France
Arrondissement de Melun

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    • Day 7

      ......jetzt aber....Feierabend

      May 13 in France ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

      Was für ein interessanter Tag .
      Er begann mit der Google Maps Falle.....wollte keine rupeligen Feldwege fahren.
      Habe dann zwischen 🚗 und Fahrrad hin und her geswicht.
      Bin dann an Charles de Gaulle ✈️ vorbei über den Norden nach Paris rein.
      In einem Vorort ein tolles Hähnchensandwich gegessen, sehr interessante Strecke und Leute in den Vororten. Überall sieht man noch Bautätigkeit Olympia 2024
      Dann als erstes am Louvre vorbei gekommen.Sowas von beeindruckend. Daran schließt sich ein riesiger Park an.
      Dann weiter über den Place de la Concorde, Chaussee de lysee und dann zwei Runde um den Arc de Triumph 😀😃🙂.
      Dann zum Eifelturm.
      Tja, hier könnte man dann eigentlich Feierabend machen 😀
      Naja, ist ja noch etwas Zeit übrig.
      Bin dann wieder raus aus Paris und ca. 40 km außerhalb einen Campingplatz angefahren.
      Klasse hier.
      Die Fahrt mit dem Rad rein und raus aus Paris war schon sportlich und ich war froh, dass ich auf dem Rad saß und nicht im Auto. 😉
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    • Day 9–15

      Heute sightseeing 😀

      May 15 in France ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

      Schloss Fontainebleau
      Heute ist Ruhetag und ich bin dann mal ins Schloss gegangen. 😉
      Tolle Location.....sich in der Zeit treiben lassen.
      Zusätzlich noch Bein- und Popopflege.....sind ja noch ein paar Kilometer 😉Read more

    • Day 28

      fontainebleau

      May 5, 2023 in France ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

      Rain!! Heavy first thing so delayed start, and jacket on. Jacket lasted all but 5mins as the clouds rolled back and the sun reappeared. More Loire side cycle ways of excellent quality- some run along levees alongside the river . Detour into Orleans was worth it - the twin towers of the cathedral were a marker on the horizon long before I arrived. Big on Joan of Arc here. Felt a bit bewildering to be in a big city! Easy in and out on the riverside cycle way- and then onto the Orleans canal . The towpaths started off amazing but rapidly deteriorated, so back onto quiet roads as I climbed up imperceptibly to flat nothingness. Eventually entered the Fontainebleau forest and after a critical food pitstop 10k short I popped out into Fontainebleau where city and chateau appear to have mergedRead more

    • Day 41

      Geht´s auch etwas kleiner?

      May 15 in France ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

      (Bert) Die Wetter-App zwingt uns fast nach Fontainebleau. Und da wir - vom Regen getrieben - hurtig in Richtung Norden fahren, bleibt noch Zeit, das Schloss zu besichtigen. 1500 Zimmer, damit kommt man üblicherweise zurecht. Natürlich ist das Bauwerk über Jahrhunderte entstanden und hat eine Geschichte, die den Besuch laut Audioguide auf 4:30 Stunden anschwellen lassen könnte. Wir konzentrieren uns der Einfachheit halber auf die Zeit des Ersten Kaiserreichs (Ausdehnung: siehe grüne Karte in den Bildern), sozusagen Aufstieg und Fall Napoleons. Zunächst ein großer Triumph: 1807 muss Spanien im Vertrag von Fontainebleau der französischen Armee Durchmarschrechte nach Portugal zugestehen. Nur wenige Jahre später dann das Ende der französischen Vorherrschaft durch die Niederlage bei Waterloos 1815. Wie wäre die Geschichte weitergegangen, wenn Napoleon gesiegt hätte? Wären wir heute Teil einer Weltmacht Frankreich? Zwiebelsuppe und Zitronentörtchen statt Eintopf und Burger Brezel? Man bekommt jedenfalls einen Eindruck davon, wie groß vor gut 200 Jahren hier
      gedacht wurde, wenn man vor der gigantischen Schloßanlage inklusive der umgebeneden Gärten steht. “La grande nation”. Aber: Geht´s auch etwas kleiner, liebe Nachbarn?
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    • Day 60

      Charles de Gaulle Airport

      November 16, 2022 in France ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

      Our afternoon of walking around Paris yesterday was cancelled due to rain.

      We got to Gare du Nord about 2 PM, stuffed our backpacks into a locker. Found a nice café for lunch. Met two women from Quincy MA, who knew from my voice I am from the Boston area.

      When we left a light drizzle started which quickly became rain. We changed plans, found a supermarket for a light meal to eat in our hotel room, plus a Côté du Rhône.

      Then we hopped on a train to our hotel at the airport.

      The last leg of our camino, a flight to Boston!
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    • Day 3

      Schloss Fontainebleau

      May 3 in France ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

      Fontainebleau ((Fonteneblu), ca. 20.000 Einw. ist berühmt durch sein Schloss
      ► Fontainbleau ist ein Gefüge verschiedener Stilepochen.
      ► Ludwig VII. (siebente)baute hier eine Abtei, die Thomas Becket 1169 weihte.
      ► Franz I. , der Renaissancekönig, baute darauf ab 1528 ein Schloss im florentinischen und römischen Stil.
      ► Heinrich IV.(vierte) und Ludwig XIII.(dreizehnte) fügten weitere Bauten hinzu.
      ► Ludwig XIV. (vierzehnte)kam jährlich zur Jagd nach Fontainebleau.(Fonteneblu) Hier widerrief er auch das Edikt von Nantes.(Nant)
      ► Der Bau ruhte bis Napoleon I. das Schloss zu seinem bevorzugten Aufenthaltsort machte.
      ► Nach 1855 geriet es in Verfall.
      ► Erst unter Louis Philippe und Napoleon III. wurde es wieder hergestellt.
      ► Das weitläufige mehrgliedrige Schloss hat bis auf wenige Pavillons über dem Erdgeschoss nur ein Stockwerk.
      ► Es umfasst 5 Höfe.
      ► Besonders sehenswert ist der Cour de Cheval Blanc (Kur de Chüfal blong) mit der hufeisenförmigen Treppe von 1634.
      ► Ihre ausgeklügelte Konstruktion erlaubte auch Pferdegespannen die Durchfahrt unter den beiden Bögen.
      ► Das Innere des Schlosses zeigt prächtige Dekorationen, Gemälde, und Stuckaturen italienischer und französischer Künstler.
      ► Auch sind einige Ausstellungen mit Porzellan und anderen Einrichtungsgegenständen sehenswert.
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    • Day 277

      Paris Museums (by Andrew)

      May 21, 2023 in France ⋅ ☁️ 61 °F

      We went to Paris to see Emma and Yanai. We got to see the Mona Lisa at the Louvre. If you take 20 seconds at all the pieces it will take 133 days because there are 35,000 objects. We also went to an Aquarium. My favorite animal was a shark in a tank. All of this stuff was really fun, and I’d love to come back.

      Andrew out…
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    • Day 2

      Fontainebleau

      September 4, 2022 in France ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

      We drove through the morning after an early landing in Roscoff at 7am and made straight for Fontainebleau to stay for the night and do a quick spot of bouldering . After stopping at the Hippodrome "bivouac site" to make toasties and consult the climbing guidebook, we headed for the Apremont bouldering area. Fontainebleau, once the private hunting grounds of a since expired French monarch, is a largely wooded area whose ground is sandy and strewn with large sandstone boulders, deposited by a passing ice sheet. This shady boulder field has become a mecca for climbers. You can't drive 100m without passing a car or van rammed with bouldering mats and the occupants awkwardly squeezed in around them. Our own bouldering mat on Bill's back, we headed out into the Fontainebleau labarynth of pleasant old growth forest and boulders and, as is tradition, promptly got lost. Having eventually found our way, Bill pulled on his climbing shoes and leapt on a few of the lower boulders, Jo chasing around under him with the mat. After three climbs Bill decided that he would not be thanked for breaking his ankle on the first night of the honeymoon, so we opted to head back to the bar chalet at the entrance to the woods. We're now parked up at the Hippodrome again having cooked and eaten a satay that was just the far side of too spicy, and are now sat out, cans in hand, watching the stars and judging oversized campervans.Read more

    • Day 8

      Po hitrih cestah nazaj domov

      September 10, 2022 in France ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

      Se peljemo nazaj domov, trije... Četrto smo pustili samo v Parizu :( Žalostna je tale pot domov.

      Gremo pa po hitrih cestah in zih nas čakajo kje še lokalne. Avtoceste so enostavno predrage, za pot od nemške meje do Pariza smo dali nekje okrog 70 evrov, peljali smo pa itak samo okrog 110 km/h, toliko kot po teh tahitrih. Avtoceste so res bolj komot, brez lukenj in bolj naravnost...Read more

    • Day 8

      Oct 3 - Kalocsa, Hungary

      October 3, 2023 in France ⋅ 🌧 18 °C

      We docked this morning about six kms from the town of Kalocsa – pronounced Kal-OH-cha. Kalocsa used to be a riverside town, but the meandering course of the Danube over the years has taken away that status. This area is the epicentre of the paprika universe, with its long hours of sunshine and perfect soil conditions. Paprika is used in the classic Hungarian dish of goulash that comes in all grades from sweet to ferociously hot.

      It's another spectacular day – warm and sunny with just enough breeze to keep us comfortable. We don’t have any activities until 1:00 p.m., so we enjoyed a lie-in and a late breakfast. The water level on the Danube is very low, so the slope up the ramp to ground level was very, very steep. We managed it, but there are a lot on this ship who are going to struggle. We walked about 2/3 of the way into town through fields of corn and something we need to identify. With 1.5 hours and 10,000 step under our belts, we retired to our balcony (for the first time on this trip) to enjoy some down time. The balcony can be fully enclosed for use in cool or damp weather. Today, we put the top window down to soak up the soft, lapping sounds of the Danube and the wonderfully fresh air.

      This afternoon’s activity is a horse show at Bakodpuszta, followed by a stroll through Kalocsa. Will let you know about those later. Time to eat – again!

      By the way, the location feature of FindPenguins isn't working very well with the weak internet, so some of the locations showing are wrong - like this one that thinks we are in France. I'll fix things when I get access to strong internet which might not happen until I'm back home. We've been warned that the farther east we head in Europe, the sketchier the internet will be. Oh well......

      Bakodpuszta is a traditional Hungarian farm that raises cattle and pigs and sheep and uses horses for both work and pleasure. It was located just a short drive out of Kalocsa. The family put on a show for us. The first “act” was five horsemen and a short guy on a donkey. They displayed their riding skills and their whip skills. The whips make a cracking sound when snapped with the right force. Then they did a display knocking over a peg standing on a stump using just their whip while galloping at high speed. (Donkey guy finally used his foot.) Then they played “take the kerchief”, a form of tag where they try to get a kerchief from one another. The kerchief would have been given by a pretty lady as a token of her interest. This display of manliness is often done at weddings to set up the next loving couple. Yes, Donkey Guy captured the scarf and gave it back to the lady. A skilled driver with an assistant for making the turns races around the ring in a light weight wagon with drawn by four perfectly matched horses. The highlight of the show was when a young man drove 10 white horses, arranged 4-4-2, while standing upright on the last two horses - no carriage or wagon. Such arm and leg strength. No Planet Fitness membership required for him!

      After the show, we had an opportunity to go out into one of the fields to see the livestock, and then to tour the barns which had horses, pigs with curly furry coats, sheep with long, curled horns and one dog that loved Doug.

      Next stop – the town of Kalocsa. One of the main attractions is the Holy Trinity Square, named after the Holy Trinity column, which stands next to the Baroque-style Archbishops Cathedral. The present archbishopric, founded about 1135, is a development of a bishopric said to have been founded in 1000 by King Stephen the Saint. Many of the buildings in Kalocsa are yellow because yellow was the favourite colour of Empress Maria Theresa. We saw other buildings painted pale green and pink – so very different from what we see in Canada.

      Then it was back on the buses to the ship. We set sail at 4:45 p.m. Next stop is Mohács, Hungary. We should dock about 8:30 p.m.

      We docked in Mohács (MOW-haw-chs) right on schedule. A troupe of five so-called gypsy - they were probably just plain Hungarian - musicians clambered aboard. We enjoyed their music for close to an hour and then called it a night. It had been a full day.
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    Arrondissement de Melun

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