Saturday, October 29, 2005

Claire

Gina's schoolmate from Beijing was here for a week. See how happy they are to have been reunited:

Gina and Claire

Claire is studying to be a beautician, hence her lovely fingernails:

Claire's hands

Today is Gina's first (of three) birthdays. She was born on the 29th day of the 10th lunar month (in 1980). At some point, this was translated into English as October 29 (today!!). In fact, using the solar calendar, she was born on December 6. And, this year, her birthday using the lunar calendar is November 30. Since Gina loves eating gastropods, we went to Leon de Bruxelles (a restaurant chain that specializes in mussels):

Leon de Bruxelles

Next, we walked up the Eiffel Tower, which Gina has been wanting to do for quite a while.

Looking eastward from Eiffel Tower

I wonder if there's somebody who can tell the day of the year and the time of the day by that shadow...

Sunday, October 23, 2005

Jane & Olivier

Jane & Olivier came this weekend from Geneva. They'd been meaning to come and took advantage of the fact that Jane suddenly had a day off on Friday. We all went to the Louvre on Friday evening (and everybody got in for free except Jane). Looked at Boulle furniture and the Islamic collection (which included a temporary exhibit of stuff from Nishapur courtesy of the Met in NY). In the evening, we went looking for mussels, but did not find a good place.....so.....the following morning, when we found a box of 3 kilograms of mussels for 3 euros, we bought them right away on a whim. We didn't even know what to do with them. Fortunately, Anabela (the cleaning woman) was around at noon and told us how to cook them (Portuguese style). To continue on the food theme, we had fondue in the evening (with ingredients brought by J&O). Not too bad. Then I imposed a James bond movie on J&O, who slept through half of it (Gina slept through all of it). I was on #11 (Moonraker). After Gina & I did our 5k run around the Parc Montsouris, we went with J&O to the Musee Rodin. One of the better deals in Paris as long as you don't buy the ticket for the museum (5 euros); the ticket for the garden is just 1 euro. Here are some of the pictures. First, J&O:

Jane & Olivier

(I counted to three (in Chinese), but they ignored me and didn't smile.) Here are some other pictures:

Musee Rodin

Musee Rodin

Google maps

Anybody who knows me would know how excited I am about Google maps! I now need to hold myself back from spending all day playing around with it. I've also added a link to my present location (look to the right).

Monday, October 10, 2005

Nice day

Today was the nicest day we've had since we got here. Sunny and warm. Maybe the last nice day of the season. After Gina's class, we made sandwiches and left for St-Germain-en-Laye. We had lunch on a bench overlooking the surrounding countryside:

View from Petite Terrasse (St-Germain-en-Laye)

Then walked down the long terrace (2.5 km in length)...

Grande Terrasse

For those interested, running up and down the terrace a couple of times makes for a nice jog. On the way back into town, we went through the forest. Gina loves forests.

Forest (St-Germain-en-Laye)

When she was young, there was nothing she liked better than an excuse to walk through the forest. Apparently, there are lots of little snacks to eat. Today, she found some nuts and berries (which she promptly ate). She was looking for mushrooms...

Mushrooms

...but the bastard that I am, I physically prevented her from eating them.

After a quick peek inside the castle...

Inner courtyard of Chateau

...we took the train back into town, stopping at La Defense, the business district on the western edge of the city limits.

Grande Arche de la Defense

La Defense

Looking east from La Defense

Gina at la Defense

Tuesday, October 04, 2005

Bastards!

I was in a bad mood today (starting at noon). First, I found out Gina's French class has been canceled today, tomorrow, and probably the day after because the teacher and the substitute teacher are both on strike. Gina was told to come back on Thursday, but then was also handed a leaflet which seems to indicate that the striking teachers want the students to come back on Thursday to join them in their protest. Considering that the only people losing out here are the students (who are paying $27.50 per class and probably won't get payed back for missed class), I'm not sure how much support they'll be getting.

Second, we received a bill from a shipping company for $225. We shipped a bunch of my old books + my old clothes, underwear and socks from China to France. We were already annoyed because we had asked the company (TNT Express International) to ship "Economy Express," but they shipped at the next more expensive rate ("Global Express") and refused to lower the charges because of their fuck up. Now, they're also charging us $225 in import duties and other administrative fees. Apparently, tourists coming to France now have to pay $2 per underwear. I guess it's a way of encouraging tourists to leave their underwear at home and buy new ones in France.

Anyways, since I was in a bad mood, we went for a walk (instead of me studying). The Promenade plantée is a charming two- or three-kilometer long stretch of greenery. There was a little delay getting there (due to striking subway workers), but we made it and had a nice walk.

Promenade plantée

Sunday, October 02, 2005

Free Day

A number of museums in Paris are free on the first Sunday of the month. After lunch, Jane headed back to Geneva and me, Gina, Claire went to take advantage. First, the Musee Picasso. It was a little disappointing because the permanent collection was largely in storage and there was a huge exhibit of his sketches...since I'm into his colors as much as anything else, sketches don't do it for me...moreover, there were no explanations of anything, which definitely didn't make it an appropriate exhibit for people who had never seen his works before (like Gina). We did find one old friend:

Baby stroller

We went over to the Pompidou next to briefly walk through the new organization of their collection. I was intrigued by a rather large desk lamp:

Big desk lamp

Now back at home. Almost dinner time!!

Nuit blanche

La Nuit Blanche was more interesting than fun. I HATE crowds! There were unbelievable numbers of people, and more coming as of 3 AM (when we headed home). Including scary drunk young males who would sometimes suddenly start growling and chasing random females (like Gina, who did the knee-to-the-balls move, and Jane who, an hour later, did an evasive little run).

We started out around 11 pm at the Sacre Coeur. Some guy was conducting 300 electric guitars on the parvis. The effect was interesting, but the crowds! We had luckily come up from the side, but when heading down, we used the central staircase and got at one point caught in a narrow passage of barely moving people for 20 minutes. We tried to hear an all-night organ concert down the hill, but it looked like we'd be in line for 2 hours. We then headed across town to Chatelet (on foot, since the metros had shut for the night and there were probably 10,000 people, literally, trying to catch a cab). In St. Eustache there was a woman making funny screechy noises with a double-bass and occasionally making little shrieking noises with her own voice; she was drowned out by the loud rock concert going on outside. Finally, we went to the Hotel de Ville, where there was some game people played, involving jumping as fast as they could on little colored squares that were being beamed down from above. Two teams of people competed. Meanwhile, on a large screen behind there were movies of people in the daytime rushing about the square in front of the Hotel de Ville.

Finally, we headed home by bus. We fought with masses of people to get onto a night bus at Chatelet (including more drunk young men using physical force to get on before others). Unfortunately, Jane suddenly felt claustrophobic and got off, so the two of us ended up walking home (Gina & Claire, in the meantime, took the bus back and, with the traffic jams, arrived 5 minutes before us).

Saturday, October 01, 2005

Jane

Jane is in town! Arrived last night on a train from Geneva. After a slow morning (including a run in the park and lunch), we went on a little walk around town. Gina hasn't seen much of Paris yet, so since it was a nice day, we thought we'd do a walk from the Louvre

Louvre

to the Arch de Triomphe.

Arch de triomphe

On the way we noticed this...

Car in rocks

Since we still had energy, we went on to Trocadero and then clear to the Ecole militaire:

Eiffel tower from Trocadero

Incidentally, I really came to realize the extent of Jane's wine problem. Not only did she buy 65 bottles of wine over the past couple of weeks in Switzerland, but she bought two more bottles at the only wine shop we passed on our walk today!

OK, time for dinner, then we have to get ready for the Nuit blanche!