Posts Tagged ‘paris’

Video: Marathon de Paris

June 6th, 2010

My friend Beth and I decided to go on a “long-ish” run together in April. Our chosen weekend just happened to coincide with the Marathon de Paris! So we decided to go run alongside them for a while, to cheer the runners on. We started somewhere between kms 27-28, and just couldn’t stop. We ran right through to the end, whooping and hollering the entire way. Yes, we were posers, but it was darn good fun… and we’re both inspired now to run a whole one!

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Fire in Paris

March 18th, 2010

Just a few weeks ago, I posted a blurb about missing a great shot of firefighters. I didn’t think I’d get a chance to see them up close again. Well, last night I got real close.

I left work and began walking toward the climbing gym for a standard, non-St-Paddy’s evening, when I noticed a huge inky cloud in the sky. I continued walking along thinking nothing of it, as Parisians do (ignore, ignore). A bit later, I glanced up again and this time, stopped cold. This was no ordinary black inky cloud. This was clearly coming from a fire. A big, big fire. And it was close by.

I reached for my camera and nearly kicked myself in the shins when I realized I didn’t have it. Not again! Didn’t I say I would never leave home without a camera? Will I ever learn? Ugh! <kick> <kick!!> <ow>

But wait! My trusty iPod has a video camera on it. If I couldn’t take a still, maybe I could take a short video clip of the cloud hovering over “La Banque Postale,” an ominous image. And thus began an epic evening, as I continued to take clips all along the walk and realized the fire was actually right next to where I was going. Obviously, I got a bit sidetracked from the gym, and joined the crowd of curious onlookers. You’ll notice in the video that I actually walk right past a couple of news stations, who were probably scrambling to get the story of their own neighborhood.

The victim was a huge, empty, factory that was being demolished to make room for a new development. (Uh, I think this might have helped it along, a bit). I’ve never seen something this big – you could see the fire inside, with magnificent flames leaping out of the top openings in the building. And smoke, lots of foul smoke. (Another article here)

I hung out for a while, watching and studying the way everything was organized. Unfortunately, the iPod video doesn’t do so well in the dark, and you can’t make out the flames themselves. Therefore, I began to focus more on what was around - the crowd (see if you can spot the two cigarrettes in the video), the firemen (check out the shiny helmets, I wasn’t kidding!), firetrucks, hoses, people chatting on their mobiles, and passersby on bicycles casually getting in the way of firemen. Finally, at the end, a big set of flood-lights is lifted to help the firemen see – and this illuminates the building pretty well. Unfortunately, you can’t see the actual firemen up on their lofty ladders or the immense spouts of water coming from their hoses. I was really missing my telephoto lens.

Needless to say, I did not ask any firemen if they would take a picture with me…

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Best tourist shot ever, and I missed it

February 21st, 2010
Just seen: a group of firefighters with incredibly shiny gold helmets and two bright fire trucks congregating around a building. Next door: a couple nonchalantly sips drinks in the window, obliviously looking into each others’ eyes and down into their straws while firefighters are running in and out of the door just feet away. I begin to curse that I don’t have my camera.

Next, a pretty British blonde in a red coat asks the guys if she could get her picture taken with them. We’re all thinking “yeah right, come on” (I say “we” because now there is a crowd, and the couple in the window remains nonchalant) but the guys oblige (anything to please a pretty lady) and in fact, one of them takes the camera from her friend so they both can be in the shot. THEN, they lift her up!! She screams in glee!! The crowd applauds. Best tourist shot, e.v.e.r.

Never again am I leaving home without a camera.

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Paris on Sale

February 4th, 2010

I had no idea what I was about to get into. My friend Nacho and I had just finished watching Avatar (if you ever want advice on how to smuggle 4 hamburgers, 2 cokes, and 2 fries in to a movie theater, let me know). I won’t delve too much into my thoughts on the movie other than, yes, I’m a fan, and was happy to have the food. :)

After the film, Nacho, who I swear is more of a girl than I am (ha, he’ll kill me for saying that… better put, he’s a Macho Argentine with a wicked sense of fashion who works for one of the largest cosmetic companies in the world), suggested popping in to a few shops. “Let’s check it out, the sales are on.” It was the first weekend of the famed Parisian Sales, Les Soldes de Paris, the one month of January where stores are legally allowed to discount their merchandise. I thought, ”Sure, why not?” We ducked in to Zara.

Paris Sales & Soldes

Madness. This was the not-as-crowded section.

Dear God. It was utter madness! Think Oxford Street in London right before Christmas, and add the discount provocation. Women with huge bags would literally push you out of their way as they attempted to get to an item they had spotted through the mass of clientele. Shoppers would all but rip the product you were fingering from under your hand so they could try it on first. All etiquette was thrown out the window. People didn’t even bother to say “pardon” as they bumped and shoved their way around the store. It didn’t take long for me to follow suit, there were just too many people and too many collisions to care. It didn’t matter any more, it was what you had to do and everyone accepted that.

Shopper picks nose in Paris

Did I really catch a Parisienne picking her nose? Oh man, I think she's just scratching it, but that would have been awesome.

Now, I am not much of a shopper. I love a good bargain, but am pretty bad at fighting for it. Once I have to rifle through piles and piles of goods and elbow people just to look at a top, I lose interest. This is why, when I do go shopping, I end up spending more than I should. More often than not, I skip it entirely and settle for the dork look.

The prices were actually good, though, so I bit the bullet and dove in to the fray with fervor. Before I knew it, I had an armful of things I didn’t need. The queue to the fitting rooms snaked around the perimeter of the store, so I opted to plant myself in front of a mirror and try stuff on over my clothes. This of course meant fighting for the mirror with the 5 other girls and their piles, doing the same thing. After working up a good sweat, I ended up with a single t-shirt. It is gray with a giant bright drawing of Wembley Fraggle on the front. I proudly held it up to Nacho, who had purchased a classy leather jacket. He smiled politely and said “hehhh, it’s nice… where would you wear it?”

I’m wearing it to work today. I wish I could have videotaped the top-to-bottom look I got from a typically trendy woman as we waited for coffee this morning. I don’t think it’s so bad, so there. I will wear my Fraggle’s googley-eyes proudly.

Wembley Fraggle Tee

My Wembley Fraggle Tee, at work

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The Montmartre Jazz Band

November 16th, 2009

The very first time I went for a wander in my “arrondissement,” I heard these guys before I saw them and they drew me in with their toe-tapping Swing. Really wished I had some Lindy Hop partners in town; it would be fun to tear it up in the square with these folks.

Happily, I have noticed they play every weekend. Next time, I’ll make sure to note down their real band name. ;)

Apologies on the terrible filming; please pay more attention to the sound than the video quality!

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The Hermit, Period.

November 6th, 2009

I’ve just arrived in this wonderful city and what do I do? Hide in my little apartment. I go to work in the morning, and home at night, and that’s it. Repeat. What? No running around Les Galleries Lafayette? Or heading up the Eiffel Tower? Champs-Elysées? Louvre, anyone? Nah. Not yet. A little wander around my neighborhood is quite enough, thanks. I’ve now been here more than a week and I don’t have much to show for it. Don’t even have pictures for this post. ;)

It’s the Hermit Period: that time when you first get somewhere after a move, and instead of checking the place out you just feel like stopping for a second. You were going 110mph for the past month and then you’re supposed to have a ton of energy to be a tourist, too? Hah! That will come; there is plenty of time to check the place out. For now, I just wish I had a TV and some movies so I could sit on the couch and veg out. Instead, I’m doing silly things like cooking, reading textbooks, migrating the blog, and listening to university courses by podcast. Who knew? Free uni! Love it. Check out Open Culture and MIT for a start.

Soon I will get stir crazy and pop my head out of the den. Uh, actually that’s ‘sposed to be Tonight. Plan is to go out, if I can drag myself by the hair out the door, kicking and screaming… I have no normal going-out shoes to wear, so I’ll be the dork in big brown (and dare I say increasingly smelly) loafers dancing in a club with a group of (sure to be extremely well dressed) Argentinians and Brazilians. We’re not even going to start until midnight. I’m going to want to be curled up in a little ball by then, lovingly held by my mattress and duvet, but I will persist! Oddly, I’m so desperate for some real exercise that the idea of running to music sounds more appealing than a club right now. But…must get out there, ALLEZ, c’est Paris! Oh dear the place closes at what time? 6am? Go on, be Extroverted for christ’s sake! (Pulls hair tighter ouch! slams door)

I’m getting old. Screw it, I’m crawling into bed (opens door meekly and sneaks in before the crazy Extrovert returns). If I don’t go running or climbing tomorrow, she’s gonna kill me.

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Moving to Paris

October 28th, 2009

Let the next adventure begin! I am now starting to get settled in my tiny studio flat in Montmartre, and it’s wonderful. After all the trials and tribulations leading up to this point, I’m glad I came. In a way I feel like this stint is partly about closing the “Europe chapter” on my own terms, without an economic crisis to send me home. When I go home at the end of this (whenever that may be), it will be because I’m ready. And, I’m almost ready. Stay tuned – some craziness first, of course!

Mime in Montmartre

Mime in Montmartre

Getting here was a significant undertaking in and of itself. I had some pretty stressful last few days, packing up and moving from my apartment, wrapping up projects at one job while starting another (they actually overlapped a few days), and of course saying goodbye to friends and family. (See the “Tough Transitions” post last month).

With two bags of moving material (read: climbing and camping gear) I kissed my patient and supportive guy goodbye in the airport and headed to London, where I have about 10 plastic boxes full of, dare I say, crap in my ever so gracious friend’s attic. I decided the gigantic 18-person Peruvian tent, among other things, needs to go home. Why did I ever bring it to London? I’ll be heading home for the holidays, so this visit to London was as much about moving things to Paris as it was about moving all the extra crap back home. Have to take advantage of flights before I book a shipping company to take the rest.

This led to a record amount of baggage, almost none of it with wheels, to heft onto the Eurostar. I now had three large check-in size bags and three carry-on size bags, only one with wheels. If it weren’t for friends helping me at either end, I don’t think I would have made it.

Packing Light!

The looks I got from the very-well-put-together European business travellers were priceless. Amazingly, the only stranger to help me was a short and plump, sweet-faced African woman on the French platform. She only took my rolly bag, but it allowed me the ability to walk more than 2 meters at a time.

My new place is a small studio flat in Amelie’s hood. It’s pretty awesome. I now know where I’ll be for the next few months. Yay. :)

Le Sacre Coeur

Le Sacre Coeur

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