Paris – Day 2

I woke up to it being super foggy outside, which normally isn’t a problem except today was Eiffel Tower day. I made my way to the tower by foot, passing some cool museums and random old gardens and buildings…and can I take a moment to just say the French are completely, totally EXTRA? Like, they don’t just put in a building, they decorate it with statues and gold and intricate iron bars and there is no building here old or new that’s just a plain glass/metal square. Every building here is interesting and unique in some way. Granted, I didn’t go outside the downtown area to where all the big buildings and businesses are so maybe it’s more modern there, but here everything is so cool and over the top. I love it! The people? Eh, not so much sometimes. The French like to keep up appearances but also weirdly don’t give a shit about others and will bump you right into a wall or shove you into oncoming traffic or smack you with their bag as they throw it over their shoulder or stand in the narrowest part of a hallway taking up the most room and will NOT shift even slightly to let people through even if they have plenty of room just two steps forward. As a result, the other French people just plow right through them, and this is seriously a locals thing not a tourists thing, so you really need to pay attention. They all seem to exist in their own little bubble and no one else matters, yet they want everyone to notice them and be impressed on a grander scale. Based on what I’m learning about their history, it seems it’s always been this way. 😂 Can’t say I’ve encountered a culture quite like this before.

Anywho, the trip up to the Eiffel Tower summit went smoothly even though with the fog you couldn’t see too far. Hoping the fog would burn off before I left, I ate the most expensive microwave veggie lasagna I ever had at the 1st floor restaurant (no, seriously, it was like a Lean Cuisine lasagna they charged about $20 American for. How are these places getting good ratings? Am I being dumb and missing the good food? I know it must be here, lol!) then walked around a bit when the sun finally came out. I headed back down to ground level and walked around the exterior, too. Afterwards, I went to Arc de Triomphe and hung out there watching the mass chaos of cars and being impressed that somehow magically there were no accidents, barely any honked horns either! It was getting late so I started to meander back to the Eiffel Tower. I stopped in a pretty park area for a bit, then went to a restaurant next door that actually wasn’t too bad. I watched the light show at Eiffel Tower around 7pm, then walked around and watched it again at 8pm. It’s actually really cool if you get a chance to go. I much preferred the Tower area at night rather than during the day, personally. By that time my feet were aching so I took a taxi back to the hotel to relax.

Off to Paris!

I packed up, waited about 1.5 hours for the “express” bus to the airport (long, annoying story, just don’t take the 747/757 buses back to Dublin airport. Trust me, just don’t. 😑) and practically ran through Terminal 1 to Terminal 2 to check in but then had to run back to Terminal 1 where the flight actually was…seriously stressful morning 😬 But here I am now in Paris! Man I thought London was expensive but DAMN Paris you crazy!

Pictures are of the flight out of Dublin, in to France, and my swanky hotel. After checking in I went across the street to a basic French restaurant and got some chicken and gravy with a Nutella tiramisu for dessert. Very yummy! Then I spent the rest of the evening doing laundry. Super great night over here in Paris, the reality is not every day is exciting and fun when you’re full time traveling 😂

Scottish Highlands – Day 4 (Isle of Skye)

I had planned on leaving early to hit all the sights, but I didn’t end up getting on the road until after 10am. My first stop was supposed to be The Old Man of Storr, but they were doing construction on the parking area and had turned it into a giant mud pit. That, plus the fact I didn’t realize you had to climb a mountain to get there, made me pause to take a look but then continue driving onward. I stopped at quite a few outlook points and passes to enjoy the amazing views until I made my way up to Kilt Rock and Mealt Waterfall. Then I drove all the way up and around the Quirang and stopped at Duntulm Castle for a bit to take in the sights and sounds. Then I continued the loop and detoured off into the Fairy Glen. The Fairy Glen was really cool, it’s about 10 or 15 acres of these random hill formations that have wavy footings because of the wind in that particular spot. Where erosion occurred you have little holes, so it literally looks how you would imagine fairy houses to be. It was all very Tolkien-esque. After making my way down the narrow, steep, winding roads (which I’ve gotten a bit more used to by now) I got back on the main road and headed south to Armadale and waited around a bit for the ferry to arrive. The ferry landed in Mallaig, and although I saw a neat rock beach there, it was getting late and I headed to my B&B in Glenfinnan. It’s a very old B&B just down from the aqueduct, so I’ll stop by there tomorrow.