Paris by boat
An original and
unexpected view of Paris - the canal Saint Martin opens up perspectives of the
old and relatively unknown city, A three hour cruise brings you the best of
both worlds : the grandeur of the Seine, with the Tuileries Gardens, Notre Dame,
the Louvre, the Ile St. Louis, together with the quiet intimacy of Napoleon's
canals. Embarcation on the ``Canotier" or ``La Guêpe Buissonnière" under a softly
lit Parisian morning sky, just below the Musée d'Orsay. Then a veritable parade
of monuments the Louvre, the Institute of France, the royal Sainte Chapelle,
the spires of Notre Dame, the Ile Saint Louis before arriving at the entrance
to the canal Saint Martin. The most romantic street in Paris...the canal St Martin.
It is also one of the longest : 3 miles of pure poetry. In its jade couloured
water are reflected old swing bridges, halfmoon footbriges and the abundant foliage
of horse -chestnut trees. Between the Place de la Bastille and la Villette in
the north-east of Paris the Canal reveals a side of the city that
the tourist usually doesn't get to see. Adventure beckons at the approach of
the first lock of the canal. The boat is then swallowed up by the underground
vault of the Bastille : a mile and a half of cool mystery... underneath the Place
de la Bastille, with a view of the foundations of the July Column. After the
tunnel a dazzling world of locks, swing bridges, errant green-back ducks, with
stoic fishermen and tender lovers scattered along the quaysides. Beyond a curtain
of chestnut trees nestles the Hôtel du Nord, scene of the famous film starring
Arletty and Louis Jouvet. The canal climbs its way through a series of nineteenth
century locks and some enchanting old areas of Paris until, 26 metres above the
Seine, it comes up to the Park de la Villette, where the Science Museum, the
Geode, the Music Museum and thematic gardens await you.





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