Monday, February 26, 2018

We find the castle from Frozen in Mont St. Michel, Normandy, France

We continue our 2018 trend of visiting UNESCO World Heritage Sites, and what a site Mont St. Michel is!  The Bay has the highest tidal range in Europe (like the Bay of Fundy in Canada) so like a good Coastie I carefully consulted the tide tables so we could see  the island at high tide.  (When it's low tide, the island is just surrounded by mud and you'd never believe the tide can come in so far.)

As we were dragging the kids out of their nice warm beds..I was repeating what Mark would say at the beach, "Time & tide wait for no man".    Teenagers are tough to convince, but we did manage to leave while it was still dark.  We passed an old windmill as we were close...you can see its almost sunrise!

 The car parking is on the other side of a long causeway that was only recently built.  Our goal of the Mont is what you see rising out of the clouds behind us in this picture.

 This gives you an idea of how far we had to walk, it was cold, there was a layer of frost on the causeway boards..but what a destination!  The girls said it looked like something out of a Disney movie that we were walking toward...like the castle in Frozen...
Charlie kept trying to flag down the shuttle bus driver by sticking up his thumb the guy would give him a thumbs up and honk, but he kept driving..we all had a good laugh!

 Getting closer...
 The sun is peeking through..
 All the trucks you see are bringing in supplies for the hotels and restaurants on the island.  They can get as far as that lot, then they have to unload everything and hike it up in little wheelbarrows.  Impressive organization to keep the cupboards stocked here!
 Arrival...
 Kelly really liked the unicorn sign on this place!
 The streets were super narrow and winding, the kids said it was like being in Diagon Alley in Harry Potter.  What most most incredible to me is that it was all real...not a theme park...
 A lower chapel...before we climbed, up, up, up to the steps of the Abbey.
 Clouds were surrounding the Abbey as we continued to climb.  The Abbey is supposed to be incredible inside, however, it was cold and very early and it wasn't open yet.  We decided that we had achieved our goal and we should escape before the crowds rolled in and our 8 year old melted down. 
"You gotta know when to fold em'", right?

 Kelly took this picture with my phone right before she dropped the phone and it barely missed falling into a hole and going out to sea...lucky for her!

 A view of someone's champagne from the night before, this is one of the hotel rooms right on the island, it is supposed to be cool to stay over for the night because once the crowds leave you have the entire place to yourself.  We got there so early we did have the place to ourselves, other than the few workers who were bringing in supplies to the hotels.

 Katie & Greg doing there goofy photos...
 Look how much more you can see now that the sun has come up...still freezing though, so we cheated and hopped the shuttle bus back to our car.  You can also see how much the tide has gone out since the time we arrived-probably about an hour before!
 Later in the day we sampled the local cider and I was super excited because it came in this mug, just like the picture I had seen in one of the guide books.  It was good cider...but not quite the Savannah Dry I have been searching for since we left South Africa!

The town our Air BnB was in was called Roz de Couesnon, and there was a scenic view point that showed the whole area.  This sign was at the top, I thought it was cool that I found an original "Coast Guard Station"...see below.
 The Coast Guard building they are talking about is the brick thing to the right in this picture. 
 We were sad to head for home the next day and had plans to stop in Rouen, but instead detoured to a beach town near the Black Cow Cliffs (called Falaise des Vaches Noires) we followed the highway sign that showed a fossil and a sea shell.  The sea shells were what lured me in but the big surprise was finding this bike rental place next to a dinosaur museum.  They rented every kind of bike rig you could imagine. 
 We decide on the triple bike...Kelly starts out as driver...
 Charlie picked out this green machine type bike..
 Greg replaces Kelly as the driver...they found their groove eventually but it was really hard-heavy bike! 


Next time we thought we would try the giant red octopus looking bike..we sat on it to test it, we needed two more people and we could have done it, it was super heavy!




























I did get to collect some sea shells and Charlie thinks he found some fossils.  Kelly and Greg enjoyed a nice long walk and talk on the beach.
We headed for home, feeling pretty lucky to have had such a great trip, we feel very fortunate to have seen such amazing places...I think the kids will never forget the early morning walk to Mont St. Michel!

Saturday, February 24, 2018

All that we could see in St. Malo








 A few years ago a friend highly recommended the Pulitzer prize winning book, All The Light We Cannot See.  The book was set during WWII and much of it occurs in the town of St. Malo, France.  Ever since I read the book I longed to see St. Malo.  Lucky for us its only about a six hour ride from Brussels!

On our way to St. Malo we did a speedy stop at Omaha Beach in Normandy.  We plan to go back and spend more time exploring all the WWII sites, but this was just a preview.
 Below is the sculpture that is on Omaha Beach.
 The American Cemetery, it had been so long since we have visited that they now have a visitors center!
 The sculpture that looks toward the rows of crosses.

We stayed in a tiny town in an old stone cottage which had been a stable but was totally redone into a cute house.
Our cute little house!

 Charlie loved the fact that the farmer down the way had a really nice swingset and when we went to check it out, in French he said something like, "It is possible"...so Charlie became a regular!
Where every 8 year old boy belongs!
He also had cool donkeys right next to the swingset so we had fun feeding them some apples.

St. Malo is an old walled city and we had a blast walking the walls and going out to the tidal island right next to it.  We read that the walls were over 25 feet thick...here we are about to go through them..

This is walking along the ramparts...look how much room we have to walk!

There was a vacation week carnival set up...here is the "American Circus" funhouse


 The ferries from England pull in here...see the one to the left.


Should we launch him?

From the beach with the walls behind me...

It was low tide so we walked to the first of two tidal islands...the one to the right...

Sisters!

From the island, the town is behind us...

There was a tidal swimming pool complete with diving tower...we wanted Kelly to swim it and show the video to her swim coach, but we figured she would be sick for the rest of the season...


Goofy sister picture!

Charlie wanted me to put this picture in because he thought the merry go round with a seat was very cool!

A final view of the city before we headed out.
 Our next stop was a little beach town to the North called Dinard, which had a promenade walk along the sea.  From the walk you could still see St. Malo in the distance, the walk came with some pretty scary warning signs and no guard rails...

These actually rivaled some of those scary signs from our Africa days!

Charlie waiting for the tide to come in and splash him!

Beach houses on the cliffs.
The cliff walk got scary for me to watch as we headed back to our car, Charlie had no fear and I was just happy to get him back to the car dry and in one piece!

Sunset on the walk...