First, brunch a
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t a corner bistro - next, Montmartre.
We took the train to Place des Abbesses found in our travel book, that train station is amazing. I advise taking the elevator - am not quite sure how I survived the stairs which seemed to go on forever before we finally saw the light and felt a breath of fresh air. Not something you need before tackling the hills.
This was to be the day of the Montmartre Grape Harvest Festival where we hoped to see the area around Sacré-Coeur including French people. We tried to take the least strenuous rout to the church - avoiding steep streets as much as we could and discovered to our delight that the area is full of quirky shops filled with all sorts of fun things. When we finally got to the church we were quite laden with shopping bags but it didn't stop us from adding to them. There were rows of stalls selling wine and delicatessen from all over France - sold by the bottles, glass, kilos, and piece. And the place was crowded. Painters, musicians, french, foreigners, old, young, and everything in between. We walked between stalls, tasted plenty and bought some but mostly we just enjoyed the festivities that were going on around us. Unfortunately, the wine from the area was finished - was hoping to get a bottle of that although I have no idea even if it had been for sale. If there is a next time I will make sure to take the whole day off to spend at the festival.
We had made a reservation that evening at a Michelin restaurant - the Lasserre - and had been looking towards that all the trip. It is very formal, but excellent service - excellent food - and the wine was great as well. I wish I knew the name of any of the courses I ate that night but I really couldn't understand any of it. We simply ordered a variety dish and it was delicious. A course of six or seven small meals that seemed to arrive one after another throughout the evening.
Later, we took a taxi to Café de Flore - again. I had seen an ad at one train station or another promoting a jazz festival and was really keen to go. Unfortunately, no one seemed to know anything about it and we arrived at the café just before it close and were told that mostly everything closes at that hour. To avoid the terrible taxi line we took a stroll around the area and found a bar were English rugby fans were celebrating their victory from a match earlier in the day. Having joined the celebration for a while we decided to walk towards the hotel and try to catch a cab on the way. It was one of the worst decisions ever. We somehow ended up at the Louvre - not quite the direction we were heading - and didn't find any taxis until we were nearly at the hotel at which point I had taken off my heels having decided that being cold was better. Could have wept from joy at seeing that taxi and bribed him quite shamelessly into abandoning his current assignment.
Taxis or high heels are quite definitely not the way to go in Paris.
the holiday looked great too
my name is mba sillah i like friends,ok bey for now,