Friday May 11, 2012 France
10:16 PM Arizona, 6:16 AM France
I actually see sun attempting to peek through the
gray morning sky. The ship is pulling
into Le Havre harbor after a fairly clam English Channel crossing. However, at times I am amazed at how the sea
pitched this large ship about last night.
Want to see if I can connect with Lisa but, cannot connect to the
internet aboard the ship will now have to wait until I reach our hotel in
Paris. The ship is about to docked and
it is not time to see if my “Connection Angle” is still with me. The ship is to dock at 8 AM and then I have to
get to the train station to catch 9:30 AM train to Paris. This train will allow me to travel with my
bike and get to Paris by noon. If I miss
it I’ll have to wait until 11 AM and will not get to Paris until 3 pm. If I make it I’ll be in Paris in plenty of
time to check into our hotel. Trying to
find my sea legs, but I think that by the time I do the ship will dock. The sky is still gray and rain is pattering
against the front windows of the ship.
It has been raining regularly over a month in England, France and
Spain. The sun is supposed to come out
but it is not getting the job done. I
watch a tug turn us around so the ship can back into the berth. We have arrived at 8:30 AM, time to go
downstairs, get my bike, get off the ferry and ride to the train station.
A few wrong turns but I’m at the station and with
ticket in hand, I am on the train with 5 minutes to spare, thank you Connection Angel.
I must change trains at Rouen, which is no problem as I have used this
station three times before. This is a three-car
train, which is quickly filling up the closer we get to Rouen. I become anxious that the conductor might ask
me to leave the train before I reach my destination. Nevertheless, all is well as the train pulls
into Rouen and it is time to change. After
look around for the lift (elevator), seeing none, I ask the station attendant and
he tells me that there is no lift on this platform and I should take the
escalator up. Immediately Mark’s story of
his attempting to ride up the escalator in Amsterdam and falling over backwards
last year flashes through my head. With
trepidation I head toward the escalator planting my feel as firmly as possible
up we go. Thankfully I arrive at the
top with no mishaps and find myself right next to the information boot which I
know has a lift to take me down to the platform where I’ll catch my next train. As the lift doors open the attendant points
to a train sitting at the platform and tell me that is my train. I am on and off to Paris. At this point, I am beginning to think that
there is a force at work here.
MMMMMM!
The station in Paris, Saint Luzern, is north of the
hotel where we will be staying. Setting
off thought the streets of Paris with a fully loaded bike draws quite a lot of
gapping mouths. Not too bad, I think to myself pulling up in front of the Monessen train
station where I need to pick up the reserved tickets, which will whisk Lisa and
I to St Jean Pied de Port in three days.
At the reservation desk I’m told “Your reservations have been
canceled”. Don’t attack the agent! After
a bit of quiet talking I exit the station with tickets and Sr. Pass in hand. Now it is time to find our hotel which is a
few blocks from the station. It takes me
all of five minutes to get there and check in surprised to find out that Lisa is
not there yet. The lift in the hotel is
not working so I have to drag my four panniers up five flights of stairs. Also, because the lift is broken my bike will
stay in the manager’s office, not the garden as planned. O.K. no big deal I am here and will have time
to get a shower. I am shocked to find,
upon entering the room, that the twin beds we requested are right next to each
other with no room to separate them. I
am worried about how Lisa will react to seeing them. It is time for a shower since my last one was
two days ago in Arizona. Just as I am
getting wet when there is a knock on the door = Lisa has arrived. I manage to get the door unlocked and slip
back into the shower unseen. After my
shower we talk a bit, she is fine with the bed arrangement, warning me to stay
on my bed, and then it is time to fine Lisa’s friends and start enjoying Paris!
After a ride on the Metro, we meet up with Tina and
Camille at a corner cafe. Tina is Lisa’s
friend from N.Y. where she owns an architect firm, Camille works in London for
a finance firm. After some drinks and
snacks, we wander around Paris until we find a place for dinner. We enjoy a nice dinner, talk, laugh, and make
plans for tomorrow, it is time for Lisa and I to travel the Metro back to the
hotel. Our hotel, Pavillon Losserand Montparnasse, is on a narrow street filled with numerous shops that
beckon to us. The main one is a bakery
directly across the street from our front door.
The first thing we do upon opening our eyes is to head downstairs to buy
some wonderful treats from the bakery along with fresh brewed coffee. After which it is time to shower and head out
to meet Tina and Camille. Over the next
two days, we become Metro experts. We
visited Eiffel Tower, Louvre, Notre Dame, Champs Elysees, Left bank, Latin
Quarter, and The Moulin Rouge. In
addition to walking around doing Paris tourist things, we have eaten wonderful
food, drank wonderful wine, laughed until tears came, and shared intimate
details of our lives. The time in Paris
flew by and now it is time for us to head to the train station and travel to St
Jean Pied de Port. We are sad at having
to leave, but excited to begin the Camino not really fully realizing that we
had already started it.
I forgot to mention that while waiting to board the
plane in Dallas a fellow asked me if I were going on the Camino. He could tell because I have the traditional
symbol of the Camino, a Scallop seashell, attached to my backpack. He had done the Camino twice and was thinking
about doing it again next year. Why
anyone would do an 800 Km walk more than once is beyond me.
Buen Camino.
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