Monday 16 September 2013

Baby Steps in the French Riviera

Unfortunately, all my photos of Monaco and Cannes are on my Dad’s camera, so I’ll share photos of my apartment instead.

Cannes (Day Trip - Sept. 5, 2013)
View from Apartment (Personal Photo)
Once we had settled in to the apartment, my family and I decided to explore how the buses operated, so on impulse one morning we decided to go to Cannes, famous for its annual film festival held in May. It cost us only 1.50 euros each. After days of walking around Nice, the bus ride to Cannes was a welcome respite for my feet, which throbbed at the end of each expedition.


The roads here are narrow and twist like vipers; every hamlet is a maze of twisty passages, all alike. I was glad we were not driving, for within a heartbeat I would have become lost: the extra moment it would take to process the French signs (and share that information with my father, the hypothetical driver) would inevitably lead to such an end. And that’s not including dealing with unfamiliar traffic laws and road signs!
 
After being forced off the bus at its last stop, we hit the beach. Unlike those in Nice, the beaches of Cannes are sandy, which was much gentler on my tender toes. A few minute’s walk from the beach lay the pedestrian-only area lined with shops and small cafés. As I wandered further, the way narrowed and began to twist upwards. Squeezed into the space were increasingly fancy restaurants. My stomach, not yet accustomed to the 7pm French dinner hour, was rumbling by 5:30. As we passed one restaurant, the brother of the chef convinced my family to come back for dinner, and so I found myself supping on salmon, dorade (sea bream), and crème brûlée while enjoying a glass of white wine on the house. (I should add that many French restaurants seem to close sometime in the afternoon and reopen for dinner at about 6pm; the ones that remain open all day advertise themselves as having “non-stop” service.)

 
Monaco (Day Trip - Sept. 7, 2013)
Main Room of Apartment (Personal Photo)
Two days later, our destination was Monaco, a tiny country situated an hour’s bus ride from Nice. Tourism and gambling are its main industries. It even has its own monarch. Oddly enough, I was reminded of Genovia, a similar but non-existent country from The Princess Diaries. We hopped off at the Monte Carlo Casino and, after snapping a few photos of the outside, walked down and around the bay to the Palace.

We saw a rare event: every day, at 11:55am sharp, there is the changing of the guards; however, we had chosen the lucky day when no such event occurred. Instead, we watched for 15 minutes as a forklift shoved some steel beams onto the back of a transport truck. As we waited in vain, I saw pigeon missing one of its feet and dubbed it Peggy, the peg-legged pigeon. I also saw a seagull the size of a small dog and thought it was going to snatch my baguette panini sandwich from my hands.



1 comment:

  1. I have always believed that Monaco was the model for Duchy of Grand Fenwick, a tiny fictitious nation from the novel and subsequent movie "The Mouse That Roared". Your adventure sounds wonderful. Keep posting so that we may live vicariously through you.

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