A scorching European vacation
- Share via
Joel Furman
It was a sizzling, stifling and generally sticky summer in southern
Europe. When I think back to my family’s summer trip to England and
France, the heat first comes to mind.
It seems that we planned our August trip to perfectly coincide
with one of the warmest summers to ever grace Europe. Temperatures
frequented the century mark; add to this a healthy dose of humidity
and a lack of air conditioning, or even fans, and you probably see
why this is what I most clearly remember about our experience.
Despite the substantial amount of time we devoted to finding
air-conditioned buildings and unmelted ice cream, we did manage to
see a lot, and in fact had a great, albeit (I’ll mention it one more
time) hot, excursion to the other side of the pond.
We spent most of our time in London, staying in a residential
building called the Mansions, which though adequate did not exactly
live up to its name. On our tourist hit list were all the usual spots
and touristy things -- the Tower of London, double-decker buses,
Harrods, Hyde Park, Carnaby Street, Big Ben, Stonehenge, you get the
idea by now.
One of the funniest incidences of our journey took place at Madame
Tussaud’s Wax Museum, which was actually cool. My brother Daniel
found a good spot and stood frozen in place, as were the 30 or so
celebrity mannequins strewn around the room. No worries that my
brother is not a celebrity, does not look like a celebrity and was
not dressed in celebrity-suitable attire.
His impression was convincing enough to get some even more
out-of-their-element visitors to stare at him for a good 20 seconds,
believe that he really was fake, and go to take a picture with him.
Their reactions when they discovered he was actually not really fake
were priceless.
At the Tower of London, we watched an overgrown blackbird chase
(if you can call it that, more like hop after) a terrified woman up
three flights of stairs. And of course when my brother, dad and I, in
search of a pub, stumbled into a gay bar that the next morning we saw
was clearly demarcated by a huge rainbow banner.
Being Harry Potter fans, we found Platform 9 3/4. Unfortunately, I
must speak the truth -- it doesn’t go to Hogwarts. In fact, it’s just
a wall that some tourist-pleasing official decided to label platform
9 3/4, but seeing it made us happy nonetheless.
Our substitute for the magical and exciting Hogwarts train was the
slightly less exciting and entirely nonmagical Chunnel. One moment we
were in England, then poof, a few hours later we were in France.
We Furmans spent the last three days of our adventure in Paris. We
saw all the of-course spots and the whole Louvre Museum, which even
though we raced through still took hours to conquer.
Now after reading “The Da Vinci Code,” by Dan Brown, I wish we had
spent more time in certain areas. But hey, what can you do when there
are thousands of famous paintings, which you don’t care anything
about but still must see if you want to be a good vacationer.
Overall, in spite of the already exhaustingly mentioned
conditions, I, and I’m pretty sure the rest of my family, had a
really good trip. We went, we saw, and we saw some more. We had
unique experiences, which we probably won’t forget, and experienced
things we wish we could forget. But we did it all as a family, and
without too much bloodshed. Just because of that, I’d consider our
trip a success.
* JOEL FURMAN is a resident of Newport Beach
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.