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London and Paris With Casey

09/26/2019 to 10/03/2019

Casey has expressed an interest to take a trip with us for quite some time.

Yes, we are lucky he still likes us - go figure.

So we decided 2 of the easiest places to start an overseas experience are London and Paris.

Both cities are teaming with history and amazing places to see.

Then there are the pubs. Yes, I do love a good pub and London has quite a few.

Paris cafes are also a favorite of ours. Nothing is better than strolling along and stopping at a sidewalk cafe for a coffee or wine.

We are proud to say Casey found these experiences just as much fun as we do.




Tower of London 09/26/2019

We stayed at The Sanctuary Hotel on Tothill Street just a couple blocks from Parliament. Nice rooms and a pub below

First day we rode the tube (naturally) over to The Tower Bridge and Tower of London.

Even though it was drizzling a bit the Tower of London was a good start to the day's events.

Lots of history, amazing buildings, ramparts, gates, Warders.



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The Sanctuary House Hotel. A great 19th century building with lovely very British rooms
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The pub under the hotel.
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On to the Tower.
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The grounds inside the Tower complex.
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St. John's Chapel
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St John's Chapel
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The people living in the Tower complex love to brighten up their homes with plants
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White Tower
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This belonged to the Knights on Malta. No idea why dragons or the Chinese motif
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This was the young Henry Stuart's suit of armour
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The detail in the metal is impressive
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Suits of armor for various soldiers at various time sin history are on display
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On to "weapons of mass destruction" old style
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Ah, the Dragon
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Still no real clue but it's built of parts.
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Recreation of Edward I bedchamber. He ruled from 1272 to 1307
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Small chapel
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Throne Room ceiling
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The little chapel in the Throne Room
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Chapel stained glass window
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A portable Altar Piece
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Casey & George
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Casey & Sharon up on the ramparts
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Casey and one of the artsy iron soldiers
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One of the Tower Ravens.
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The Raven's coops. As long as they stay the realm will not fall.
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Skyline




Tower Bridge 09/26/2019

Tower Bridge - hard to believe but it has been a working structure since 1894.

Traffic and pedestrians cross it daily.

Above is an enclosed walkway with glass panels in some parts of the floor so you can get great views of the Thames flowing below as well as the skyline.

One of our favorite parts was the old machinery. They sure don't make them that lovely any longer



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Tower Bridge is really quite pretty
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The blue against the stone is one of the things I really enjoy about it.
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Looking at the Tower of London from the Bridge
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Of course there has to be a gargoyle
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Casey shooting down through one of the glass panels in the pedestrian section of the bridge
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Looking down the Themes
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Love looking at the London Skyline
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City Hall
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The weather can be a bit unpredictable but what the heck, it's London.
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The HMS Belfast battleship.
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Looking toward our next stop - The Monument to the Great Fire. Yeah, that one from 1666
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And yes, we do go to the top
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Of course you have to ascend and descend all 311 stairs.




Tower Bridge Engine Room 09/26/2019

We have wanted to do this part for a few years but it was not open.

The Engine Room is a great display of the equipment that originally manipulated the bridge as well as a great tribute to the ingenuity, sweat and dedication of the people who worked here.



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One of the old boilers. They made them pretty as well as functional
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Old folks in front of the boiler. No we do not remember when these were made. Not that old
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Casey & Mom.
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Diagram of the works
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To us this is a work of art as well as a machine.
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I love the copper oil tube




St. Paul's Cathedral 09/27/2019

St. Paul's is just incredible to see. The architecture is renown, but for me the ceilings are the main draw.

It is also the home of many monuments to great battle leaders - usually only the Admirals or Generals and not the men who did the most fighting and dying.

Besides the main area there is a crypt paying homage to Wellington, Florence Nightingale, Nelson and more. Very interesting.

Then climb the 500+ steps to the top. Great views



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Entering you see the Baptismal Vessel
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It is huge. Lovely, but really big.
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Now the ceilings
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Casey got some great shots of the artwork on the ceiling
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The organ pipes are colored. These are a first for us.
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Mary and Child. Lovely statue
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Lieutenant-General Abercrombie - long history of fighting
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Admiral Lyons
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Admiral Earl Howe
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Believe this is the John Howard who championed prison reform and humane treatment
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Lt. Gen Thomas Picton - good soldier but lousy person. Tortured women when he was governor of Trinidad.
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Thomas Middleton - first protestant bishop of India. I'm sure the Hindus were thrilled
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Ah, yes. The one memorial upstairs dedicated to officers, non-commissioned officers and men.
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Nelson's monument. Well, he did save them from the French.
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And Wellington. Another savior of Britain.
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Then up the stairs to the top
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Yes, lots and lots of winding steps.
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Looking across Millenium Bridge
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Skyline
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They call it the Walkie-Talkie
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The Shard - offices, hotel and restaurant.
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Paternoster Square Column was erected in 2003




Church of the Immaculate Conception 09/27/2019

It's our Gothic style church day.

Next we stopped at the Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception.

Yes some Catholic churches survived through the religious turmoil although this one was built in the latter 1840s.

it is quite impressive inside with lovely vaulted ceilings, beautiful colors and an impressive altar.



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The statuary was beautiful
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The ceilings were wooden tiles
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The colors and paintings were unique to me.
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Very elaborate front of the altar
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Another wonderful ceiling
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And more statuary unlike most we have seen.




Hayes Galleria 09/27/2019

On our last trip to London we strolled through this more or less by accident but we liked it so much we made sure Casey got to see it.

It was at its height as a wharf in the 1800s and continued to be used until it was bombed during WWII.

Times changed, ships docked elsewhere and it fell into disrepair until the resurgence of the Docklands in the 1980s.

Today it is a mix of shoppes and restaurants with a really incredible piece of artwork in the middle known as The Navigator



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Hayes Galleria from across the Thames
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Inside - restaurants and shoppes
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And The Navigator




Parliament - Palace of Westminster 09/28/2019

We finally were able to do the tour of Parliament. Only took 3 tries.

The tour itself was great. Our guide was informative with a dry sense of humor, and we were shown both chambers, the walk between, and several other venues.

Unfortunately no pictures are allowed inside once you leave the great hall - the original part.

Sorry. You'll just have to go see for yourself



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I swear most of London is under reconstruction. Invest in scaffolding!
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Big Ben - well as much as you can see anyway
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I could really appreciate the stonework when I was close to the building.
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Casey outside Parliament
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Inside the oldest part - Westminster Hall. It is quite long and the wooden ceilings are just beautiful
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Unveiled in 2016 this piece is called "New Dawn" and honors those who fought for women's rights.




St. Dunstan in the East 09/28/2019

After Parliament, a pub for lunch, and lots of wandering around to see The Golden Hinde, Anchor Pub, have tea, and enjoy several other sites you just can't miss we decided to stop at St Dunstan in the East.

I just love this little park. So quiet and pleasant. People just come sit and read.

True it may not be huge and historic but it is one of those places I wanted to share.



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Casey - yes I made him pose so I could get pictures of him. There's a cost for traveling with Mom




Jardin du Luxembourg 09/29/2019

We arrived in Paris in late afternoon so after checking into our hotel and doing some unpacking we strolled over to The Luxembourg Gardens.

Probably everyone has seen paintings of Parisians lunching on the grass and children playing in the pool. They still do it today.

As with most current public places here it was once a home for royalty, not the people.

Today it is owned by the French Senate which still meets in the palace.



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The modest little home of the widow of Henry IV.
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But they do have little boats you can sail
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That's our little sail boat.
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No not high-tech. That pole in Casey's hand is what you use to move your boat away from thee edge
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We had a lot of fun chasing our boat from one side of the pool to the other.




Le Pere Lachaise Cemetery - Paris 09/30/2019

Le Pere Cemetery was one of Casey's top sites to see in Paris. It is the resting place for thousands - actually estimated in a million plus now.

It was named for Father Lachaise - confessor to King Louis XIV.

Since it opened in 1804 it has seen many funerals. Most ordinary people, but also some very famous.

Chopin, Moliere, Edith Piaf, Max Ernst, Balzac and many more.

The cemetery is very large and probably one of the most peaceful, lovely places you can visit.



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This is almost like a city with street signs for direction and district designations
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This is the size of most of the tombs - small but nice
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George & Sharon strolling toward the simple monument. Like I said some of these are really huge and grand.
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Strolling down the street
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The stained glass window in many was pretty
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Anatole de la Forge - Valient Defender of St. Quentin and Faithful defender of democracy. Yup, soldier and writer.
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Many are phone booth size
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We took this for our friends The Meyers
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Some more simple graves
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The famous tomb of Aberlard & Heloise.
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Abelard & Heloise - star crossed lovers. Their letters endure - not sure their bodies are here though.
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The tombs that are no longer cared for are so sad.
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Champollion - he deciphered the Egyptian hieroglyphis.
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I do not know why some doors are open
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Moliere - famous play writer. He was on Casey's list
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Gertrude Stein - on the list
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Gertrude Stein. As she wanted it is plain and unassuming. People put little stones on it to honor her
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Smaller but very elaborate
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Joseph Spiess - patented a rigid airship a year before Zeppelin
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Oscar Wilde
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Still do not understand this motif. The glass was recently added because people kept kissing it
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Balzac. On the list
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Chopin - also o the list. As you can see it is well attended
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Chopin
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As you can see the tombs go up the hill side as well
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This was designed by an artist who did some of Paris metro entrances.
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Casey taking some shots
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Lots of family crypts
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This was very dramatic
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Crematorium - the first in France
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The columbarium where urns are placed
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Max Ernst - father of the Dada art form. Also on Casey's list
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The stairs to the second story of the columbrium.




The Eiffel Tower 09/30/2019

Naturally we went to The Eiffel Tower. What self-respecting guide would not include this on someone's first trip to Paris?

This time we booked a slot for 3:30 to take the elevator up to the top.

What this means is you start standing in line at 3:30 and you actually gain access to the elevator at 4:30.

Ah, but the views are still wonderful, the structure is amazing, and I still love it.



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The elevator is a rather small box that goes up at an angle
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The elevator is a rather small box that goes up at an angle
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The elevator is a rather small box that goes up at an angle
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The elevator box
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Just so you know even Paris has big ugly high-rise towers. That black thing is the Montparnasse Tower
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You do get some great views from the top.
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Casey & Mom. So happy to share this with him
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I am always so impressed with the actual structure
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The cross beams are artistic to me
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Les Invalides - the one with the gold dome. Built by Napoleon as a veterans hospital and home
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Notre Dame. Note the huge cranes. They have stabilized it and are starting to do some repairs. Restoration plans are controversial to say the least.
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Palais de Chaillot - built in 1937 for the International Expo. Replaced most of the Palais du Trocadéro
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The garden area in front of the Palais is the Trocadero
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The bridge in front of The Grand Palace with the gold is Pont ALexandre III.
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Sacre-Coeur. Such a lovely church
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Looking down the Sien
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The elevator shaft
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Views from the top
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Views from the top
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Views from the top
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Views from the top
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Looking down to the ground from the first level
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Looking down to the ground from the first level
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Casey & Sharon descending the stairs.




Rodin Museum - The Gardens 10/01/2019

Probably everyone knows of Rodin the sculptor. His most famous piece is The Thinker.

He had two workshops; his home Villa des Brillants at Meudon just outside Paris and the Hotel Biron in Paris.

Upon his death he willed his work and collection to the state providing they turn these buildings into museums to display them.

We first strolled the man pieces in the garden - many of these change regularly so there is something new to see on subsequent visits.

I think the gardens were our favorite, even though it was drizzling.



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The Rodin Museum
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This area holds many statues and they are often changed
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Yes, that is The Thinker
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And he is nicely framed by those well manicured trees
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Adma
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Adam - Rodin really did faces well
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Eve
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Balsac
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The Burghers of Calais. After a successful siege by England they offered themselves as sacrifice for the rest of the town
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Claude Lorrain - a painter
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Fallen Caryatid with Stone.
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Jean de Fiennes
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Jules Bastien-LePage
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This is called Meditation
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Shade
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The Spirit of Eternal Repose
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Ugolino & His Children
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He is crawling on the bodies of his children - very ugly but part of Dante's Inferno
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Victor Hugo
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Casey & Victor




Rodin Museum - Inside 10/01/2019

After wandering the gardens for quite some time we went into the museum.

Rodin was not only a great artist in his own right but also a great collector.

He had many paintings of Van Gogh, Tanguy, Claudel and others.

The pieces were varied and the museum itself is a beautiful building. Well worth the time.



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I have no idea why there is a gnome on a stag
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One of Rodin's oriental collections
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The Age of Bronze
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Again, the details are amazing
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Age of Maturity
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Age of Maturity
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Alsatian Orphan
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Call of Arms.
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We noticed a running theme of irate women in many French patriotic pieces
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Father Eymard
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Girl in Floral Hat
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Iris Waking a Nymph
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Man with a Broken Nose.
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Rodin himself
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Rodin's Father
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Rodin's Father




Church of Saint-Sulpice 10/01/2019

Paris has quite a few churches - no surprise there - and most of them are just stunning.

Casey was very interested in the architecture of the churches in London and Paris so St. Sulpice was a good stop.

Dating from the mid 1600s it has gone through many "up-grades" as well as restoration after the Revolution.

Today it is a masterpiece of stain glass, stone and light. Well worth the stop



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The Church of Saint-Sulpice
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The front entrance
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Casey is standing by the doors for scale. Yes, they are large
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Looking toward the altar from the front door
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The Altar. And no, no rose line, no broken tile from a crazed monk
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The artwork was stunning
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The stained glass windows were lovely
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The Pieta of St. Sulpice in Chapel of the Souls in Purgatory
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St. Mary with Jesus and Mary Magdalene - only one with all 3 I have evern seen
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St. John the Baptist
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The columns and ceilings were beautiful
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Mary and child
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A rather dramatic presentation of Mary and child
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The pulpit
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The Organ - it is supposed to be one of the best ever made
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Organists from all over come to play and give presentations
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The fountain in the plaza in front of Saint-Sulpice
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It is huge. That's George and Casey in for scale




Notre Dame - Post Fire & Pre-Reconstruction 10/01/2019

We were wandering along the Seine and decided to see how Notre Dame looked after the fire.

Oh, what a horror. The area is fenced off and a tarp is surrounding the work area so taking pics was hard.

As you can see a lot of work has been done to brace the structure - that was done only recently because they spent months cleaning up the toxins and lead first.

Beside the lead in the stained glass windows the roof had 430 tons of lead tile

Heaven only knows when the actual reconstruction will begin, but they have enough scaffolding in place to support the walls as they continue to clean up and brace the support features so it's safe.



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Notre Dame as it looked before the fire
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Now, an abundance of cranes and scaffold. Yes I say again - invest in scaffold!
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Note the wood buttresses.
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The flying buttresses are filled with huge wooden forms
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Doesn't look too bad from this angle - minus the protective tarp of course
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More construction pieces
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Good shot of the wooden braces
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Some of the glass was saved although you can see the smoke smudges that still need to be cleaned
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The shroud over what once was the lovely stain glass front
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Cleaning one of the gargoyles
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All I can think of is a hoard of ants swarming over something




Les Catacombes de Paris - The Catacombs 10/01/2019

Very long story. These were limestone quarries dating back to open pit mines in the first century AD and tunnels in the 13th century until they were closed in the mid 1800s.

Stones from the quarry were used to build Notre Dame, the Louvre, and other structures around Paris.

Eventually streets collapsed from all the mining and they were shut down around 1774.

Meanwhile Paris cemeteriess were bursting so they decided to slowly move all the remains to the old mines.

Then about 1810-1814 Inspector Héricart de Thury started the artful display of the bones as the tourist trade flourished



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Part of the older section of mining tunnels
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So sweet. A heart of skulls.
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And a chair-rail of skulls in a wall of femurs
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Makes you want to kneel and pray doesn't it
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I forget the story of this well
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These bones are still just shoved in a cavity
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A barrel of bones?
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As ghastly as this is the amount of care and time it took to do this just blows your mind




The Arc de Triomphe 10/02/2019

Iconic Parisian monument commissioned by Napoleon in 1806 but not completed until about 1836 by King Louis-Philippe.

It honours those who fought and died for France in the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, with the names of all French victories and generals inscribed on its inner and outer surfaces.

The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier from World War I lies under the arch vault.

This time we went to the top for some amazing views of the city.



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Casey at the Arch
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The artistic underside of the vault.
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The names of the generals are down the sides
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Casey & Mom - I look so short compared to him.
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George & Shraon
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Plaque in memory of the proclamation of the 3rd French republic
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Casey at The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
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The unknown soldier from WWI
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La Marseillaise
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La Marseillaise
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Le Triomphe
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Plaque in memory of the return of Alsace and Lorraine from Germany
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A shot of part of the stairs to the top
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Casey at the top
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He's a cutie. The scenery is nice too
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Looking toward the downtown or business area. The other arch is La Grand Arch de la Fraternite - or just The Grand Arch.
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In the top of the arch are numerous pieces such as this bust. It is the head of the woman in La Marsaeillaise detail on the arch
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Eiffel Tower in the distance
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Sacre Coeur in the distance
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Sacre Coeur in the distance
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Looking down the streets from atop the Arch




The Glass Pyramid, Place de la Concorde, and MIsc 10/02/2019

So, last day in Paris and we just wandered around after we left The Arch

We strolled around the Place de la Concorde and saw the Luxor Oblisk and colorful Fountain of River Commerce and Navigation.

Then through the Tuileries Garden, peeked at the glass pyramid in front of the Louve, and just enjoyed being in Paris.



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The Luxor Obelisk
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Closer shot of some of the hieroglyphs
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Casey at the base of the Obelisk
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The Fountain of River Commerce and Navigation.
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Casey and the rather interesting forms on the fountain.
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Our friend Max took this of us at the Place
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Next we strolled through The Tuileries Garden. Loved this bird on the statue hand. The statue looks like he's hiding
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This statue is just sure his bird will poop on his head.
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George - Casey got him trying to get shots of the Louvre without cars passing
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The Louvre Museum and the Louvre Pyramid
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I like the pyramid, must not the location To my eye it clashes with the lovely old architecture.
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At the end of the day we enjoyed huddling under the awnings of one cafe, sipping wine and looking across the street at another cafe. Ah, Paris.




The London Eye 10/03/2019

We headed back to London because we fly home tomorrow.

This time we stayed at Marriott County Hall. A huge sprawling old building that once was the seat of government for London until the later part of 1980.

The draw for us was it's proximity to The London Eye. Since we were arriving in the late afternoon we decided it would be a nice, relaxing final tourist event.

We were surprised how much we enjoyed it.



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The London Eye
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Yes, we had to take shots of the mechanisms
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Huge, Huge wheel.
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The pods you ride in.
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The staff moves you along quickly - better than Disney
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Inside our pod. As you can see it's large and not packed
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We took pics of other pods, and they took pic of ours
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Looking down on a pod, the Themes and Jubilee Gardens
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George & Casey
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Mom and her baby
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Caught him totally unawares here
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This time he was ready for me.
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Part of the gears that drive the wheel
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Lookiing down the Themes
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Big Ben - under all that scaffold. Yes, buy scaffold stock
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Our hotel - the former County Hall . It was where the London City Council met.
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The round building is now used for storage
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The Jubilee Bridge
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Pub on the Thames - no didn't do this one.
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Looking at the skyline past Jubilee Park
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Boat traffic on the Thames
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Westminster
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That's the Waterloo Train Station
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Views from the Eye are really nice