We anchored off Monte Carlo this morning (a Viking cruise ship was docked in the berth we had a couple of weeks ago) so we had to tender ashore. It was a beautiful sunny day and not too hot. I booked a tour to Nice and St. Paul de Vence. I really booked it to get to the latter town to take a trip down memory lane. Al and I went there several times and bought a couple of paintings there and I guess I just wanted to remember those lovely times.
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Prince's Palace in Monte Carlo from the tender |
We drove on the high corniche to our first stop, the old part of the city of Nice. Our guide Mimi (she had a long French name and told us to just call her Mimi instead) led us through a warren of alleys including one through the red-light district to the market. This market is an outdoor one consisting of many vendors selling everything under the sun. There were lots of food vendors, including fruits, vegetables, olives, cheese, pastries, etc. There were lots of flower stalls. There was a man carving wooden figurines and an artist painting watercolors. I passed vendors of leather belts and table lamps. The place was crowded because it was a Sunday during a long weekend. I walked a little and then found a comfortable chair at a café in the shade and people-watched. I heard lots of different languages spoken by the passers-by and saw a variety of attire. Unfortunately I wasn’t as quick to get my phone and take photos of the most unusual. You’ll have to take my word for it that there were some pretty strange sights, including a young woman wearing s hot pink top adorned with feathers, cut-off denim shorts that revealed most of her rear end, and purple fur-topped boots. (Maybe she was a resident of the red-light district out for a coffee and croissant.) A group of people dressed in long red hooded robes walked by and I did catch the tail end of their procession. Mimi told me later that they belong to some church in old Nice and they may have been celebrating the confirmations of some church members since today was a Sunday they did that.
These are scenes of streets in old Nice. For some reason I like pictures of these old houses with their laundry hanging on the balconies so I take lots of them.
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This was above the entrance to one of the houses in the red-light district. |
From the café in which I was sitting I could see the building where the artist Henri Matisse worked and died in 1954. Many of his paintings were done as if looking out of a window and that was a representation of his window there above the Nice market. As with all these places the old city buildings are painted in a variety of colors with shutters on the windows also in lots of different colors.
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Matisse lived on the top floor of that house. |
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Some of the vendors |
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Look at the different ways the shutters can be opened |
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The tail end of the red robed procession |
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There were lots of police on both bike and foot in the market |
Traces of human habitation dating back hundreds of thousands of years have been found in the area around Nice. An archaeologic site nearby has found evidence of the use of flints to build fires and crude tools for the construction of houses. The present location was probably settled by Greeks during the fourth millennium BC. Modern day Nice really began to develop in the late 19th century when wealthy people from northern Europe, especially Great Britain, sought warmer climes in the winter . The main street along the seashore is the Promenade des Anglais. It’s along this street on which we drove that we saw many of the hotels and a few of the old mansions still remaining. That street is where the wealthy and nobility came to enjoy the mild winter weather.
From Nice we made the short drive inland to the beautiful medieval village of St. Paul de Vence. I think this place is one of the most beautiful I’ve seen. The walled town is perched atop a hill in the Provençal countryside. At one time the surrounding countryside was planted with fields of lavender which must have been beautiful to see and wonderful to smell when the plants were in bloom. Now sadly there are houses everywhere, but they aren’t high-rises and they are built out of stone and stucco with red-tiled roofs so they maintain some of the charm of the area. We had to park our bus pretty far away from the gate to enter St. Paul. I had forgotten how steep the climb was both to get to the town and within its walls. Everything is cobbled, winding and with lots of steps. My knees and stamina are not what they used to be, but I managed by taking it slow.
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The first glimpse of beautiful St. Paul de Vence |
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These and the next are just streets inside the walled city. They are more beautiful than I could ever describe |
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Part of the wall surrounding the village with some nests tucked away in the stonework |
My intention was to find the restaurant where Al and I had lunch the last time we came, but it was closed. I don’t know if it closed because of Covid and never reopened or if was just a current thing. I was disappointed but maybe it was better that I didn’t get to eat there. Thomas Wolfe said you can’t go home again so maybe it’s just best that I have the wonderful memories. I did find the little art gallery where we bought paintings and lo and behold the artist was actually there. He didn’t speak English and my French is very limited (that’s an overstatement!), but we had a sort of conversation using google translate on his phone. I must remember to figure out how to use that on my phone. After meeting him I walked around a little more and I made my one purchase, a beautiful scarf that looks like it could have been painted by Van Gogh. I’m getting quite a collection of scarves; now if I could just become proficient at tying them I’d be in great shape. By then it was time to get down to the meeting point for our departure. I sat at a café with a woman from Canada and her two daughters who are also on the ship and had a croque monsieur sandwich and a glass of local rosé.
On the way back to Monte Carlo we passed a 1000-meter hill topped with the summer palace of the Prince of Monaco. It was on a ride back from that place that Princess Grace died in a car accident in 1982. There has been a lot of speculation about the cause of the accident and even who was driving, whether it was Grace or her daughter. I guess we the public will never really know.
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That's the Prince of Monaco's summer palace way up there |
This time around Monte Carlo looks all prepared for the upcoming Formula One race which will take place in about ten days. Mimi and our driver dropped us off at the tender pier and there we had a new twist – the wind had picked up since the morning and the tender ride was like a thrill ride. The number of people for each ride was limited to 30 and there was a long line. I lucked out because there was room for one person on the first tender and since there aren’t many of us solos I got to jump the queue. I actually didn’t think it was too bad – I’ve had rougher rides – but many of my fellow passengers didn’t feel the same way. It’s the getting off back at the ship which is more difficult. I heard, but don’t know if it’s true, that there were a few injuries. Hopefully that’s just shipboard rumor.
Anyway, it was a nice day if a bit nostalgic. This part of the world brings with it many memories of good times that we had. In my head I can still remember the delicious salad niçoise and carafe of house wine we had. Perhaps it was good that the place was closed and I couldn’t relive those moments because they probably wouldn’t have been as wonderful because one half of the picture was missing. Wow, I’m sorry. I don’t often get so carried away, but I just can’t help it today. Oh well. Life goes on.