I spent the night before on the internet looking for train tickets to Aix. It looked like the only way to get tickets for under $300 was to leave the station before 9:00am. Since we were about 50 minutes from the station that serviced south France we would have to get up at 7 or so. We managed to do so and made our way to the train station. I learned in France you always go to the window to buy tickets. In Italy always use the machines and never go to the window unless you don’t have a machine. The reason you should go to the window in France is because what you see in the machine or on the internet isn’t always what the ticket agent sees. She got me a train at 10:00 that cost less then my super early train. Still it cost us $250 with our discount card to go to Provence. That was a lot because I still hadn’t gotten paid from the company I was working for. Three hours later we’re in the middle of what looks like a desert.. It obviously gets very hot and is very dry in Provence. It reminded me of Greece. The station that we arrived in is the Aix en Provence TGV station which happens to be 20 miles from the city. After finding an SNCF attendent that spoke english we learned that we need to take a bus to the city. The taxi was 25 euros and the bus was 15. Twenty minutes later we’re at a bus station that wasn’t on our map. We had hotel reservations but they were near the old train station. It was about a million degrees and the sun was shining. Jade learned a valuable lesson right away – when in Provence don’t touch metal. He’ll remember that for a while. Anyway we walked the right direction and ended up near the train station and our hotel. Funny that we stayed in a Comfort Inn in Europe. It had a pool and decent rooms. The only difference between the Provencal Comfort Inn and the Seattle one was about $100. We were hot and tired from the journey so we layed down and took a nap. Hunger awoke us so we ventured into town. Dinner appeared in the form of a Lebanese kebab which turned out to be quite good. Everywhere we go the Lebonese food is different. This kebab had an big round pita opened up in the middle. They put kebab meat (think vertical rotiserie like the Greeks), lettuce, onions and some sort of sauce. Then they rolled it back up and put it on the grill for a minute. They were pretty good and didn’t taste like any other Lebonese kabobs we’d eaten. We found an internet cafe and logged on to see if we had money yet and we did. Finally the waiting to do anything but survive was over. We returned to the hotel at Piper’s insistance and went night swimming in the pool. By the end of the night Jade could almost float. I was holding him up with one finger. He’d be an excellent swimmer if he could overcome his fear of water.

The following day we decided we needed to wash clothes. We really needed to wash clothes in Paris but judging by the lack of laundromats Parisians don’t wash clothes. There are dry cleaners all over but no laundromats. Our clothes were 7 days old and only designed for 4 so you can imagine how they smelled. We found a laundromat that looked friendly enough near our hotel. One thing I’ve learned is many things are the same abroad as at home and everything else isn’t…. Laundromats fall into the latter category. In this particular one you put clothes in the washer, go to a payment machine, put in money, push the number 23 which output soap out of another machine, you then take that soap to your washer and put it in the top and return to the payment machine and push the number on your machine and it would deduct the amount to wash from the money you inserted. If you requested change it would give it to you otherwise it would keep it. My kids put the clothes in while I skipped the first few steps. I figured I’d pay for it then push the big button on the machine to get it to start like in America. Things started to go wrong as soon as I put money in and the machines started running even though the doors weren’t shut. Who’d design a washing machine that would fill up with water when the door is open? Anyway one of the doors we got shut and the other had clothes stuck in it so water started pouring out on the floor. The attendent started talking in French and motioning to me frantically. I can imagine what he was saying…He got the machine to stop and mopped up the water. He started the machine again and we washed our clothes with no soap. I really didn’t want to add complexity since we were having a hard enough time just getting the water to stay in the machine. The clothes came out ok even without soap. Rinsing them for an hour did wonders to their smell. After attempting to wash clothes we went for dinner. Provence is known for it’s cuisine as is all of France so we wanted to go somewhere nice. We stopped at a place and like any true French person sat outside under an awning. I had slices of duck interleaved with slices of carmalized cantelope and the best vegatables I’ve ever eaten. I couldn’t place the flavors in the veggies so I wouldn’t even be able to recreate the dish at home. I have to say as of July 7th this is the best meal I’ve had here. Maybe the French can cook after all. Aix is a nice town and Natalya mentioned that if she could get used to the heat she’d live there. It’s very different than Paris though as is every other city on earth. The following day we left for Tuscany.