Gay Pride March

We sort of accidentally stumbled on the march. It was truely a monumental affair, lasting hours winding its way through central Paris. There were hundreds of thousands of people easily. This one float; there were dozens and dozens.

Gay Pride March

After recovering from Versailles, and a short visit to the Louvre, decided to go back out for Paris at night. A walk along the Seine produced music, laughter, and general excitment.

Worthy of note: hundreds of younger people congreating, and TALKING to each other, and hardly a cell phone in sight, le plus inhabituel.

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Versailles et au-delà

Versailles, first negative experience. The place is a madhouse – long lines, heat, people pushing and shoving. Generally a bad experience, sadly. Opulent and beautiful, and full of history; the crowds made it impossible to look at or experience. c’est la vie.

I’d love to come back sometime when I could actually see it and not the back of someones head shoved in my face, or their cell phone thrust in front of my eyes every 10 seconds. The crowds were like the Metro at rush hour.

Afternoon at the Louvre and even walk on the Seine, much better.

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Notre-Dame de Paris

Visited Notre-Dame de Paris again, and this time climber to the top of the bell tower. Tiny claustrophobic winding staircases that go on forever, both up AND down. Visited the Louvre again.

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view from atop Notre-Dame de Paris

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The quick and the dead

The main thing we did today was visit Père-Lachaise cemetery . Among the guest there we found were: Eidth Piaf, Jim Morrision, Chopin, Collete, Molière. As usual, ate great food, and walked a ton.

I’m getting a tan, who knew that an essential item for Paris is sunscreen.

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