Tour France: Best Celebrity Tips For Visiting Paris (or Anywhere in France)
It's not what you see, it's how you see it!
Last night, I watched Anthony Bourdain's new show "Layover", the first episode of which focuses on Paris. And I was struck by how much I agreed with him. He said the exact same things I say to my clients all of the time (without the use of @#%& and other colorful wording.) For the second time (he also did a show on Burgundy) I knew most of the places (restaurants, streets, sights) he spoke of quite well, having been to them many times myself with and without clients. I even knew several people he spoke with/visited on air --quite a surprise to see them on the television instead of in person! But it is not familiarity that made me agree with Mr. Bourdain. It was that his advice was the best recipe for having a truly outstanding experience in France. Let me explain why.Everybody and their uncle tells you what to see while in Paris (or Burgundy, or Provence, or just about anywhere)....Your best friend, the guidebook, the blogger you love, the New York Times, your neighbor etc. There is a very long list of things you "absolutely should notmiss". (Even I have items remaining on that list.) But, how you plan your time is even more important than what you decide to see.I know that they might not seem to be very different things. But they are.People ask me all the time what they should see and when --well, that is the business of Bliss Travels. They also ask me to plan for their "downtime" (i.e. time not spent with Bliss Travels) and for the meals they will have on their own. And they should. They are, in fact, paying for my expertise. And they listen carefully to the names of restaurants and special streets and bakeries. The one thing I have a difficult time getting people to hear is that they shouldn't overbook themselves or run themselves ragged. Sure, they should see a few major sites. Sure, they should see a few "off the beaten track" items. But, they should also allow themselves to absorb the place they are visiting. The magic of Paris (or France in general) isn't revealed by a guidebook, or located solely in the many beautiful things to see. It is more keenly felt when one experiences the place and the culture as the locals do (even if a bit more intensely). There is something quite true about that old saying "when in Rome, do as the Romans" That is not to say that you shouldn't take a tour....Of course you should.
Obviously, we pride ourselves in our small private walking tours and discourage big bus tours. However, bus tours are of interest to some people --especially if they have limited mobility. If you can't do a walking tour with someone like Bliss, then designing your own is a good idea.Of course you should see art in Paris. If not there, where? So choose a museum or two (depending upon the length of your stay) and enjoy that experience. (Tip: Get museum passes if you are going to visit one of busiest museums so you don't spend all morning in line.)Do remember to meander the streets of some of the more interesting neighborhoods, not just the grand boulevards...Do it without a destination in mind. Do you know that some streets in Paris are 1000 years old?Remember to try the local cuisine in one of the postage stamp size bistros that are so popular. (Unfortunately, once Mr Bourdain -a celebrity-- recommends a place on national television, the character of the place, and maybe even the menu can change --so try to find a place that still has its neighborhood character.) If you don't have someone like us to provide that information for you, wonder around --off of a main street, in a nice, but less touristic neighborhood. Start reading menus. If they are in English, move on. Do the same thing if the menu is large. Find a market fresh place with a lot of native French speakers, and give it a try.
Lounge at a cafe with a coffee or a wine, and watch Paris go by. Walk along the Seine, or sit on the banks or a bridge and absorb the scenery. Visit a park.
Visit a market street. You must! Taste as you go. A great trick, if you are doing this on your own, is to find a good market street, and look at where the customers are. Stand in line behind a long line of French locals. Listen to what they are ordering --or watch, if you don't understand the language...You'll see a pattern. Try what they are trying! (Normally, I do not advocate acting like sheep --however, if you are trying to find truly fine, non touristy food and drink, and you don't have anyone with inside knowledge helping you, then you must become aware of what the locals are doing. That's the only way you can do a real "quality check" and also experience local fare you wouldn't necessarily know was available
Attend a performance of some sort. How about a concert in a church (Paris over the holidays has many)? A ballet? A local circus for festival? (A Provence activity in the spring and summer) Even a a street performance is a good idea. You will relax. You will find that humor and entertainment are different and exciting. I will never forget one particular performance in a Mediterranean beach town. It was at the beginning of a trip and I was with two clients from Princeton New Jersey. That evening, before the fireworks --fun huh?-- there was a theatrical street performance as intricate and absurd as a Fellini movie. with actors tossing others into a small pool made on the sidewalk, yelling, laughter, grand gestures. And you didn't need to speak or understand a word of French to appreciate the humor and also how different it was from our own American street performances.Or the time last Christmas in Paris when, after lunch, we stumbled upon a street performer, who kept us in stitches without saying a word.Most of all, just relax and eat and drink and walk...You cannot have a bad time if you do those things! This is Bliss!-Wendy