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Provence: A tale of two cities | Philstar.com
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Travel and Tourism

Provence: A tale of two cities

- Manny Gonzalez, Plantation Bay Resort & Spa -

Part 2: Aix-en-Provence (just say EKS)

MANILA, Philippines - Town of Beautiful Women. Aix (eks) is the other major city in Provence. Now, I have always maintained that you can tell a lot about a city by the kind of establishment that predominates in its downtown. In Jackson, Wyoming, there are more art galleries than restaurants; this means that there are a lot of thin rich people there. In Hong Kong, there is a jewelry store every 10 meters; you can guess what this says about the men (I will not spell it out as I already have enough death threats, etc.).

Well, in old Aix, there are cosmetics shops (not pharmacies, cosmetics shops) on each and every street. After mulling this over a couple of days, I decided that in Aix, there must be more women than men. You see? It’s all so simple if you just think about it hard enough.

Maybe because it is a university town with students from all over the world (this is why the women outnumber men — lots more women get into college), maybe because those handsome Roman legionnaires picked the best Gauls to grow grapes with, and maybe because some of those cosmetics actually work, Aix has some serious talent, female-beauty-wise. It’s all concentrated in the small Old Town district, where, if you sit at just the right place, you can fall in love with a different woman every two minutes.

Fruit Market: On different days of the week, fruits, cheeses, antiques, books, and many other items are sold on the streets of Old Aix.

Where is this “right place,” you ask. Well, one edge of the Old Town is a wide boulevard called the Cours Mirabeau, and from there the old district extends northward about a kilometer. The Cours has a string of bars and restaurants that are always full, especially just when you are in need of dinner. However, this is not the “right place,” because even though your café may be on a sidewalk, people pass by in a hurry.

Boulevard of Plane Trees and Pigeons. The Cours Mirabeau is one of the best-known streets in France, largely because it is planted on both sides with ancient London plane trees (not sure what the French call them, but they’re the same tree that populate much of Hyde Park in London). These are very big, very leafy trees whose crowns have grown together, so that in summer you can walk down the middle of the boulevard in dense shade, though this might also get you hit by a car.

Unfortunately, I went in spring, before the leaves had come out. (See picture.) Just pretend these trees have leaves. Anyway, I am pretty sure there is a distinct downside to walking down the Cours in summer, and that downside is bird poop. Lots of birds. Lots of poop. Such was the evidence of the sidewalks below the trees, where, even though an entire winter had passed (snow and rain, etc.), one could still see layers of hardened bird-droppings everywhere.

Cours Mirabeau: In summer this is the shadiest street in the south of France. Because the author is not very bright, he went in early spring. Anyway, just pretend there are leaves.

Commerce and the Law. The best way I can describe the Old Town is that it looks like Diagon Alley from the Harry Potter movies (though of course the architecture is Olde Frenche instead of Olde Englishe, it is the atmosphere that counts, and the atmosphere is about right). On top of that there are shops of every description, from Hermes to GAP. There are more shops here than in the downtown of Marseille, which has six times more people. During my four days in Aix, I spent quite a few hours just window-shopping and wandering around its picturesque cobweb of lanes.

Why so many shops? Well, here is my theory. France’s Court of Appeals for much of the southern half of the country is located here. And where there are juries and judges, well... I will say no more because I hope to get my Schengen visa renewed someday, and there are already enough death threats, etc.

The Right Place. All right, I have left you in suspense long enough. In Aix, guided only by my unerring eye for feminine pulchritude, I discovered the perfect place for girl-watching, on only my third day. One short block from the Cours Mirabeau, the Place des Augustins is an intersection of five lanes with a fountain in the middle.

From the fountain, or for that matter any of the cafés around it, you can see up two or more of the lanes, giving you plenty of time to appreciate what is heading your way. And lots of good-looking women do head your way, though most of them are on a man’s arms. Regardless, this is a great way to kill a morning, then an afternoon, then a dinner, for which I recommend Jo’s Pizzeria, which has the sultriest waitress I ever saw anywhere, with a figure that slowly drove me wild, or maybe it was just hormones. Anyway, she only had eyes for the bartender.

Place des Augustins: The Place des Augustins is the spot for girl-watching in this university town. The author started with a cappuccino in the morning and nine hours later still had not quite torn himself away. Just when he was about to do so, he saw the waitress at Jo’s Pizzeria.

Tourism Central. Aix has a fairly efficient tourism bureau located conveniently at one corner of Old Town. Though they are not cheap (about 60 to 100 Euros each), there are day-trips to many neighboring attractions, such as the town of Arles (another Roman holdover), Baumes (a hilltop fortification), or even the Camargue, a region like the Florida Everglades (the parts without trees).

I took a break from stalking the waitress at Jo’s to do the Camargue, and was gratified to see its famous herds of horses which are allowed to roam freely, but are so friendly that they come to any human who calls, and come faster if you wave a bag of stale bread, as my tour guide did.

The tour also took me to Ste. Marie de la Mer, which figures in The Da Vinci Code as the place where Mary Magdalene supposedly arrived after she fled Jerusalem. The church certainly looks 2,000 years old (see picture), and it felt really holy. The only place I have ever been to that felt as numinous (look it up) was Mont St. Michel. I am pinning special hope on the Three Wishes I made there.

Provence was not what I had expected. But in a very different way, it was better. After all, you can only gaze at scenic lavender hillsides for a few minutes, while window-shopping and looking at beautiful women can entertain you indefinitely. If you do go, make sure to stay right in the Old Town of Aix, not a suburb (this would greatly reduce your available time for girl-watching), and use it as a base to see the whole region. Do Avignon, too, and you will not regret your visit to this fabled corner of France.

vuukle comment

AIX

BOULEVARD OF PLANE TREES AND PIGEONS

CAMARGUE

COURS MIRABEAU

OLD

OLD TOWN

PLACE

RIGHT

TOWN

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