I have a trip planned in Spring to London and Paris. I'd love to take any suggestions on interesting things to do and see, and places to eat (accommodations are already decided).
I'd like to avoid the typical tourist spots.
If you are a fan of Impressionism, you might also like the Musee Marmottan. 2 Ave. Louis Boilly. The largest collection of Claude Monet in the world including an obscene number of his water lillies. Originally Posted by TexTushHogThe Musée de l'Orangerie des Tuileries also has a collection of Monet's water lilies arranged in two connected oval shaped rooms where you can sit in the center and feel like you are in his garden. It is located on the right front edge of the Tuilerie gardens in front of the Louvre, just off Place de la Concorde. The access is limited so the crowds are not bad. You can get a ticket from your hotel concierge that will get you to the front of the line.
When in Paris walk around the block from Notre Dame ...Agreed, that is one nice bar with martini's to match.
If you want to scope for celebrities and don't mind dropping a little change then stop in for cocktails at the Hotel George V. . Originally Posted by Mazomaniac
http://www.fourseasons.com/paris/dining/le_bar/ Originally Posted by WTFOh wow is that pic creepy.
I have a trip planned in Spring to London and Paris. I'd love to take any suggestions on interesting things to do and see, and places to eat (accommodations are already decided).While I share your aversion for the "typical" on a quick trip some of it is just too good to be avoided.
I'd like to avoid the typical tourist spots. Originally Posted by Lauren Summerhill
....and also take the train to the Palace of Versailles. Originally Posted by WTFI'd definitely concur! The display of conspicuous consumption is not to be missed!
If you're in London and you want to do the anti-tourist thing, then the only way to go is FOOTBALL.Again, I concur! If you want to see where the supporters of Toronto FC inherit their passion from, go straight to the source! Thousands standing & singing/chanting in unison....in English!!...and you STILL can't understand a bloody word of it! It's brilliant!!
Now I know this seems like a testosterone-laden guy thing, and it is. But that's the point. What happens on the field doesn't matter. What goes on in the stands is the real show.
Thousands of human males chanting and singing in unison. Multitudes lifted to heaven and dashed to hell with each goal scored. Courtesies discarded. Rules ignored. All manner of chaos allowed with the sole unwritten command that women and children are not to be harmed.
It's like a living anthropology museum. You get to see exactly how men behaved when we still lived in caves and relied on herd behavior for survival. Not that you don't see a lot of that in your daily life anyway, but here to get to see it 30,000 guys at a time!
But if you do it, do it right. Grab the tube through the seedy east end to the Boleyn Ground and take in a match of West Ham United. Go early and walk from the tube station to the ground through a high street area filled with mom-and-pop stores selling authentic salwar kameez and ao dai. Stop in at at a hole-in-wall restaurant for some awesome authentic curry and then head into the stadium through revolving steel riot gates to watch thousands of males being male. Afterward head back to the tube with thousands of fans either partying and carrying on in the streets (if it's a West Ham win) or trashing everything they see (if it's not).
I love it. It's about as far outside my normal comfort zone as I can get without needing a firearm. For all the ballyhoo in the press it's actually a fairly safe thing to do. It just feels deliciously dangerous. The police keep a tight fist on things that cross the line although there's always the random a-hole who started drinking too early in the day. That said, I've only seen one guy who actually got hurt and that's because the idiot showed up in another team's colors.
YMMV, but don't go alone. Maybe you can hook up with Camille for a match!
Cheers,
Mazo. Originally Posted by Mazomaniac
The one thing that always seems to suprise people about England is how green it is. There are 60 million plus folks packed into a country that is smaller than California.. Originally Posted by CamilleActually, it is about half the size of California and a third that of Texas (Great Brittan - including Scotland, Wales & N. Ireland is 84,000 sq miles). You don't want to ask about Alaska. Closest state in terms of size is Utah.
Actually, it is about half the size of California and a third that of Texas (Great Brittan - including Scotland, Wales & N. Ireland is 84,000 sq miles). You don't want to ask about Alaska. Closest state in terms of size is Utah.Oi cheeky! Less of the cranky lol.
The population density at about 720 people per square mile is about the same as Connecticut. Massachusetts (820), Rhode Island (1,000) and New Jersey (1,180) are much worse. No wonder those people are so cranky.
BTW Camille, does TSA allow "brollys" on the plane? Originally Posted by pjorourke
If you're into Rodin, there is a really nice, out of the way Musee Rodin that draws way too little attention. Originally Posted by TexTushHogThis was going to be my suggestion also. Especially to see "The Kiss," arguably his most famous work.