September 2010
Monthly Archive
Thu 30 Sep 2010
Posted by Linda under
General[4] Comments

Where to eat. As I said before, you will have no problems finding places to eat. We even ate at a Tex Mex place for dinner one night for a change and it actually wasn’t too bad but maybe that’s just because I haven’t been in Texas for a while. Although you can eat at one of the many rather posh places on Cours Mirabeau, including the famous les Deux Garcons, it’s more fun to head up the narrow streets and explore and come upon a fun area. When we went into 28 a Aix, the manager, Michel, gave us some recommendations of places to eat.

We picked this place. It has a lovely interior and also an area around a fountain with umbrellas filled with tables. We arrived at noon, a usually early time for the French to eat, and weren’t able to get a table by the fountain, but did sit outside but the restaurant. People stood and waited for tables, a good sign there is good food.

We almost always have rose with our meals.

My Thai salad. It was as good as it looks. Victor’s was a great place for a salad or a chicken sandwich with what looked like really good french fries.
Two other places recommended by Michel that we didn’t get to try: la Table de Ventabren at 1, rue Cezanne, la Mado at 4, place des Precheurs, and a Tomate Verte at 15 rue des Tanneurs-I read they can have very bad service here on Trip Advisor. To find other fun places go to the huge fountain at the end of Cours Mirabeau, go up the first small street to the right, Rue Espariat. You will pass many places. Turn left on the first street after rue des Tanneurs called rue des Bedarrides and then left on the second street off there and you will wind down narrow streets into small squares packed with places to eat. There are also places in front of the Hotel de Ville but they don’t appeal to me as much.
Tue 28 Sep 2010
Where to stay in Aix? There aren’t too many places actually in the old section of Aix and most seem to be on the exterior of the city although a short walk to Cours Mirabeau which you will find will almost always be where you start to do anything in Aix.

This is where we stayed. It was a nice hotel, 4 star, bar, lobby, elelvator, swimming pool but, really, just a hotel when it comes down to it. I recommend it if you can’t get into this place:

This is the little lobby. It’s called 28 a Aix, found on 28, rue du 4 Septembre close to Cours Mirabeau. I read about it in the New York Times article on Aix and stopped by to have a look. There’s no pool, no elelvator and there are only four rooms. It not even a B&B. It has a new owner and they were smart enough to keep the services of the manager, Michel, who is a wonderfully friendly guy and who let us in to look around. The rooms were off limits though.

Not your usual lobby.

Wouldn’t you love to have breakfast here every morning? I read that their breakfasts are fabulous and included in the price of the room which wasn’t the case of our hotel. To get a room here you have to book months in advance and July is always fully booked being the big festival month for Aix. The rooms range from 250 to 300 Euros a night or more depending on the season. The next time I have a reason to spend the night in Aix, I’m going to try and get a room here.
Sun 26 Sep 2010
What to do in Aix? I haven’t broken it up into two hour increments like the New York Times did but here is a list of what to see and do while visiting Aix.
First, make a stop at the Tourist Information Center across from the huge fountain at the Rotunde and get a map of Vieil Aix. It will help you find places as the old part of Aix can be confusing with its winding streets and dead ends. You will find that Cours Mirabeau is the heart of Aix lined with it’s lovely plane trees and decked with fountains and it’s a good place to have a drink and watch tourists and fashionable women stroll by.

Good King Rene stands at the opposite end of la Rotunde. He is holding a bunch of muscat grapes in one hand, something he brought to Provence.
Go south to find the Mazarin section of Aix, especially the Place des Quatre Dauphins. Go north to enter into Vieil Aix where shops, cafes and markets of every kind fill the narrow lines and squares.

I especially like this clock tower next to the Hotel de Ville. It’s a really nice sqaure. When the market here is finished, it is filled with tables for drinks and eats. Continue on up the street past the tower and you will arrive at the Cahtedral St Saveur, a must see. It is a mix of centuries of additions with a lovely 5th century baptistry with recycled colums from the temple of Apollo which once stood here. There are fabulous carved wooded doors that are covered but you can arrange to see them by asking at the office in the church. There is also a wonderful 12th century cloister which is opened once or twice a day at scheduled times. The cathedral, by the way, is closed for lunch.

My favorite thing in the cathedral, over on the furtherest wall to the left, is this dragon. Martha was said to have captured it after it had been terrorizing the villagers. Martha along with two Marys of Biblical times were believed to have come to France after Christ was gone so you will find many places and churches connected with this belief.

You will find these medallions all over Aix and you can get a map and follow them to various buildings and areas having to do with Cezanne was lived and painted in Aix and the surrounding areas. You can find his atelier at 9 Ave. Paul Cezanne where you can see where he did his still-lifes. You won’t find a museum with his paintings here though, although the city did have a really good show of his art a few years ago.
Thu 23 Sep 2010
To the south of the Cours Mirabeau is an interesting area to explore. If you need some reading material you can also find an English bookstore called Book in Bar Bookstore at #4, rue Joseph Cabassol in this section of town.

The fountain found at Place des Quatre Dauphins. This is found in the area called Mazerin and is one of my favorites.

If you’re lucky, you may get a photo of a lady walking her dog seen through the falling water of the fountain.

Aix has some of the best markets in Provence. Wednesday and Saturday there are many stalls lined up on the Cours Mirabeau mostly selling clothing but also table clothes and a free hand made items. I especially love the vegetable market held daily on Place Richelme which is right before you reach the Hotel de Ville.

You can easily rent bikes in Aix. Instead of being called Velibs as in Paris they are called VHello. Get it? Really though, Aix is so easy to walk around that unless you are going a long distance, you probably won’t need one.
Tue 21 Sep 2010
A year or so ago I read an article in the New York Times entitled 36 Hours in Aix-en-Provence. They do one of these once a week on places all over the world. Since I’m always in Aix I eagerly read the article and wondered where in the world they came up with the places the picked. Mostly it was bars, restaurants and a little shopping leading me to think that the article must have been written by a young person. Who gave them the information? Where can I get this job? Anyway, I decided to put together my own 36 Hours piece. I find I have to split it up into parts mainly because I have so many photos. Maurice and I actually did spend 36 hours in Aix the other day as we had to wait for our car to be worked on. It’s a wonderful place to be “stuck”.
Preface to 36 Hours in Aix:

A good starting point in visiting Aix is the Rotunde. The lovely Cours Mirabeau, a charming central street goes off this place and the Tourist Information Office is to the left of this fountain if Cours Mirabeau is behind you.

Aix is packed with places to eat and it is a pleasure to find an umbrella or tree to sit under, sometimes with a fountain trickling nearby, and watch the world go by. Cours Mirabeau has a line of cafes going all the way up one side but I like to go “inland” from there up the tiny streets to find a place.

Fountains can be found all over the city. This is one of my favorites.

Always keep looking up as you walk around Aix. There are amazing things overhead.

Aix is full of lovely buildings and churches.

There are Saints and Virgin Marys on many buildings overhead.
Sun 19 Sep 2010
Posted by Linda under
General[7] Comments
I just can’t take enough photos of fruit and vegetables at markets. You can find just about any color there is at a market.

White-ish eggplants.

No red like that of tomato red.

I love this color found in melons. I’ve always thought a wall in a kitchen painted this color would be fabulous.

Hard to beat the colors of pumpkins too.

Probably won’t see sunflowers much longer.
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