Although we are
staying in Nice, our first day in southern France was spent in Cannes. We took
a thirty-ish minute train ride there, and then wandered off into le vieux
Cannes du Suquet (translated: old part of town). As Miel wants me to include, I
remarked that it was “like California…but Romans lived here.” With the Film
Festival going on, it did feel a bit like I would imagine Hollywood to be, but
with actual history. We managed to stumble upon the main historical attraction
of Cannes, the Eglise de Notre Dame de l’Espérance. Judging by the scaffolding,
we assumed it was undergoing renovation. The hill atop which it sits provided a
lovely view of Cannes. We encountered a tour group and stole part of their
tour, covertly listening to the guide explain the history of the Suquet (if
you’re interested, after the Romans left, it was a tiny fishing village until
it was rediscovered by some British dude, who built a house and bought land).
| Lots of tall apartment buildings and narrow roads in Old Cannes. |
| Clock tower of the church. |
We then walked
towards the large mass of white tents near the shore, which we found out were
all for the Film Festival. There were many, many official people with name
tags, presumably press and others involved in film stuff. We took pictures of
famous people’s handprints and walked on the red carpet. It was very exclusive
and secure and busy.
| The red carpet, sans celebrities until tonight. |
We meandered
along la Croisette for a while, until we spotted a mini-train tourist tour
attraction, which we then did. We heard about each of the big famous hotels,
all the famous people who stayed in them, and the movies that were filmed
there. The tour also took us back up the hill to the church that we had found
on our own, so we took more pictures there. We passed many cafés and noted that
most of them advertised “Service non stop!” letting the tourists know that the
establishment would not close in the middle of the day. Miel thought this was
an interesting cultural note because they did not mention this in London or
Paris.
As we felt obligated
to touch the Mediterranean, we found a non-exclusive swathe of beach, took off
our shoes, and let “the end of the waves…what do you call that? That last bit
of wave” wash over our feet. We desanded and dried our feet using different
methods of choice and headed away from the general commotion of the beach.
| "It's just...so...blue..." |
Our next stop
was the Cimetière du Grand Jas, located about two miles (uphill) from the
coast. It was really big and pretty. As we went to investigate a particularly
large mausoleum, we saw a solemn procession heading our way and quickly scampered
away with an exclamation of “Funeral! Awkward!” Miel has kindly offered to
write this part for me (read: started listing things I had to include). “Things
you have to mention about the cemetery. You have to mention that we learned
things about grave architecture, specifically the knobs that permit one to open
the tomb for the purpose of adding in more [dead people]. You can paraphrase
what I say next. That way, grammatically, it will make sense.” (There is so
much meta-discussion going on now that I can’t properly paraphrase, so we’ll
move on to more grave stuff.) We made inferences about the circumstances of
people’s deaths (wars, etc.), Miel translated various inscriptions, we found
one very wordy and indignant family’s monument (they had three exclamation
points in a row at one point, although, to be fair, they were describing their
innocent daughter’s random murder), and found a note written to thieves who had
presumably stolen something off the gravestone. We didn’t take pictures, as it
was forbidden. Sorry. We did, however, preemptively dodge several mourners out
of respect.
| Beach! More blue! |
One of our
DEVOTED READERS should go through and calculate the percentage of each blog
that is random quotations and arguments, versus actual content regarding the
events of our day. (“You have to mention it was my idea!”) It was Miel’s idea.
Additional
reports (Nice!) forthcoming.
-Sara & Miel
P.S. As of today, we have realized just how close we are to Italy. If we had a car, we could get across the border in about half an hour. No wonder everything is printed in Italian as well as French and English. As the tour guide pointed out, you can see the foothills of the Alps from Cannes as well.
Love you! Love your blog! So if you walk to the corner of the alps and Italy and you stopped for a snack would it be a crepe, antipasti, or a brat?
ReplyDelete-Your MOST Devoted Reader
We had a villa in the foothills one of the summers we worked at Sophie antipolis. Glad you are having a blast and watch out for those Italian drivers!
ReplyDeleteGreat picture of you and the Mediterranean! It IS really blue! Hope you're enjoying the dorm lifestyle of the hostel back in Nice!
ReplyDeleteWhat a perfect day! I am glad you found a place where you could dip your toes. So, unlike Ocracoke, there are no foot-washes?
ReplyDeleteso much blue indeed! you two are gorgeous.
ReplyDeleteThe south of France will always be my favorite, even if you're skipping the best city.
ReplyDeleteThis post is 19% random. Calculation was done by wordcount, including title, captions, and post-script, but not photos.
ReplyDeleteI have an interesting idea of how to use this information, but I'll keep it to myself for now (see Heisenberg).
I cannot express how pleased I am that you actually went through and calculated this. When do I get to find out??
DeleteAlso, Sara wants to know if you have other things to do, like build satellites? I hope CA is going well!!!
I. am. not. surprised.
Delete