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A Romantic Apartment in Paris
by Judy Babcock Wylie
The offer on the Net was hard to believe: a week in an apartment in
Paris, including round trip airfare on Air France, plus extras like champagne,
a welcome dinner basket and a limousine pick- up for only $849 per person. Winter
in Paris. It hardly had the ring of April in Paris, but we decided to take it
at that price. Browsing the Paris Sejours Reservation web site, we studied photos of apartments in
Saint Germain des Pres, our favorite part of the city, and found a
charmer located within walking distance
of the Seine and the Louvre. The photos showed beamed ceilings, a complete bath, and even a kitchen with dishwasher.
Less than three weeks later we
were in Paris, peering out the window of our snug 11x 18 studio apartment
through formal drapes, down past the tiny
terrace, to narrow Rue de Rivoli. On the building opposite, a discreet plaque announced that Racine had died there
in 1699. A young man hurried by carrying a long baguette fresh from the baker, an
elegant older woman walked her big black, raffish dog, and a window cleaner pedaled by on his bike,
his squeegee propped at a rakish angle. Looking down to the end of the street
we saw a young couple kissing while
waiting to cross.
A Special Season
We discovered Paris is wonderful
in the winter, even if it is cold,
hovering between 35 and 45 degrees most days. It seems for every degree the temperature goes down,
Parisians attitude toward visitors goes up. We discovered there are no rude
waiters in Paris from November through March. No longer under siege by Nike-wearing
tourists who cant pronounce croissant
properly, theyre relaxed, even affable.
One morning at breakfast our
waiter at a neighborhood café introduced us to one of his regulars, a chocolate
brown Laborador named Mousse, who was
eyeing my plate of eggs and baguette with soulful interest as his owner sipped her café au
lait. At tea in
a bistro on the Boulevard Saint Germain on our first day in town, when we suddenly realized our map didnt show
our street and we had no idea how to get back to our new digs, the waiter went to get a better city map, and
carefully showed us how to get back.
Staying a week in a city allows you to see famous places on a normal
day. One Tuesday, we stepped into Notre Dame just as a priest hurried by
carrying a white electric coffee pot. Parishioners lit candles and knelt to pray,
ladies refreshed the flowers, and in two of the side chapels, priests heard confession in glass and chrome confessionals that made
it look as matter- of- fact as a person taking out a bank loan. Notre Dame was
what it has always been: a working church, not primarily a tourist attraction. At museums such as the
Louvre, because crowds were light and we
had a whole week, we didnt feel we had to see it all in two hours on one
visit. Even Mona Lisa had breathing room.
Our apartment in the Saint Germain
des Pres neighborhood was close to an open market on the Rue de Seine, and any morning we had the inclination
we could get up early and go find freshly
baked goodies such as pain au raisins, a buttery bun shaped like a coiled rope; or
a square apple tart, a pastry fortress
filled with thin slices of apple lined up with military precision.
These early morning runs also
revealed a more intimate side to the city.
I opened the front door to step out one
day and almost bumped into Davy Crockett
on his way to school, holding his mothers hand. He was followed by a 6 year
old Chinese man in a red robe and hat with a pigtail, led by his mom. When I asked
the clerk behind the counter at the boulangerie why all the kids were in
costume today, she smiled and said Cest Mardi Gras! Id
forgotten it was a French holiday before it hit the Big Easy.
Exploring the Neighborhood
We began to collect our favorite
places: our café with the best view, our
boulangerie with the best wheat baguettes, our cheese store with the best brie coated with black pepper. We
found a grocery store with great dijon
mustard vinagrette salad dressing, deep green, tiny-leaved lettuce and pretty flowered toilet paper and bought some of each. We started each
transaction in our broken French and shop
people helped us along with good humor if we needed a word or fractured a pronunciation. Most could speak
some English if necessary.
The neighborhood was dotted with posh art galleries and home decor
shops full of items such as stuffed camels, African fertility masks and extravagantly
tasseled pillows. Each evening we passed a jewelry shop so small that we
finally measured the front at 49 inches. In the pie- shaped space a pleasant white-haired woman sat each evening,
displaying old jewelry such as gold hearts, delicate jet necklaces and
filigreed drop earrings. We eventually broke down and bought a silver charm in
the shape of a book for less than $20.
The Literary Life
We chose the little book because it reminded us of the many
bookstores in the neighborhood. Some specialized in French history, others in the
natural sciences, others in serious fiction. Over on the Rue de Bucheries we found
Shakespeare and Company, an English
language bookstore where George, the frail,
gray- haired proprietor, invited us to
tea on Sunday, an invitation he extends to just about anyone who drops in to
browse.
We also strolled along the Seine,
stopping at the booksellers open stalls, looking through old copies of Gide
and Sartre, and admiring old prints of French court life or the countryside.
The prints weren't expensive. A 5x 8 print from the 1800s depicting an
elephant was only 7 Francs, or about $12.25 U.S. There were also more contemporary
items such as Batman comics and lurid comics depicting aliens, which were doing
a brisk business. For further literary inspiration we dropped in at famous cafes
such as Deux Maggots and the Café Lipp,
both known as haunts of Hemmingway and Sartre.
What to Wear and How to Stay Warm
Paris in the colder season
requires warm clothes. If you want to look like a Parisian, bring a black three-quarter length or ankle-length
coat in leather or wool.. Women favor
slim black pants. Bring gloves. A wool scarf is a must, wrapped several times
around the neck for a proper chic look. Mink coats are in, so if you have one,
bring it. When it rained or the wind
took too big a bite, we dipped down and traveled by Metro, ducked into a museum,
or took a boat cruise on the Seine in an enclosed vedette. We also learned strategies
such as taking the Metro to the Palais Louve stop so we could walk directly into the museum by an
underground passage, avoiding a tedious (and frigid) 45- minute wait to get
into the I.M. Pei entry pyramid.
Dining.
Wed read that most visitors to Paris
spend $100 per day per couple over and above lodging costs, but we averaged less,
from $65-$70 a day. Although we never used our apartments stove or toaster
oven, we ate a few meals in, making lunch
or dinner of pate, cheese, crusty bread, salad and fruit, all bought nearby for
well under $8. When we ate dinner out,
we were able to stick to a budget of under $15 per person, thanks to the
three-course specials every restaurant listed on menus outside. At Le Boomerang
on the Rue Gregoire de Tours, we feasted on mussels for the first course, cod
in mustard sauce or steak au poivre for the main course and creme caramel for
dessert, all for 69 Francs per person, or about $12.
Some of our best lunches were taken at museums or department stores.
At the Musee DOrsay, a former train station
and now a transcendent art museum, the tea room is a gilt-encrusted, cupid-studded, frescoed
room with a terrific hors
doeuvres buffet for about $10. We also chose lunch instead of dinner at the more expensive places. Deux Maggots cost
about $27 for a chicken curry salad, a
bacon and chicken sandwich, and wine. Dinner would be at least twice as much.
Behaving like a Parisian
By the end of the week we were
beginning to feel like real Parisians and wanted to act like them. There is no question that love and
relationships are the number one priority here. When people talk they listen
intently to each other. When in doubt, they kiss. We saw people kissing in
elevators, on a funicular, shopping at
a street market, and standing in front
of a Monet at the Musee DOrsay. We decided if we were to blend in as part of
the neighborhood, wed have to try it. We started in the privacy of our apartment,
moved to the outside doorway, then got bold
and kissed near the oyster stand at the
open-air market as the owner smiled and went on shucking. Even the beggars understand this concept. When
a raggedy beggar reached out his hand for a donation and a passing woman turned away, he shrugged and
offered an alternative. Baissez? Which roughly translates as How about a kiss?
Details on Booking a Paris Apartment:
Paris Sejour Reservation, Inc. in
collaboration with Air France, offers various special promotions during
different months of the off -season. Even high -season rates are not really high, with studio apartments starting at $80
U.S. A recent promotion titled Discover the Museums and Monuments of
Paris included 8 days and 7 night in a Paris apartment in the Champs Elysees
district, round- trip airfare, and a
three-day museum pass. The company
expects to repeat this and other promotions in the winter months next year. The rental apartments offer
weekly cleaning, and other concierge services
such as theater tickets, on request. For
a preview of PSR apartments click onto their Web site, which includes lists of
apartments by neighborhood, plus photos
and floor plans.
http://www.PSRyourhomeinPARIS.com
Paris Sejour Reservation, Inc.
PSR-USA
875 N.
Michigan Ave. #3214
Chicago, IL 60611
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