Summary
Drive to Èze. Very picturesque but very crowded with tourists. Great views to the Mediterranean. Crazy drive to Monaco. One week before the Grand Prix of Monte Carlo, so the racecourse is laid out and all the grandstands have been built. Grabbed a quick lunch and then walked over to look at the yachts in the boat basin. Drove to Saint Jean Cap Ferrat to visit the Ile de France Villa of Baroness Beatrice de Rothschild . Audio tour of house then gardens. To Nice, walked Old Town then to Panama Restaurant for early dinner.
Details
Our plan is to drive up to Èze today, a very picturesque, popular hilltop village. It’s only 11 miles away but will take 45 minutes. So many twists and turns. We get there and park. The city garage is shiny, new, and enormous, having many floors on which to accommodate many, many cars. What can it mean? We take the elevator way up to the ground floor and start heading up towards the village proper. We’re not alone.
It is picturesque but all pictures will, necessarily, contain lots of people. It’s only April but the place is packed. We hear lots of English, Spanish, Italian, Japanese, and of course French. The narrow ancient “roads” are all just for pedestrians, as it was back a few hundred years ago when the place was quieter. The paths go up and down, and loop back on themselves, so with each turn we seem to encounter some big family or group we saw just a few minutes prior. It reminds me of the M. C. Escher drawing with stairways going all different ways with the walkers ignoring the pull of gravity.
We escape to the cemetery where we encounter just as many people but they’re all buried. Their best faces are on oval plaques remembering who is here. Some of the names are French but many more seem to be Italian or Spanish.
As nice as Éze might be, it’s much too crowded now and we can’t get out of there fast enough. We feel bad for the poor people who still live there. I guess it’s their living now. Hopefully in the later afternoon and evening it clears out and they get a little bit of peace and quiet, time when they can relax and clean up the trash from the day’s visitors and restock the shelves for tomorrow.
Our watches say it’s getting on towards lunch and we ponder our options. Monaco isn’t far away and is a strong draw for the group. Surely we can find a good place to eat lunch there.
The drive to the principality is easy enough until we get there, where it turns into an automotive version of the Chutes and Ladders game, albeit with tunnels and roundabouts. We go in the direction we think we should until the signs leave us wondering. At times we take advantage of the ability to go around a roundabout more than once to decide in which way we should be going. Amusingly the car in front of us is doing the exact same thing. On the positive side we have GPS. On the negative side we’re below ground, in a tunnel, and we’ve only paid for cellphone service in Italy and France. One of the tunnels is a long, sweeping arc going slowly around, down and down, until we’re out of the hills and down to near sea level. We’re plopped out back into the daylight and quickly scramble to find one of those blue signs with a big white P on it (for Parking). We’re ready to be rid of our car for a while.
Walking again we find a likely place for lunch and install ourselves. We get to choose between French, Italian, English or probably other languages. Satiated we set out to see how the prince lives. Apparently the Monaco Grand Prix will be going on in about a week and the race track and stands are all in place, with fancy chain link fences all around, limiting who can get in and where. The signs lead us to the “boat basin” where we see some of the biggest and fanciest yachts we’ve seen. We laugh at the clever names on the boats, giving our prize to the modest craft with “DonQuiFlotte” on the back.
Ready to be back in France we reclaim our car and head back uphill. We’re going to the former residence of one of the nieces of the banking family Rothschild. Beatriz found this big, flat plot of land overlooking Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat. She then invested a lot of the money at her disposal (a mountain of it) to build a very nice “house” and “gardens”. Thankfully over time the property was turned over to a foundation which found lots of benefactors to maintain it and fix it up. It’s as lovely as ever and the gardens are amazing. They cover a lot of ground and as interested as Beatriz was in collecting valuable art, she was in collecting unique plants, not from here. The plants liked the climate as much as we humans and have thrived. It’s a sight to behold.
Having had as much of the Lifestyles of the rich and famous as we can take we head back the short distance to Nice for dinner. We park the car and head to the Panama restaurant on the Place Garibaldi for dinner. It’s good and soon we’re back home, enjoying our VRBO for one last night.
Photos
[Note: to view the photos in chronological order, start at the bottom :-/ ]