Thursday, April 5, 2012



Bonjour to all! I'm going to try to keep this somewhat short, but I'd like to write about my last two lovely weekends.

Weekend 1: Fontainbleau
Madelaine, an american friend who I met at New York orientation and see semi often at various AFS weekends and activites, lives south of Paris near a town called Fontaine Bleau. We had been trying to organize something together and finally got it worked out so that I'd come stay at her house for a day or two. So two fridays ago I took a two hour train ride towards Fontainbleau where her family picked me up. We drove back to her house (and saw large dead boar that got hit by a car on the way), she lives out in the country side in an adorable house that's 300 years old! 
The next day we took an great bike ride through the counrtyside and visited a town nearby called Barbizon, which is famous for all the artists that lived and worked there. There was construction work going on in the middle of the road, which took away a little bit of the charm, but it was fun to look around the galleries and shops. Also the weather was absolutely beautiful. It felt so amazingly awesome to be biking through the French country side in the glorious sunshine! Sunday morning we drove in to the Market in Fontainbleau to buy meat and cheese and vegtable and flowers and such. I tried this delicious cheese thing, a specialty of Fontainbleau that's a mix of whipped cream and white cheese. Super yummy with a little bit of honey and strawberries.
The Fontainbleau Market
Madelaine and her oh-so-french grocery carrier

So many cheese choices! (sorry, no cheddar)
Later on Sunday on the way back to drop me off at the train station, we drove by the house and then the grave of Claude François, a famous french singer. The "Elvis of France" as my host mom described him. I had watched a movie that just came out about him (good thing, because I really had no idea who he was before), though I did already know this song, here's a link:
See if it rings a bell :)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_YSydDh3Vo


Part 2: Reims and Chateau Thierry
A few days after getting back from Madelaine's, her family called offering to take me to Normandie with them during easter weekend (which is this weekend coming up), which is really awesome. When I was asking my host mom about it, she said yes and then offered to take Madelaine with us for our visit to Reims with AFS  (which was this last weekend). So Madelaine and I had been trying forever just to plan one weekend together, and then we end getting to do stuff three weekends in a row!
There's reims, Chateau Thierry is a smaller town nearby
Normally AFS plans a little walk in Paris the first sunday of each month, but this time they planned  visit to a Museum and an American Cemetery in Reims, a town east of Paris, about two hours from where I live. Since that's a long drive for one day, we made a small trip out it and left saturday to look around ourselves. It's champagne region, so saturday we drove by the vinyards and all the champagne houses. We also visited the Vranken House of Champagne, which had been fixed up and renovated by this super rich couple. The house was amazing, with hand painted walls, old decor, and a rug with real gold in it. We finised with a champagne tasting, which was, of course, very delicious ;)

Giant bottle cap and cork

My host mom and I


Inside Vranken




In another champagne house, these things just cracked me up

heehee

This one's my favorite :)
The next day we visited the house of Jean de La Fontaine, a french writer who wrote a bunch of fables, including The Tortoise and the Hare, and The Country Mouse and the City Mouse. I knew all the stories but I never even knew they were french in the first place, let alone that they were written by this dude. So that was fun to visit, I also had a great time talking with the local high school kids that came with us. We took a break to have lunch in town before heading to the cemetery.

Tine (from norway), me, and Isla (from Finland)
I didn't order this myself, but this is steak Tartare, raw beef with a raw egg.  I'd always heard of it but never seen someone actaully order and eat it, so I had to take a picture. 

We then drove out the cemetery, which is from WWI. AFS actually stands for American Feild Service, and  started as an organization in WWI of ambulance drivers. A couple people from the original AFS are buried here, we visited their graves along with the grave of Joyce Kilmer, the man who wrote the poem "Trees", I've always loved this poem:

TREES
by: Joyce Kilmer (1886-1918)
     THINK that I shall never see
    A poem lovely as a tree.
     
    A tree whose hungry mouth is prest
    Against the earth's sweet flowing breast;
     
    A tree that looks at God all day,
    And lifts her leafy arms to pray;
     
    A tree that may in Summer wear
    A nest of robins in her hair;
     
    Upon whose bosom snow has lain;
    Who intimately lives with rain.
     
    Poems are made by fools like me,
    But only God can make a tree.

    Some more photos:


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VoilĂ ! I'm sure you'll see a new post soon about the trip to Normandie this weekend, I'm also planning a trip to the south of France for next holiday, which I'm really really really excited for. I've been so incredibly lucky to be doing all this traveling lately, I'm so grateful for all these oportunities! Only three months left, gonna make the most of it! 

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