by Local Host
Sipping coffee at a Parisian cafe or taking in the masterpieces at the Louvre are French experiences that can’t be missed. While traveling in Paris take some time to get off the beaten path by visiting this must-see sites on your Paris vacation.
Canal Saint Martin
Should the mood strike for a romantic stroll, make your way to this little-touristed canal. Its shaded towpaths are dappled with sunlight that filters through the plane trees. Enjoy.
Maison Prunier
For exquisite seafood dishes, give this venerable dining room a try. The fare is traditional French. The atmosphere, Art Deco.
Shakespeare and Company Bookstore
In the Roaring 20s, this quirky bookstore in the bohemian Left Bank was the meeting place for some of literature’s greats-Hemingway, Fitzgerald and Joyce to name a few. It still serves as a refuge for struggling writers and visitors alike.
Rue Cler
This bustling pedestrian street is teeming with edible objets d’art-from the rainbow of fresh fruit, to the soft palette of French baguettes and the colossal wheels of cheese. And when you’re ready for dessert, specialty stores abound-from tarts and pastries to crêpes and, of course, chocolate. Bon Appétit!
Sainte-Chapelle
One look at the upstairs chapel, and you’ll understand how Paris earned the moniker “City of Light.” Fifteen intricately designed panels of stained glass, commissioned by Louis IX, depict 1100 story-telling scenes.
Sephora
The importance of a delicate nose in French society is apparent at this aromatic wonderland. Follow your nose to the store’s “wheel of scents,” which are arranged from fresh scents like sea breeze to stronger ones like leather, chocolate and even civette-eau de cow pie.
Check back on Friday for Part #2 of our Paris, France not-to-be-missed sights. Start planning your France vacation today!
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by Leslie Russell
A day spent sightseeing in Paris is filled with artworks, fresh baked treats and colorful markets. When the sun goes down, Paris magically transforms into the “City of Light.”

On your vacation in Paris, see the Eiffel Tower illuminate the sky while you dine on French cuisine and enjoy a fine glass of wine. France is filled with beauty and romance.
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by Tony Perrottet
No trip to Paris, France is complete without a tour of the Louvre to see the famous Mona Lisa.
Today, a thick pane of bullet-proof security glass keeps artlovers a safe distance from the most famous painting in the world, Leonardo da Vinci’s “Portrait of Lisa Gherardini, Wife of Francesco Giacondo,” known in French as “La Joconde” and English as the “Mona Lisa.” But back in 1911, it was simply hung on the walls of the Musée du Louvre like any other canvas. That was until a former museum employee named Vincenzo Perrugia strolled into the gallery before opening hours on August 21, noticed the room was empty, took down the Mona Lisa and walked out of the Louvre with it under a painting smock.
When the loss was finally noticed, the police were mystified. For two years, the whereabouts of the masterpiece was unknown, while French detectives made various wild guesses. (It had been stolen by the Germans. By anarchists. By evil geniuses. By lunatics.) They actually arrested the country’s top art critic, Guillame Apollinaire, then let him free.
Then, out of the blue in 1913, an Italian art dealer in Florence was contacted by a man calling himself “Leonardo” who claimed to have the Mona Lisa and wanted to see it hang in the Uffizi, Italy’s top art museum. Although he found it hard to believe that the thief could be so reckless, the dealer tipped off the police and agreed to meet the strange Leonardo in a Milan hotel room. There, the nondescript fellow opened his suitcase, emptied out his socks and underwear, opened up a false bottom in the case to reveal the Mona Lisa – and was immediately arrested.
It turned out that Perrugia was no criminal mastermind trying to make a fortune but a sentimental Italian nationalist who had stolen the canvas on impulse and merely wanted to see it returned to its land of origin. (The Mona Lisa was purchased by France’s King Francis I in the 1530s.) The recovery was greeted with exultation in France, and the famed canvas safely shipped to its home in the Louvre. Back in Italy, however, the thief Peruggia was hailed as a patriotic hero in Italy and served only a short prison sentence.
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by Leslie Russell
Bienvenue, or welcome, to our series of posts on Paris, France.
We invite you to travel with us over the next month to the City of Love. Spend a lazy afternoon in a café, wander through the Louvre and learn the history of Leonardo da Vinci’s “Portrait of Lisa Gherardini, Wife of Francesco Giacondo” and explore one of the most evocative sites in Paris, the Place de la Bastille.
Escape with us on our journey as we go off the beaten path and discover the must-see gems of this great French city.
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by Leslie Russell

Enjoy sipping on a cafe au lait at a French bistro with your true love on your Paris Honeymoon.
Stroll hand-in-hand along the Champs-Elysées, savor an intimate dinner in a Paris bistro, enjoy romantic views from the top of the Eiffel Tower—and do it all surrounded by that famous Parisian joie de vivre!
For more romantic inspiriation, view the Paris Photo Gallery part of the Places of a Lifetime series from National Geographic Traveler magazine.
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by Leslie Russell
Happily ever after begins with a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for fun, romance and quality time with your new spouse.
The rest of this month we vow to provide you with the essential information to plan the perfect honeymoon and highlight some of the most romantic honeymoon destinations in the world.
Over the next few weeks stroll the white-sand beaches of Hawaii, indulge in a wood-fired Neapolitan pizza in Italy or enjoy romantic views atop the Eiffel Tower in France.
Get ready to say “I Do,” the honeymoon vacation is just beginning…

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by Tony Perrottet
Most people get their first glimpse of southern France in an art gallery: Perhaps no place on earth has been home so many celebrated painters, leading some critics to put it on a par with Paris and New York as an international art center.
The influx began in the late 19th century, when the Impressionists Paul Cézanne and Jean Renoir became captivated by the south’s dazzling light, its sun-baked towns, the azure sea views and color-saturated hillsides. Passionate about painting en plein air, “in open air,” they were naturally drawn to a land with over 330 days of annual sunshine. (Cézanne took his love of the outdoors to extremes, and by 1906, at the age of 67 was still painting in the mountains near his home, Jas de Boffon in Aix-en-Provence; he was finally caught in a storm and collapsed, dying not long afterwards).
The roster of painters who either lived or holidayed in southern France, particularly Provence and the Riviera, becomes a who’s who of modern art: Van Gogh, Gauguin, Matisse, Monet, Cocteau, Leger, Degas, Dufy, Braque and Dali were all inspired by the landscape here.
But perhaps the most prolific and celebrated artist to fall in love with the south was Pablo Picasso: He first visited the Mediterranean coast in 1939 (producing optimistic works with names like Joie de Vivre) and he returned to live in the south permanently after the Second World War, moving between beachside residences and a castle in Vauvernargues, near Cezanne’s home in Aix. Picasso found the landscape liberating, declaring that “in Paris, I never draw fauns, centaurs, or mythical creatures… yet they always seem to live in these parts.” Until his death in 1973 at the ripe age of 92, he stayed up until 3 am every night painting in his hilltop villa in Mougins, ceaselessly attempting to capture the magic of the South.

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by Tony Perrottet
“They are not vegetables but miracles,” declared one gourmand recently of the wild black truffle, the rare dark tuber found buried beneath the oak trees of southern France.
The scarcity of this subterranean fungus, combined with its delicate flavor and unique, pungent aroma, has made it an obsession amongst food-lovers and driven prices as high as $500 a pound. This “truffle-mania” dates back to Roman times: Ancient scientists, intrigued by the tuber’s curvaceous shape and underground birth, believed they were of magical origins and declared them aphrodisiacs.
In the Middle Ages, their scent was thought to evoke the ruffled sheets of a bordello, and monks were forbidden to eat them in case they would provoke indecent desires. But truffles truly came into fashion under the hedonistic “Sun King” Louis XIV, who demanded they be served at the royal table in Versailles.
By the 19th century, with the rise of haute cuisine, French chefs were worshipping them as “diamonds of the kitchen.” Demand soared, and the sight of truffle hunters traipsing across the countryside every fall and winter with their enormous waddling pigs became one of the most picturesque images of southern France. Sows were the traditional beast of choice for hunters. (Female hogs find the truffle’s scent very close to that of an aroused male and seek them out voraciously). But pigs have the unfortunate habit of devouring the truffles they find, so in recent years dogs have been trained to sniff out and dig up the elusive fungi.
Sadly for gourmands, production has plunged in the last century due to deforestation and lack of manpower in rural areas; southern markets once exported 1000 tons of the tubers, but the amount is now closer to 50. Modern biotechnologists are coming up with new plans to cultivate the truffles in larger quantities, but true gourmands, it seems, will always hold the wild truffle supreme.
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by Tony Perrottet
If you have a spare afternoon in Nice, take a taxi ride to the promontory of Cap Ferrat, France’s most exclusive playground for the rich and famous. Its perfect beaches and steep hillsides are encrusted with fabulous “dream villas” built throughout the last century.
Most of these are private – but the two most historic properties, only 20 minutes walk apart, are open to the public and offer a glimpse into the storybook lives of millionaires past.
Read the rest of this entry »
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by Local Host
Continuing our post from Friday, here are five more Nice, France gems just waiting to be discovered.
Cimiez
Old world meets new in this wealthy residential suburb north of town. Reminders of an ancient Roman past, including an intact amphitheatre and public baths, are juxtaposed with a vibrant modern art scene.
Molinard Perfume Factory
For an aromatic day trip, visit the fragrant town of Grasse and its famed perfume industry. Make your way to Molinard, where a keen sense of smell can help you concoct your own signature line.
Centre de Plongée Sous-Marine
The shimmering Mediterranean entices many visitors to take a closer look. Dive into the azure blue sea to discover underwater caves and view the magnificent blue gorgonians, which is actually a spindly red coral.
Rue de France
Exclusive clothiers. Sidewalk cafés. Trinkets and treasures alike. Give in to the impulse to spend an afternoon (or three) along this decadent pedestrian mall.
Monaco/Monte-Carlo
The glittering of this famous place is highly recommended.
We hope that these Nice must-see sights will help you get more vacation from your vacation and serve as a planning resource for your French Riviera vacation.
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