TRAVEL TALES
Young Chang
Four friends interrupt each other. Memories of a recent trip to the
Loire Valley in France have gotten Lary Freeman, Cheryl Swegan and Gary
and Leba Kramer a bit excited.
Chambord Castle had that huge, amazing staircase. The L’Orangerie at
Chenonceau, with its fairy-tale gardens and moats, was beautiful. Then
there was their favorite -- what was it called? The small yet invitingly
charming castle. No, not the Amboise -- the Langeais.
For four days last November, the Corona del Mar residents visited
castles, lounged through four-course, two-hour meals at least twice a day
and napped. They returned home well-rested.
The four -- Freeman is an airline pilot, Swegan is a flight attendant,
Leba Kramer is a clinical psychologist and her husband Gary is a
certified public accountant -- have visited France before.
This time however, they slowed down -- napping and touring without
consulting itineraries, catching a castle here, a castle there, between
eating gourmet meals in chateau dining rooms and cafes with roaring
fireplaces.
“I would recommend this trip for people like us -- who’ve done the
beaten path,” said Leba Kramer.
It was on this path that the two couples met three years ago. On a
Princess Cruise around the British Isles, the Kramers approached Freeman
and Swegan, who are engaged, because they looked like a “nice couple.”
They learned, while aboard the same ship thousands of miles away from
home, that they lived about five minutes from each other in Corona del
Mar. Since then, the two couples have become close friends -- spending
holidays and having dinner together at least one a month.
“It was not a summer romance,” Swegan said.
Freeman played designated driver during the Loire Valley excursion.
The car rental agency was not able to offer the full-size car they had
promised, so the tourists made do with a Mercedes station wagon instead.
They stayed for two nights at the Chateau DePray, a four-star castle
built in the early 1200s. Their last two nights were spent at the Chateau
de Rochecott, the former home of Lord Talleyrand. Thick scarlet curtains
and finely-detailed rugs gave the couples a sense of the royal.
Their daily schedule involved breakfast in the morning, a castle
visit, a “big, fabulous lunch,” a nap, another castle and then dinner,
which they dressed up for.
The ladies looked lovely every night, Freeman said.
“They looked gorgeous 24 hours a day,” Gary Kramer quickly added.
Most of the castles they visited were grandiose. Chambord and
Chenonceau chateaus gave the travelers a sense of time, helping them
understand that the floors they stood upon had endured centuries of wars
and change.
“Being from a place that’s so new, lodging in a place that was built
before Europeans came here to America -- that just really to me is so so
astounding,” Leba Kramer said.
The smaller chateaus were intimate. The Amboise and the Langeais
castles -- where rooms were small but dotted with careful decorative
touches -- left an impression on the Kramers, Swegan and Freeman. They
also visited the last home of Leonardo de Vinci -- Clos Luce -- where
copies of his drawings and models of inventions such as the precursors to
the automobile and the machine gun were displayed.
The last chateau they visited, the Usse Castle, is also called the
“Sleeping Beauty” castle. It is said to have inspired Charles Perault,
the writer behind the fairy tale, with its beauty and numerous tableau
scenes, Freeman said.
Driving to Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris on their last day, the
four friends remembered seeing the Eiffel Tower and other famous
monuments through the car windows.
“I was great to see it from a distance,” Leba Kramer said.
* Have you, or someone you know, gone on an interesting vacation
recently? Tell us your adventures. Drop us a line to Travel Tales, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail [email protected]; or fax to
(949) 646-4170.
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