With my French High Speed Train due to
depart Geneve Cornavin at 0612, my two alarms have been set for 5am.
Why then am I wide awake at 0330? Partly excitement, mixed in with a
fear of not waking up and missing the train.
So I take my time making sure that I
have packed everything I will need for the trip, cramming in to my
two trolley bags an extra item or two, things that I probably will
not actually need, but I have had extra time to think about.
The taxi arrives outside the front door
exactly on time. I ask the driver to take me to the nearest entrance
to the TGV lines. He says he will drop me right outside, because Gare
Cornavin is a 'bad place' and that 'I need to be careful with my
belongings'.
At just before 6am, I sweep through
Swiss and French border control and customs with not a soul in sight.
Various security doors open automatically. Quite eery, really.
At my seat on voiture 11, I ask the
'chef de train; where the electric point is. He laughs. 'This train
is from 1981, they had not thought of such things then'.
When I booked, I had been told that the
train was almost full and that I was lucky to get a seat. But,
bizarrely, it's very quiet, with a dozen of us crammed into one
section of a carriage, with the rest of the seats vacant. The first
class carriage next door has only three people in. Really odd.
We are served a continental breakfast
at our seats. It's nothing special, but adequate, although the
croissant is, for a French train, especially disappointing.
At 0910, only a quarter of an hour
before our scheduled arrival in Paris Gare de Lyon, we grind to a
halt. An announcement tells us that because of 'an incident', we will
be delayed by approximately 90 minutes. Later, the chef de train
comes through First Class, to explain, rather graphically, that there
has been a suicide on the track and the police are collecting what's
left.
We pull into a platform behind another
TGV at Marolles, Seine et Marne, and are invited to get off and
stretch our legs while we await permission to proceed.
The delay means that I will miss my
only good connection to Dieppe, the sole reason I have got up at an
unearthly hour. At Gare de Lyon, we are told to stand in a line to
collect an envelope to compensate for the delay, but when I
eventually get to the front, I am told that they only deal with
French trains and that, as I have come from a Swiss one, I have to
queue elsewhere. So I don't bother.
Outside the station, I take bus number
20 across Paris to Gare St. Lazare. As we approach l'Opera, the
driver suddenly pulls across the road, stops his bus and, without
explanation, tells us all to get off.
I walk to the nearest stop where, 10
minutes later, the same bus and driver appears to complete the
journey. I ask the French lady next to me what the problem had been
but, like me, she has no idea.
I have over an hour to wait until the
train to Rouen, so I stand in another line to make bookings for the
next section of the trip. When I eventually get to the front, I am
electronically ordered to go to a particular counter, only to be told
that I need an international desk.
There, the man hammers away at his
keyboard, scratches his head, consults the Thomas Cook timetable and
consults with colleagues. There are no Inter Rail seats on any route
to Germany on either Thursday or Friday. If I pay full fare, there
are plenty of spaces available, but nothing is available for Inter
Rail pass holders.
There are two double-decker TER trains
coupled together; the first is jam packed, but, as I approach the
front of the second, it is mercifully quiet. I sit upstairs in a very
nicely appointed First Class carriage, in glorious isolation. It
appears to be no different to Second Class, but it's quiet.
At Rouen, I set off for the information
desk, to discover that, despite what my timetable says, I have nearly
three hours to wait for my connection to Dieppe. I enquire about
booking for Germany on Thursday, any route, at any time. Laureline
hammers away at her keyboard, consults colleagues, then shrugs her
shoulders. Non. Pas du tout.
I repair to the nearby Metropole Bar,
which has wifi, food and beer. Two hours later, I return to the
station, where, armed with additional suggestions, Chantal finds me a
seat to Frankfurt via Stuttgart. It's all there is, she says. But
it's something.
The ancient little train to Dieppe is
stiflingly hot inside, but really quiet. All these empty trains today
have been really odd. The man comes to check my ticket. I ask him
why, on a Monday, I have had to wait so long for a connection. Ah, he
says, it's not Monday really, it's a bank holiday and thus it's a
Sunday service.
That explains a lot.
The Normandy pace of life is
underlined, when, at the station of Montville, a group of people are
playing boules. On the actual platform.
At Dieppe, my friend Ghislaine
surprises me by turning up at the station. She runs a delightful
'Chambres d'hotes' in a former convent. But it will probably be the
last time I will see her at 'Villa des Capucines' because she plans
to sell up and retire to Corsica.
In the evening, I have a splendid meal
at the nearby 'Le Turbot'. On the €13.95 menu, there's a splendid buffet for starters, with a great variety of seafood, a great terrine and loads of salads. The main course gives several choices. I opt for the steak with saute potatoes and haricot verts, which turn out to be excellent, and finish off with a splendid piece of cheese.
After that lot, I really do need a walk round the harbour before retiring in the Mother Superior's bedroom!
After that lot, I really do need a walk round the harbour before retiring in the Mother Superior's bedroom!
In the morningI have a couple of hours
to explore Dieppe, especially enjoying the displays of fromagerie and
charcuterie in C' Royal in the Grand Rue. I make some enquiries at
the Office du Tourisme, but the young girl on duty gives me wholly
inaccurate information and, in response to one question, says she
doesn't know but makes no attempt to ask any of her colleagues. But I am given a badly designed leaflet that alternates between English and Dutch, without any differentiation in typeface. Absolutely useless.
I buy a French sim card for my iPad.
The terminals in the SFR shop are down, so I have to buy credit at
the tabac opposite, much to the amusement of the proprietor, who
waves merrily to the watching SFR staff across the street.
Ghislaine kindly takes me out for the
day along the coast, where we visit the wonderful little church of St
Valery at Varengeville-sur-Mer perched high above the beaches where,
almost exactly 70 years ago, nearly 1000 young Canadians lost their
lives in the futile Dieppe raid of WW2. In the graveyard is one
single stone to mark the passing of a 21 year old Seaforth
Highlander.
It's a gorgeously sunny day, but as we
head along the coast to Quiberville sur Mer, a sea mist rolls in,
creating a somewhat eery feel.
L'Huitriere is the only place that
seems to be open for lunch, but it rather makes itself appear
unwelcoming by the endless computer-generated instructions attached
to every available bit of wall.
In the evening, Ghislaine and I enjoy a
bottle of chilled Sancerre with some lovely saucisson and Normandy
cheeses while sitting in her lovely old conservatory overlooking the
delightful garden. Mme. Poucette lounged on the sofa, but did not participate.
Tomorrow, I will potter around Dieppe
for the day before setting off on the long journey to Fulda in
Germany, a stopping off point I have selected rather at random, my
friend having advised that Frankfurt was 'just full of office blocks'
and not worth visiting.
I have also been able to organise some emergency business cards for next week's rail conference in Leipzig, having lost my proper ones in the bag that was stolen at Geneva station. Luckily, I found a very helpful man, Henri Lieury, at Le Plumier, almost next door to my favourite cheese shop, Olivier's in Rue St. Jacques. I had popped in to see Benedicte, grand-daughter of the founder, but she was not at home and I almost stumbled across the sign advertising 'cartes de visite'.
The sun does indeed shine upon the righteous!
I finish the day visiting a local florist to buy some flowers for Mme Bore and then going to Dieppe's wonderful swathe of pebbled beach.
I have also been able to organise some emergency business cards for next week's rail conference in Leipzig, having lost my proper ones in the bag that was stolen at Geneva station. Luckily, I found a very helpful man, Henri Lieury, at Le Plumier, almost next door to my favourite cheese shop, Olivier's in Rue St. Jacques. I had popped in to see Benedicte, grand-daughter of the founder, but she was not at home and I almost stumbled across the sign advertising 'cartes de visite'.
The sun does indeed shine upon the righteous!
I finish the day visiting a local florist to buy some flowers for Mme Bore and then going to Dieppe's wonderful swathe of pebbled beach.
Photos of the trip can be seen at:
European Rail Trip 2012 |
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