Friday, December 30, 2022

FRANCE 2022 Trip report Day 6: Drive Annecy to Avignon, Nimes Esplanade Charles-de-Gaulle, Arènes de Nîmes [amphitheater]

  

 

DAY 6, SEPTEMBER 21, 2022


STAY 

Avignon 1 night, Résidence Les Cordeliers 49 rue du Portail Magnanen, Avignon,


SIGHTS 

Drive Annecy to Avignon, Nimes arena


OUR CHOICE

Our goal was to enjoy the Cote d'azur/French riviera after the Alps region. The drive from annecy to antibes was a bit too long . Wanted to break it up, ended up going to avignon for a day though it looks a detour. Provence region would have been great in lavender season, though crowded. May be june will be good with the sight of the hardy lavendines without the peak crowd.


Anyway, we checked out from annecy, drove to avignon. Greeted by the lovely sight of the ramparts


AVIGNON CITY WALLS/ Remparts d'Avignon


The city centre of Avignon is entirely enclosed by 4.3 kilometres of walls., 8m high. ranked as UNESCO World Heritage,
The walls are crowned with a battlement which protect a walkway (chemin de ronde). gaps or indentations, which are often rectangular, occur at intervals to allow for the launch of arrows or other projectiles from within the defences. These gaps are termed "crenels"
were started in 1355 during the Papacy of Pope Innocent VI, to protect the city from the assaults by the roving bands of mercenaries. They were finished in 1370 under Pope Urban V.

Went inside the walls and reached the street where Our apt is. 


CAUGHT UP IN ONE WAY MAZE INSIDE WALLED CITY

It was one way, but quite broad and hardly a vehicle or 2 were coming. I told son to just drive in to our apt, a few seconds will not matter. He decided to go round. Bad idea to drive the narrow lanes in the old city, there were electronic stumps and we were so lost. A sanitary worker and another guy used their badge to lower the electronic stumps, 2 other guys gave clear instructions to get out of the maze. We were finally back at our apt. They were having lunch. So we had ours in the car and then checked in.


Apartment Résidence Les Cordeliers 

OUR APT WAS located in the historic centre of Avignon and is a 10-minute walk from the Avignon Central Railway Station, Palais des Papes, the main market square and Avignon Old Town

Nice apartment with some niggles 

Liked · location Inside the walled city. Big openable windows.

Disliked · Kitchen had only a small saucepan. And it had 2 hotplates for the stove tops. Luckily we had our own utensils and we managed. They are closed from 12-2pm for lunch. We had to wait when we arrived. They gave us directions to the appart-hotel with street names, which are not the easiest to read; so we ended up getting stuck inside the old city with one-way streets to negotiate. Wasted time navigating through.

Parking is free inside the walls , 7pm - 8am. Tough to get spots, but we were lucky enough to find a spot.

There is a huge geyser in the tiny bathroom; blocking a bunch of space.

DRIVE TO NIMES

anyway to continue our day, Went on a drive to Nimes. .. 44 kms. Parked and walked to the arena.


Arènes de Nîmes: Ancient Roman Amphitheater

Roman monuments are scattered throughout the city, and some are the best-preserved in France. In fact, Nîmes is known as "La Rome Française" ("The French Rome"). Our target was the most famous.

the Arènes (Amphitheater) dates back to the 1st century CE. At the center of town, this impressive 133-meter by 101-meter outdoor theater is one of the best preserved of all the existing Roman amphitheaters.

The Nîmes Amphitheater was designed to provide seating for 24,000 spectators, while 124 exits allowed the entire audience to file out of the theater in a few minutes. Detailed embellishments decorate the façade, which features 60 graceful arches adorned with Doric columns.

Very impressive from outside, inside there were a lot of metal railings to support and we felt the theaters we had seen in Turkey had the better interiors renovated authentic, with no new eye sore  metal railings like Nimes arena..

Aspendos here

https://adventuretrav.blogspot.com/2022/01/turkey-trip-report-day-11-antalya-perge.html

Aphrodisias here

https://adventuretrav.blogspot.com/2022/01/turkey-trip-report-day-15-aphrodisias.html

Hieropolis here

https://adventuretrav.blogspot.com/2022/01/turkey-trip-report-day-16-pamukkale.html


back to Nimes arena












after climbing up all the levels, we got out. 

 Nimeño II  statue in front of the theater

this statue honors the brave matador Christian Montcouquiol aka Nimeño II
his story is as follows
Christian Montcouquiol was the brother of Alain Montcouquiol, a bullfighter known as "Nimeño I", SO HE WAS II.. From 1975  Christian appeared in arenas in Spain, France, and Latin America  as a matador.

On May 14, 1989 in Nîmes, Nimeño II and Portuguese torero Victor Mendes were scheduled to fight six bulls. Mendes was injured early in the match, and Nimeño II won renowned for defeating all six bulls single-handedly.

On September 10, 1989 in Arles, Nimeño II was hurled into the air by a bull named Pañolero. He landed on his head, fracturing his cervical vertebrae and suffering paraplegia. After months of rehabilitation, Nimeño regained the use of his legs and right arm, but his left arm remained paralyzed. On November 25, 1991, Nimeño II committed suicide by hanging himself in his garage. his memory has been honored in many places



Monument aux morts de la guerre de 1914-1918 à Nîmes/ Monument to the dead of the Gard during the First World War 



Esplanade Charles de Gaulle is an urban garden of nearly one hectare in the city centre. 

Esplanade Charles-de-Gaulle

The Pradier fountain


The 'Pradier fountain', carved in white marble by James Pradier, has been the centre-piece of the Esplanade since 1845. The work of Pradier adorning the Invalides, Concorde and l’ Etoile, Jardin des Tuileries in Paris. The Pradier fountain is an allegory of Nimes, a city surrounded by four rivers of the region. 

 Look for the female figure on the monumental fountain with a Maison Carrée on her head. Nîmes the beautiful is framed by four watercourses: two nymphs (the Nemausa spring and Fontaine d'Eure) and two heavily muscled giants (the Rhône and the Vidourle).
.


 Several large buildings surround the Esplanade: Arena in the West, the Court In the North and l'église Sainte-Perpétue et Sainte-Félicité (Church of Holy Eternity and bliss) in the East.


we enjoyed watching the lovely carosel rotating with happy kids on the many animals. Caught it in a video
we were caught in the evening rush hour traffic and made it back to Avignon after wasting quite some time,
The few paid parking slots in our apt complex were full. Parking is free within the walled city 7 pm -8.30am, we  managed to find a free parking spot  inside the walls along the perimeter . 

report continues HERE

Thursday, December 29, 2022

FRANCE 2022 Trip report Day 5: Megève, Chamonix, Semnoz, Annecy lake

 DAY 5, SEPTEMBER 20, 2022


STAY 

Annecy apartment continued 


SIGHTS: 

Megeve, Chamonix, Semnoz, Annecy lake

We wanted to enjoy Alpine beauty. We started off on a drive to Megève


Megève

The charming resort town was once a humble farming village dating back to the 12th century.
However, the Rothschild family saw its potential as a skiing destination in the early 1900s,
elevating it to the luxury status that it now enjoys.


visiting the Haut Val d’Arly Heritage Museum, the Church of Saint Jean-
Baptiste, and the historic town square were our goals. but roads were blocked and there was no parking. we decided to move on



Chamonix 

Chamonix (officially Chamonix-Mont-Blanc) is a resort in the Haute-Savoie region of France, bordering Italy, at the foot of Mont Blanc.
There was free parking. We walked to the cable car station but the webcam was showing zero visibility at the top. We got out of the queue and strolled the village



The Arve (French: L'Arve} river flowing through Chamonix

Rising in the northern side of the Mont Blanc massif in the Alps, close to the Swiss border, it receives water from the many glaciers of the Chamonix valley (mainly the Mer de Glace) before flowing north-west into the Rhône on the west side of Geneva, 
It was a pretty sight


Jacques Balmat memorial. 

 one would assume the statues of 2 men looking toward the mountain range are memorials for the 1st 2 climbers of Mt Blonc. We are only partially right
Jacques Balmat (1762-1834) was one of the pair who first reached the peak of Mont Blanc. The statue, erected in 1887, is a popular photo spot, looking south so that Mont Blanc forms the background. But where's his climbing companion Michel-Gabriel Paccard? Not there: the second figure is de Saussure, who'd put up the prize for the ascent, and who Balmat later guided to the summit. Balmat was a very talented mountaineer, but overplayed his celebrity, and wrote Paccard out of history. Not until 1986 did Paccard earn a statue, sitting alone with his alpenstock on ave Michel Croz near the Alpine Museum



Eglise Saint-Michel de Chamonix 1709
















DRIVE BACK



SEMNOZ

we  drove up to Semnoz, narrow, windy roads... the view was quite underwhelming.




we were back to our apt. we then drove to the lake.

Lac d’Annecy

The pristine Lac d’Annecy, one of the largest lakes in France, sits among snow-capped mountains
and is known as the cleanest lake in Europe.





The Pont des Amours (Lovers’ Bridge) is a beautiful iron bridge by the Lac d’Annecy, which joins the Jardins de l'Europe and Pâquier 




we went back to the apt

called it a day.

report continues here