The Train Kept A-Rollin' All Night Long
Jun. 23rd, 2025 12:10 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Next morning we got up a bit earlier; we'd have to catch a train. Still we had the breakfast nook to ourselves (when we avoided some uncleared tables) and bunny_hugger observed about the TV news crawl that there was a delightful lack of people talking about Trump and his insanities. This was the week that Elon Musk had his messy breakup with Trump, mind, so I had seen some of the funny bits of that on social media, but we didn't have the oppression of this being all the news and that was surprisingly refreshing. Also, such soft, melty brie. So much brie.
This time around we asked the hotel staff to arrange a taxi for us and they were able to get one with the same company we'd gotten on Sunday, but for less than half the price. We also reflected that we should have asked the hotel ahead of time if they would arrange for taxi service, which they probably would have been able to do and would have been able to get cheaper for us.
The train back to Paris and Gare de l'Est was on time and fast and then all we had to do was go up and down four hundred different stairwells on an underground path running from Ile de France to the Norman coast and back to get to Gare du Nord, the train station that's the next one on the metro line. This because our connection to Rennes left from there. Gare du Nord also lacks adequate seating space for people just hanging around waiting for a train, although at least one block of what looked like seats was closed off for construction so maybe they're a little less at fault.
While we were getting a snack and finding our next train a guy, an American by accent, came up to ask if we could help him understand where his own train might be. We were and are novices at this but we'd more or less figured out where on the overhead boards they showed the several different train number identifications, and which of the kinds of icon it showed when they had assigned a track number. In his case, they hadn't yet assigned one, but it should be coming within minutes. We hope we were right or that he asked someone better-informed.
Now up to this point every train we'd been on had been not just speedy but on time, like, to the minute. And we had even commented on this, maybe foolishly, since now there was some kind of problem and the train stopped for what ended up being about a half hour total, and moved at mere American train speeds for a while after that. bunny_hugger saw guards standing at road crossings halting traffic so it looks like there was some important signalling problem hitting our line. Well, even Jove nods, I guess.
When we got to Rennes bunny_hugger said she'd get walking directions from her phone, if we needed them because I might well remember how to get to our hotel, the same one we stayed in ten years ago, all right. I think that overstates my memory for how to find places I've been once before but oh, yes, it did get to be pretty familiar pretty fast. And yes, it was the same hotel we stayed at before, with things stunningly similar to what we had known. With one difference: last time, the breakfast nook had a small bowl with a poor lone goldfish in not remotely enough water.
bunny_hugger checked, from trip review photographs, that they no longer kept a goldfish in such terrible conditions before rebooking this hotel. (They now put some miniature bottles of jam in the space.)
We were set up nicely in the hotel and more or less ready for the conference the next day, although bunny_hugger was irritated her shirt had got a crease in it despite everything and there was no method at all for flattening a shirt; no iron, no pressing board, not even a hangar that could be used to let it absorb moisture from a hot shower and then settle out.
But we also had the question of what to eat and when we found there was a grocery store a couple blocks away, sure, we went for that. We had notions of getting some nice little sandwiches (all that we could find that was vegetarian was fake bacon, tomato, lettuce, and vegan mayo, billed as Le British for some reason) and exotic flavors of potato chips and something called ``Monster Munch'' (original flavor, though they had variations) and a couple small bottles of Coke Zero. They had some more exotic, more interesting-looking flavors but all at room temperature and without a fridge or ice we weren't confident we would get a fair taste of it.
So this would be our quiet, personal meal back in the hotel room. While bunny_hugger got ready for bed, a friend on Telegram started looking up where you could find pinball in Paris, their helpful nature failing to register my explanation that we were not in Paris except as a transit point. But it did make me wonder: was there somewhere in Rennes, or in our Belgian destination of De Panne, where we might find a game? That seemed worth checking ...
And now to check in on the Calhoun County Fair, which had no photographs from bunny_hugger --- we had expected us both to be out of town when they were to be dropped off, so she didn't sign up --- but had other things to look at. For example ...

Nice little water fountain statue set up to make the fairground rides look more permanently decorated.

I'm sure I said this before but that rhino looks like they're taking stuff for medical purposes only.

Big Top Circus is one of the kiddie funhouses (really they're all kiddie funhouses) but it has got app splash screen energy.

Over to the crafts barn where we once again failed to convince bunny_hugger's mother to enter anything. Still, here's some nice patterns of fat rabbits and small birds.

More crafts, including a bunch of needlepoint and other felt fixtures and some really great castle playset that's got stuff in every room.

More of the embroidery and needlepoint and stuff. Note the knives with movie killers on them.
Trivia: The United States's 1960 Census was the first to ask about air conditioner ownership. It found about 12.4 percent of all households had air conditioning, ranging from less than five percent in New England to more than 27 percent in the West South Central division (Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Arkansas), with nonwhites having air conditioning at under a third the national rate. Source: Cool Comfort: America's Romance With Air-Conditioning, Marsha E Ackermann.
Currently Reading: Mission to Jupiter: A History of the Galileo Project, Michael Meltzer. NASA SP-2007-4231.