This is the view from the street as we walked to the metro from our rental apartment -- the Tower behind the Russian Orthodox church.
If you haven't been lately, this is the scene below the Eiffel Tower -- buildings we assume are barracks for police and soldiers. The footprint of the Tower is surrounded by 2" thick bullet-proof glass, and bollards to discourage anyone driving through the glass. There is an airline-style security checkpoint to get into the grounds, and another more detailed one to go up into the Tower herself.
Looking up, though, all is as it ever was.
Except for the lines. If our visit was 3.5 hours, 3 of them were spent in lines. Sometimes we were in lines that did not know where they were going.
The view from the first level was lovely.
We could see the corner where our rental apartment was located.
And...this is the view from the summit.
So, back down to earth.
So when people ask us why we went to the Tower, we tell them we went so no one else has to. It was a lovely visit once, but today...not so much. Enjoy her from afar.
During our last trip
to Paris at the end of 2016, we had made pre-paid reservations months in
advance to have lunch at the Eiffel Tower with our friend Carol, who was in
Paris for a few days. The day before our
lunch date, the Tower was closed for a strike.
Not to worry, says us, this never happens, it will be over
tomorrow. Umm, no. So
we changed our reservations for the following Friday, when Carol would still be
in town. Um, no. The strike continued.
Then the restaurant
closed for a week during Christmas. We
quickly regrouped, without Carol who had left for the south, and made a reservation
for January 4, a few days before our departure.
And then. I got an awful flu on Christmas Day, and Tom
succumbed the following day. On January
4 we were nowhere near ready to get out of bed, much less trek across town for
lunch that we probably could not swallow.
So the very kind hostess gave us a year’s extension on our reservation.
Three months later I
was having a hip replaced, and eight weeks after that began a series of health
challenges that stretched on for months.
We were not going to get back to Paris in 2017. So we gave our tickets to French friends who enjoyed
a lovely lunch in our place.
So that’s a long
introduction to this year’s Tour Eiffel adventure. To cut to the chase, this year’s Tour Eiffel adventure
was so unpleasant that we will never do it again. If you even have a tiny inclination to
journey to the top, just take an aspirin and foggedaboudit.
We had tickets for a
4:30 ascent. But no. That meant at 4:30 we would be in line for
the ascent. Outdoors. It was about 30 degrees. I had on long underwear, a crew necked
sweater, a long, heavy cardigan, an insulated vest, a long, lined raincoat,
knitted hat, and gloves. I was cold.
In all, it took about
2 hours to get from the entrance of the Tower to the summit. Where we could see…wait for it… nothing. Completely fogged in. Not their fault, but still. We walked round, and in the absence of a
view, tried to soak up some ambience, tried to find some ambience, and finally, finding it ambience-free, got into line for the descent, which took another 45 minutes. Did I mention it was cold?
So a miserable 3 plus
hours was not enjoyed by anybody.
Our advice? The Tower is a lovely building to look at,
from all kinds of angles. Do that. Don’t even think about going up it. It has been loved to death. RIP.
If you haven't been lately, this is the scene below the Eiffel Tower -- buildings we assume are barracks for police and soldiers. The footprint of the Tower is surrounded by 2" thick bullet-proof glass, and bollards to discourage anyone driving through the glass. There is an airline-style security checkpoint to get into the grounds, and another more detailed one to go up into the Tower herself.
Looking up, though, all is as it ever was.
Except for the lines. If our visit was 3.5 hours, 3 of them were spent in lines. Sometimes we were in lines that did not know where they were going.
The view from the first level was lovely.
We could see the corner where our rental apartment was located.
We could see the rooftop of the Russian church.
So, back down to earth.