Tag Archive: france


Paris

I’m in Paris now, and indeed do have a room at Grand Hôtel Lévêque on Rue Cler – it’s excellent! I’m glad I got a room here, it’s very close to everything as far as I can tell, and it seems to be a very popular part of town (lots of restaurants and cafés open late and such.)

The train ride over was great as well, it was my first time on a TGV, and they are seriously fast. Traveling at 160+MPH is quite the thing to do. I hope we can have trains like that in the U.S. sometime in the future! Quite a step up from the Talgo I took from BCN to Montpellier, and even the Teoz’ that I’ve ridden on elsewhere.

More pictures and updates tomorrow, for now I’ve had a great dinner and I’m ready for bed so I can wake up early and continue enjoying Paris tomorrow! Au revoir!

The walking route from my hotel to the Eiffel Tower

Hotel to Eiffel Tower

Arles

Arles is an excellent little French town, and it was a great introduction to France!

I went to Arles based mainly on a one-liner in Rick Steve’s Europe through the backdoor book, “Take a train to Arles” I think is all it said. Good enough for me! I researched it online a bit, and it looked like a neat place – roman ruins throughout a little french villa, and it’s where Van Gogh lived for a while in the later part of his life. That’s exactly what it is, and it’s quite interesting.

I arrived a bit later in the evening due to my not catching an early train from Montpellier, and I didn’t have a map – so initially I went down what seemed like a bit of a bad road (and I later realized it went in the opposite direction I wanted). Some kids asked me for money, but that’s all and I soon walked back and found my way to the city center, where I found a hotel. There were two hotels open when I arrived, one for 55€/night, and another that seemed more like just a bar – I went in to the bar looking one, told them I was interested in a room – and I was quickly given a key and told the price of 32€/night – I looked at the room, and it was reasonable enough (especially for me – I don’t need anything fancy on this trip) so I went with it. It was called “Hotel Paris / Bar Americaine”. There were no Americans there, but there were a lot of Frenchmen drinking the anise scented absinthe – hopefully they don’t go as insane as Van Gogh!

The city center is fairly small, and very walkable. I had breakfast at a great little place where it looked like a mother, father, and their son where working – they were very nice and made me feel like I knew how to speak French :)

There’s several points of interest to check out in Arles, a roman theatre from the first century B.C., a large roman amphitheater from 90 A.D., Van Gogh’s hospital where he did many of his paintings, the underground catacombs called the “Cryptoportico”, and many other things that I didn’t make it to, like Van Gogh’s bridge, which I would have liked to see – but it’s a bit far out from the city center.

Overall I very much liked Arles, it was a small town, with lots of friendly people and neat things to see. And excellent food! Wonderful pastries, bread, cheese, and coffee.

Le Rhône - The river that runs through Arles

Le Rhône - The river that runs through Arles

View the map of my photos in Arles!

Montpellier

My train from Barcelona took me to Montpellier, France – from 8:45 to 13:30 or so. Once I was at Montpellier, I had to figure out how to get to Arles – it’s a stop on the train to Marseille, so that seemed easy enough.
Montpellier is a fairly small town, but it was incredibly busy – it’s a university town, and at the time it was chocked full of students and their parents it seemed. I asked at the information booth what I needed to do to get to Arles – I was told I needed a reservation, so I went to the ticket counter to get one. There I was told that a reservation was not needed! Just hop on the train that says “Arles” at 15:30 – Okay I said (this time the person spoke english, so it was more clear) – and I wandered around a bit.
There were no trains that said Arles near that time, so, I went back to the information booth and asked again – I was assured again that I do need a reservation! Back to the ticket counter. I got some help from another person, who said I did indeed need a reservation, and that I had missed the 15:30 train, but that I could get on a 17:04 train – because of the miscommunication she gave me a first class reservation for free, and I got to check out Montpellier in my newfound time, excellent!
I enjoyed Montpellier quite a bit – a bit too much though, I found myself thinking I knew where I was 20 minutes to my departure time – and ended up going in a few good circles, and then finding that I didn’t have small enough change to purchase a tram ticket! With the help of some nice locals, I found out how to get to the train station on foot (up a bunch of stairs, with my backpack on – oof!) and I got to the platform with 3 minutes to spare, no problem! :)

Tam Bleu

One of two tram lines that run in Montpellier

Of course, I took some photos while I was there, and my GPS unit is still working like a charm! Check out the photos on a map here, and you can see what I saw!

Here’s a link to a map of all my photos from Montpellier

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