The adventure to France begins!
We
flew a 7 hour flight Ottawa to Frankfurt followed by a 2 hour hop from
Frankfurt to Marseille with two littles – a 3 year old and a 7
month old. Honestly, it couldn't have gone better; they both fell
asleep during the beginning of takeoff! Sure, there was some
wakefulness mid-flight but nothing some kids' shows and baby bouncing
couldn't handle, then they both drifted off again before landing.
Heavenly.
Some observations:
It would appear that when you're going to Europe,
Air Canada actually feeds you! There was a green bean and cabbage
salad, chicken and rice for hubby and pasta with smoky, cheesy tomato sauce
and for me, a bread roll, a slice of chocolate cake and –
get this – complimentary wine! Two individual bottles each. Talk
about a dramatic difference from domestic travel, my goodness.
After dinner, I cuddled up with the complimentary blanket and pillow and watched tv with the complimentary earbuds.
Also, the recent remake of Annie
deserves to be watched with a much better sound system than that
provided by complimentary earbuds.
Hubs and I each got an hour or two of
sleep.
We landed in Frankfurt airport - which we were warned would be crazy - around 7am local time.
It was crazy, but in a very organized way. We somehow got through customs,
security again, and to our gate in time to change into fresh clothes (to give ourselves the illusion of starting a new day, psychology and all) before boarding a bus across the tarmac to our plane.
As if the language barrier wasn't enough, we got our first indications that we weren't in
Canada anymore. Near our gate, we passed a glassed-in smoking room
(with excellent seals/ventilation/whatnot, I must say) and a coffee
shop serving coffees with the option of alcoholic add-ins (coffee
and brandy anyone?) or bottles of beer along with assorted pastries.
On the Lufthansa airplane, I was
surprised to be handed a small red thing with the friendly comment of
“I'm sure you know how to use this” and the stewardess seemed
equally surprised to find that I had no idea what she was talking
about and that I'd never encountered any such thing flying in Canada!
It was a small child's seat belt that attached to my seat belt.
We
were also provided with differently designed life vests for the wee
ones in advance (just in case) along with a diaper and a jar of apple
baby food for the li'l Velociraptor, as well as some chocolate and Haribo gummies for the li'l Monkey to chew on during takeoff and
landing.
 |
Label and ingredients roughly translate at follows: Milk Pudding - Semolina [and] Fruits No Added Sugar After 4 months Ingredients: Milk Preparation (Milk 35%, Water, Corn Oil), Fruits (Low-acid Apple Juice from Concentrate, Pear Juice from Concentrate, Apples, Pears), Wheat Semolina 5%, Rice Starch, Wholegrain Cereals (1%) (?) (Wheat, Spelt, Oats), Calcium Carbonate, Vitamin B1, Vitamin A, Vitamin D. Note: Gluten |
Once in the air, we grown-ups were also provided with something to nosh. I had a half
sandwich of turkey salami and some sort of quark-remoulade spread
which was new to me but tasty - like something between mayo and cream
cheese with spices and chopped bell pepper. Hubby had a prepackaged
bowl of muesli. Beverages offered included the option of
wine. We both had coffee. It was delicious.
Today's language
lesson: German.
Erd = earth
Nuss = nut
Beere = berry
Erdnuss = ground/earth nut = peanut
(bad)
Erdbeere = ground berry = strawberry!
(yum!)
I was also quite proud of myself for
riddling out the meaning of a few words, such as sonnenblumenkerne. Any guesses?
Hint:
German has a lot of compound words.
We landed in Marseille around 10am
local time. 4am to us. Thank goodness for coffee, copious sunlight, and naps!