Showing posts with label Marseille. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marseille. Show all posts

Friday, 10 July 2015

June 24, 2015- Marseille Disembarkment and TGV to Paris

Another Terrible Breakfast- Rounding Up is Normal on All Costa Bills- Disembarkation in Marseille and Back on Solid Land for Good - Taxi to Gare Saint Charles- TGV Marseille to Paris- Checking into our first Airbnb Accommodation in the 9th Arrondissement- Montmartre

This morning we had a skip in our step knowing that we were getting off of this nightmarish cruise. We were not allowed to order in room service, so we went to the "International Breakfast" restaurant again instead of eating doughnuts and cake with the main occupants of the ship in the buffet. The service was as usual a nightmare, but nothing could bring us down knowing that we were never again to be on the Costa Magica!

April was done her course of antibiotics for the severe food poisoning that she contracted on the Costa Magica, but her intestines were still very unhappy and would clearly take some time to settle out after the trauma they had endured.

As usual we had to fight for a table for two in the largely empty restaurant. We were seated, April ordered tea, and then we were ignored while other people seated after us had their orders taken and were brought food while we looked hungrily on. We finally ordered our breakfast. Our breakfast arrived before April’s tea water arrived. April had to ask for tea more than 3 times and they seemed surprised each time. The tea water was warm this time, but the tea selection was poorer. They didn’t bother to ask if we needed more bags. No milk was provided for tea, we had to ask many times, and then a waiter started pouring hot milk into April's empty tea cup until it was full. Apparently they could not provide a little pot of cold milk as normal restaurants are able. It's as if the waiters have never heard of the concept of tea. We were asked if we wanted “more coffee” several times when it was clear we didn’t have any (having previously indicated that we did not want any). Syrup was dumped on our pancakes AND eggs this time (last time there was no syrup). Again, there was no butter for our pancakes. Half of the eggs were overcooked for April this time. As a result of the extreme difficulty obtaining water the day before, we brought our own tap water with us to the table in a bottle. Where was Amit when you needed him? Dinner runs so much more smoothly than breakfast under his watchful eye.

A note on tap water. You would not believe the lengths we went to to get tap water on this ship (despite coming on board with the North American offer of unlimited free tap water, juice, tea, and coffee). We were not allowed to order tap water through room service and therefore were only allowed to drink it at restaurants or the buffet at meal times. The only other places where one could get tap water were fountains in the gym and change room or if you took water from the bathroom tap in your room and left it in an open bottle for a day or two to dechlorinate so it would not make you sick (according to staff on the cruise ship, drinking it right out of the tap would make you feel sick because there was so much chlorine in it). So, over the cruise we amassed a collection of empty water bottles that we rotated through the dechlorination process or took up to the gym to fill with the filtered tap water. It was a real pain in the ass and really makes you appreciate living in Canada, especially Victoria, where the tap water is safe, good tasting, and available for free at any time.

We were given the earliest disembarkation time of 9:15 A.M. after the ship arrived in Marseille at about 9:00 A.M.. Bill was not allowed to pick up his passport the night before and was only allowed to during a fifteen minute window of time in the casino that morning. We assumed it was there because they had higher security procedures to protect the valuable passports. It was not. We had to rush through our breakfast to be there in time to pick up the passport (because we could not go for breakfast afterwards because the "International Restaurant" closed early and only the Italian one was open later, not that this uneven treatment surprised us anymore). In the casino, the lone employee took a person's name, opened their passport and asked the person if that was their passport. What kind of Mickey Mouse security is this? You have to surrender any non-EU passport and then they treat it as if it's a loyalty card for a store? Anyone could have waltzed up there and taken anyone else's passport. We are disgusted that Costa takes the security of international passports so lightly when it forces people to surrender them for the length of the cruise without any prior notice.

The fun was not over, we had not been given our itemized bill until early that morning (it was printed past 3 AM and delivered while we were sleeping). We did have a problem with that bill. The total was rounded up by 3 cents even though we were paying on a credit card. Why did they do this? Bill stood in line at customer service to ask about this. We thought it was a typo, but no, they explained they did it to everyone. What? That's theft and since they're doing it to thousands of people, grand theft. Is this how Costa is paying for its court costs and settlements?

Prior to disembarkation, we met in the theatre and then all went down together to the exit and into the port station where we chose our bags from the huge group of unattended suitcases. Fortunately no one had stolen all of our dirty clothes.

We procured a cab and were whipped into the chaotic rush hour traffic of Marseille on our way to the Gare Saint Charles where we were to catch the TGV back to Paris. As we listened to the blaring horns and sirens around us, we reflected on the cruise gone awry. We realized that no one ever got back to us about what brand of ravioli the executive chef uses on the Costa Magica. Perhaps it was Chef Boyardee after all.

We sat in the train station and had a snack and bought sandwiches for our trip. We took out our tickets and the printing on them was mired. We took them to an attendant when we were boarding and they didn't really look at them and sent us on our way, so we guessed what the coach number was and sat down on the seats in the coach that lined up with the seat numbers on our tickets. We had been there for a little bit until two people boarded in Avignon and showed us tickets with the same seat number as ours and it was determined that our seats could not possibly be there because we had bought economy tickets for the way back (unlike the premier tickets we had on the way down). We had to collect all of our suitcases and our carry-on luggage and traverse through five different cars until we reached the correct one and found our true seats. Oops!

We arrived at Gare de Lyon in Paris and used free Wi-Fi to tell our Airbnb host, Eric, that we were on our way to his apartment on the edge of Montmartre (18th arrondissement) in the Opera district (9th arrondissement). We took at taxi to Eric's apartment and then used the code provided to get into his building. We then tried ringing his apartment as previously instructed. We even tried going up to his floor, but could not find him. April reviewed her previous emails and finally found one from him earlier in the day where he said he'd be working from a friend's apartment on the floor below and to ring that name instead. We did that and Eric came to meet us. His apartment is an airy one bedroom with a kitchen, living room, toilet, and bathroom with a big tub. For Europe it had lots of space and has beautiful wood and tile floors and gorgeous moldings on the ceiling. The day was very hot, yet his place which had lots of windows opening to a courtyard, was very cool and comfortable. It was quiet too. He gave us his Wi-Fi password, his keys, and went on his way.

First, we connected to the Wi-Fi and then we went to the nearby grocery store (one block away) to pick up some supplies for breakfast the next day. We returned home by way of the bakery that was just half a block away and then had a snack. The baguette and croissants were amazing, particularly after our culinary deprivation on the Costa Magica. We walked into neighbouring Montmartre (the Moulin Rouge was about 1 minute walk from his place). We were unable to look in the Montmartre Cemetery as it was already closed, but we saw the Moulin Rouge, Le Chat Noir, bought some macaroons, and climbed all the way up the cobblestone streets to Sacre-Coeur Cathedral. We sat on the steps on Sacre-Coeur and ate macaroons looking down over Paris. We walked through the cathedral marvelling at the light shining through the impressive stained glass windows. We walked down the steps of Sacre-Coeur taking in the view of Paris and avoiding many, many African hustlers and merchants trying to sell their wares.

We walked along Place de Clichy, deciding not to take in any strip shows or cabaret performances. Instead, homesick, we had Indian food for dinner at an Indian Restaurant along the street. The Chicken Tikka Masala and vegetarian curry we ordered along with Pilau rice and naan had us smiling as we walked back to our apartment just over the border of the 18th arrondissement into the 9th. We slept well that night off the ship and safe on land.

6.64 km walked today.
Our broken towel rack was never fixed though we left the broken part out more than once and told customer service
Our broken shower pole was never fixed though it was hanging off the wall on more than one occasion and we told customer service. Guess this kind of disrepair is normal on the Costa Magica.
A whole cup full of hot milk. Thanks. Where am I supposed to put my tea exactly?
We have never been more happy to be out of an accommodation in our travelling lives. Bill at the Marseille port.

Gare Saint Charles in Marseille where we caught the TGV to Paris.

No wonder the seats looked the same as the ones on the way down, these were first class seats and not our actual seats. Oops!

Eric's 9th Arr. Apartment was Beautiful








Place de Clichy on the border of the 18th Arr. just beside the 9th Arr where we stayed.

The View from Sacre-Coeur is Breathtaking


Sacre-Coeur is a Gorgeous Memorial to the Fraco-Prussian War












Thursday, 25 June 2015

June 13, 2015 – Marseille, France & Boarding the Ship

Explore Marseille, check out the Hotel Alex, taxi to the cruise ship terminal, and board the Costa Magica for our first ever cruise

We awoke to find lots of wet clothes from last night’s rainstorm that we were caught in. We had breakfast in the hotel, buffet style. What value! For 12 euros we had pastries, cheese, yoghurt, eggs, bacon, ham, coffee, tea, and juice. We packed up and continued to dry our clothes with the hair dryer.

We checked out and checked our bags in the hotel as we had some extra time to kill. As we walked to the Old harbour, we stumbled upon a flea market. It was fascinating to peruse the old wares and quasi-antiques. We then wandered down to the old harbour and found a café right on the water to have what discovered too late was a sad nicoise salad, albeit, reasonably priced.

After lunch, we wandered back to the hotel, procuring along the way some water and nuts to bring aboard the cruise ship to snack upon. The friendly front desk agent at the Alex Hotel called a taxi and a jolly cabbie came and brought us to the cruise ship terminal.

We went through the cruise ship security screening without much hassle, however, Bill suddenly found out that he would have to surrender his passport for the remainder of the cruise because he did not have an EU passport like April (we were not informed of this ahead of time when we booked the cruise). They said that they would have to hold the passport for visa reasons at each port of call. We asked to speak to the manager and had to wait for quite a while at the "passport collection table." The passports were all on display on the little table with nothing covering the little box. The bored employee seldom had her eye on the passports and anyone could have grabbed a handful and absconded with them. We doubt the Canadian government would be happy to know their passports were being held in this manner. The manager said that Bill would have to surrender the passport or get up very early every time they called in port and go with an employee to sort out visa issues with that port or just stay on the ship. So Bill surrendered his passport. April was able to keep both her Canadian and Irish passports.

We were subjected to a security drill for abandoning ship if necessary, but not necessarily abandoning ship. After all the adventure we ordered ourselves room service of a light meal to share as we had the late dinner service and wouldn’t be eating for another number of hours. The “fruit with fresh cream” was a special treat for April, and resembled a chilled fruit soup. Traces of melon and pineapple shards were uncovered in the opaque liquid. A little surprising…a little unexpected…not a great description of what the dish actually was.

We were also disappointed and shocked that we could not order a glass of tap water with room service. Even though we were told before we booked the cruise that all non-fizzy drinks and alcohol would be free (the "North American plan" that Costa is using to try to attract customers from North America).

We were happy with the size of our room which was bigger than we expected. The condition of the room though was definitely showing the age of the ship (11 years) with marks on the walls, chips out of the bathroom counter, and a worn carpet. The light by our door flickered like a strobe light and we called to have it fixed.

A little while before dinner, we changed our clothes and went to explore the ship and get our bearings.

Dinner was in itself rather disappointing, however the server, Amit Sing, was the highlight. He provided us with great service and we enjoyed talking to him about where in India he was from. The highlight of the mediocre meal was the ice cream.

It was a very full day. We returned to our cabin to find the ship's newsletter in French. Apparently they thought that we were French.


Breakfast in Marseille

April's flower complements the life jacket during the emergency drill very well.

A silhouetted Bill finds a perch in our cabin

Selfie on the top deck of the boat before dinner.

Before dinner



The ice cream was much better than the M&M meats style cream puffs. 


Friday, 12 June 2015

June 12: à Bientôt Paris, Bonjour Marseille!


Check out of Le Signature Saint-Germain-Des-Pres, TGV to Marseille, Check into Alex Hotel, Explore Marseille my foot and petit train, a true European rainstorm

This morning we were up early to pack. We had a couple of Pink Lady apples and a pain au chocolate obtained the evening before, then we checked out of the lovely Le Signature Saint-Germain-Des-Pres. 


The hotel staff had called us a cab and he took us to Gare de Lyon train station. At the station we had yogurt, a croissant, and tea. The croissant, fresh and soft was the best so far on this trip. We looked for the platform for our train but only the hall was posted so far, so we paid to use the washroom, an annoying thing about France, and then found some cold drinks for the trip. I tried to find apples but was only successful at finding cut up apples in bags, good enough. 

Once the power that be posted our platform number, there was a mass movement of people towards the train. We found our car, S3, and the worker checked our printer printed train tickets. We found out seats after putting our luggage in the racks. The seats were striped and so big and comfortable. We were in comfort class because there was little difference in price with economy, but on the return we're in economy so we'll have to compare. 

We left right on time, 9:37 AM. The train ride was one of the nicest trips I’ve ever had. We arrived five minutes late in Marseille, having had some sandwiches on the train. We took a picture of the spectacular view and wandered down the steps of the train station. It was very warm and humid. We found the Alex hotel right across the street and checked in. 

After carrying our bags up a few flights of stairs we organized ourselves, obtained a map from the front desk, and wandered down towards the old harbour. We found a beautiful old church, Eglise Saint-Vincent-de-Paul, bought some lemon meringue, and wandered more, finally figuring out where we were. 

We tried to have a cool sparkling water in McDonalds to take advantage of their free Wi-Fi and the bathrooms but we were harassed continually for food and money by people, so we left. We strolled through the old harbour and found more cool drinks and Le Petit Train, a diesel powered train on wheels that drives in little connected cars through the streets of Marseille and up to the church that overlooks all of Marseille. The tour was breathtaking and we enjoyed the view from the top at Notre Dame de la Garde very much.

We were returned to the old harbour where we went in search of an “early” dinner as it was only 6:00 p.m.. We wanted to try a recommended Moroccan place, but it did not open for another hour and we were really hungry, so we went to a cafe down the street that was open and had a “menu” special of moules et frites (mussels and French fries) with dessert. We both had this. It was very good as was the fresh baguette that appeared on our table. The desserts were interesting. One we had never heard of and it was like a cake with creamy custard in layers. The other was tiramisu.

As we had been searching for dinner there had been some ominous raindrops and the sky had been darkening all day. At dinner, the skies opened and it started to pour. Of course we had no umbrella and were dressed in summery clothing. After dinner, we left the restaurant and tried to skip from covered place to covered place until it became obvious that we would never reach our hotel if we continued like that, so we just entered the deluge and became completely drenched.

 The lightning and thunder started and the downpour reached monsoon like conditions. We were blinded by rain and drenched through every article of clothing. We made it back to the hotel where the front desk lady recommended that we take a shower. Bill said that we already had to which we all had a good laugh. 

We did have a hot shower and then tried to dry our shoes and clothes a bit, but really it was if we had just gone swimming for hours in our outfits. And, I found out that pink silk top from Value Village is not colour fast and now I have an ombre sweater, underwear, and Capri pants. Oh well . . . 

Tomorrow we board our cruise to Morocco and beyond and we will not have Wi-Fi on the ship and are unsure of if we will encounter it on our shore days. So you may not hear from for a week and a half. But check back to see if we manage to post anything. When we do have Wi-Fi we will be putting up new posts with lots of pictures.



Bill in front of the war memorial in Marseille and the Eglise St-Vincent-de-Paul (Les Reformes)

An arch that is right on the water, in which you can see Chateau d'Iff right through it


Palm trees....it's definitely the Mediterranean.

A view from Basilica Notre Dame de la Garde atop Marseille. Chateau d'Iff is in the background on the little island for all those Montecristo fans.

April aboard the petit-train

Inside Notre Dame de la Garde

Bill taking the above picture

Look up... look way up.


Notre Dame de la Garde

Fun with stone carvings
Great hand work


Notre Dame de la Garde





Dinner...Moules et frites parceque quand on est en France, on doit manger comme les francaise.

Il pleut...chat et chiens...and this was before it got heavy!
The result...soaked right through. The evening's activity...washing and using the blow dryer to dry off as much as we can!