Sunday, April 28, 2024

ITALY 2024: LOS ANGELES TO ISTANBUL TO NAPLES

Wednesday, March 13-14, 2024

We planned a trip to Italy, Malta, and Tunisia during my spring break in March 2024 and invited my sister Chris and her husband Stan to join us. The trip started off a bit rocky. On Sunday morning, we were notified by Lufthansa that our Wednesday flight from LAX through Munich to Naples had been cancelled due to an airline cabin worker strike planned for that day. They offered us flights on Thursday, which would have ruined our plans for Naples. We booked a new flight for Wednesday with Turkish Air, and Travelocity promised to refund the cost of our initial round-trip tickets.

Chris and Stan, flying in from Montana, did not have the luxury of the flight options we had, and they ended up having to book their flight to Naples a day earlier, arriving on Tuesday instead of Wednesday. What a hassle.

We left for LAX at 8:30 AM, and our phone's navigation took us on the most bizarre route to avoid morning rush hour traffic, including segments through residential neighborhoods. After 2¼ hours of driving, we made it to our prepaid parking at the Hilton. Even after waiting what seemed like an usually long time for the hotel shuttle and then picking up our boarding passes at the Turkish Air desk (we had only carry on luggage), we had time to eat lunch.

Our first leg to Istanbul was over 12 hours long. (I watched 3½ movies--Priscilla, Barbie, The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, and half of an Inspector Poirot movie that I finished on the return flight.) It was our first time on Turkish Air, and we loved everything about it EXCEPT for very cramped seating. The food was great--stuffed pasta shells for dinner and scrambled eggs for breakfast. We especially liked the flight attendant outfits.  They did ditch the hats after take-off.


Leaving Los Angeles, and arriving (I think?) in Turkey:

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

FRANCE 2000: PARIS - PERE-LACHAISE CEMETERY, THE BASTILLE MONUMENT, THE LOUVRE, AND A STRESSFUL FINALE

 December 27-28, 2000

Our next stop was Père-Lachaise Cemetery, the largest cemetery in the city with over one million bodies buried there and countless more cremated remains in the columbarium. It is the most visited cemetery in the world, getting about 3.5 million visitors each year. Established in 1804, it is named for the confessor to Louis XIV, Père François de la Chaise, who lived in a Jesuit house that once stood where the cemetery chapel is now.

Covering 110 acres, Père-Lachaise is the final resting spot for many famous people, including the Polish composer Frédéric Chopin, the French novelist Marcel Proust, medieval lovers and letter-writers Abelard and Heloise, the American singer-songwriter Jim Morrison, the French actress Sarah Bernhardt, the French novelist Honoré de Balzac, the French Romantic artist Eugene Delacroix, the Irish playwright Oscar Wilde, the composer Georges Bizet, and the French playwright Molière, to name just a few. 

The rule is that you can only be buried in a Paris cemetery if you die in Paris (as in the cases of Jim Morrison and Oscar Wilde) or if you have lived there. Also, these days you lease a plot, and if the lease isn't renewed, the remains are dug up and cremated, and the plot gets a new resident who can pay rent.

We visited the cemetery on an appropriately gloomy day, a day when it looked like the set for a horror movie.

These next three photos are of no one's graves in particular, just "picturesque" burial spots.

This one is an interesting mix of old and new.


Jim Morrison, lead singer and songwriter for the rock group the Doors, died in Paris at age 27 under somewhat suspicious circumstances. The first time we walked past his grave there was a man standing next to the stone swaying and singing softly what we can only assume was one of the Doors' hits. A few others were reverently standing by. We decided to come back when it was less crowded. 

We went around the corner and happened upon the grave of Frédéric Chopin, one of the leading composers of the early 19th century. He also died young--age 39. An interesting story is that after his death, his physician removed his heart and sent it back to Chopin's native Poland. It can be found in the Holy Cross Church in Warsaw, still pickled in alcohol in the glass bottle and interred in a marble column.
Anyway, we eventually got a picture of our daughter in front of Morrison's grave, and we noted that while his stone was covered with flowers, Chopin's was bare but for one red bloom tucked in the iron grille surrounding his tomb.

Our older son had been reading A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens for his English class, so we made an effort to stop at the Place de la Bastille, a monument marking the site where a fortress called the Bastille once stood. At the beginning of Dickens's  novel, one of the main characters is released after having been imprisoned in the Bastille for 18 years, and later in the story French insurgents storm the Bastille, a symbol of royal authority and abuse, during the French Revolution.

Of course, it would be wrong to go to Paris and not go to the world's most famous art venue, the Musée du Louvre. Originally a royal residence was on this site, but it was demolished and rebuilt and then  extended over the centuries until it reached its present size and shape in the 18th century at about the time Louis XIV established his royal palace in Versailles. In 1980 it was expanded once again and the existing space was renovated, including the addition of a new pyramid-shaped entrance designed by Chinese-American architect I. M. Pei (who also designed the JFK Library in Boston, among other buildings).

We were still travel novices, and adding two teenaged boys and thousands of other tourists to the mix made for a less than perfect Louvre experience. Still, I managed to take more pictures (and buy more postcards) here than many other places on our trip. 

We all found our favorite pieces.

Left: The statue of Muse Melpomene, 50 BC
Right: Venus de Milo, 160 to 110 BC

I have this cartoon pasted in our scrapbook:

This somewhat odd sculpture is a representation of the Tiber River with Romulus and Remus, 1st-2nd century:

Compare my photo of Winged Victory (2nd century BC) to the postcard I bought. Which one is better? The mom in me says mine because those are my kids standing in front.

And there she is, Mona Lisa herself. As I recall, the room was packed with people straining to get a look at what might be the most famous painting in the world. I was surprised by how small it is--just 21" x 30".

I love this photo from Wikipedia, taken in 2015 and showing pretty much what was our experience.

These two sculptures of slaves by Michelangelo were Bob's favorites.

In contrast, one of my favorites was Botticelli's Virgin and Child.

The museum is worth visiting just for the magnificent interior architecture.

But alas, after about 20 minutes, this is what the male segment of our family looked like. One of them (who shall remain nameless) said, "When will this be OVER?" This is the LOUVRE, guys! What's wrong with you???

The next morning we got up early to make our way from our hotel in Versailles to the Charles de Gaulle Airport.  We left plenty of time to get there, but we hit a huge snag. There was a major accident on the freeway, and after sitting in a parking lot of traffic, we were eventually directed off the freeway to detour, and then we couldn't find our way back to the freeway. Remember, this was pre-cell phone days, even pre-GPS, and we didn't have a map. We wandered around for quite a while and then miraculously found our way back onto the freeway and to the airport. The stopped traffic and then the detour had eaten up almost two hours, and we were dangerously late. 

Our daughter, who had been in France for six months, was on a different flight than we were, and it left from a different terminal. Her plane was leaving first, so Bob pulled our rental van up to the curb and I ran in with her. The desk person told her she was too late to make her flight. She started to cry (she SO wanted to go home), and the attendant gave in, checked her bags, and told her to run to the gate--they would hold it for her.

One down, four of us to go. We sped to our terminal, and Bob pulled up to the curb. As we were getting out of the van, in my rush I slammed the car door on my oldest son's fingers. He, of course, crumpled to the ground in pain. Bob was stressed over getting the car back, so I gathered up my son, and we left the van at the curb and went in, checked our bags, and got our boarding passes. Bob headed back out to return the van to the off-site Sixt Car Rental agency. The boys and I found a little corner in the airport and had a prayer. We prayed for my son's throbbing fingers and for their dad driving away from us. Then we got in line, went through immigration, and waited to board. Not much later, we got on the plane, took our seats, and waited and waited some more. No Bob. The flight attendant came by several times asking where my husband was. "I don't know!" I said over and over, near tears. 

Meanwhile, Bob had taken a wrong turn on the way to the car rental and was on a divided highway leading away from the airport and away from the city. There was nowhere for him to turn around for about 20 minutes.  He knew time was running out, and by the time he got back to the airport and to the right road that led to the car rental return, there was no more time. 

So he did an unbelievably crazy thing. He parked the car at the curb in front of the terminal, locked the doors, and ran inside, stopping at the airline desk to give THEM the keys to the van. Someone spoke English, and he explained, as quickly as he could, his situation. He told them he would call the car rental company from the phone on the plane (they used to have phones in the back of the seats) and tell them to come get the keys and take the car away.

Then Bob started running for the gate. As he was running, he heard, "Roh-bert Can-none, Roh-bert Can-none" over the intercom, and something about the gate closing. When he got to immigration, he pushed through about fifty people to the front of the line. (This was pre-9/11 and pre-ultra security.) They must have recognized the desperation on his face, and they let him through.

Back on the plane, I was trying hard not to cry. Had Bob gotten in an accident? Where was he? We were on our way across the ocean, and I wouldn't know what had happened to him for hours. Also, he had the car keys. What would I do when I got to the airport? I had two kids with me and one another one on another plane coming in around the same time we were, and I couldn't just hop on a return flight to Paris.

Then . . . the flight attendant signaled to me that something was happening. Bob, a hot, sweaty, heart-pounding mess, came pushing down the aisle. I've never felt so relieved before or since. People around us who had heard the flight attendant's questions clapped and smiled as Bob fell into the seat next to me. The flight attendants closed the door and the access ramp pulled away. Minutes later we were taking off.

It took Bob about 15 minutes to get control of his breathing, and by then we were far enough into the flight that he could make a phone call to the car rental.  He told them what he had done, and they replied, "You can't do that." 

"But I already did!" he said.  

"No, you CAN'T DO THAT," they repeated more than once. Thankfully, there was nothing we could do at that point.

To say they were unhappy is an understatement.

We waiting nervously for months for the bill from Sixt for the trouble Bob had caused, or for a ticket from CDG Airport for illegal parking. Nothing ever came. It took us years until we dared rent a car overseas from Sixt again. It makes a great story now, but man, it was incredibly stressful when we were in the middle of it. We hope we never have another ending to a trip like that.

Overall, this was an incredible trip to Germany, Austria, and France. It was the first time for me on the European mainland, and the only time we have been overseas with all three of our kids. The time with my mom in Germany was priceless. We lost her nine years later. Our experience sharing in our daughter's study abroad experiences was also a treasure. It was a stretch for us financially in those days, but worth every penny.

Sunday, April 14, 2024

FRANCE 2000: PARIS - THE CATACOMBS, THE ORSAY MUSEUM, THE EIFFEL TOWER, AND SACRE-COEUR BASILICA

 December 26-27, 2000

Starting in 1786, wagons loaded with the remains of more than six million human bodies made their way through the streets of Paris at night, depositing their loads in a mine shaft that led to what used to be the city's underground stone quarries. Many of the remains came from overcrowded cemeteries in the city. At first the underground cemetery was a disorganized mess, but in 1810 the director of the Paris Mine Inspection Service oversaw the process of creating order out of chaos, stacking the bones and skulls in the patterns visitors see today and adding other interesting elements. It became a novelty gathering spot for private events in the early 19th century, and in 1874 it was opened for visitors.

And just 126 years later, the Cannon family from California walked down the spiral staircase into the depths of the Paris Catacombs.


It appears that the "organizers" tried to keep bones from different cemeteries separated. The sign on the left reads, "Bones from the old Magdeleine Cemetery deposited in 1844 in the west ossuary and transferred to the catacombs in September 1859."

The sign over our heads (left) says, "Stop! This is the empire of death."  The sign behind our son (right) notes that these bones were taken from the St. Etienne Cemetery and re-interred here in 1787.

Since this experience with an ossuary (a room filled with human bones), we have been to several others, including one in Kutna Hora (Czech Republic) and one in Evora (Portugal), but there's nothing like the shock of the first time.




Back out in the cold but fresh air, our youngest son took this photo of a lion guarding the catacombs. 

Our next stop was the Musée d'Orsay (Orsay Museum), a museum specializing in art from 1848 to 1914 and best known for its Impressionist and post-Impressionist collection, including Manet's Olympia and Monet's paintings of Rouen Cathedral and his gardens at Giverny. Of course, I wasn't into taking pictures of pictures back then. I did, however, buy this postcard of Whistler's Mother by the American artist James McNeill Whistler . . .

. . . and this postcard of Renoir's La danse a la ville (Dancing in the City):

Of course, number one on MY list for What To See In Paris was the Eiffel Tower, and I devoted a couple of pages in our scrapbook to images of it I had clipped from tourist materials.


Who took this picture of the five of us at the top of the Eiffel Tower on a dark and stormy night, and why do we look so happy?  
It's actually a fun story.  The tower was encased in a blanket of fog, and we were feeling a little disappointed that the view wasn't going to be very good.  We noticed another American family with a gaggle of young children also on the viewing platform, and we struck up a conversation.  I can't remember where they were living, but they were expats living somewhere in Europe for the father's work. When they found out we were from Redlands, they asked if we knew the Richey family. Indeed we did! They were some of our closest friends! It turns out the father of the family was a first cousin to the Richeys. Small world.

And here we are in the Paris Metro on our way back to our hotel after a very long day.

The next morning our first stop was the Sacré-Coeur (Sacred Heart) Basilica The interior dome is stunning, as you can see in the postcard below.

Sacré-Coeur, built between 1875 and 1914, is the second most visited spot in Paris behind the Eiffel Tower. The unusual elongated dome on top of the church is 273 feet tall! To me, those domes give the basilica a Turkish flavor. 

Our older son was the only one of us who wanted to climb to the top of the tower. He took these wonderful pictures.




NEXT: FINISHING UP IN PARIS AND GOING HOME