Saturday, April 17, 2010
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
Honfleur
On Sunday the 25th of March, I went to Honfleur. I went with Ambre, her mom, her 5-year-old cousin (Léna) and her grandma (Mamie). It was about an hour drive from Caen. I saw signs for Pont-l'Eveque, which is a cheese but I think also a place. We got there and it wasn't super crowded, but there were a fair number of people out and about.
We went first to this butterfly enclosure. There were SO many butterflies. I took a lot of pictures of them. Ambre's mom said that when there were hardly any people there, butterflies would land on you, but there were too many people there that day I guess. Behind glass, you could see cocoons that were growing, and some were empty! It was quite hot and humid inside the enclosure, so it was kind of nice when you step out of it and the air is cooler around you. They had a small exhibit on insects and water and climate change (I think) around the world.
Next we went to this park where there is a sort of historic path. On the path, there are busts of famous people from Honfleur, notably Samuel de Champlain! Each bust had plants and landscaping and stuff around it, and all of that was surrounded by a hedge in the form of a boat. To clarify, there was one boat-hedge per statue, not for all of them.
The way back to the car was along a sidewalk next to the harbour. I don't think we were where all the sailboats go, but we might have been by where the commercial ones go. And then...in the distance...it's a bird, it's a plane, it's ...da-da-da-DAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA! The Pont de Normandy! Only it was a little hard to distinguish, but if you looked somewhat attentively you could see it, and it's smooth, sleekness, and stuff. I took quite a few pictures of it. Then, when I wanted to take more pictures ten minutes later, my camera battery died! It seems to do this a lot, although it may not have been fully charged, but it's still not great when it happens.
We were hungry, even though we'd had a few tic-tacs, so we went into this little creperie cafe. We had crepes (surprise!). I had a chocolat one and chaperon rouge (red riding hood) tea. It was red fruit (strawberry/raspberry/other fruits that are red) flavoured, although the tea itself wasn't red. It might have been from tea leaves though, and I remember them looking a little green. Ambre also had a chocolat crepe, Léna had a nutella one, I think Ambre's Mamie had some sort of pie, and I forget what Ambre's mom had. The crepe was really good, and it was warm, which was nice because it was getting cold, almost stormy or at least gloomy, and I think a bit rainy outside. I want to try to make crepes in Canada!
I managed the coax a couple pictures out of my camera by taking the battery out and putting it back in, but after a while it would start up and then shut down before I could take any pictures.
We got back and dropped Léna off at her house, which is near the sea in what I think is by a small town a bit out of Caen. The architecture in the towns is really old, european, historic -looking and i really like it. I like seeing small towns, although some seem more exciting than others.
We went first to this butterfly enclosure. There were SO many butterflies. I took a lot of pictures of them. Ambre's mom said that when there were hardly any people there, butterflies would land on you, but there were too many people there that day I guess. Behind glass, you could see cocoons that were growing, and some were empty! It was quite hot and humid inside the enclosure, so it was kind of nice when you step out of it and the air is cooler around you. They had a small exhibit on insects and water and climate change (I think) around the world.
Next we went to this park where there is a sort of historic path. On the path, there are busts of famous people from Honfleur, notably Samuel de Champlain! Each bust had plants and landscaping and stuff around it, and all of that was surrounded by a hedge in the form of a boat. To clarify, there was one boat-hedge per statue, not for all of them.
The way back to the car was along a sidewalk next to the harbour. I don't think we were where all the sailboats go, but we might have been by where the commercial ones go. And then...in the distance...it's a bird, it's a plane, it's ...da-da-da-DAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA! The Pont de Normandy! Only it was a little hard to distinguish, but if you looked somewhat attentively you could see it, and it's smooth, sleekness, and stuff. I took quite a few pictures of it. Then, when I wanted to take more pictures ten minutes later, my camera battery died! It seems to do this a lot, although it may not have been fully charged, but it's still not great when it happens.
We were hungry, even though we'd had a few tic-tacs, so we went into this little creperie cafe. We had crepes (surprise!). I had a chocolat one and chaperon rouge (red riding hood) tea. It was red fruit (strawberry/raspberry/other fruits that are red) flavoured, although the tea itself wasn't red. It might have been from tea leaves though, and I remember them looking a little green. Ambre also had a chocolat crepe, Léna had a nutella one, I think Ambre's Mamie had some sort of pie, and I forget what Ambre's mom had. The crepe was really good, and it was warm, which was nice because it was getting cold, almost stormy or at least gloomy, and I think a bit rainy outside. I want to try to make crepes in Canada!
I managed the coax a couple pictures out of my camera by taking the battery out and putting it back in, but after a while it would start up and then shut down before I could take any pictures.
We got back and dropped Léna off at her house, which is near the sea in what I think is by a small town a bit out of Caen. The architecture in the towns is really old, european, historic -looking and i really like it. I like seeing small towns, although some seem more exciting than others.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Weeks of March 5-14
Friday March 5, Ambre and her mom and I went to visit her sister and her husband, Ingrid and Romain. They live downtown in a condo. I like their condo a lot. It's modern but still has walls and separate rooms. And it has a really big terrace, or patio or whatever, from which you can see a tower from a gothic church! We celebrated Ambre's mom's birthday. Ambre had made some applesauce tiramisu desserts and chocolat-covered marshmellows with coconut or praline(I think) shavings. They were all so good!
The next Wednesday, the 10th, was my birthday! My friends at school made me a "cake" with sweet bread and pink jam that one girl's mom made. It was really good. They sang Happy Birthday to me in French and put a candle in the cake. They also had a t-shirt that lots of people in the class signed, even some people I haven't talked to yet! I got cards from my family in Canada and a package containing, among other things...candy! It hasn't all been eaten yet though. They also sent me an Olympics section from the Edmonton Journal. The french broadcasters cut the feed just before the medal presentation and anthems after the men's gold-medal hockey game!!!!! I got over it though. The evening of my birthday, Ambre and her dad and I had a very good and nice-looking chocolat cake with 16 candles. I had talked to my mom and brother earlier on webcam and that was nice.
The next day, there was a carnival at school for the middle of Lent. It involved dressing up in costumes, like at Halloween. Ambre was a cowgirl and I was a chef. There were a fair number of people who actually dressed up, and a couple staff members. They had a costume contest as well. Some other people dressed up as Little red riding hood, Tinkerbell, a cartoon lady from an ad, a skiier-type, and staff members as a garden and a jailbird. The school spirit seemed fairly strong., at least among my class and those who were dressed up. There were a lot of people taking pictures!
The next day, Friday, we went on a fieldtrip for English class to see the movie Invictus. I'm not sure if all the grade 10 classes went or not (there are 8 in total) but at least a few went, and the movie theatre was quite full. The high school payed for our movie tickets. We could either get to the theatre on our own or go with the school, but buy our own bus and tram tickets. In Canada, you take a schoolbus to a fieldtrip, but in France we took public transportation together (city bus and tram, which is like an LRT but over ground and connected to cables above for electricity to run, I think). We also walked a bit. The movie was at a theatre with about 2 rooms. It seemed to be an alternative/foreign film place mostly. We saw Invictus in English with french subtitles. The subtitles actually helped me quite a bit sometimes because I found it hard to understand their south african accents sometimes. The movie was really good and I even did one of the songs in it with my choir years ago (Tshotsholoza - the song at the beginning and when they're in a huddle in the last games.) We were, and still are, studying South Africa in English class, so it was fitting. After the movie, we went back to school, had lunch, then had gym class, also sort of fitting since Invictus involves sport, and then we were free for the weekend at 3:30! Which is the earliest we get out, except for Wednesdays when everybody seems to get out at 12:30.
That evening, Ambre, her dad and I and her sister and her husband went out for dinner at this Alps region inspired restaurant. They all had raclette ( I had this other bake thing with potatoes and chicken and a sauce that was really good.) For the raclette, which I believe is potatoes and an assortment of meats, you put melted cheese on the potatoes. You are given a huge half-circle of cheese(with a rind) on a special stand, and a special heater thing heats the cut (exposed) part. When the cheese at the surface starts melting you scrape it off to go with your potatoes, and put the heater back by the cheese, and repeat the scraping process every time the cheese starts melting. It was quite interesting, at least for me. And the half-circle was quite a bit smaller at the end. There was one of those cheese things for the four of them. Apparently if I'd ordered raclette they would have given us another cheese device. On the menu, it had said for some foods that at least two people had to order that food, or at least that type of dish. I realised why when I considered the cheese situation.
The next day Ambre and her dad and I went to Ambre's cousin's house. Both places are in Normandy, but Ambre lives in Basse-Normandie, in the Calvados region. Her cousins's lives in Haute-Normandie, in the Eure region, where the biggest city is Evreux. It was about 120 km, and about and hour and half drive more or less. The roads were fairly swervy, not as bad as I've ever seen but not great. But they are like that to accomodate nature I think. It really went into rural France. What you would imagine some French country-side to be like. (Well, you'd probably see pictures from the south if you looked it up on Google, but this was very country.) It wasn't that far a drive from the nearest highway or town, but it still felt like you were pretty deep in the country, at least to me. Ambre's dad said it was a "petite heure", which means a little less than an hour (50 minutes ish) to Evreux from the house.
The next Wednesday, the 10th, was my birthday! My friends at school made me a "cake" with sweet bread and pink jam that one girl's mom made. It was really good. They sang Happy Birthday to me in French and put a candle in the cake. They also had a t-shirt that lots of people in the class signed, even some people I haven't talked to yet! I got cards from my family in Canada and a package containing, among other things...candy! It hasn't all been eaten yet though. They also sent me an Olympics section from the Edmonton Journal. The french broadcasters cut the feed just before the medal presentation and anthems after the men's gold-medal hockey game!!!!! I got over it though. The evening of my birthday, Ambre and her dad and I had a very good and nice-looking chocolat cake with 16 candles. I had talked to my mom and brother earlier on webcam and that was nice.
The next day, there was a carnival at school for the middle of Lent. It involved dressing up in costumes, like at Halloween. Ambre was a cowgirl and I was a chef. There were a fair number of people who actually dressed up, and a couple staff members. They had a costume contest as well. Some other people dressed up as Little red riding hood, Tinkerbell, a cartoon lady from an ad, a skiier-type, and staff members as a garden and a jailbird. The school spirit seemed fairly strong., at least among my class and those who were dressed up. There were a lot of people taking pictures!
The next day, Friday, we went on a fieldtrip for English class to see the movie Invictus. I'm not sure if all the grade 10 classes went or not (there are 8 in total) but at least a few went, and the movie theatre was quite full. The high school payed for our movie tickets. We could either get to the theatre on our own or go with the school, but buy our own bus and tram tickets. In Canada, you take a schoolbus to a fieldtrip, but in France we took public transportation together (city bus and tram, which is like an LRT but over ground and connected to cables above for electricity to run, I think). We also walked a bit. The movie was at a theatre with about 2 rooms. It seemed to be an alternative/foreign film place mostly. We saw Invictus in English with french subtitles. The subtitles actually helped me quite a bit sometimes because I found it hard to understand their south african accents sometimes. The movie was really good and I even did one of the songs in it with my choir years ago (Tshotsholoza - the song at the beginning and when they're in a huddle in the last games.) We were, and still are, studying South Africa in English class, so it was fitting. After the movie, we went back to school, had lunch, then had gym class, also sort of fitting since Invictus involves sport, and then we were free for the weekend at 3:30! Which is the earliest we get out, except for Wednesdays when everybody seems to get out at 12:30.
That evening, Ambre, her dad and I and her sister and her husband went out for dinner at this Alps region inspired restaurant. They all had raclette ( I had this other bake thing with potatoes and chicken and a sauce that was really good.) For the raclette, which I believe is potatoes and an assortment of meats, you put melted cheese on the potatoes. You are given a huge half-circle of cheese(with a rind) on a special stand, and a special heater thing heats the cut (exposed) part. When the cheese at the surface starts melting you scrape it off to go with your potatoes, and put the heater back by the cheese, and repeat the scraping process every time the cheese starts melting. It was quite interesting, at least for me. And the half-circle was quite a bit smaller at the end. There was one of those cheese things for the four of them. Apparently if I'd ordered raclette they would have given us another cheese device. On the menu, it had said for some foods that at least two people had to order that food, or at least that type of dish. I realised why when I considered the cheese situation.
The next day Ambre and her dad and I went to Ambre's cousin's house. Both places are in Normandy, but Ambre lives in Basse-Normandie, in the Calvados region. Her cousins's lives in Haute-Normandie, in the Eure region, where the biggest city is Evreux. It was about 120 km, and about and hour and half drive more or less. The roads were fairly swervy, not as bad as I've ever seen but not great. But they are like that to accomodate nature I think. It really went into rural France. What you would imagine some French country-side to be like. (Well, you'd probably see pictures from the south if you looked it up on Google, but this was very country.) It wasn't that far a drive from the nearest highway or town, but it still felt like you were pretty deep in the country, at least to me. Ambre's dad said it was a "petite heure", which means a little less than an hour (50 minutes ish) to Evreux from the house.
The houses and yards where Ambre's cousin lives are cookie-cutter or pathwork quilt-like in that the lots all seem to be bordering on each other. However, their "borders" aren't straight lines at all. Ambre's cousin's house is I think pretty old, but they've recently redone or are redoing the inside. There were two little buildings in their backyard. The first one was younger - around 50 years old. It was a type of shed that has as its back wall the fence, and so the roof only slants to one side, like a lean-to. However, there was still a front wall with doors. The older building was over a hundred years old! It was a little barn, with 2 stories so that you could store hay or whatever on the second floor. Ambre's dad said that they could turn it into a car garage or something. It would be so cool to have old buildings in you backyard! So long as they don't fall down suddenly!
We went to her cousin's house to see her newborn baby, who was about 10 days old. She was so small! Her name is Emerence. She was sleeping when we got there, and she looked really comfortable! Ambre's aunt and uncle were also there. We had brownie-ish cake and hot beverages and talked. It was really nice - it's always kind of nice to see people other than at school, especially people of different ages. At my school in Canada, I see lots of different aged students every day, even just in passing, but at my school here there are only high-school aged kids, and some a couple years older in prep classes. So it's nice to talk to people whose lives are focused in other areas than school, but they still relate. I find that in France, when I'm in a group of people, they will keep me in the conversation but not make me the only centre of attention, and I like that. It's a comfortable position to be in.
I went with Ambre's dad and uncle to get bread for dinner. (Yes, they do eat a lot of bread in France. It's a lot, but not exclusively, baguette. We go through a lot of baguette at Ambre's dad's, but her mom prefers other kinds of bread (whole-wheat or special(almond, fruit, etc.) loaves usually). At the cafeteria at school, you are allowed to take 3 pieces of bread per person. They are smaller pieces than a regular loaf in Canada though.) The town nearby was also really European feeling, and I got the "omigosh I'm in the french countryside" mindset, or impression I guess, for a few minutes. (I hadn't been in that mindset so much at the time, so this was different that I had felt usually those days.) We looked into the window of an antique shop and saw a white cat sitting on a chair! Driving back, we saw this church with a tower (by tower I mean a quadrilateral prism standing upright with gothic-ish window design.) There was also a statue, I think of a guy with a horse or something, that was a war memorial. I think it was for WWI but then they put WWII and at least one other war on it.
Then we went back and Ambre's cousin's husband and brother came and everybody had dinner. For dessert there was a selection of pie. I had this pie that I'd had at least once before but I don't know what it's called. If I remember correctly, it was yellow with a brown bottom and it's slightly gelatinous or custard-y.
I think at about 11, we started driving home. On the drive home a wild boar ran across the road in front of the car! That was different, since usually in Canada the animals at the side of the road aren't wild boars! We got home at around half past twelve.
The next day we went to a park about 20-30 minutes out of Caen. It had some animals behind fences, but it was more to reserve part of the forest for them than a zoo enclosure. There were some goats, boars and deer. The forest seemed to have fallen leaves on the ground - in March! Ambre, her dad and I also had a snack at a picnic bench. We had Coke (or Perrier) and madeleines, which are these little cake things.
We went to her cousin's house to see her newborn baby, who was about 10 days old. She was so small! Her name is Emerence. She was sleeping when we got there, and she looked really comfortable! Ambre's aunt and uncle were also there. We had brownie-ish cake and hot beverages and talked. It was really nice - it's always kind of nice to see people other than at school, especially people of different ages. At my school in Canada, I see lots of different aged students every day, even just in passing, but at my school here there are only high-school aged kids, and some a couple years older in prep classes. So it's nice to talk to people whose lives are focused in other areas than school, but they still relate. I find that in France, when I'm in a group of people, they will keep me in the conversation but not make me the only centre of attention, and I like that. It's a comfortable position to be in.
I went with Ambre's dad and uncle to get bread for dinner. (Yes, they do eat a lot of bread in France. It's a lot, but not exclusively, baguette. We go through a lot of baguette at Ambre's dad's, but her mom prefers other kinds of bread (whole-wheat or special(almond, fruit, etc.) loaves usually). At the cafeteria at school, you are allowed to take 3 pieces of bread per person. They are smaller pieces than a regular loaf in Canada though.) The town nearby was also really European feeling, and I got the "omigosh I'm in the french countryside" mindset, or impression I guess, for a few minutes. (I hadn't been in that mindset so much at the time, so this was different that I had felt usually those days.) We looked into the window of an antique shop and saw a white cat sitting on a chair! Driving back, we saw this church with a tower (by tower I mean a quadrilateral prism standing upright with gothic-ish window design.) There was also a statue, I think of a guy with a horse or something, that was a war memorial. I think it was for WWI but then they put WWII and at least one other war on it.
Then we went back and Ambre's cousin's husband and brother came and everybody had dinner. For dessert there was a selection of pie. I had this pie that I'd had at least once before but I don't know what it's called. If I remember correctly, it was yellow with a brown bottom and it's slightly gelatinous or custard-y.
I think at about 11, we started driving home. On the drive home a wild boar ran across the road in front of the car! That was different, since usually in Canada the animals at the side of the road aren't wild boars! We got home at around half past twelve.
The next day we went to a park about 20-30 minutes out of Caen. It had some animals behind fences, but it was more to reserve part of the forest for them than a zoo enclosure. There were some goats, boars and deer. The forest seemed to have fallen leaves on the ground - in March! Ambre, her dad and I also had a snack at a picnic bench. We had Coke (or Perrier) and madeleines, which are these little cake things.
Friday, March 5, 2010
Rest of week off
Hi, I'm going to tell you what happened after I got back from Paris last week. So from February 25-28th.
I stayed up to watch the women's hockey final on the 25th, but it started at 12:30 am on the 26th here. I watched until the end, so about until 3. Surprisingly, I wasn't overly tired the next day. I had been getting up pretty late all vacation though.
On I think Friday the 26th, Ambre, her dad and I went to a D-Day Beach one afternoon. I believe it was by the Juno Beach Canadian War Museum place, but I think the real Juno beach is elsewhere. The beach was quite long until the water started, but not all that steep. (I remember hearing about other D-Day beaches where the Nazis were on cliffs above.) It wasn't too sold, but not too warm. We saw a tank and a little fortifivation that were used in WWII by Canadians I think. We played this game with a mushy ball and raquets, as well as frisbee. We also walked to the water, and on the way I unexpectly got into pretty muddy sand. My shoes and bottoms of my pantlegs got wet sand on them, and it took 4 times in the dryer to dry my shoes! Also on the beach were little rocks and shells, this sea-weedy stuff or maybe it was just green muck, and I guess water.
Near the beach there are what I'm guessing were condos, as well as some museums, restaurants, docks for recreational boats, and a few stores. We went into one selling live seafood. Then we wer going to go bowling but given the state of some of our shoes shoes we weren't sure they'd accept us. We decided to go the next day. Later, I found that the skin on my hands seemed much more soft and moist. I wasn't sure if it was from being close to the sea that afternoon, or if it was mostly because I rubbed some of the green muck on my hands!
The next day we went bowling (10-pin) and I don't think I got a score over about 30! But these people starting talking to me because I was holding the ball with the wrong fingers and after I changed my fingering it helped.
The next day we had coquilles St-Jacques, which is shellfish in a sauce in half a shell. IT was pretty good but the small amount was enough. I also watched the mean's hockey final, which was on at 9:30 pm this time. It was a great game, but they stopped broadcaster stopped broadcasting the game right before the medal presentations and anthem, which I was really looking forward to seeing. I looked online to see if I could watch it there, but I couldn't find anything. I was happy to see that on Facebook people were celebrating though! I was a bit dissapointed the Olympics were over but I got over it.
I stayed up to watch the women's hockey final on the 25th, but it started at 12:30 am on the 26th here. I watched until the end, so about until 3. Surprisingly, I wasn't overly tired the next day. I had been getting up pretty late all vacation though.
On I think Friday the 26th, Ambre, her dad and I went to a D-Day Beach one afternoon. I believe it was by the Juno Beach Canadian War Museum place, but I think the real Juno beach is elsewhere. The beach was quite long until the water started, but not all that steep. (I remember hearing about other D-Day beaches where the Nazis were on cliffs above.) It wasn't too sold, but not too warm. We saw a tank and a little fortifivation that were used in WWII by Canadians I think. We played this game with a mushy ball and raquets, as well as frisbee. We also walked to the water, and on the way I unexpectly got into pretty muddy sand. My shoes and bottoms of my pantlegs got wet sand on them, and it took 4 times in the dryer to dry my shoes! Also on the beach were little rocks and shells, this sea-weedy stuff or maybe it was just green muck, and I guess water.
Near the beach there are what I'm guessing were condos, as well as some museums, restaurants, docks for recreational boats, and a few stores. We went into one selling live seafood. Then we wer going to go bowling but given the state of some of our shoes shoes we weren't sure they'd accept us. We decided to go the next day. Later, I found that the skin on my hands seemed much more soft and moist. I wasn't sure if it was from being close to the sea that afternoon, or if it was mostly because I rubbed some of the green muck on my hands!
The next day we went bowling (10-pin) and I don't think I got a score over about 30! But these people starting talking to me because I was holding the ball with the wrong fingers and after I changed my fingering it helped.
The next day we had coquilles St-Jacques, which is shellfish in a sauce in half a shell. IT was pretty good but the small amount was enough. I also watched the mean's hockey final, which was on at 9:30 pm this time. It was a great game, but they stopped broadcaster stopped broadcasting the game right before the medal presentations and anthem, which I was really looking forward to seeing. I looked online to see if I could watch it there, but I couldn't find anything. I was happy to see that on Facebook people were celebrating though! I was a bit dissapointed the Olympics were over but I got over it.
Monday, March 1, 2010
Paris again
So it's been a while since I wrote. The last two weeks were school holidays. The first week was with Ambre's mom, and that week we went to Bayeux. The second week was with Ambre's dad and we went overnight to Paris!
We left Tuesday the 23rd and got back the next day. On the first day, we took a 7:08 train from Caen to Paris. It was about two and a half hours. It was almost more exciting than flying because I haven't rode trains as much. It was sort nice to be up in the cool, fairly moist air in the morning, and I felt like I had more space to move around in a train than in a plane. People don't stick to their assigned seats as much though. I seemed fairly common for people to say "Excuse me but I reserved this seat".
We got to Paris and dropped our stuff off at the hotel. Then we got something to eat at a cafe. We had had a bit to eat at 6:00-ish but it was good to get more food. Compared to Canada, France sometimes seems to have set-ups where people handle everything. That can be good since you can talk to a person, but sometimes it's hard to know what to do to get your food in a self-serve-ish food place. Anyway, the food was good and fairly filling. We went to the Palais de la Decouverte. It's the same idea as the Space and Science Centre, although that's the old name, in Edmonton. Although this one is bigger and the building is castle-like. It might actually be a castle. The expositions were comprehensive but appealing to probably all age groups. They also had a planetarium like the one in Edmonton, and it was tempting to almost fall asleep under the fake darky, starry sky. They also had a temporary exhibit on dinosaurs. I was going to see if it was like the Royal Tyrell, but it was more aimed at kids. There were a fair number of robotic mopving dinosaurs and that was cool. There were robotic velociraptors! My brother and I have an inside joke there. I also bought two packs of freeze-dried astronaut food. One pack is an ice-cream sandwich and one is... BANANAS! I plan to give that one to my teacher.
Then it was probably 5 pm and we went to the Champs Elysées. I recently realised what the name actually meant and have like the street more ever since. We went to a few stores. I asked if they knew if Le Coq sportif, a store or so I thought, was on the avenue. I wasn't. My brother had wanted me to take a picture of that store but it would have to wait. We stopped at this bistro place and got drinks. I got a lemonade, but it was seems to be typical french lemonade, which is Sprite-ish pop with a hint of a lemon taste. The last time I was in Europe there was a brand of french lemonade, I think it might have been a bit more lemony, and I'm not going to put the name on a website.
That evening we went to a play. It was in a nice, cozy theatre, and yes it was in french. It was about a lady who hires the buttler guy and he fantasises about her, and she does in a way about him. I didn't like the story that much but the actors and the presentation was good. One actress reminded of Donna's tall friend from Mamma Mia! who my mom thought also played Mrs. Weasley. At the end, the audience kept clapping for a long time, the curtain kept rising and the actors kept bowing in intervals of three. They did at least twelve bows!
Afterwards we went to Pizza Hut to eat. It was about 11 o'clock I think. I had a deep-dish pizza that was quite good. We also had dessert and I had a meringue, like on pie, floating in this vanilla custard I think made from eggs. It was pretty good but it depends on your mood how much you like it. I'd had it once before and I enjoyed it more the second time.
Afterwards we went to the hotel and went to sleep. Ambre and I shared a room. It was two single beds, spaced about 5 cm from each other, but for a Paris hotel room is was quite nice. The TV was a flat-screen and big for a hotel room in Europe. However, there seemed to be channels in Spanish and English and other languages, but not in French. How odd.
The next morning, I got up earlier than I had been during the vacation time. I had been getting up sometimes at 11, so earlier than that isn't necessarily saying much. But I started the day later than I remember I would when my family was traveling in Europe. Ambre and her dad's style was less packed, in schedule and in mind. At about 10 o'oclock, we went with Ambre's dad, who collects stamps fairly avidly I get the impression, to a stamp trading place. He didn't take that long, but then he saw a motorcycle helmet store and went in. I think he motorcycles by the way :). He tried on a few and ended up buying one. If I remember correctly, it had a target design on the front. The store was called Elmo, so I took a picture of the outside because it reminded me of Christina :). Then we went to this sopping place called Les Halles. They used to be greenhouses or something vaguely like that that were underground, only the roofs would be above ground...something like that. Now, it's a three-floor deep underground mall. It was pretty cool but I didn't buy anything. Some stores, like H&M and Zara, are popular in France and we also have them in Canada. H&M was in Les Halles and Zara was on the Champs Elysées, and we went into both, and I think Ambre bought something at both. That afternoon we went to the Pantheon. Ambre's dad said there was a street with a lot of old bookstores in Paris, and I think we might have been on it. I think my dad would have like that. There were some books about law, and also science, in some storefronts. Maybe because it was right by the law school, or the old law school building maybe.
The Pantheon doens't seem like Paris' biggest attraction, but it's actually auite interesting. A king a long time ago was dying and he told St. Genevieve that if she let him live he'd build her a church. He lived but the country was broke. They made this national lottery and got profit off that, and then built the church. Then probably because of the Revolution they made the state and the church seperate, so they decided it was now a Pantheon instead. They buried some people in the basement. People get panthonized if they were considered to have emulated things the french value basically. People like Victor Hugo, Pierre and Marie Currie and Louis Braille were Panthonized. Also, a group of people can get honourarily panthonized, which means they are panthonized but they don't get burried in the basement. Sometimes they made statues for groups of people like that. It became and unbecame a church many times, and they kept taking down and putting up crosses, but they left it up the last time I believe. The Pantheon is in the classic - roman and greek-ish - style instead of the gothic style. The tour guide actually said how to get a person panthonized, but it's sort of long to write and it doesn't have anything that wierd in the procedure.
Afterwards, we might have walked around a bit more I don't remember, but then it was time to go back and get our luggage. We went to this special place where I couldn't tell if it was one big store or a small mall, but it had mostly, in my opinion, north-american style clothing. The british style might have been included too. We only had about five minutes to look around. I saw some gold shoe laces but decided not to buy them.
We then got back to the train station, composted our tickets - sorry if that's a frenchicism, I'm not sure of the english word - and took the train back. I think we got back to the house at around 10. They were having fun giving the taxi driver directions and stuff.
I believe we had a snack after that and then went to bed.
So in short...the trip to Paris was fun and different from what a tourist might do. If I was a tourist it wouldn't have been ideal but as a sort-of local of France temporarily it was a less busy way to visit Pairs. Now that I think about it, it's sort of nice ot know Paris can be less bustling and busy and crazy than it sometimes looked when I was touring with my family and with the OSEF group. The architecture is also sort of cool. It's cool to imagine having an apartment in Paris or even in Caen. It would be sort of different, well a lot different, than I live in Edmonton, but it would be close to stuff and if you wanted that and you didn't want a yard that badly, then an apartment would be great. Ambre's mom actually has an apartment that I'm in as I write this. It's outside of the city by a tiny bit and I think most of the neighbourhood is appartments. It's not so much different than my life at home, since I still have a bedroom, the kitchen, the bathroom and the TV. There's also space to breath, as in it's not packed to the gills or anything, so it's good.
I think I might be using a lot of commas. I read part of a book in french that had SO many commas. They are used correctly, but there are just so many. I read it and to change the sentence structure would seem weird, but other books I read have fewer commas and it works! Oh well!
We left Tuesday the 23rd and got back the next day. On the first day, we took a 7:08 train from Caen to Paris. It was about two and a half hours. It was almost more exciting than flying because I haven't rode trains as much. It was sort nice to be up in the cool, fairly moist air in the morning, and I felt like I had more space to move around in a train than in a plane. People don't stick to their assigned seats as much though. I seemed fairly common for people to say "Excuse me but I reserved this seat".
We got to Paris and dropped our stuff off at the hotel. Then we got something to eat at a cafe. We had had a bit to eat at 6:00-ish but it was good to get more food. Compared to Canada, France sometimes seems to have set-ups where people handle everything. That can be good since you can talk to a person, but sometimes it's hard to know what to do to get your food in a self-serve-ish food place. Anyway, the food was good and fairly filling. We went to the Palais de la Decouverte. It's the same idea as the Space and Science Centre, although that's the old name, in Edmonton. Although this one is bigger and the building is castle-like. It might actually be a castle. The expositions were comprehensive but appealing to probably all age groups. They also had a planetarium like the one in Edmonton, and it was tempting to almost fall asleep under the fake darky, starry sky. They also had a temporary exhibit on dinosaurs. I was going to see if it was like the Royal Tyrell, but it was more aimed at kids. There were a fair number of robotic mopving dinosaurs and that was cool. There were robotic velociraptors! My brother and I have an inside joke there. I also bought two packs of freeze-dried astronaut food. One pack is an ice-cream sandwich and one is... BANANAS! I plan to give that one to my teacher.
Then it was probably 5 pm and we went to the Champs Elysées. I recently realised what the name actually meant and have like the street more ever since. We went to a few stores. I asked if they knew if Le Coq sportif, a store or so I thought, was on the avenue. I wasn't. My brother had wanted me to take a picture of that store but it would have to wait. We stopped at this bistro place and got drinks. I got a lemonade, but it was seems to be typical french lemonade, which is Sprite-ish pop with a hint of a lemon taste. The last time I was in Europe there was a brand of french lemonade, I think it might have been a bit more lemony, and I'm not going to put the name on a website.
That evening we went to a play. It was in a nice, cozy theatre, and yes it was in french. It was about a lady who hires the buttler guy and he fantasises about her, and she does in a way about him. I didn't like the story that much but the actors and the presentation was good. One actress reminded of Donna's tall friend from Mamma Mia! who my mom thought also played Mrs. Weasley. At the end, the audience kept clapping for a long time, the curtain kept rising and the actors kept bowing in intervals of three. They did at least twelve bows!
Afterwards we went to Pizza Hut to eat. It was about 11 o'clock I think. I had a deep-dish pizza that was quite good. We also had dessert and I had a meringue, like on pie, floating in this vanilla custard I think made from eggs. It was pretty good but it depends on your mood how much you like it. I'd had it once before and I enjoyed it more the second time.
Afterwards we went to the hotel and went to sleep. Ambre and I shared a room. It was two single beds, spaced about 5 cm from each other, but for a Paris hotel room is was quite nice. The TV was a flat-screen and big for a hotel room in Europe. However, there seemed to be channels in Spanish and English and other languages, but not in French. How odd.
The next morning, I got up earlier than I had been during the vacation time. I had been getting up sometimes at 11, so earlier than that isn't necessarily saying much. But I started the day later than I remember I would when my family was traveling in Europe. Ambre and her dad's style was less packed, in schedule and in mind. At about 10 o'oclock, we went with Ambre's dad, who collects stamps fairly avidly I get the impression, to a stamp trading place. He didn't take that long, but then he saw a motorcycle helmet store and went in. I think he motorcycles by the way :). He tried on a few and ended up buying one. If I remember correctly, it had a target design on the front. The store was called Elmo, so I took a picture of the outside because it reminded me of Christina :). Then we went to this sopping place called Les Halles. They used to be greenhouses or something vaguely like that that were underground, only the roofs would be above ground...something like that. Now, it's a three-floor deep underground mall. It was pretty cool but I didn't buy anything. Some stores, like H&M and Zara, are popular in France and we also have them in Canada. H&M was in Les Halles and Zara was on the Champs Elysées, and we went into both, and I think Ambre bought something at both. That afternoon we went to the Pantheon. Ambre's dad said there was a street with a lot of old bookstores in Paris, and I think we might have been on it. I think my dad would have like that. There were some books about law, and also science, in some storefronts. Maybe because it was right by the law school, or the old law school building maybe.
The Pantheon doens't seem like Paris' biggest attraction, but it's actually auite interesting. A king a long time ago was dying and he told St. Genevieve that if she let him live he'd build her a church. He lived but the country was broke. They made this national lottery and got profit off that, and then built the church. Then probably because of the Revolution they made the state and the church seperate, so they decided it was now a Pantheon instead. They buried some people in the basement. People get panthonized if they were considered to have emulated things the french value basically. People like Victor Hugo, Pierre and Marie Currie and Louis Braille were Panthonized. Also, a group of people can get honourarily panthonized, which means they are panthonized but they don't get burried in the basement. Sometimes they made statues for groups of people like that. It became and unbecame a church many times, and they kept taking down and putting up crosses, but they left it up the last time I believe. The Pantheon is in the classic - roman and greek-ish - style instead of the gothic style. The tour guide actually said how to get a person panthonized, but it's sort of long to write and it doesn't have anything that wierd in the procedure.
Afterwards, we might have walked around a bit more I don't remember, but then it was time to go back and get our luggage. We went to this special place where I couldn't tell if it was one big store or a small mall, but it had mostly, in my opinion, north-american style clothing. The british style might have been included too. We only had about five minutes to look around. I saw some gold shoe laces but decided not to buy them.
We then got back to the train station, composted our tickets - sorry if that's a frenchicism, I'm not sure of the english word - and took the train back. I think we got back to the house at around 10. They were having fun giving the taxi driver directions and stuff.
I believe we had a snack after that and then went to bed.
So in short...the trip to Paris was fun and different from what a tourist might do. If I was a tourist it wouldn't have been ideal but as a sort-of local of France temporarily it was a less busy way to visit Pairs. Now that I think about it, it's sort of nice ot know Paris can be less bustling and busy and crazy than it sometimes looked when I was touring with my family and with the OSEF group. The architecture is also sort of cool. It's cool to imagine having an apartment in Paris or even in Caen. It would be sort of different, well a lot different, than I live in Edmonton, but it would be close to stuff and if you wanted that and you didn't want a yard that badly, then an apartment would be great. Ambre's mom actually has an apartment that I'm in as I write this. It's outside of the city by a tiny bit and I think most of the neighbourhood is appartments. It's not so much different than my life at home, since I still have a bedroom, the kitchen, the bathroom and the TV. There's also space to breath, as in it's not packed to the gills or anything, so it's good.
I think I might be using a lot of commas. I read part of a book in french that had SO many commas. They are used correctly, but there are just so many. I read it and to change the sentence structure would seem weird, but other books I read have fewer commas and it works! Oh well!
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Bayeux
Today I got out of bed past 11 o'clock!
Ambre and her mom and I went to Bayeux, a town about half an hour away. It seems to be fairly developped for tourists. It has a huge cathedral and the architecture is mostly different than in Edmonton.
There's a famous tapestry in Bayeux - called the Bayeux Tapestry - and a small museum accompanies it. The tapestry itself is about 70 metres long and tells he story of William the Conqueror. Basically this king dies, battles happen, and William eventually becomes the ruler of England in about the year 1070. The tapestry was well-made and also tells of medieval life, and even references Aesop's fables, which were well-known at the time. The museum part talks about William, medieval stuff and the tapestry thoughout the last millenium. There was a 16 minute film as well. The gift shop seemed pretty good but I didn't buy anything. I also learned that the french version of William is Guillaume.
The town of Bayeux is pretty nice. It has cobblestone streets and a bit of greenery too. There were statues or ornamentation on many buildings. I saw one of those waterwheel things, which was charming.
I watched the film about the tapestry in English and the narrator's english accent was a bit unusual for me. There was this other family there speaking english, but they had an accent I didn't recognise. I wondered if my north amercian accent would have sounded weird ot them.
It seems that in the streets here, pedestrians and vehicles intertwine more. I think it would take some getting used to if I was driving. Maybe it's also because the older streets are narrower, and the street versus the sidewalk isn't as defined. This doesn't all apply to main roads in cities as much though.
Ambre and her mom and I went to Bayeux, a town about half an hour away. It seems to be fairly developped for tourists. It has a huge cathedral and the architecture is mostly different than in Edmonton.
There's a famous tapestry in Bayeux - called the Bayeux Tapestry - and a small museum accompanies it. The tapestry itself is about 70 metres long and tells he story of William the Conqueror. Basically this king dies, battles happen, and William eventually becomes the ruler of England in about the year 1070. The tapestry was well-made and also tells of medieval life, and even references Aesop's fables, which were well-known at the time. The museum part talks about William, medieval stuff and the tapestry thoughout the last millenium. There was a 16 minute film as well. The gift shop seemed pretty good but I didn't buy anything. I also learned that the french version of William is Guillaume.
The town of Bayeux is pretty nice. It has cobblestone streets and a bit of greenery too. There were statues or ornamentation on many buildings. I saw one of those waterwheel things, which was charming.
I watched the film about the tapestry in English and the narrator's english accent was a bit unusual for me. There was this other family there speaking english, but they had an accent I didn't recognise. I wondered if my north amercian accent would have sounded weird ot them.
It seems that in the streets here, pedestrians and vehicles intertwine more. I think it would take some getting used to if I was driving. Maybe it's also because the older streets are narrower, and the street versus the sidewalk isn't as defined. This doesn't all apply to main roads in cities as much though.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Weekend and commentary
Just to document this past weekend: It Ambre's mom's friend's birthday. There was a little get-together with the lady's family and friends, kids and adults. We went bowling and my score was about 26! But you only got two balls and in Canada I seem to usually get three... maybe that's in five pin. Then we played laser tag. It was pretty cold - I don't know if the laser tag building - it was more like an add-on and not a permanent building - was insolated. I felt a bit like I was in a war scene, and I didn't feel like I had very good instincts for hiding and strategic positioning. It was fun, but 20 minutes at a time was enough. We were on two teams, and there were about sixteen people in total. Afterwards, everyone went to a separate room to eat. The food was mostly what we would consider hors d'hoeuvres in Canada. Afterwards, Ambre, two younger boys and I played laser tag again. Ambre's mom said that for parties in France, everyone brings something to eat. That must take some of the load off of the host or hostess.
Ambre and her mom go to the movie theatre more often than I do in Canada. They don't buy popcorn and pop every time though. In Canada I see maybe five movies a year. In a week and a half in France, I have already seen two movies. I Love You Phillip Morris isn't great, but it's typical Jim Carrey. Sherlock Holmes is pretty good but sort of dark. In most movies here, the original dialogue has been "dubbed out" so the movie's in french, but in many cases the title isn't translated. Maybe it helps market a movie internationally if the title is the same everywhere.
Sometimes it seems like, compared to France, the food in Canada is either healthy or unhealthy, not as much in between. At least that's sort of my impression. In France, my experience has been that the two mix a bit more. For example, we eat a lot of yaourts, which are sort of between a yogurt and a pudding. I think they might be worse for me than I think, but they taste good so oh well. In Canada, I sometimes eat way too much candy, and here I don't have access to much, so when I get back I don't know if I'll eat more or less candy.
The Olympics are fun to watch. I mostly see taped stuff since Vancouver is 9 hours behind. I'm not sure if they'll show hockey or curling on TV here, since I don't think France has teams. If need be, I'll find somewhere to watch those games on the internet. I seem to be out of the "region" that can watch broadband video on CTV, but I'm sure there are other sites.
That's all for now!
Ambre and her mom go to the movie theatre more often than I do in Canada. They don't buy popcorn and pop every time though. In Canada I see maybe five movies a year. In a week and a half in France, I have already seen two movies. I Love You Phillip Morris isn't great, but it's typical Jim Carrey. Sherlock Holmes is pretty good but sort of dark. In most movies here, the original dialogue has been "dubbed out" so the movie's in french, but in many cases the title isn't translated. Maybe it helps market a movie internationally if the title is the same everywhere.
Sometimes it seems like, compared to France, the food in Canada is either healthy or unhealthy, not as much in between. At least that's sort of my impression. In France, my experience has been that the two mix a bit more. For example, we eat a lot of yaourts, which are sort of between a yogurt and a pudding. I think they might be worse for me than I think, but they taste good so oh well. In Canada, I sometimes eat way too much candy, and here I don't have access to much, so when I get back I don't know if I'll eat more or less candy.
The Olympics are fun to watch. I mostly see taped stuff since Vancouver is 9 hours behind. I'm not sure if they'll show hockey or curling on TV here, since I don't think France has teams. If need be, I'll find somewhere to watch those games on the internet. I seem to be out of the "region" that can watch broadband video on CTV, but I'm sure there are other sites.
That's all for now!
Friday, February 12, 2010
First impressions of french school
In France, students write their French diploma exam in grade 11, and it has a written and oral part, and perhaps other parts. The my class' french teacher was administering those exams all week, so we didn't have any french classes this week. My class is like in junior high in that, generally, the same kids go to all the same classes together, and our schedule is not the same every day. But the number of classes you have each day does change. For example, on Thursdays we have school until 5:30, but Fridays end at 3:30. The days are longer than in Canada but they don't feel that long to me, perhaps because the end time changes, but also because there aren't clocks everywhere. Also, there is are two 15 minute breaks in the day. The classes last an hour instead of an hour and a half, so they feel short. For my class, there aren't options other than languages, and you take 3. Everyone has to take English, and I'm taking German and Latin. There is Phys. Ed. once a week, for two hours on Friday afternoons. Compared to my schedule in Canada, this is the equivalent of me taking another language instead of band, this extra social studies course instead of religion, and another language on top of that. There are about 1.5 hours more of school per week, but more holidays than in Canada.
After everything about the French schools being really strict...they aren't so much. They do seem more exclusively academic in terms of courses, at least at this school. But the teachers seem less strict when it comes to security during exams. Kids talk in class as much as they do in Canada. Hovewer, my experience in Canada is: the kids talk, the teacher tells them to be quiet, they are quiet, then they are loud again. In France it seems like it's more of an ongoing, slightly less loud talk.
The self - or cafeteria- makes you scan a card and go through a twirly thing to get in. Then you can get an apetiser, up to three pieces of bread, a yaourt - sort of like yogurt but more tasty and probably less healthy than in Canada, and common at meals-, a main course, a dessert and a fruit. It's so good! The food in France has generally been really good! The first day at the self, the apetizer was a springroll and this indian pastry thing, and the main course had Indian chicken...the self is a bit more like a restaurant than a cafeteria, but it's still wholesome food that keeps you going.
I have met Ambre's friends. They are sometimes calm, but sometimes really social, energetic and playful. They're really nice. Sometimes they seem quite different than a lot of my Canadian friends, and sometimes it seems like we're all the same fundamentality, so it'll be interesting to see who I am friends with at the end of the exchange.
Ambre's parents both live in the suburbs but it takes them each 15 to get us to school. During spares, I'll be able to go into the town and do whatever. We also walk to the conservatory - that's the most highly reputed place to take music lessons, and the teachers play in the symphony orchestra. I'm in a choir on Wednesday afternoons, when school is let out early. It's a high school treble choir and I think they do mostly opera. There are about 20 people in it and at least some of them take voice. The conductor apparently lived in Alberta and he said he knew of my conductor in Edmonton...small world!
Yesterday it had snowed about 10 cm and the buses weren't running! While walking to the conservatory after school for Ambre's viola lesson, we stopped at a bakery and I got a croissant with almonds and icing sugar. It was SO good! I really like French food, even day-to-day. I sort of keep wondering if I could bring some home...
Today-Friday- we didn't go to school because of the snow. It was nice to have free time, although I sort of do everyday now. I don't have activities after school, except on Wednesdays in the fairly early afternoon. I think of supper as a reference point. In Canada, supper is at 6, so I have 2 hours beforehand and 4 hours after. In France supper is at 8, so it's 4 hours before and 2 hours after. Supper seems more calm here, but mostly because nobody is running off to activities. It's sort of nice to have supper at 8, but it's also nice to have a lot of time afterwards.
I just got back from visiting Ambre's relatives. I met Ambre's aunt and uncle, her other aunt, her other uncle, her gradma and her four cousins. "La bise" isn't as weird as I thought but I was a bit surprised when I got it from some of her relatives who I had just met. But in France a hug is considered a lot more intimate than "la bise". Ambre's mom's six siblings all live in Normandy, except one who lives in Brittany, so it's a lot easier to all get together than for my family!
After everything about the French schools being really strict...they aren't so much. They do seem more exclusively academic in terms of courses, at least at this school. But the teachers seem less strict when it comes to security during exams. Kids talk in class as much as they do in Canada. Hovewer, my experience in Canada is: the kids talk, the teacher tells them to be quiet, they are quiet, then they are loud again. In France it seems like it's more of an ongoing, slightly less loud talk.
The self - or cafeteria- makes you scan a card and go through a twirly thing to get in. Then you can get an apetiser, up to three pieces of bread, a yaourt - sort of like yogurt but more tasty and probably less healthy than in Canada, and common at meals-, a main course, a dessert and a fruit. It's so good! The food in France has generally been really good! The first day at the self, the apetizer was a springroll and this indian pastry thing, and the main course had Indian chicken...the self is a bit more like a restaurant than a cafeteria, but it's still wholesome food that keeps you going.
I have met Ambre's friends. They are sometimes calm, but sometimes really social, energetic and playful. They're really nice. Sometimes they seem quite different than a lot of my Canadian friends, and sometimes it seems like we're all the same fundamentality, so it'll be interesting to see who I am friends with at the end of the exchange.
Ambre's parents both live in the suburbs but it takes them each 15 to get us to school. During spares, I'll be able to go into the town and do whatever. We also walk to the conservatory - that's the most highly reputed place to take music lessons, and the teachers play in the symphony orchestra. I'm in a choir on Wednesday afternoons, when school is let out early. It's a high school treble choir and I think they do mostly opera. There are about 20 people in it and at least some of them take voice. The conductor apparently lived in Alberta and he said he knew of my conductor in Edmonton...small world!
Yesterday it had snowed about 10 cm and the buses weren't running! While walking to the conservatory after school for Ambre's viola lesson, we stopped at a bakery and I got a croissant with almonds and icing sugar. It was SO good! I really like French food, even day-to-day. I sort of keep wondering if I could bring some home...
Today-Friday- we didn't go to school because of the snow. It was nice to have free time, although I sort of do everyday now. I don't have activities after school, except on Wednesdays in the fairly early afternoon. I think of supper as a reference point. In Canada, supper is at 6, so I have 2 hours beforehand and 4 hours after. In France supper is at 8, so it's 4 hours before and 2 hours after. Supper seems more calm here, but mostly because nobody is running off to activities. It's sort of nice to have supper at 8, but it's also nice to have a lot of time afterwards.
I just got back from visiting Ambre's relatives. I met Ambre's aunt and uncle, her other aunt, her other uncle, her gradma and her four cousins. "La bise" isn't as weird as I thought but I was a bit surprised when I got it from some of her relatives who I had just met. But in France a hug is considered a lot more intimate than "la bise". Ambre's mom's six siblings all live in Normandy, except one who lives in Brittany, so it's a lot easier to all get together than for my family!
First impressions of french life
I got to Ambre's dad's house. It's in a suburb of Caen called St. Contest. There was a sign the said Place des canadiens. Her dad told me that there are a lot of streets named after military things, because of all the WWII stuff that happened there.
The house has quite a modern design compared to my parents', but it's about half open concept. One of the walls on the main floor is made up of windows. My room is blue with a sort of gabled window. Looking out, the scenery looks pretty european. The houses are kind of cute and there's this sort of half-decayed stone wall with moss on it in a neighbour's yard...it's pretty charming. The climat is more humid but not as much as I would have thought. When it rains it rains pretty lightly. I thought my skin might feel different, and it doesn't much. My eyes, which are usually dry, feel a bit better, but sometimes feel more tired than usual. I wonder if air pressure is a factor?
We had a late lunch. They brought out some goat cheese hors d'hoeuvres things, bread, olives and other things. It was nice but seemed like a small lunch. Then they brought out some meat, potatoes and carrot things. The meat is served well done, medium or bloody! I was still a bit confused about how french meals worked.
Ambre's mom came over for dinner. I would be spending that night at Ambre's dad's; then 15 days at her mom's, since there was one week left of school before the holidays.
The house has quite a modern design compared to my parents', but it's about half open concept. One of the walls on the main floor is made up of windows. My room is blue with a sort of gabled window. Looking out, the scenery looks pretty european. The houses are kind of cute and there's this sort of half-decayed stone wall with moss on it in a neighbour's yard...it's pretty charming. The climat is more humid but not as much as I would have thought. When it rains it rains pretty lightly. I thought my skin might feel different, and it doesn't much. My eyes, which are usually dry, feel a bit better, but sometimes feel more tired than usual. I wonder if air pressure is a factor?
We had a late lunch. They brought out some goat cheese hors d'hoeuvres things, bread, olives and other things. It was nice but seemed like a small lunch. Then they brought out some meat, potatoes and carrot things. The meat is served well done, medium or bloody! I was still a bit confused about how french meals worked.
Ambre's mom came over for dinner. I would be spending that night at Ambre's dad's; then 15 days at her mom's, since there was one week left of school before the holidays.
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Paris
On February fourth I go to the Edmonton Airport at 7 am. I only forgot...my oboe! I got through security and saw... Monsieur Bérubé! But it turns out our chaperone was his old teacher or vice principal or something...small world. We got to Calgary and met up with the 57 kids from there. There were eight of us from Edmonton - that is, flying out of Edmonton - but almost 30 from Victoria and 25 from Vancouver, then I guess 15 from other places. There were 6 people alone from Canmore and Banff, too of whom know my cousin...small world. Then we all went to Toronto and had dinner. I had poutine and an Iced Capp to be Canadian. The Edmonton kids were small enough to be our own little group instead of splitting up - it sort of stayed that way for the time we were together in Paris.
The plane ride wasn't bad, and we got to Paris near 10 am local time. There were people with light blue OSEF rainjackets waiting for us - they were friendly and welcoming. We put our luggage in trucks depending on what method of transportation we were taking to get to our host families, and then we got on one of three tour buses.
We went to Sacre-Coeur first. The church was really nice and it is on the top of a hill. But there were people trying to weave tourists bracelets and then charge them lots. Two wanted to weave me one but I said no a lot of times and they seemed surprised I was talking french and kind of stopped bothering me. But someone :) ended up paying 30 euros!
Then I think we went to Flunch. It's sort of like a fastfood place only more healthy and better food. In France it seems like you have smaller portions of many foods instead of bigger portions of a few foods like in Canada. It was a bit confusing but I survived.
Then we went to Notre Dame and that was cool. The OSEF sightseeing approach is "be back in an hour". As opposed to choir tour with ECC :). Then we went back to the hotel and got assigned rooms. My roommate happened to be the niece of a lady my parents know from Calgary that was at this dinner thing the day I left...small world! The dinner was a bit confusing. It was this sort of interesting salad bar and bread and some meat and desserts. Then I sat down at the wrong place. I wasn't sure I would be full but I wasn't hungry after. I went to bed by about 9 pm after being mostly awake for 29 hours. I didn't really feel the jet lag much but I think it was underminingly there - I didn't feel like I was completely there near the end.
The next day we got up earlier than scheduled and went to the Louvre for an hour. I had ham as part of my breakfast, which was surprisingly good. This way of sightseeing - being governed by deadlines instead of interest - makes for people who are less braindead at the end of the day, but perhaps more physically tired. One hour in the Louvre isn't very much...but we saw the "Monna Lisa" so it's all good! Then we went to the Champs-Elysées and under the Arc de Triomphe for an hour. They have quite the goldplated McDonald's M! And quite the dice...don't ask.
Then we had lunch at a different Flunch that had a bathroom sign with an arrow pointing at a customer. And then it was to the Eiffel Tower. We only went up to the second floor but it was still really cool. It was cold, windy and perhaps rainy though. They sell pasta in the shape of Eiffel towers! It seemed to be faster to take the stairs down than the elevator, so we did. We then went on a boat ride on the river Seine. It was really cool and intriguing but relaxing at the same time. Since a big part of the historic part of Paris is on an island surrounded by the Seine, there are many bridges connecting the island to the mainland. So we went under a lot of decorative bridges, some of then with statues or gold on them!
Paris is a bit like a whole city of Whyte Ave. It's pretty intense. There also seemed to be streets where all of the shops had the same theme, for example wedding stores. The buildings all looked older with periodical character. The ones in Caen do too even though they were mostly rebuilt after WWII, so maybe I don't mean periodical. In Paris, keeping in mind that in Europe the ground floor is floor zero, they buildings usually only have balconies on the second and fifth floors, the reason being that people would put their children on the fifth, live on the second and the rest were for servants or rented or something. It would be cool to have and apartment like that!
The next day I got up at 8 - some people had to get up at 5:15 to catch a bus to catch a train. Then Ambre and her dad picked me up and had coffee and a pain au chocolat, which people actually have for breakfast, at the hotel restaurant. Two and a half hours later we arrived in Caen!
The plane ride wasn't bad, and we got to Paris near 10 am local time. There were people with light blue OSEF rainjackets waiting for us - they were friendly and welcoming. We put our luggage in trucks depending on what method of transportation we were taking to get to our host families, and then we got on one of three tour buses.
We went to Sacre-Coeur first. The church was really nice and it is on the top of a hill. But there were people trying to weave tourists bracelets and then charge them lots. Two wanted to weave me one but I said no a lot of times and they seemed surprised I was talking french and kind of stopped bothering me. But someone :) ended up paying 30 euros!
Then I think we went to Flunch. It's sort of like a fastfood place only more healthy and better food. In France it seems like you have smaller portions of many foods instead of bigger portions of a few foods like in Canada. It was a bit confusing but I survived.
Then we went to Notre Dame and that was cool. The OSEF sightseeing approach is "be back in an hour". As opposed to choir tour with ECC :). Then we went back to the hotel and got assigned rooms. My roommate happened to be the niece of a lady my parents know from Calgary that was at this dinner thing the day I left...small world! The dinner was a bit confusing. It was this sort of interesting salad bar and bread and some meat and desserts. Then I sat down at the wrong place. I wasn't sure I would be full but I wasn't hungry after. I went to bed by about 9 pm after being mostly awake for 29 hours. I didn't really feel the jet lag much but I think it was underminingly there - I didn't feel like I was completely there near the end.
The next day we got up earlier than scheduled and went to the Louvre for an hour. I had ham as part of my breakfast, which was surprisingly good. This way of sightseeing - being governed by deadlines instead of interest - makes for people who are less braindead at the end of the day, but perhaps more physically tired. One hour in the Louvre isn't very much...but we saw the "Monna Lisa" so it's all good! Then we went to the Champs-Elysées and under the Arc de Triomphe for an hour. They have quite the goldplated McDonald's M! And quite the dice...don't ask.
Then we had lunch at a different Flunch that had a bathroom sign with an arrow pointing at a customer. And then it was to the Eiffel Tower. We only went up to the second floor but it was still really cool. It was cold, windy and perhaps rainy though. They sell pasta in the shape of Eiffel towers! It seemed to be faster to take the stairs down than the elevator, so we did. We then went on a boat ride on the river Seine. It was really cool and intriguing but relaxing at the same time. Since a big part of the historic part of Paris is on an island surrounded by the Seine, there are many bridges connecting the island to the mainland. So we went under a lot of decorative bridges, some of then with statues or gold on them!
Paris is a bit like a whole city of Whyte Ave. It's pretty intense. There also seemed to be streets where all of the shops had the same theme, for example wedding stores. The buildings all looked older with periodical character. The ones in Caen do too even though they were mostly rebuilt after WWII, so maybe I don't mean periodical. In Paris, keeping in mind that in Europe the ground floor is floor zero, they buildings usually only have balconies on the second and fifth floors, the reason being that people would put their children on the fifth, live on the second and the rest were for servants or rented or something. It would be cool to have and apartment like that!
The next day I got up at 8 - some people had to get up at 5:15 to catch a bus to catch a train. Then Ambre and her dad picked me up and had coffee and a pain au chocolat, which people actually have for breakfast, at the hotel restaurant. Two and a half hours later we arrived in Caen!
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