Tuesday, September 24, 2013

A Tour of Detroit–The Good, the Bad, the Bankrupt

 While I was home in the USA this summer, I took a tour of the city where my ancestors set down their roots in the 1860's.
Detroit 089

Just as I arrived, Detroit declared bankruptcy. A much reported fact was that 40% of the city’s street lights were out, a disturbing statistic. Yet from what I saw, Detroit is far from dead. It is down, but not out. The question is, will it ever be able to change into the city it wants to become?






DSCN4525
Riding in from the airport, I saw a story in Hour Detroit magazine called “101 Things Every Detroiter Should Do.” I’ve bicycled on the River Walk, eaten Coney Island hot dogs (I prefer the cleaner taste of American over Lafayette,) seen the Diego Rivera working class mural at the Detroit Institute of Arts, and watched hydroplane races on the river. But I had never heard of the Detroit Bus Company tours. Online, I saw two tours that intrigued me.



Schreiber ancestors 003
Great-grandfather
Adolph Schreiber was a confectioner.
Was he also one of the
Drunks of Antiquity?
“Drunks of Antiquity” is a historical tour linking Detroit’s past to its oldest and most notorious drinking establishments. According to the tour description, alcohol was “front and center” in many of the city’s defining moments, from its founding as a French missionary outpost through Prohibition and beyond. As a descendent of Irish and German immigrants who came to Detroit in the 1860’s, I probably have some of the alcohol my great-great grandfathers drank still running in my veins. Unfortunately, the “Drunks” tour was in two weeks, and I would already be back in Abu Dhabi.

However, there was another tour the very next day. “Paradise Paved,” a look at development successes and failures around the city, spoke to the geographer in me, and sounded really interesting. And they did hint that we might stop at a watering hole or two. As I was registering, Dad spoke up and said, “I might like to go too.” So I bought two tickets.




Detroit 039
Only after I had paid for the tickets online with a credit card did he ask, “Does this bus have a bathroom?” Geez, I doubted it. It was a refurbished school bus. And how hard would the seats be? Dad’s bony rear end gets awfully sore. How many times would we get on and off? Was there much walking involved? I woke up several times that night, worrying. What am I doing, taking Dad traipsing all over Detroit? Will there be some disaster?




Detroit 026
There was no disaster. It was a beautiful Saturday, and we arrived early at our meeting place at Detroit’s historic Eastern Market, another of the 101 things Detroiters should do. While we waited for the bus, which was late but that’s a long story that I don’t have room to tell, we walked through the market once and then watched hundreds of people, from all over the Detroit Metro area, coming and going with their bags of produce.


Finally aboard the bus, we wound our way east through town while our tour guide, Amy Swift, introduced herself. Amy is a native Detroiter, and here is part of her impressive bio from her Building Hugger website:
Detroit 061


Amy is an architect, writer, and artist living-working-advocating in the city of Detroit. In 2012, she formed Building Hugger to fill what she saw as a void in accessible renovation design focused on marginalized vernacular structures … currently lectures on the history and theory of 20th century architecture at Lawrence Technological University … completed a MS in Historic Preservation from Columbia University in NYC … boasts 7 years of experience in architectural practice and has worked previously in Chicago, New York, and San Francisco.





What, you may be asking, are “vernacular structures?” As part of my graduate studies in Geography and Land Use Planning at the University of Nevada, Reno, we looked at the vernacular landscape.

Thomas Schreiber 003
In essence, they are the everyday houses most people live in. No fancy architectural pedigree, just what people build when they need a roof over their heads. Think of a sod hut on the prairie, a shotgun shack in New Orleans, a humble bungalow, or a brick or clapboard box. Or this modest duplex on Ashland Avenue in Detroit, where my Dad grew up.




Michigan 020



This is what it looks like now. It was continuously occupied until recently.







Detroit 048

Our first cruise-through was Indian Village and the adjacent West Village, now part of a larger waterfront redevelopment area along the Detroit River. These two beautiful and proud historic neighborhoods boast an architecturally diverse collection of mansions, most of which have escaped the blight and obliteration of the vernacular structures just a few blocks away.


Detroit 049

Designed by a roster of the most famous architects of the time, these beauties were originally the homes of Detroit’s captains of industry and finance in the days before commuting was an option. Current owners are more diverse, yet united in their commitment to keeping their community vibrant. They even have an organization called HACK – Historical Area Cocktail Klub. I can totally respect that.


Detroit 051

A block or two away, we viewed an urban farming project which began as Hantz Farms and is now called Hantz Woodlands. 1500 mostly empty and derelict lots were sold to a developer who would turn it into a tree farm and agri-tourism business, providing jobs for locals and positioning Detroit as a leader in the Urban Farming Movement.


The lots are now being cleared of debris, and derelict structures removed, but as Amy pointed out, not much else has happened. The city’s planning and permit process (is it a process?) may have slowly ground down any innovative edge the project had compared to other cities, who are now jumping onto the urban farming bandwagon while Detroit falls behind. The politics of the project pitted the local residents, those who remained, against City Hall and corporate interests. So, as usual, there are hard feelings.

Detroit 052

Amy asks this question: Is this the best use of this prime land in the heart of the city? Where city services are available, and there is a still-vibrant downtown nearby, should these 1500 lots be downzoned to create a tangled woodland? Or should it remain a vernacular neighborhood, where people can afford to live and work in the city? You can’t create jobs in a city where there is no affordable place for workers to live.



Detroit 058

The tour lasted four hours. We passed many places Dad knew the history of. A friend or relative worked here, owned a building there, his father was baptized in that church, his grandparents had lived on that street.





Detroit 065

Amy took us to the Detroit Riverfront and its RiverWalk for a welcome bathroom stop, past “The Joe” Joe Louis Arena …






Detroit 068

… and on to the Michigan Central Station, where a doomed restoration has been in progress for years. The old post office where my Dad once sorted mail as a young man was across the street.




Detroit 075


We rounded a corner where Amy discussed the vacated CPA building that Dad’s good friend once owned and worked in as an accountant …










Detroit 078

… through Corktown with its Irish bars …






Detroit 079

… past the now-empty site of Tiger Stadium where a game of old-time baseball was being played, complete with period uniforms …





Detroit 084


… then into downtown, Hart Plaza, and Woodward Avenue …





Detroit 102
… into the partially redeveloped Brush Park neighborhood, Detroit’s deteriorated first “suburb,” where the classic beauties are stubbornly clinging on. Amy, who once lived here, told us that Tigers fans sometimes set up their tailgate parties on the porches of occupied homes, assuming the entire neighborhood is abandoned. It is not.



whole-foods-detroit



We finished the tour in cool, hipster Detroit Midtown, where Wayne State University is and Whole Foods has just moved in.










Detroit 060
We saw many vacant buildings. Amy told us stories of startups and NGOs that had moved in and tried to renovate, often with temporary success. She pointed out historic buildings that are victims of unwarranted demolition, redevelopments where historic buildings were tragically torn down, and historic buildings that are deteriorating and now unsalvageable.



Detroit 080
She spoke passionately about Detroit, and unabashedly about what she considers its “good” development and “shitty” development, the respectable developers who have the best interests of the city at heart, and the ones she doesn’t support, who are just trying to grab land without considering the long term effect on Detroit.



Detroit 097
Good development maintains healthy, vibrant neighborhoods with businesses open and people present on the streets. But Detroit’s downtown sports, cultural, and casino district, while it does bring people into the city, has created “dead zones” where the streets are empty between events.



Detroit 090One of the biggest problems is land speculators who buy property, making promises about what they will do. Then, they do nothing. Maybe they can’t get the permits they need. Maybe they never intended to do anything anyway. The building deteriorates, the tenants move out. The owner then claims he can’t afford the project any more. But he won’t sell the land, because he wants to hold out for a magic number, which seems to always be $1 or $2 million. Here is the story of the Wurlitzer Building.

The city itself is one of these major land holders, Amy told us. It owes itself millions in taxes. Civic cannibalism!

Detroit 105Wait. Yes, I did say that Detroit is not dead! We saw many places that were brimming with activity. We drove through pockets of cheerful new enterprises alongside the die-hard Detroit institutions and the nearby dross and despair. Is there hope for any big improvements in the near future? Most of the improvements that are now happening are at the grassroots level: small community gardens, neighbors getting together on projects, and often moving ahead without permits. Asking for forgiveness, not permission.


Detroit 109
We did, finally, get to a watering hole at the end of the tour. The entire group, 11 of us plus Amy and the tour conductor, bellied up inside the Temple Bar and ordered pitchers while the bus driver waited patiently. Chatting with the others, we found that they were an eclectic mix but none were tourists – this was not a touristy tour. Everyone there, as Dad later said, “Knew what they were getting into.”



Michigan 003

We arrived home just in time for the all-important cocktail hour. At 4 p.m. sharp each day Dad and I meet Bob, the 93-year-young next-door neighbor and former B-24 bomber pilot, on Bob’s patio. Dad makes himself a “see-thru,” a gin martini on the rocks with onions. It’s been his signature drink since I was small enough to sit on his lap where I could pluck the gin-soaked onions out and pop them into my mouth.


Dad and Bob shake their heads about the bankruptcy. It’s been a long time coming, and no big surprise to anyone who has been watching. Earlier, on the way home, I asked Dad where he placed the blame.

“It’s everybody’s fault,” he said. “There’s enough blame to go around.” And that, in a nutshell, is my Dad, the quintessential stoic Detroiter. When you have lived in the Detroit area for your whole life, you learn to accept what happens.

I agree with Michigan Radio's Jack Lessenberry on the key to Detroit’s success after bankruptcy. There are lessons to be learned from past successes, and Detroit's situation is as close as you can get to rebuilding after a war, but without the bombs. It’s not a simple solution, and it should not be just Detroit’s burden. Detroit is part of a greater metropolitan area. There needs to be a regional approach to solving problems and providing services, especially transportation. Which, of course, is the greatest irony of all. Detroit's automakers used their considerable power and influence to determine how transportation funding decisions were made, which led to the misunderstanding and dearth of mass transportation in the USA today. Now, Detroit is disconnected from the neighbor communities it needs. The city needs to connect to its outer rings, and move people into, out of, and through the city, if it is ever going to be great, or even good, again. 

Thanks for reading.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Summer Sailing in the USA–CA and NV

Lake Tahoe, San Francisco Bay, and Lake St. Clair
My seven weeks in the USA this summer were divided into three phases. In the first phase I was in Michigan with Dad, in the second phase I went to California and Nevada, and in the third phase I was back in Michigan. Lucky me, I was able to get some sailing in – as crew racing in local events, and as a spectator at a couple of international events.

Nevada 009
Upon my arrival in Nevada, I was invited by boat owner Greg Dyer, who saw on Facebook that I would be in town, to go Wednesday beer can racing on Lake Tahoe on his Melges 32, Intruder. The other crew members were three guys from North Sails in Minden, which is one of North’s big production lofts. The Swede named Pere looked about my age so I casually mentioned that I used to make sails way back in the 1970’s. For who? Turned out we both worked for the same sailmakers, just not at exactly the same time. In the small world of sailing, everyone knows the same people, so this isn’t really a surprise, but it’s still fun. The youngest guy, Rob, was very excited because he’d just been recruited to work for the Oracle America’s Cup campaign. Heady times!

Nevada 018

The wind was pretty gusty that evening, and we had some spinnaker issues so we didn’t win the race but nobody really cared. It’s a summer beer can. After the finish Greg said, “Anne, you drive.”



Nevada 021
So I took the helm while Greg went below to grab a round of beers. The spinnaker was up, it got windy, and pretty soon we were scooting along downwind, parallel to the east shore of Lake Tahoe … and away from our destination, the mooring ball at Marla Bay. Then the wind quit.


Intruder Lake Tahoe

Never mind, it was a beautiful evening and we still had a bit of daylight left. We ghosted around a bit, and I enjoyed my beer, trying not to spill it while keeping the wind vane pointing over my left shoulder. Next thing I knew we were moving again, and someone said, “Hey, how did you do that?” I looked forward, and we were headed right for Marla Bay. I pointed to the top of the mast and said “That’s my best friend.”




Me with A-Cup 1

A few days later, I was back in the San Francisco Bay Area, watching the AC 72’s battle it out for the Louis Vuitton Cup and the right to compete with Oracle USA for the America’s Cup. Anyone who has been watching this 34th America’s Cup unfold, from the announcement through the planning stages to the finals, which are still not over as I write this, knows what a roller coaster ride it has been.





Actually that’s a terrible analogy, because it’s been MORE than a roller coaster ride. This time, if Hollywood makes a movie about the America’s Cup and they base it on reality, it will be more exciting than anything they could have made up, with far more ups and downs than a roller coaster.

America's Cup LVC 005

But at the time I was there, things were looking grim. The Swedish team, Artemis, was out sailing for the first time since their tragic capsize and loss of life. They made a good showing but the Italians on Luna Rossa won both races, which were so short that they were over before I could get my head into the game.



SF Bay Area 007

The next week, I watched Emirates Team New Zealand and Luna Rossa race. Again, it was all over before my friend Lori and I could even finish our beer. The event venues were deserted minutes after the races were over. Although seeing the amazing AC 72’s in person was on my bucket list, overall the experience was a little underwhelming.



SF Bay Area 001

The timing of my trip prevented me from staying through the AC 34 Finals and, to be honest, the chatter from my local Bay Area friends was pretty darn negative. Nobody seemed to want Larry Ellison to win; they were rooting for the Kiwis! But then, everyone on both boats sounds like they are from Down Under anyway.




Besides all that, there is a difference between sailors who like multihulls and those who favor more traditional designs. Multihulls have a dangerous reputation among die-hard monohull sailors. They don’t handle well, and they can break apart. How fun is that? But, argue the proponents, they are so FAST! Or, if they are cruising sailors, they are so ROOMY! But if you read the history of the Auld Mug, none of this controversy is anything new.


americascupGETTYWhatever. Nobody is arguing any more that this America’s Cup isn’t breaking the mold, literally, and although I am half a globe away from the action I can hear people in San Francisco holding their breath, hoping for a race, and another and another because Oracle is now as good as ETNZ, which nobody thought could happen, and it’s some of the best, most exciting competition anybody has ever seen, in sailing or in any other sport, for that matter. If sports fans in the USA don’t catch on to sailing after this, then it’s hopeless, and they are just stuck in the dirt. This is X Games on steroids, and walking on water. Thank God Mark and I can watch it on the internet!


RYC Weds night 018

I did race a couple more beer can races in California. They were Wednesdays at Richmond Yacht Club, first with Commodore Gary Troxel on his Beneteau 423 Tiki Blue. Cap'n G is fun to race with and makes great post-race rum cocktails. But you have to be careful, or you could become "Troxelized."





RYC Weds night 020

Tiki is just across C-dock from Wildcard’s slip, which is sublet but empty now. I miss our boat!





J70_NYYC_0908_526B-1199-913-470-80-c

The next Wednesday I got a call from Peter, our Australian Wildcard tactician who came to visit and rode to the top of the Burj Khalifa in Dubai with Mark and me in 2011 right after we moved to the UAE. Peter just bought a new J70 with a partner. Did I want to sail? Heck, yeah!




J70_NYYC_0908_589-1200-913-470-80-c

The J70 is 22.75 feet long, trailerable with a lifting keel, and hyped as “the fastest growing sailboat class worldwide.” Mark and I are looking at the possibility of getting a small boat to sail on Lake Tahoe, and I appreciated having the opportunity to sail the J70 … the little boat that is “taking the world by storm!” J/70 photos http://jboats.com/j70-one-design-sailboat


Plus, I got see lots of friends at the RYC post-race grill-your-own dinner, where they always give out bottles of wine as prizes. I got a bottle for being the person who traveled farthest to the race.  It’s all good. 

And ... since I ran out of time and energy, the Lake St. Clair sailing will have to be another story.


Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Paris-on Foot, Bicycle, Metro, and Bateaux


Paris (535)
On Foot
If I could have one thing that I do not already have – and that isn’t much – I would want an invisibility cloak. Then, I could go around taking photos without being detected. I so badly wanted to photograph the Paris fashionistas who step, stroll, strut, totter, and sometimes stumble about in their amazing shoes. If I had my Harry Potter cloak, I would lurk near a Metro station, and then photograph them as they emerge and carefully make their way up the street. No way could these people be doing the kind of walking in Paris that Mark and I did. My feet and legs were killing me, even in my normal shoes. I saw women older than I (well, to me they looked older) walking gracefully on the uneven sidewalks in high heels, wearing short skirts or skinny jeans. I am in awe.


On Bicycle
Instead of walking or taking the Metro, some Parisians take advantage of Velib, the bicycle sharing system. I saw people pedaling around town, and decided to give it a try. Being an independent soul, often too doggedly independent for my own good, I chose to avoid the guided bicycle tour and strike out on my own. How hard could it be? The website said there were stations every 300 meters. It sounded so easy.
Paris (364)

There’s no booking. Just turn up and go! Go to terminal at a Vélib’ station. Follow on-screen instructions. Select a bike and enter bike number. Wait for the green light and signal and take your bike. The first 30 minutes of each trip are always free of charge. NEW: today, you can buy a ticket online; it’s easy, quick and secure!
 


Viola! I bought the one-day pass online which cost a mere 1.7 euros, and allowed me to use a number to get a bike without having to swipe my credit card each time. I could ride for 24 hours, and as long as I switched bikes every 30 minutes, that’s all I would pay. I struck out from my hotel to find a station, thereby making my first mistake, which was not going to the closest station, near my hotel.

My second mistake was assuming that, once I found the bike station, I would understand the directions. Instead, I found that the only part that is not in French is the line on the screen which asks you if you would like instructions in English. Unable to understand how to get a bike to release, I decided to call the Velib telephone number, which was an international call on my mobile phone. After three or four tries, with a phone call each time to the same guy who, although very nice, was difficult to communicate with, I finally got one of the bikes, which are heavy, “state of the art” monsters. By this time I was sweaty and frustrated, knowing that I had just spent $50 worth of minutes on my phone.

Paris (513)

The phone calls were my third mistake, but now I was heavily invested and unwilling to give up. I had 30 minutes in which to find another station and switch bikes, and I now realized that I had made a fourth, critical mistake. Choosing to avoid the crowds on Champs de Elysees, I was in a part of the city I had not already explored.

Paris (506)



Within three blocks I was in the middle of a busy roundabout, unsure of which way to go, with cars, buses, taxis and pedestrians everywhere, and no bike station in sight. The minutes were ticking by – it’s amazing how quickly you can burn up 30 minutes – and I decided to just head back to my original station. After all, if it was that hard to get the bike out, wouldn’t it also be hard to return it?


Turning around and backtracking was not as easy as it sounds. The streets of Paris are like the facets of a diamond, intricately connected. You are never far from where you want to be, but you cannot see it through the prism of the other streets. I was waiting for a red light, and a courier pulled up next to me on a motorbike. He smiled and said something in French, ending with a word that sounded like “trouble.”

“I speak English,” I said grumpily, which was my standard line when someone approached me. Inwardly I was thinking, “Yeah, you’re right, this is more trouble than it’s worth.” As he pulled away a moment later, it occurred to me that he actually said was “tres belle.”  He was flirting with me!

Paris (365)

I never did find the original station, so I turned toward the Arch de Triomphe and Hotel Elysees Bassano, knowing there was a station somewhere nearby, which I should have used in the first place. As a beautiful bridal couple posed for photos nearby, I jammed the bike into one of the empty posts, hot, sweaty, and praying for the green light to indicate the bike had been accepted. I went back to the hotel to reward myself with a glass of chardonnay, and to regroup.


That afternoon I walked to the Musee d’Orsay. Passing the bicycle stations, I was sorely tempted to give them another try, but I resisted. Instead, I made a mental note of the location of two stations, and on the walk back to my hotel later I had a carefully planned, successful ride. I just had to prove to myself that I could do it.

Paris (78)

Were I to do the Velib again, I would obviously do several things differently. But the truth is that, much as I hate to say it, as a tourist, I would not recommend the bike sharing. The main reason is that it wasn’t fun. There was too much traffic, too many intersections, the streets are bumpy, and there were people everywhere who came to a dead stop in front of me – taking photos, or talking, or texting on their mobiles, or lost like me.


Paris (549)

My experience was that you just cannot ride for pleasure and sightseeing in Paris. And, stations every 300 meters? Excuse moi. Not where I was riding. You have to know where they are hidden.




Paris (515)

The bikes look like they work well for Parisian locals who use them to ride between a Metro station and their place of work, or home. And I suppose they are fine for guided tours as well, although from what I saw it looked like the tours encounter a lot of people who are likely to step in front of them at any moment.




Paris (598)
On Metro
The next morning, prior to Mark’s arrival, I decided to finally activate my Metro ticket. It would have saved me a lot of steps, and a lot of leg pain, to have taken advantage of it sooner. But there were a couple of reasons why I didn’t. First, I was not destination-oriented; I wanted to walk so I could see all the sights.




Second, I didn’t want to spend my first days in Paris figuring out the metro. Sure enough, I went the wrong way on my first ride, which I quickly realized, no harm done. If I had spent more time in Paris I would have used the Metro much more, but it was crowded and I preferred walking, despite the pain and the rain.

Paris (550)
Mark and I were moving out of the luxury Sofitel Paris le Faubourgh and into a small hotel for the last two nights. We decided to take the Metro, but had trouble agreeing on which line and which station. Instead of going to the convenient Concorde station near the Sofitel and transferring, which was my now-expert opinion of what we should do - I knew exactly where it was - Mark wanted to walk several blocks to another station in the rain, dragging our luggage, so that we wouldn’t have to transfer.


The station he wanted to go to was a large two-in-one, and I felt that it would be even more confusing, once we even found it. Just between you and me, I think he was punishing me for bringing what was, in his opinion, too large a bag.

Paris (544)

I gave in, partly because I could use my new umbrella that says “Paris,” with has a picture of the Eiffel Tower on it. Also, because it was noon and we could stop for lunch in one of the little bistros.




Paris (546)

Lunch was lovely, and after that I was in a much better mood. For the record, the large, rambling underground station was confusing, we asked for directions twice, and I still think it would have been easier to just get on at Concorde and transfer. But it wouldn’t have been as much fun.


 
Paris (866)
When we emerged from the underground station – and by the way, not all of them have lifts, so we had to haul our bags up a lot of steps – we walked half way around the roundabout before realizing that our hotel was hidden in plain sight. The Hotel du Prony has the tiniest elevator ever; it can only fit one person with luggage, or two without, but we enjoyed our stay there. Five-star hotels are fine, but we liked the intimacy of chatting with the staff about culture and politics.

 
Paris (575)

We were in the Batignolles, a fashionable residential neighborhood just north of the Arc de Triomphe where Edouard Manet and his friends once made paintings of café life. It would have been the site of the Olympic Village, if Paris had hosted the 2012 Olympics instead of London. This relatively un-touristy area was the perfect place for us to unwind and do some low-key exploring, stopping in cafes and admiring the rose gardens.

 
There were two things I wanted to do in Paris with Mark. The first was to go to Montmartre, the highest hill in Paris, site of the Sacred Heart basilica, and a favorite haunt of artists including Dali, Modigliani, Picasso, Mondrian, and the Impressionists.

We started our walk to Montmartre by once again going in the wrong direction, not realizing it until we hit the ring road. This led to the kind of silent bickering that married people do, mentally tallying up reasons to blame the other person. Finally, we had to just blame the sun, for hiding behind the clouds and not telling us that we were going west, not east.

Paris (599)

Once we got going in the right direction, it was so obvious. The buildings were getting older and more quaint, not taller, squarer and newer. And we were going uphill. Soon we were crossing a bridge over the Montmartre Cemetery, the final resting place of many famous artists, scientists, musicians, performers, and writers. We would have liked to wander through, but instead continued on.


Paris (637)


There is a gondola ride on the south side from the bottom of the hill to the top, but we were approaching from the west so we walked all the way up, rounding a corner into the Place du Terte, a charming, albeit touristy spot where starving artists including Picasso and other modernist painters lived at the beginning of the 20th century. Today, artists set up in tiny spaces to paint, sell paintings, and draw portraits.
 
 
 
Paris (643)







The magnificent Basilica of the Sacré Cœur, or Sacred Heart, sits atop the hill, and we caught glimpses of its graceful domes around every corner.
 
 
 


Paris (617)


It was worth lingering outside on the steps, soaking up the sun, crowd-watching, and enjoying the fine, if somewhat hazy, view of Paris spreading out below. We entered the church just as mass was finishing, and as we were leaving a group of nuns entered, took seats behind the altar, and were lifting their voices in song.
 
 
 
 
 






Paris (645)


I was also hunting for a glimpse of one of the last two windmills that once ground grain, plaster, and grapes. We walked up and down some side streets and just as I was getting ready to give up we saw it, poking up through the buildings and trees.
 
 
 
 
 





Paris (649)

Mission accomplished, we walked downhill and through the red light district, past the Moulin Rouge (I might have to finally watch that movie) and then south toward the river.
 
 
 



On Bateaux
Paris (695)I had saved the boat ticket that came with my Paris Passport package so that we could do the bateaux ride on the Seine together. That was the other must-do with Mark.The bateaux route goes east upriver, passing the Louvre, Musee d’Orsay, and Notre Dame Cathedral, around Ile de la Cite and Ile de Ste. Louis, the two islands upon which Paris was founded, then back downriver past the docks, turning around again past the Eiffel Tower before heading back upriver to the landing. We crossed under bridges at least 30 times. 
 

Paris (690)

I realized when we boarded that it was a very special Friday – the last day of school for the local children. A large group, with their exhausted looking teachers, was on the boat with us. The kids were dashing all around, and yelling and waving each time we crossed under a bridge. All along the route, people stopped to wave and cheer, which I think is probably a normal thing, every day.


And why not? Gliding along on the Seine, only seems appropriate to be celebrating just being in Paris.
Merci beau coups for reading!