I was awake early & was quite excited as we were taking the train to Bayeux & I was going to see the tapestry!! I had thought about making the trip twice previously but the museum was closed both times (it closes Dec - March & another time was closed for renovations).
We walked up to the station & called into Key & Co for a coffee, it was lovely, the best I’ve had in France as it was made with fresh milk & the coffee was a lovely flavour as well. There are renovations going on outside the railway station, we eventually located the bus station where we leave from tomorrow.
We went across to our platform & there was already a train there (approximately 20 mins before departure time) so I confirmed with someone onboard it was “our train”, an American couple with cases heard me say to Richard it was the train to Bayeux, I had been looking for a station attendant & when I spotted one I did confirm it was “our train”.
The couple had also been travelling for a period of time, ex-military & they’d been on two cruises, were at the Caen Memorial yesterday, she also volunteered with animals. They were staying in Bayeux, going on a “landings tour” the following day & didn’t know there was a tapestry in Bayeux!!
The journey was only 15mins & we headed straight for the museum. It was definitely busier that when we’d seen the English Bayeux at the museum in Reading for free!! There I had time to study the scenes, stitching etc, here I didn’t really get the chance.
Entry included an audio guide which was great information & explained what each scene represented but did mean you had to move quite quickly (I think that’s why they did it), not sure if the couple two in front had a different language, German, & that their audio took longer than ours or if they were just “behind” in the audio. There was a couple with two children in front of us who actually overtook the couple. At one stage a man overtook me but I did move past him, near the end there was a young boy who “pushed in” but I again went past him. The tapestry was wonderful, in a room that was dark & only the tapestry was lit & behind glass, the room was curved in a “U” shape. So pleased I’d had the chance to spend more time with the English one but so pleased to have at last seen this one. There was an exhibit upstairs which explained the history & had some information about the cloth & thread, there was also a film which was good. We then headed to the gift shop, being mindful I had to carry what I bought I only purchased a book which had a number of the scenes in as you weren’t able to take photos.
We the headed out to the Bayeux War Memorial & Cemetery, this is the largest WWII cemetery in France, it’s the resting place for more than 4,100 Commonwealth servicemen, the memorial commemorates 1,800 servicemen who died but don’t have known graves & their names are listed on the memorial, it was very moving.
We’d purchased a banana to eat on the way to the cemetery not realising it was so close to Bayeux, which we ate on the way, we’d also purchased pistachios which we ate on the way back. We then had a wander around the medieval town centre, found an ice cream shop & headed to the train station. We had a lovely day in Bayeux.
We stopped at the Monoprix on the way home & purchased some Turkey escalopes to have with our salad & baby kifler potatoes, it was delicious.
Julie Elvidge
87 hoofdstukken
16 apr. 2020
mei 02, 2019
|
Thursday
I was awake early & was quite excited as we were taking the train to Bayeux & I was going to see the tapestry!! I had thought about making the trip twice previously but the museum was closed both times (it closes Dec - March & another time was closed for renovations).
We walked up to the station & called into Key & Co for a coffee, it was lovely, the best I’ve had in France as it was made with fresh milk & the coffee was a lovely flavour as well. There are renovations going on outside the railway station, we eventually located the bus station where we leave from tomorrow.
We went across to our platform & there was already a train there (approximately 20 mins before departure time) so I confirmed with someone onboard it was “our train”, an American couple with cases heard me say to Richard it was the train to Bayeux, I had been looking for a station attendant & when I spotted one I did confirm it was “our train”.
The couple had also been travelling for a period of time, ex-military & they’d been on two cruises, were at the Caen Memorial yesterday, she also volunteered with animals. They were staying in Bayeux, going on a “landings tour” the following day & didn’t know there was a tapestry in Bayeux!!
The journey was only 15mins & we headed straight for the museum. It was definitely busier that when we’d seen the English Bayeux at the museum in Reading for free!! There I had time to study the scenes, stitching etc, here I didn’t really get the chance.
Entry included an audio guide which was great information & explained what each scene represented but did mean you had to move quite quickly (I think that’s why they did it), not sure if the couple two in front had a different language, German, & that their audio took longer than ours or if they were just “behind” in the audio. There was a couple with two children in front of us who actually overtook the couple. At one stage a man overtook me but I did move past him, near the end there was a young boy who “pushed in” but I again went past him. The tapestry was wonderful, in a room that was dark & only the tapestry was lit & behind glass, the room was curved in a “U” shape. So pleased I’d had the chance to spend more time with the English one but so pleased to have at last seen this one. There was an exhibit upstairs which explained the history & had some information about the cloth & thread, there was also a film which was good. We then headed to the gift shop, being mindful I had to carry what I bought I only purchased a book which had a number of the scenes in as you weren’t able to take photos.
We the headed out to the Bayeux War Memorial & Cemetery, this is the largest WWII cemetery in France, it’s the resting place for more than 4,100 Commonwealth servicemen, the memorial commemorates 1,800 servicemen who died but don’t have known graves & their names are listed on the memorial, it was very moving.
We’d purchased a banana to eat on the way to the cemetery not realising it was so close to Bayeux, which we ate on the way, we’d also purchased pistachios which we ate on the way back. We then had a wander around the medieval town centre, found an ice cream shop & headed to the train station. We had a lovely day in Bayeux.
We stopped at the Monoprix on the way home & purchased some Turkey escalopes to have with our salad & baby kifler potatoes, it was delicious.
1.
Africa to Europe
2.
Lisbon
3.
Lisbon
4.
Lisbon
5.
Lisbon
6.
Lisbon
7.
Obrigado Lisbon, Ola Seville
8.
Seville
9.
Seville
10.
Seville
11.
Seville to Granada
12.
Granada
13.
Granada
14.
Granada to Murcia
15.
Murcia
16.
Murcia
17.
Murcia
18.
Murcia (day trip to Cartagena)
19.
Murcia
20.
Murcia
21.
Murcia to Barcelona
22.
Barcelona
23.
Barcelona
24.
Barcelona
25.
Barcelona
26.
Gràcia Barcelona, bonjour Toulouse
27.
Toulouse
28.
Toulouse
29.
Toulouse
30.
Toulouse to Nice
31.
Nice
32.
Nice (day trip to Monaco)
33.
Nice
34.
Nice to Lyon
35.
Lyon
36.
Lyon
37.
Lyon
38.
Lyon
39.
Lyon to Dijon
40.
Dijon
41.
Dijon
42.
Dijon
43.
Dijon
44.
Dijon
45.
Dijon to Strasbourg
46.
Strasbourg
47.
Strasbourg
48.
Strasbourg (day trip Alsace)
49.
Strasbourg
50.
Strasbourg (lunch in Germany)
51.
Strasbourg to Caen
52.
Caen
53.
Caen
54.
Caen (day trip to Bayeux)
55.
Caen to Lille
56.
Lille
57.
Lille
58.
Lille
59.
Merci Lille, Hallo Oostende
60.
Oostende
61.
Oostende (day trip to Brugge)
62.
Oostende
63.
Dank u Oostende, hallo Amsterdam
64.
Amsterdam
65.
Amsterdam
66.
Bedankt Amsterdam, hello North Sea
67.
Howay Newcastle & Hexham
68.
Hexham
69.
Hexham
70.
Hexham
71.
Hexham
72.
Hexham
73.
Hexham to Northwich
74.
Northwich, Saltfleetby, Sheffield, Northwich, Windsor, Clifton, Northwich.
75.
Northwich to Dublin
76.
Dublin
77.
Dublin to Fermoy
78.
Fermoy & Cobh
79.
Fermoy to Farmers Bridge
80.
Farmers Bridge
81.
Farmers Bridge (day trip to Dingle Peninsula)
82.
Farmers Bridge to Kinvara
83.
Kinvara (day trip to the Cliffs of Moher)
84.
Kinvara to Dublin
85.
Dublin to Holyhead
86.
Northwich, Hexham, Hartlepool, Durham, Louth, Hexham.
87.
Grand Final 2019
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