samedi 4 août 2007

Summing it up


Laying low at the Louvre.... peace and quiet. We miss our marvelous loft with all the skylights.
What a lovely 3 month long time of peace, stillness and refreshment. Truly a blessing. Our last few days included a revisit to Chris' favorite.. the Cluny Museum. Chris had a look at the Pomoidou after Judy and Ben & Jens good reports of the current exhibit. We regularily greeted our hostess at our Place de la Sorbonne Pizza restaruant: we will miss her smiling face, as well as our square. The long long trip home was blessed with first class seats going over the Atlantic. We enjoyed the film, Paris, Je T'Aime at the theatre (in English) Au Revoir, Paris.

mardi 26 juin 2007

Time to go home...

Our Vancouver neighbor Judy has been travelling Italy and Germany for the month of June, and joins us here in our final week.

I found this article in the Financial Times which says alot! about Paris!

‘I would be an exemplary Parisian’By Michael Steinberger

It is often said that one of the pleasures of travel is going home. But what if you do not want to go home? What if the place you visit feels more like home than home itself? That, for better or worse, is what Paris has been for me since I first set eyes on the city as a slack-jawed 13-year-old. A quarter-century on, this very peculiar sensation – this feeling of being a displaced Parisian, inexplicably marooned 3,000 miles away in north-eastern America from where I was meant to be – has not only remained, it has become a nuisance. I am fortunate enough to get to Paris fairly regularly and I derive as much pleasure as ever from her. Yet there is now a bittersweet edge to each visit. That is because I badly want to stay and I realise that the possibility of doing so is growing ever more remote.

There are, to be sure, worse fates than never being able to call Paris home and Paris is not exactly an original choice as objects of affection go. But – and to reword the Samuel Johnson formulation – if a man is incapable of being seduced by Paris, it means he probably has a heart of stone. Most of us want beauty and pleasure in our lives and Paris, as no other city on earth, satisfies these very basic human impulses. Some people can visit Paris, soak up its unsurpassed grandeur and charm, and happily return home. I have never been able to do that. Ever since that maiden trip to Paris, I have always felt that to live elsewhere was settling for less.

But, for me, Paris has always provoked more than just desire. I vividly recall all the touristy things I did on that introductory visit to Paris but what I mostly recall is this odd sensation of belonging. The city had a magnetic appeal that I’d never before felt. A few weeks after returning home, a family friend asked me what I had thought of Paris. Without hesitation, I said that I loved it and wanted to live there, an answer that she seemed to find amusing. Thirteen years later, over one exhilarating summer weekend in Paris, a friend became a lover who, in turn, became my wife, a fact that has only deepened my conviction that Paris and I were destined to be together.

Sadly, we are not; with a young family and ageing parents, I recognise that I may never get the opportunity to live in Paris. It is a realisation that gnaws at me, especially when I meet expats who are lucky enough to reside in Paris. As if picking at a scab, I cannot resist asking them if they enjoy living in Paris (as if the answer is really in doubt), and if I am feeling particularly masochistic, I will ask how they managed to pull off this coup, which will inevitably set me to coup-plotting. Reality eventually intrudes and when I grudgingly concede that there is no practical way to live in Paris now or in the foreseeable future, I am left marinating in my own jealousy – Paris Envy, you might say.

The fact that I am not living in Paris is not just my loss, however, it is also Paris’s loss, because I am quite certain I would be an exemplary Parisian. I doubt there are very many natives who partake so fully of the city’s pleasures. When I’m in Paris, I usually stay on the Left Bank, at a friend’s flat near the Mouffetard market, the oldest and most cherished of the city’s outdoor food markets. If I happen to be there on a Saturday, I will roll out the door at around 9am or 10am, take a brisk stroll through the Mouffetard and then head off in the direction of Saint-Germain-des Prés. My first stop there is usually Gérard Mulot, the superb pâtissier, for a slice of his cherry clafoutis – not the healthiest of breakfasts but certainly among the tastiest. I will then usually pop in to see my friend Georges at Bacchus et Ariane, a cute little wine shop with a deceptively good inventory in the Marché St Germain. Inevitably, Georges will have an open bottle and several empty glasses at the ready .

I typically have lunch at Le Comptoir du Relais, Yves Camdeborde’s cubbyhole of a bistro, a meal that will invariably consist of his superb salade niçoise, chased down with a glass of a Loire red. From there, it is a short walk past the St Sulpice church to the boutique of Pierre Hermé, Paris’s most acclaimed pâtissier, where my usual dessert awaits: a praline millefeuille. In my considered judgment, it is the single greatest pastry known to man, which is reason enough to make it a daily habit when in Paris.

For me, life in Paris revolves mainly around three things: food, wine and walking. Sufficiently fortified, I will set out from Pierre Hermé in the direction of the Seine. My usual route takes me across the Pont du Carrousel, immortalised by Rilke (and featured, more recently, in The Da Vinci Code). No matter how often I cross this broad, elegant bridge, which runs perpendicular to the Louvre, I always come to a halt in the middle and the view in both directions never fails to cause a tingling sensation. Once on the Right Bank, I might head towards the Marais or walk along the Rue de Rivoli towards the Place de la Concorde and the Champs-Elysées or meander around the Palais Royal. There is no agenda, other than just savouring the views and savouring the time to think. Paris is easy to walk in and a pleasure to navigate by foot.

I end up retracing my steps back to the Mouffetard but with one slight detour into the Luxembourg Gardens. If there is another park in the world that manages to combine as much majesty, tranquillity, and humanity, I’ve never encountered it. I’ve always loved the Luxembourg Gardens but it has become even more sacred to me since I brought my son (now six) there as a 10-month-old.
At that time, he was just managing to get himself off the ground and we set him alongside the little boating pool in the middle of the gardens. As he stood there, tenuously holding on to the side of the pool and excitedly watching the regatta of toy boats, he turned around and cast a huge smile in our direction that we, for once, managed to catch on film. Returning to the gardens now, I find myself gazing at that spot and wishing desperately that my family were with me.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007

samedi 23 juin 2007

Fete de la Musique

Wednesday June 21st, the longest day of the year, is the day/evening & night of this city wide festival. Free concerts are performed in multiple venues, accompanied by professionals and amateurs on any corner anywhere! Jazz, rock, gospel, rapp, spontaneous singing along side traditional musica in churches, halls, parks - any place with an outlet for an amp. Streets were swarming with people all night, and cars had no hope of progression. The carnival atmosphere was much like New Orleans, but everyone was not drunk. Much to our pleasure and surprise, the booming in our apartment stopped precisely at midnight, and the next morning the streets full of rubbish were miraculously clean. Ah, Paris

mercredi 20 juin 2007

Sunset on the Seine


Computers-R-us

Ben and Chris viewed an exhibit at the top of La Defense on the history of computers. You've come a long way, baby.
This carried as much information as one email message of today.
"We are two wild and crazy guys".

vendredi 15 juin 2007

Ready, Aim, Fire!

After a major amount of bureaucracy, paperwork, telephone calls, and much patience, the gene gun arrived. With 2 weeks left, Chris and his colleague, Christian, are looking forward to some exciting preliminary experiments. Ready, Aim, Fire!

Ben & Jen, North Coast trip



Ben and Jen arrived June 4th. They have done the walking shopping museum subway thing here in Paris. We went to the Jazz Festival at Chateau de Vincennes on the east end of Paris with its excellent gardens.We took 2 days and went north to the coast. Fun driving for Chris - we now know that the dotted lines between the lanes on a highway are for the motor bikes to zip by on, with perhaps of foot of space to spare. Saw the Bayeux Tapestry and ancient town, The US Cemetary and museum at Omaha beach. (Watch the beginning of the movie Saving Private Ryan).
"Here rests in honored glory a comrade in arms unknown but to God."Overnight in a "B&B", which you can see on the hill against the trees. Surrounded by extensive gardens, inground pool and full of antiques. Rare homemade jams x16 for breakfast, as we recovered from the black mold.
The advertised diner "at the beach" was a car park complete with trucks behind the berm. We just had to keep laughing. Yummy moules et frites!
Mount St Michele its usual excellent self.
"Dont look down Mom.." its a long way down!

dimanche 3 juin 2007

Montmartre and more

Whew.. that is a long climb on a busy Saturday crowded with tourists! Chris is playing Waldo.. where is he?
The back of the church has a beautiful garden with grape vines and wisteria. Very peaceful place for lunch.

Chris thinks TIME is elusive.. along with Salvador Dali.
Dali had a thing about snails as well as time. They go slow.. so he added a flight of foot to compare. He likes the extreme of the hard shell and their soft bodies. Hi Kate!

St. Genevieve is the patron saint of Paris. This church is just in our square by the Pantheon. Amazing how light stone can look.

Chris visits the University of Ghent, learns about Belgian Beer and the Naus Brewery

I visited a colleague at the University of Ghent for a couple of days, to present a research seminar and learn about Belgian Beer. I had a chance to practice my dutch. I stayed at a renovated 17th century monastery, which was full of white peonies and Gregorian chants. The city of Ghent is amazing, full of medieval charm. The town centre consists of fantastic buildings around canals and old churches.
There are unique restaurants - the "old gallows" and "The Noose" (is there a problem here? One interesting pub we visited is called The Endless Prayer. When you are ready to leave, the waiter brings you the bill hidden inside a bible.






It displayed old signs on the wall – and one of these was for Naus beer!

mardi 29 mai 2007

Chris at a meeting in SALAMANCA, Spain

I was invited to participate in this meeting of the European Society for Neurochemistry, held her in Salamanca last week. It is a pretty amazing place – reminds me of Venice without the canals. And it is also like walking into a Renaissance painting! Here is a description I read; “Salamanca is known as "La Dorada", or "Golden City", because of the golden glow of its sandstone buildings. This charming town is untouched in its architectural purity. It is one of the five Spanish cities declared by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site. Salamanca boasts a student population of almost 35,000 (approximately 6,000 of whom are foreigners) which provides a lively atmosphere and nightlife. “ I stayed in one of the old colleges, which you can see on the left. The Roman Bridge used to be the main entrance into Salamanca. It was an essential part of the Roman Silver Route (la Ruta de la Plata), which ran from the silver mines in the North, in Astorga, to Mérida. The University of Salamanca dates back to 1218, which makes it the oldest in Spain and the third oldest university in Europe, and the fourth oldest in the world.

Salamanca's Plaza Mayor (bottom picture), in addition to being one of the main monuments of Spanish Baroque, is the heart of the city. It is, without a doubt, one of the most beautiful Spanish squares. The square has 88 arches, its spandrels decorated with blazons of distinguished characters of Spain's history: Spanish kings, saints, discoverers, conquerors and wise men. Oh yes, and they also have a picture of Franco as part of their history. It was a great place to have a glass of wine with some tapas.

Jane's wallet

Quite a long time ago I purchased a wallet at the market. After a week I decided I wanted to have a larger one, so we went back and were pleased that the merchant would exhange it. About 10 days later, when my Master Card did not work, I went to take cash out and realized I did not have my TDCT bankcard. After searching everywhere there was only one place it could be. Finding him was not easy.. and there it was - the original small wallet. Jammed into one of the compartments was my card ... no one had bought the wallet! We had prayed we would found it, and Chris was so glad he bought himself a wallet as well. So, it took another 3 weeks for him to return to our market, and today I was glad to meet him again and capture him with the camera. He is holding my bankcard in his hand...

lundi 28 mai 2007

Chris's Gene Gun Gaffaw


One of my objectives during my time in Paris was to work out the use of our Gene Gun, a device designed to deliver genes to cells. Seemed like a good project on which I could “focus” with the “aim” of “targeted” research. So I had it “fired” over to Paris. It arrived here in Paris about a month ago – and it is still at customs. They don’t seem to know how to process this “item”, so there have been many negotiations by phone, still ongoing, and hopefully soon it will be delivered.

Maybe there is something wrong with my phone?

samedi 26 mai 2007

Parc de Bagatelle

1200 species of roses, 320 iris, 155 peonies +++ what a place! This was the week of the RBG Chelsea Flower show.. this saved us the ticket over to the UK.
WELL worth the walk!

Looking for a girfriend...
Look at all those peonies!Who is that in the wysteria?