(Thursday October 22)
So after waking up at noon on Tuesday we had to set the alarm bright and early Wednesday morning in order to get to Disneyland Paris at a decent time. Getting there involved 2 metros and an hour long RER train ride. Suffice to say not only did we get up pretty early, we also got back really late. Like almost midnight, and promptly fell into bed, not setting an alarm.Well, surprise surprise, we slept in again. Until 11:30am! Oops! Scott's first words on waking were "Uh, we did it again..." LOL. Oh well.
Place de la Concorde
After quickly getting ready and grabbing some bakery breakfast on the go, we headed over to Les Tuileries gardens and the Musée
de l’Orangerie. Just in front of the entrance to the gardens is the Place de la Concorde. This square, known during the French Revolution as Place de la Révolution, is where the guillotine was set up by the revolutionary government, and it is here that Louis XVI (and so many others) lost their heads.
After the revolution it was renamed Place de la Concorde. It's now a lovely spot bordered by the large gardens of Les Tuileries to the east, and is at the end of Les Champs-Elysées on west side. This means you can see all the way to l'Arc de Triomphe from the Place. It contains a large obelisk that was a gift to France from Egypt in the 1800s, as well as a large fountain.
Right now it apparently also includes a public art installation. We went into one of the buildings, which was entirely made of rotating colored glass panes. The kids really loved that one!
Musée de l’Orangerie
This was both Nicole and Max's favorite painting
Josie had two favorites. This was the first one
And this was the second
L'Arc de Triomphe
After leaving the museum we hopped on the metro and made our way all the way up the Champs-Elysées to exit at the Charles de Gaulle-Etoile stop. This is probably my favorite metro stop in Paris because you ride up out of the underground station on a long escalator that drops you RIGHT in front of the Arc de Triomphe. Literally, steps from the edge of the traffic circle it sits in. The scale of it as you pop out of the ground right there is quite impressive. We went to the Arc knowing that it was too close to closing time for us to be able to get up to the top of it (having slept until 11:30 and hitting the other museum already), but we wanted to at least see it from the outside. Maybe we'll make it back to go up in it before Doug leaves, but if not he's happy to have at least seen it from the ground.
We of course have lots more pictures on Scott's nice camera, but I'm blogging right now with just my pics from my phone because it's quicker. You'll just have to trust me when I say that we got some really nice pictures of the family, and of Doug in front of and under the Arc. :-)
The other reason we knew we couldn't make it to the top today is that we had plans to have dinner at one of our very favorite places in Paris: Le Relais de Venise. It is ah-mazing. Seriously, if you go to Paris you HAVE to go. Or if you go to London or New York City where they apparently also have locations now, you HAVE to go. There is only one thing on the menu - steak and fries. The only question they ask is how you would like your steak prepared. It comes with the most delicious fries and a secret sauce so incredible you may dream about it. No joke. Mmmmm...Seriously, there are pages and pages on the internet devoted to trying to duplicate this sauce, so far unsuccessfully. Yum-o!



























































