Tournez à gauche, Tournez à droite? Maitai’s Scenic Detour Through France
Tournez à gauche, Tournez à droite? Maitai’s Scenic Detour Through France
Chapter One: We’re Off To Paris
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Despite the fact that my liver is now only slightly better off than those of the ducks and geese we saw (and devoured) in the Dordogne (I have a full blown case of foie gras remorse), our journey through the Dordogne (five nights in Sarlat), Loire (three nights in Amboise and one in the underrated city of Angers), Normandy (three nights in Bayeux and one night in Honfleur) and Paris (two nights at the beginning and three at the end) was completed without causing an international incident (that we know of).
Even after dire warnings from their children about traveling with us again, our friends Kim and Mary joined us for another of our travel adventures.
Outside of a minor (although pretty, damn bloody) injury at the Limoges’ train station (getting old alert) and a harrowing, yet rather enthralling, drive through the streets of Paris (I swear I was NOT the guy who hit the Arc de Triomphe), we and pedestrians throughout France escaped relatively unscathed.

For the better part of two weeks, we were “guided” by our dueling and multilingual GPS Systems that allowed us to see parts of the country we didn’t expect (and often times didn’t necessarily want) to see. During those driving excursions, my passengers complained continuously of nausea after my multiple circle-drives navigating the country’s many roundabouts. So without any further fanfare (oh wait, there hasn’t been any), welcome to Tournez à gauche, Tournez à droite? Maitai’s Scenic Detour Through France.

Obviously we arrived at CDG safely on our non-stop flight from LAX on Air Tahiti Nui or you would be reading my obituary. However, spending 12 hours confined in a plane that had more diseased people than the Mayo Clinic was not a particularly fun way to begin our journey.

Before I get into that, the flight began with a bizarre scene. As we sat on the tarmac at LAX, two flight attendants walked though all the cabins spraying something from an aerosol can. At first, I thought it might be some sort of deodorant spray to offset the fact that I had taken a rather quick shower.
However, we were told over the intercom (after the spraying) that it was not deodorant, but insect spray, and this was done on all flights going to Charles De Gaulle (although they did not do this on our friends’ Kim and Mary’s flight). The voice assured passengers that the spray was harmless, but if we were worried we should “cover our eyes and mouth.”
Curiously, this message was related to the passengers about three minutes after the flight attendants had come through the cabin, so we figured the carcinogens had already permeated our bodies, and we proceeded to contact our next of kin.
Before we took off, the woman sitting in the row behind us set an all-time aircraft record for the most (and loudest) nose blows in history. Just as the plane got airborne, she blew such a honking loud one, I was sure we had hit a skein of geese. I have to stop watching Seconds From Disaster the night before we fly.
By the time we were over Chicago, the cacophony of coughs and the syncopated sneezing reached such a crescendo, I was just wishing I could get a breath of fresh air.
When I told Tracy I needed some fresh air, she said (without missing a beat), “I wish we were sitting next to Mitt Romney, so he could roll the window down (politicians say the darndest things).” Since it was minus 57-degrees centigrade outside at the time, I was glad that Mitt’s pre-election request that airplanes be built with windows that opened had not been implemented.

About four hours into the flight, I believe more than half the passengers on the plane were hacking up a lung. “Are we flying to CDG or the CDC?” I said. Instead of love, it was Influenza that was in the air on this Paris flight.


Going through immigration and customs at CDG was a breeze (unlike our return to LAX), and within about 45 minutes Kim and Mary wandered in from their San Diego/Dallas/CDG flight, and the trip was officially underway.



We arrived at our hotel for the next two nights, the Hotel De La Paix Montparnasse (225 Boulevard Raspail). The lobby was charming and there was a nice breakfast room, but since breakfasts at hotels in Paris are usually overpriced, we did not take partake the following morning.
The rooms were small, but clean and comfortable. After a long flight, we all decided to take a shower (no, not together), and both showers provided a challenge. They were so small that…well, let me just say I am glad I declined that second croissant on the plane.


Refreshed, we walked a block to a restaurant that was recommended by our hotel for lunch (the staff at Hotel De La Paix Montparnasse was excellent). Bistrot des Campagnes, 6 Rue Leopold Robert, had an enticing chalkboard menu. Of course, our bilingual (in our dreams) crew could only decipher about two of the 15 items, and our perplexed look did not go unnoticed by our very attentive server.


Our waiter, who I think might have been the owner or manager, was very patient and explained all the menu items to us. Kim and I tried the chicken supreme (the hot, sweet mustard that accompanied this dish was remarkable). Mary had the salmon tartare and a confit de canard with pommes frites. Tracy went for the Napoleon de legumes (eggplant and zucchini) topped with an egg.


The fresh air did us well, so we walked a bit, bypassing a metro stop or two. We passed a newer building that showed an older building within its reflection, and we were starting to feel like Parisians already.

Hopping on the Paris metro (my favorite mass transportation system in the world), we rode it near to the Musée d’Orsay. The museum was pretty slammed on this Wednesday afternoon, but we lucked out when they opened a second line right as we got there. Admission was 9€, and in we went.

The first statue I saw looked exactly like Larry from The Three Stooges, so for a moment I thought we had stepped into the wrong museum. Then I looked back at the big clock and realized we were fine (not Larry Fine, but fine).


Sadly, Moe and Curly were nowhere to be found.

For the first 45 minutes or so of traversing the Musée d’Orsay, I thought I was going to be able to make it through the day rather easily. But the various famous clocks were ticking away the time that I could stay awake,even the one that gave you a glimpse of Sacre Coeur through it.


Using her “Super Zoom,” Mary was able to capture a nice photo of the famed church where we would all go on our second visit to Paris later in the trip.

It’s when I started drooling near one of the Monet paintings that I realized I must Van Gogh back outside Toulouse this sleepy feeling (art humor is not that easy).
Still showing no ill effects from their long flight, our intrepid traveling partners stayed for a little while longer to enjoy this beautiful museum that fortunately I have visited on many occasions, so I didn’t feel like I was losing out on anything by our early departure.
Meanwhile, in a futile attempt to stay wide awake and not fall asleep on the sidewalk, Tracy and I walked for a bit, strolled by the venerable La Coupole restaurant and what looked to be a Dead Shellfish Convention (until it started pouring) before returning to the hotel.


It was at about 5:30, while watching CNN International, that our eyes began to get heavier and heavier, although we were trying with all our might to keep them open. Nearly asleep, we were jolted by the ring of the telephone. It was Kim and Mary calling us to say they were back. We all agreed to an early dinner, so we didn’t lapse into a coma.
None of us wanted to have an expensive or drawn out dinner, since it would have been kind of a waste in our wasted condition (Kim and Mary were also hitting the wall by now).



Sorry to say, but we were all rather underwhelmed by the dinner crepes. They weren’t bad, but maybe the place is a little over-hyped. I will say, however, my Flambé Orange Crepe smothered in Grand Marnier for dessert did give the place a nice comeback and made for a cool photo by Kim (no restaurant patrons were injured during the filming of this crepe).

We really weren’t all that disappointed in the meal, however, because we weren’t looking for anything special anyway.

To insure we would fall asleep when we returned to the hotel, we stopped by a nearby café, Bisto La Petite Rotonde (it was raining pretty hard by now), and shared a bottle of French vin rouge to toast another start to a trip.
We all climbed into bed a little after 9 p.m., and just as I had hoped, nobody saw the light of day until eight the next morning (although it was still pretty dark at that hour). Eleven hours of sleep! Jet lag averted! Paris and future French destinations await! Yeah, life is good, baby!
Next: Day Three – Cheer Cheer For Old Notre Dame, Silver And Gold, Church Goers, Panthéon Sans Sperm, You Might Rue Our Description Of This Street, Sherpa Revisited, On Track For Limoges, Dinner Quandary and Didn’t I Buy One Of These At Trader Joes Last Week