It seems that most people, when planning a trip to France automatically plan a trip to Paris. I suppose that’s because if you’re going to come to France, you just HAVE to see the Eiffel Tower.
Yawn.
For many people, Paris IS France – there is nothing at all worth seeing that exists outside of Paris, so they spend their vacation strolling on the Champs Élysées & gawking at the Arc de Triomphe.
Snore.
Of course, standing around in museums, staring at a painting of a bowl of fruit is a really good time. Shopping for over-priced clothes is a real kick in the ass, too. Right?
Ugh. Whatever.
There are some other people who comprehend the fact that there is a France outside of Paris. Maybe those people are taking bicycle tours through Provence, are sunning themselves on the Mediterranean coast, or are taking wine tours through Burgundy. Good for them.
Maybe they’re history nerds on the beaches of Normandy.
Olivier & I have been to Normandy a couple of times in the past few years. We spent a weekend there for our first wedding anniversary & have gone back just for the fun of being tourists. Sometimes, we just like to get our nerd on, you know?
The Longues-sur-Mer battery was part of the Atlantic Wall fortification that was constructed by the Germans. If you’re an ignorant fool who has never cracked open a history book, or watched a documentary, then just think of the opening scene to Saving Private Ryan.
The battery was constructed by the Wermacht, who, as you may already know, didn’t build flimsy half-assed shit.
Those same German bunkers that were bombed to all hell during the D-Day invasion are still standing.
Of course, a few of them sustained a little more damage.
Another place that is worth seeing in Caen is the Mémorial de Caen. This will take up most of an entire day & is well worth it.
To be honest, this place probably deserves its very own post, but I am a lazy woman & decided to lump all of these things together. You’ll just have to take a trip to Caen to see for yourself exactly what I mean.
Upon entering the museum, one makes an immediate descent into a darkened chamber, symbolizing the descent into the hell of war. The feeling of immersion is profound. Visitors meander at their own pace through a global time line that begins just before Hitler’s rise to power on through the Cold War, the fall of the Berlin Wall & the 9/11 attacks.
While much of the museum is focused on the events of WWII, D-Day & the destruction that took place in Caen in 1944, it is much more than that. It is a memorial & a monument to peace; a meditation on the evils & failures of war.
The Caen Memorial is thought-provoking, interesting & in some ways, upsetting. However, what is most upsetting is that upon leaving, it’s so plain to see that in spite of our past mistakes related to war, we really haven’t learned a goddamn thing.
Something else in Normandy that is not to be missed is the Normandy American Cemetery & Memorial. There are 11 American military cemeteries in France & for you ignorant fools deprived of history books & documentaries, just think back to Saving Private Ryan again. The cemetery where they buried Tom Hanks? Yeah, it’s this one.
Another cool thing about visiting an American cemetery in France – well, if you’re an expat with an attitude problem like me – is that it is considered American territory. So, when I feel like being really cocky, I can go there, stick my chest out & strut around for a while before being humbled in the streets of Paris once again.
Now… the most important thing, the thing that cannot, must not be missed in Normandy: the food. Camembert, Neufchâtel, & Boursin fromages. Flan Normand, (it’s kind of like an apple pie, but with French deliciousness) brioche & macaroons. Crepes with a big glass of cidre.
Or… you could just go stand around in front of the Eiffel Tower & rent Saving Private Ryan again.
Preaching to the choir!
I was lucky enough to spend 6 weeks or more every summer in France during my childhood, and I saw a lot of the country before ever setting foot in Paris — the Cote d’Azur, the Camargue, les Alpes Maritimes, Normandy, Brittany and an out-of-season stay in rather drab Le Touquet. Later on, when I was 18, I worked on a farm in the Loire Valley. You are so right — there is so much more to France than just Paris (Mind you, Paris sera toujours Paris). Contrast this with a Canadian friend of mine who spent a week in Paris and ate every evening at McDonalds.
I have also been lucky enough to visit a couple of the Commonwealth War Grave Cemeteries from the First World War — beautifully maintained, on land that has been ceded to the British Commonwealth in perpetuity. And I have never met a French person who had the slightest problem with that. In fact, they seem very grateful for the sacrifice that each headstone represents.
[…] appreciation. There are streets & métro stations named after Franklin Roosevelt. There are American cemeteries & memorials all over the place & I’ve never met a French person that had a problem with it, or had […]
I always wondered what was left of the Maginot Line. I think I must have driven over it the one time I went to France (Stuttgart to Strausberg, but just for a day).) I live vicariously through you here in Bisbang.
The first time I went to France, I spent most of my time in Bretagne. I did make a few trips to Paris during those several months of traveling. The first time, I was not impressed. By the third time I felt the magic of Paris, but I still prefer the countryside. I spent a few days in Normandy and have the same dick shot with my then-boyfriend being the one in the photo.
The beach with the beached ships is so poignant and strange. I have several photos of that too.
France is on my short list of countries I must visit before I die. Even if it means renting the damn movie.