Our final day in Paris, we made our way to the “love lock” bridge over the river Seine. The padlock we placed on the bridge is locked and the key subsequently thrown in the water to symbolize unbreakable love. Ours was inscribed not with our own initials, but those of the five of us, because next time we are in Paris we will most certainly be four boys and a girl. Au revoir.
Monthly Archives: January 2014
Le Selfie
The Louvre Through My Lens
The Spirit of American Youth Rising from the Waves
This is the title of the bronze statue that proudly rises above the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial. It overlooks the pristine grounds of the cemetery where the remains of 9,387 American military servicemen are buried. Their final resting place is located on a bluff overlooking Omaha Beach and the English Channel.
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The names of 1,557 additional Americans who lost their lives in the Normandy campaign but could not be located or identified are inscribed on the walls of a semicircular garden near the memorial.
An expansive wall within the memorial depicts the landings at Normandy.
France has granted the United States a perpetual concession to the land occupied by the cemetery, free of any charge or tax. The cemetery is managed and meticulously maintained by the American government.
It was an absolute privilege and an honor to be there May 8th, Victory in Europe Day. We witnessed the flag lowering ceremony, and proudly watched as American servicemen who fought so bravely for our country helped to lower the American flag which flies above this sacred memorial.
Cidre Bouche & Calvados
Although France is known for its vineyards and wine, the Normandy region has a climate in which apples grow and thrive. This major apple-growing area in Normandy is situated in and around Calvados, whose beaches were the main staging area for the D-Day Landing and whose landscape was a central battle zone throughout the Invasion of Normandy.
Cidre bouche (literal translation meaning “cider under cork”) and Calvados (apple brandy) are made and served at the Lebrec family estate and orchard. We were fortunate enough to make a stop here to visit and taste.
Beyond enjoying this family’s hospitality and delicious spirits, part of the home is open to the public, and on display is an array of artifacts from the battles that took place on their property during the war. Their home was also used at one point as a headquarters for a combat battalion.
Merci to la famille Lebrec!
Pointe du Hoc
We travel with our tour group on various World War II vehicles from Omaha Beach to Pointe du Hoc along the Normandy coast.
Remnants of prefabricated bridges towed in pieces across the English Channel by the Allied troops and assembled just off shore.
The Atlantic Wall was a system of fortifications built by Nazi Germany along the western coast of Europe as a defense against an anticipated Allied invasion. The Wall primarily consisted of batteries, bunkers, and minefields. As part of the Atlantic Wall, the prominent clifftop location known as Pointe du Hoc was fortified by the Germans. On D-Day, the United States Army Ranger Assault Group successfully assaulted Point du Hoc after scaling the cliffs there.
Gaping craters in the earth remain where American bombs landed scattering pieces of steel reinforced concrete from German bunkers.