
DAILY ITINERARY
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Day 1: Sunday, June 24, 2007
(Hotel in Reims)
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Arrival day:
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Judie and Alain will pick you
up CDG. Drive to Reims.
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Reims reflects traditional
France with its sidewalk cafés, celebrated restaurants,
stylish shops, a canal running through town and
champagne cellars underneath, medieval churches
and its magnificent Gothic cathedral.
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Day 2: Monday, June 25, 2007
(Hotel in Reims)
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Morning
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Guided visit of Reims.
For 800 years most French kings came here to be
crowned in its cathedral, including Charles VII
in 1429, led by "the maid of Lorraine,"
Joan of Arc. During World War I 80 % of the
town was destroyed, to be rebuilt by the mid -1930s.
In World War II General Eisenhower established
his headquarters in a local high school, and it
was here that the surrender of the Third Reich was
signed.
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Afternoon
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Drive to Epernay to visit
a champagne cellar (Moët et Chandon or other).
If there is time and interest, we can stop briefly
in Hautvillers to see the abbey church, burial
place of Dom Perignon, the 17th-century monk
to whom we owe the discovery of the champagne process.
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Free time
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Day 3: Tuesday, June 26, 2007
(Hotel in Nancy)
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Morning
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En route to Nancy we
will drive to Verdun to see sites of WWI.
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Afternoon
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If there is interest, we can
stop for a guided visit of Le Hakenberg,
largest and most impressive sector of the Maginot
Line.
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Day 4: Wednesday, June 27, 2007
(Hotel in Nancy)
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Morning
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Guided tour of Nancy.
This beautiful city invites you first to enjoy the
golden opulence of its newly restored Place Stanislas
and gems of architectural elegance found throughout
the city. Then you will want to discover the works
of early-20th century artists and architects who
joined glassworker Emile Gallé to found the
Ecole de Nancy and launched the graceful
style we call Art Nouveau. Everywhere in
the city you will find traces of the history of
Nancy and the fascinating story of the dukes
of Lorraine.
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Afternoon
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Free time.
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Day 5: Thursday, June 28, 2007
(Hotel in Strasbourg)
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Morning
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En route to Strasbourg
stop briefly in Lunéville to visit its château,
called the Versailles of Lorraine and in
Baccarat to admire the displays in the Crystal
Museum and in local shops.
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Afternoon
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Guided walking tour of Strasbourg,
followed by a boat excursion on the canals. We will
visit the Petite France neighborhood, where
half-timbered houses look out onto a maze of canals,
see the magnificent cathedral with its sky-high
spire and red sandstone façade of Gothic lacework.
The cathedral is known for its fine sculpture and
fascinating astronomical clock, where a parade of
little figures announces the passing hours. After
our tour we will have time to stroll in this great
city, which feels homey in spite of its international
importance as headquarters of the Council of Europe
and meeting place of the European Parliament. Street
performers often entertain passers-by at public
squares, children play alongside them, and locals
join visitors at friendly wine taverns. Of course,
we have to leave time for shopping in Strasbourg!
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Day 6: Friday, June 29, 2007
(Hotel in Strasbourg)
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Morning
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Drive up to the Mont Sainte-Odile
for a beautiful panoramic view over the countryside
below. Later, visit the imposing feudal fortress
of Haut-Koenigsbourg, rebuilt by German Kaiser
Wilhelm in the early 20th century, when Alsace
was still German territory. If there is time, we
will stop to see Kayserberg, a charming village
on the River Weiss, with its castle, fortified bridge
and 16th and 17th century houses, some topped with
nests where storks still raise their young. The
town is also the birthplace of Albert Schweitzer,
musicologist, physician and Nobel Peace Prize recipient.
We can visit his house, now a beautiful little museum
which chronicles his life and work at the hospital
he founded in Lambaréné, Africa.
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Afternoon
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Drive along the Alsatian
Wine Road, visiting towns and villages en route:
Obernai and tiny Ottrot, where we
can visit the atelier of an artist who creates fine
landscapes using different inlaid woods.
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Day 7: Saturday, June 30, 2007
(Hotel in Strasbourg)
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Morning
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Visit lovely Colmar,
so typically old Alsatian with its tangle of winding
streets, brightly painted, crooked half-timbered
houses, and its neighborhood of waterways known
as the Petite Venise. For art lovers Colmar
also has the fine Unterlinden Museum, world
renowned for the dramatic Issenheim Altarpiece.
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Afternoon
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Visit Riquewihr, one
of the oldest and most picturesque villages of Alsace,
set amidst rolling slopes of vineyards. We’ll tour
the Hugel Winery, one of the oldest producers
of Alsatian wines, and stop for a tasting.
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Late Afternoon:
Return to hotel to prepare for next day’s departure.
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Day 8: Sunday July 1, 2007
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Morning
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Tour ends after breakfast.
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