It's been about a week and a half now since departing from the United States, and I am already in love with this country. So many things are different, but so many things are so wonderful... and it is absolutely beautiful here!
I began my trip with a typical McFarland adventure. As many of you may have heard, the Sunday that I was scheduled to fly out, a transformer went down in Cleveland, causing all power to be out in that part of the city which just so happened to include the airport. The radio broadcasts indicated that no flights would be leaving, and we were near positive that I would have to leave the following day, putting me in Paris a day late. We decided to drive to the airport just to be sure, and upon arrival we found that they were using generators to operate three terminals. Only three flights would be leaving that evening... and MINE was one of them! What a relief for us all!
I took off without any other problems and was on time for my connection in New Jersey and for my arrival in Paris. Upon landing at 10am Monday morning, I met up with the API group in the Charles de Gaulle Airport where our Resident Directors immediately began speaking to us in French alone. How exciting!
Above you can see the view from the front door of L'hotel Minerve where we stayed.
Our first day in Paris, we spent a lot of time just getting to know the area well and getting to know the other students with our program. We went to a little supermarket where we bought baguette and Nutella and a few clementines for lunch... very typical and delicious French food! Later in the evening, we met with the RDs and were taken on a boat tour of the Seine River where we saw all the most beautiful places in the city. Paris is surprisingly quite small, but it has MUCH to see! After our boat tour, we made our way by métro to a little restaurant called Restaurante Perraudin where we had our first truly French meal. This was a traditional three-hour French dinner consisting of three separate courses for each of us. My meal included an appetizer of flaky bread puffs filled with warm goat cheese, a stew of steak, potatoes, leeks, carrots and other veggies and a delicious warm apple tart with vanilla ice cream on top. I have to say, French cuisine is by far the best I have ever had! I have not yet tried something I do not absolutely love! Below you can see the first of the three yummy courses!
The next morning we awoke and had breakfast at the hotel which consisted of baguette and croissants with preserves and Nutella, soft boiled eggs, yogurt, fruit and lots of cheese. They served us coffee and tea in our own little pots and offered orange juice and water as well. After breakfast, we took the train to the Palace of Versailles which was absolutely incredible. It was even bigger than I could have ever possible imagined. Although very cold and snowy, we were also able to walk around the gardens a bit as well, although it would take several days to see all of them. For lunch we stopped at a little café where we had delicious sandwiches on baguette... these have become one of my favorites since being here! After eating, we took the tra
The following day, Wednesday, we visited Notre Dame and Sainte Chapelle, my favorite cathedral of all. It is the only church in Paris with the original stained glass windows as they are the only ones that were not destroyed in the war. During the war, they were taken out, placed in boxes and stored outside the city walls to protect them. Today, they have been replaced and make the second floor inside the church one of the most beautiful things I have ever seen! After this, we went to the Louvre. Although incredible, I wish so badly that I would have had more time to take my time and see so much more of it. With it being so expansive, it would take someone four months to see every item on display. However, I did get to see much of the French sculpture and paintings as well as a few Italian paintings including, of course, la Jaconde, or the Mona Lisa, and she's actually MUCH smaller than one would imagine her to be. After the Louvre, several of us went out to les catacombes where the bones of 600,000 graves have been moved. During a time in France when a great sickness broke out, they ran out of room in the cemeteries and began moving the bones of the dead to the old mining tunnels underneath the city. Today, you can venture down where there is tunnel after tunnel of skulls and bones arranged in various shapes and fashions. Although a bit disgusting, it was actually very cool to see! That evening we had dinner in the Latin Quarter at a little Algerian restaurant and then went for drinks at a little café on the way home. The wine and the hot chocolate in France are so delicious! :)
After the Eiffel Tower, we went to the train station to catch the TGV to our new home, Grenoble, where we would be meeting our host families at the airport for the first time!
Paris is one of the most wonderful things I have ever experienced. I heard many things about the French being rude or stand-offish, but I have found exactly the opposite to be true. I have encountered so many friendly people here, and it is almost refreshing in comparison to the United States. People ALWAYS say bonjour and au revoir, as it is rude not to, people love to help us practice our French and are careful to take it slow so that we can understand and people seem to enjoy the little things in life much more without the constant hustle and bustle of everything. It has been wonderful experiencing this culture, and I am already learning to love so much about it!
Although I have class soon and must go for now, I will be sure to write about my first week in Grenoble and my family very soon. All is wonderful and well, and I feel like the luckiest girl alive to be experiencing such wonderful things!
But until later, à toute à l'heure, mes amis!

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