Provence area of France

Day 3 June 21

This was a full day of travel and sightseeing. I was super excited because we were going to all new places. Some I had seen 25 years ago and did not mind returning.

Stop 1 

Pont De Gard located north of Nimes. This triple decker aqueduct has stood the test of time. 

We skipped rocks and wadded in the river on both sides of the structure. We walked along the pedestrian bridge admiring the details. All of us found something to be happy about at this stop.

Stop 2

Our next stop was Carrières de Lumières, near Les Baux-de-Provence. Christina, Stephen, and I were trying to figure out how to experience Van Gogh without the kids complaining. This stop hit the spot on so many levels. We arrived just in time to watch great masterpieces of art come to life on screen projected on the walls of a cave. The two main artists featured wereVincent Van Gogh

and Piet Mondrian.Secretly this was on my French bucket list.

The venue was absolutely unique and amazing. We walked around while the movie was playing, finding different angles to watch. The air was cool and welcoming. Cam, Mazie, and Kellen even enjoyed the show. We grabbed French sandwiches to go and continued on to our journey through Aix en Provence.

Stop 3

Our drive to the next stop reminded me and Mazie of our time in Greece. The landscape was less green, very hilly, and speckled with big cream colored rocks. This was the hottest stop of our day. The sun was bright and beating down on us. We walked through ancient Greek/Roman architecture Site Archéologique de Glanum near Saint-Rémy-de-Provence.

I joked there was no need to go to Greece after visiting here. In this location we were allowed to walk among the ruins, touching whatever we wanted, very different than in Athens.

The beating sun and parched mouths drove us to end our journey here quicker than expected. We spent 16 Euros on 8 bottles of water and were thankful.

Stop 4

Touring a Roman coliseum was our last adventure for the day. Mazie and I had been in a coliseum in Nimes so we decided to visit another one nearby, in Arlés. The short drive there allowed our bodies to cool and rest. The traffic, directions and parking aspects in Arlés were crazy. We came in between the end of a work day and the beginning of a Wednesday night downtown festival! Finally, after round and round the town, we landed in a parking spot that was not in a last minute tow-zone. The coliseum was tucked in a fun little part of town with narrow streets and old French decor.

Again the kids enjoyed being here, wondering about gladiators and bull fights.

We wandered through town square seeing the famous café that inspired one of Van Gogh’s famous paintings. After a long day, well behaved kids, and still a drive home we opted for ice cream to help with the walk back to the car. What a fun day for all of us!

Les Journées de Nîmes, May 6, 2023

In May people descend on Nîmes to participate and be a spectator of Roman Week. I come from 5 years of Latin from an exceptional teacher, Mrs. Vicki Jones. When I found out about this event I was determined to go, even if alone. In the end it was me, the kids, my friend Anne,  and her daughter Ella (Julia’s mom and big sister). Randy was off biking Alpe d’huez with Jeff.

We had tickets to a reenactment between Julius Caesar and Vercingetorix. However this particular reenactment took liberty and meshed two different eras and historical references to make the show we saw today. This reenactment was based on the visit of Emperor Hadrian to Nîmes in 122 AD.

For me it was more about watching a Roman reenactment in a real Roman Arena. The arena was built almost 2000 years ago and is still considered to be the best preserved Roman amphitheater of all. Like the majority of structures we have been to this year it too was partially under external reconstruction. The hallways, arches and bleachers were intact. Thankfully we had more modern seats than the fellow people of Gaul.

The show included a cast of over 500 from France, Germany, Italy, Croatia, and horses from a nearby village. There were about 12,000 spectators, including a Philadelphia Eagles fan based on his hat.  

The show consisted of Roman games, archery, warfare, peasant market day, bread throwing to the spectators, horse fanfare, marching of legions, warfare tactics, and dialogue (French and Latin) that we could not understand very well. Luckily, Anne translated the French every once in a while during key aspects.

Each legion was uniquely decorated based on historical documents. My favorite shield was blue. My favorite people to watch were the ones with animal skins covering their heads and backs. 

The girls enjoyed watching the horses. Zach enjoyed watching individual actors during battle. Once he saw two guys fighting. One of them had just been hurt and was falling over. The opposing guy stuck out his index finger and barely touched the injured guy to make him fall over, cracking Zach up with a smile. I enjoyed watching the archers. Once home I was looking through photos I found actors kissing after the final scene, luckily they were on the same legion, the yellow shield company,…hilarious.

A bald eagle was released both at the beginning of the show and at the conclusion. The eagle was so majestic in flight. During the closing flight the eagle decided to be a spectator instead of returning to its handler. It proudly joined the bleacher section for about a minute before the handler and security were able to retrieve it. 

Getting out of the parking lot 5 floors under was its own battle. I was driving an older manual van without a lot of pickup. (Jill and Fred this story all works out in the end.) The ramps in the garage parking lot were very steep and packed with cars leaving. Upon realizing the van was not going to be able to stop and climb the ramps with cars so closely behind us, Anne came to the rescue. She hopped out and had the line of cars behind me reverse and wait until we were in the clear. (A lady tried to tell Anne to tell me to punch the gas. Anne informed her that it was not the driver but the car.) I waited for the cars in front of us to be completely out of the way. I made it up 5 ramps without stopping! Then…the ticket line to get out was back into the last ramp. Many words left my mouth! Again Anne hopped out and talked to the person behind me. This guy understood and he too was having to do the same. Finally, I made it up the last ramp.  I just could not wait for Anne to “Bo and Luke Duke” it into the van, so she ran alongside me up the ramp.