I had wine.




Opera Rigoletto
One evening we went to see an Opera at Opera National de Paris located nearby the Bastille. The opera was Rigoletto by Cristiano Grimaldi. It was sung in Italian but above the scene there were subtitles in French and English.


Montmartre and Sacré Coeur
Montmartre is a neighborhood, and a hill located in Paris. It is known for its old picturesque buildings, the plaza, the small stores, cafes and restaurants, and the art. At the top of the hills sits one of Paris most famous cathedrals Basilique du Sacré-Cœur de Montmartre. It is open to visitors, but you may have to stand in line to go inside. The view from the top of the hill is spectacular.



Sights and Shopping in Paris
Nobody walks in LA but in Paris everyone walks. There is so much to see everywhere, everything is close, and there are several restaurants and shops in every block. So, why not walk a few miles every day. It is healthy too. Below are a lot of photos that I took of things we visited as we walked around Paris.















Museums and Gardens in Paris
We visited several museums and gardens in Paris. One of the museums we visited was Musée de l’Orangerie which exhibit all kinds of art from ancient times to modern times but especially paintings including several famous painters such as, Pablo Picasso, Claude Monet, Henri Matisse, Henri Rousseau, Walter-Guillaume, Amedeo Modigliano, Marie Laurencine, Maurice Utrillo, Eva Nielsen. Some special exhibits were Monet’s gigantic water lily paintings and “flou” art, intentionally blurry paintings and art because life is blurry. We also visited the Auguste Rodin Museum. The museum had hundreds of Rodin sculptures in the museum building as well as in the surrounding gardens. There were also paintings by Vincent Van Gogh and Claude Monet.







Dessert Places in Paris
There are thousands of Cafes, bakeries and pastry shops in Paris and the cakes, pastries, desserts, tarts and other baked goods are probably the best in the world. We visited a number of these stores and creperies and we had desserts at various restaurants. You can find wonderful baked goods in Italy and in the Scandinavian countries, but I have to say that France, and Paris, takes the cake (pun intended). At Angelina’s I had delicious coffee and I had some of their thick and creamy hot chocolate with whipped cream as well as two incredible cakes. At Berthilon I had amazing rhubarb and wild strawberry ice cream.


Violin d’Ingres Michelin Star Restaurant
We celebrated a couple of birthdays at a Michelin star restaurant called Violin d’Ingres. In terms of eating that was probably the highlight of the trip. Out of Paris’ 44,000 restaurants only 123 are Michelin star restaurants (10 three-star restaurants, 17 two-star restaurants, and 96 one-star restaurants). I ordered Pigeon, something I’ve never had before. It does not sound appetizing. I joked that you had to go out in the street and kill the Pigeon yourself. However, it was probably the best meal I’ve had so far this year. It was truly delicious.


Traffic in Paris
Traffic in Paris is horrendous. Paris has successfully promoted the use of bicycles, mopeds, motorcycles, buses and the metro. As a result, the air is much cleaner than it used to be, but the traffic is still bad. One of the reasons is that it has become quite popular to disturb the traffic in various sorts of protests. When we were there the taxi drivers were on strike. You may think that you could just take an Uber instead, but the taxi drivers were blocking other traffic as well, including blocking the entrance to train stations. We were afraid they might block the entrance to the airport on our return day. I have a hard time understanding this since this kind of behavior is obstruction and is illegal in the United States as well as in Sweden.
However, the striking tax drivers were not the only problem. One day when I was accompanying my wife and daughter shopping, I got bored and decided to walk back to the hotel. It was two miles, and it took me one hour. Since the sidewalks are of such high quality and there is so much to see along the way and so many opportunities to stop if you need, this is easy to do.
Along the way I saw two large demonstrations. One was “dépénaliser cannabis” and there were hundreds of people, many with green hair and weird clothes, carrying flags with green leaves on them, marching down the street and playing music. There were also hundreds of police and the entire street, Rue Voltaire, which is a major street, was blocked. Then came the bicycle demonstration. Hundreds of bicycles blocking traffic and lots of police. Well at least it was not a boring walk. Oh, what I saw on Rue Voltaire!
Have you ever been to Paris?

That was magnificent. I spent a few days in Paris right after graduation from college, but I was broke so missed pretty much anything that cost money on your tour. What an excellent time you seem to have had.
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When you are young you don’t have much money but you do things differently. In 1986 I did not have money either. We didn’t eat at any Michelin star restaurants but we had baguettes with ham and cheese almost every day.
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how great and what a wonderful reason to be mia!
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Yes we had a good time. Thank you so much Beth.
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What a beautiful trip. Yes I have been to Paris and enjoyed it. I also took the bullet train to Avignon. The Parisians were the rudest and although my French was conversational I had that awful American accent that required most to seemingly not understand me. I loved the restaurants, cafes, and museums.
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I am so sorry the Parisians were rude to you. I think the new generation may be different or maybe it is my Swedish accent. My French teacher told me my accent is very Scandinavian and sounds comical but is easy to understand. But seriously, I think the French has become much more interested in and knowledgable about the English language. I think the difference between 1986/2003 and 2025 is huge. I would love to take the bullet train to Avignon one day.
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I don’t intend to return, so let’s hope they are changing.
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I think they are.
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😊
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This is a wonderful overview of Paris, probably my favourite city. It’s interesting to hear that people are now wanting to practise English. I speak Québécois French (I sound Canadian, of course) and the last time I visited there was a lot of sighing when I opened my mouth but I was much more “accepted” than my American friends or German husband. Great to hear that there are signs reminding people that individual Americans are separate from the actions of their government. Cheers.
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Yes I think it is especially the new generation that is interested in learning and speaking English. It makes it a lot easier for those who don’t speak French. About the attitudes. It is the same thing in my native country Sweden. The current US government is probably the most unpopular I’ve ever seen in Sweden (my brother is livid), but people treat Americans in a friendly manner because people have learned not to conflate government with people/visitors. A sign to remind you does not hurt though. Paris is certainly a very fascinating city. I would love to visit Quebec one day.
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Québec is beautiful.
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Thank you Thomas, for the beautiful photo essay of your trip to Paris. I thoroughly enjoyed the sights from your great photos and excellent information. Those desserts at Angelina’s looked fantastic.
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Thank you so much Suzette. The desserts at Angelina also tasted fantastic and they were certainly dangerous. Now I have to be on a diet.
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Sorry about the diet, Thomas. Your trip looked fantastic. A treasure.
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Well it is not a big problem. It was just one week and it was enjoyable. Thank you so much Suzette.
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Most excellent!
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Beautiful pictures ! I would love to visit the mueseums and cathedrals . Also I like the restraunts’s staying open after 10 , it’s one of my biggest complaints about the city I’m in . We need later times since it’s just so hot , but sadly the culture in the US isn’t night owl friendly .
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Thank you so much Oliveunicorn. I also wish the restaurants here in Dallas would stay open after 10PM, but as you say that is not the culture here. In Paris nightlife is amazing no matter where in Paris you are.
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I imagine it’s amazing ! I would definitely be dining at night ✨
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Yes I admit I like that too even though we typically did not dine very late.
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We still haven’t been, although my wife are I are starting to plan where we’re going for our 40th anniversary (a year from August). I suspect it might be Italy, but we haven’t decided for sure.
I’m impressed by all that you did, Thomas.
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Thank you so much Pete. That sounds like a great plan for your 40th anniversary. I can add that for Europe in 2026 you are likely to need to apply for an ETIAS (Visa you apply for online). They were supposed to require that for US visitors starting May 2025 but the program has been delayed, but it will begin in 2026 instead.
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How lovely, this made me want to go back to Paris!
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Thank you masgautsen. Yes it is easier for you. You can just take the train.
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Train would take a very long time from the West of Norway. But the plane ride is short
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Oh I did not know that but I should have guessed. A train from most of Sweden does not take long, less than a day.
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Looks like a magnificent trip, Thomas. Thank you for sharing! 😊
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Thank you so much Kevin
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What an incredible journey, Thomas! I’ve only been to Paris once, but through your photos, you’ve brought it to life again for me. 😊
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Thank you so much Gwen. It was a wonderful trip and our daughter got a Louis Vuitton purse out of it, and naturally we filled out the appliaction to get the VAT back. (the sales tax included in the price).
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Sounds like a wonderful trip! I loved your photos from the Eiffel tower, plus Angelina’s bakery looks amazing — what delicious-looking cakes! 🍰
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Thank you so much Introverted Bookworm. Yes the Angelina’s bakery goods were delicious, too delicious. Now I am on a diet.
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An amazing trip and array of interesting photos. Thanks for sharing, Thomas!
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Thank you so much Grant. It was a great trip.
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What a lovely trip! The pictures are so beautiful. Thanks for sharing
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Thank you so much for your kind words quantumkindy
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What a lovely holiday. I would love to get to Paris someday, but in the meantime, thanks for taking us on your trip.
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Thank you so much Carla. We certainly had a wonderful trip.
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C’est manifique!
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Oui c’est vrai, merci Jeanne
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De rien, mon ami. 🙂
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Thank you for this fabulous and detailed tour of Paris! You certainly made the most of your week. 👌 And the food – magnifique! The sunset river cruise must have been a delight as well. I visited Paris once, way back in 1966, and remember several of the landmarks you highlighted. My favourite area was Montmartre, where the artists hang out. 🙂
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Thank you so much Debbie. I love Montmartre too. What a cozy and beautiful place! And the food is delicious. Well the first time I was there in 1986 we ate only baguettes with ham and cheese and some greens for budgetary reasons. But we were young students.
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Wow! What a wonderful trip, Thomas. The photos are all amazing! Thank you for sharing!
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Thank you so much Jan. Yes we certainly had a wonderful trip.
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I haven’t been to Paris in years, so thoroughly enjoyed revisiting it with you today. You sure saw a lot in a week, especially when visiting family. Maggie
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Thank you so much Magiie, and you are right. We had a very full schedule from early morning until bed time. We were three people from the US but with family in France (and Germany) we were eleven. We did a lot of the things with them though.
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Spent a few hours in Paris many years ago (between trains). Wish I’d been able to really explore it!
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Yes a few hours is too little to see much. I hope you get a chance to visit a bit longer one day. On my first visit to Paris I took a train from Sweden. Now we had to fly.
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Wow! What a trip. Never actually been to Paris other than when Euro Disney opened.
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Thank you pensitivity101. I would love to visit Euro Disney. I’ve been to Disneyworld and Disneyland.
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I would love to go to Paris, it sounds and looks like an amazing time. My husband would appreciate the comforts inside Louis Vuitton 😆 I’d definitely go there if the handbags are cheaper than here in the States. Great photos Thomas! Thanks for sharing.
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Thank you so much Kirsten. The Louise Vuitton purses are outrageously expensive, but they are cheaper in France and then you can get 25% back at the airport (filling out a form). So in that sense it was worth the airplane ticket (my daughter bought one).
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Wow you did a lot in Paris for one week! Nice pictures thus. I worked in Paris for several years while living in Versailles ,traffic? depends where you got your license mine in NY/NJ so Paris was a piece of cake ::) Salut now in the Morbihan breton out west of France.
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Thank you so much pedmar10. It is amazing that you worked in Paris and lived in Versailles for several years. So you are saying that traffic in NY/NJ is worse? I have to admit I have not driven much in NY/NJ.
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Its about the same lol! Once you used to it is easy. Thanks yes it was glorious but the west is more easier living near the coast. Cheers
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I would like to visit west France too. I’ve been to Marseille. Cheers 🥂
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Oh no that is way southeast I am west by the bretons of France…Morbihan dept 56 check it out and our friend Hemingway would have to do another mouvable feast! Salut!
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Yes I know Marseille is southeast. What I meant is that I’ve never been to West France, but I would like to visit. However, I’ve been elsewhere in France, in Marseille, and Nice too (which I know is not west). Sorry I was not clear. But I would love to visit Bretagne. If I don’t remember incorrectly that’s where Asterix and Obelix are from. I have to admit I do not know what Morbihan dept 56 is. Is that a store?
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No is the only department or county of France that its name is not French but Breton, Mor sea bihan small in French petite mer but have in our local celtic language. Asterix and Obelix show a lot of these gauls celtic people but are not from here lol ! Hope you can make it to deep France… Cheers
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That is interesting. I remember visiting Aix-En-Provence nearby Marseille (I forgot to mention Aix-En-Provence), and they also had their own language, Provencal. All the street signs were in both French and Provencal. I know there are other languages in France but I don’t know much about them. I hope I can make it to West France and deep France one day.
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Yes like most of Europe !
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Yes you are right. In my native country Sweden there are more than one official language and a linguist told me that I am not speaking Swedish but Norrlandish which he considered its own language (but it is not an official language), because it was different enough. Norrlandish is like a mix of Norwegian and Swedish, sort of (not exactly but sort of). Swedish, Norrlandish, Norwegian they are close all close enough that I have no problem understanding all of them.
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Lulu: “Wow, what a place! Great pictures!”Charlee: “Our Dada says he has heard that the world is also your oyster after one night in Bangkok, maybe we should check that out some time too …”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rgc_LRjlbTU
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Thank you so much Lulu. Yes my first sentence might have inspired by that musical (Abba). Dada is right again and very observant. I saw it a long time ago (1988). That is a very cool video.
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I visited Paris once, in 2018, and loved it! My favourite museum was Musee d’Orsay. I saw Notre Dame before it burned. Your photos brought back great memories. I wrote Amanda in France based on my experiences there.
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That is very interesting. I also visited France and Notre Dame in 2018 and I agree Musee d’Orsay is a wonderful museum. We didn’t visit it this time though. Notre Dame is almost back to where it was in 2018 but not entirely. Still, there are lots of visitors.
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I enjoyed seeing your Paris photos! So much to see and do there it seems, at all hours. Those famous buildings, and the ornate decor of them is amazing. Your desserts sounded really good, too. I’ve only been in the airport in Paris (Orly) as a layover on my way to Germany. I’m almost positive I saw the Eiffel Tower, at least my memory says I did. 🙂
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Yes, and we didn’t even visit Le Louvre or Versailles or d’Orsay, so no photos of that. The desserts were delicious, top notch, but you should not eat too much of them, not like that whale you were writing about. I was close though. Orly is closer to the city so it makes sense that you could see the Eiffel Tower. Charles de Gaul is further away.
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What a fabulous trip, Thomas!
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Yes I agree. It was a great trip. Thank you Dawn.
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We’ve never been anywhere in Europe, Paris or otherwise! I would say “maybe someday” but, eh, probably not. Although we do have passports, but those are so we can flee the country, depending on how the next few years go. (I am only partially kidding.)
I’ve seen many aerial shots of the Eiffel Tower but never one that conveyed quite so well as that just how it towers (heh) over the city!
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Yes the Eiffel Tower is special. It towers over the city and the river like you say. There are no sky scrapers around the tower. There are some in the distance but they are not a tourist attraction or part of “city center” Paris. Another thing with the Eiffel Tower is that you feel unprotected as you go up. It’s just a bunch of bars, and it adds to the excitement. My wife got vertigo and felt uncomfortable. I am not as afraid of heights. The Eiffel Tower also has a restaurant. If you are seriously afraid of what might happen the next few years I know several American ex-pats in various places in Europe, Sweden, Portugal, Germany and France.
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What a gorgeous trip you made with your family Thomas, and you certainly took in all the exciting sights and places to visit.. France is a beautiful country, and Paris the icing on the cake..
Your learning of French I would think impressed… I know they love we try to speak their language.. ( I only learnt a few sentences to get me by when we went on holiday ) And yes they love to practice their English… 🙂
So many wonderful photos shares Thomas… and I smiled at your wife and daughter enjoying their shopping 🙂
The cuisine there is always a delight to taste buds… And you got my own going with that Rhubarb and Strawberry ice cream… They both go so well together.. 🙂
Thank you for taking us along upon your delightful journey…
Have a wonderful New week back home.. 🙂 xx
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Thank you so much Sue. I found the Parisians to be very willing to converse this time. I made one mistake., I said “Je voudrais ajouter un pourboir.” / “I would like to add a tip” to a taxi driver, and he started telling me where I could find bars. Pourboir is “tip” but it also means “to drink” and ajouter(add) sounds like acheter (buy). My French teacher told me use the word “donner”/give instead of “ajouter”/add and say “Je voudrais donner un pourboir.” “ajouter” wasn’t wrong but easy to mishear as acheter. Well, that was an interesting quirk of the French language.
I agree the food here is delicious. The first time we visited when I was just 20, I did not feel exactly the same but that was because we bought baguettes for dinner every day for a week.
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It is an interesting language full stop Thomas, you did excellently well… Better than I could have done.
Haha about the baguettes, but you were then only 20 haha.. 🙂
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Thank you Sue. We did not have a lot of money. It was baguettes in Paris and Street Pizza in Rome.
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Not a lot of money, but you still hold very fond memories of those baguettes and Paris… Which is what life and living, it is all about xx
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Yes you are so right Sue
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Hi Thomas, wow, this was some trip. Your photographs are wonderful. It is most interesting that the French are more inclined to speak English now. They certainly weren’t like that when my move visited thirty years ago. The Japanese were very helpful and nice when I was in Tokyo. I think every country appreciates the value of tourism.
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Thank you so much Robbie. I am not sure if it was because I started out by speaking French, which I didn’t before, but I think they are more interested in speaking English now, and all the young people seem to know English, more or less.
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The world has changed due to the internet. People want to travel and speaking English helps.
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Yes I think you are right
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The last two months have been quite busy, so I’m just catching up on some blog reading. It sounds like you had an amazing an amazing time in Paris. Thanks for all the wonderful photos!
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Yes we had a good time, we saw a lot, spent time with relatives, and we ate well. Unfortunately, I gained weight. Thank you so much for stopping by David.
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That was quite the epic trip of family and friend reunions Thomas, it looks like you guys had a great time. You also got to tick off a wide array of the big-hitter sights; I was interested to read about your impressions of how Paris has changed since your previous long-ago visits. And mostly for the positive it seems, well, apart from the traffic. Glad you got to see a demonstration too, the French sure do love a protest. I have only been to Paris once, and Sladja has never been, your article reminds me that we should rectify that someday.
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Yes along with the Parisians being a bit more friendly, the tourism has increased. If you want to go to the top of the Eiffel tower you have to buy the tickets way ahead with a tour company. A few days before won’t cut it anymore. Versaille is also amazing but we’ve been there a few times. Le Louvre is very impressive and huge but Mona Lisa is way over rated. Last time we visited Le Louvre, the room was overcrowded with several hundred visitors. It is a small painting so you could barely see it. However, if you turned around there were large and incredible paintings all around you in the same room that no one was looking at. It is all fame, that’s all.
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