Once it is time to go home…it is time to go home!

We have four alarms set so we don’t oversleep and miss our 6am train to the airport. Well, no problem, at 4AM we are wide awake. We are super prepared to have a smooth morning- bags packed, apartment clean, whew!
Clock work. Tick tock. We are moving along the street. Make it to the train station. The train glides into the station. This is going well.
We trundle along in the dark. The train stops are infrequent and cover more distance than the in-city trains and metro stops. The announcements for each stop are only in French and there is no video monitor to show the name of the stop as there has been on the city trains. The announcements are a little longer as we travel but all seems to be going well. The train stops, hesitates a little too long , but then pulls away and trundles forward. We shoot each other a relieved glance and sigh. We will be glad to be at the airport with the security concerns growing with the Coronavirus scare, we just want to be sure we have left enough time. The travel anxiety begins to ebb away.

The plan has collapsed. The workers seem unfazed as we scramble dragging our suitcases back and forth searching for information, a taxi, a sign to indicate where in the world we are, as our window of TSA time ticks down.
At the moment all hope is fading we spot a white van with a faint green light on the top. And we run toward it. Two- two – two? The driver nods, grabs our bags and throws them into the back on top of the mountain of luggage. The mini van has three people wedged into the back seat, one large man in the center seat and another passenger in the front. We jump into the middle seat as the driver slams the door shut and like a race car completing a pit stop peels out into the dark street.

Remarkably, signage for the airport appears and the seven passengers are all headed to the same international gate. As the van slows to pull in to an unloading spot, we see other cars and vans barely slipping past the cars around them in a frenzy to unload and get back out for another fare. We catch our bags and offer thanks that we have arrived at the airport. Despite the “disruption” of the train and our plan, we are back and pretty much on schedule.

The airport is light. People are cautiously avoiding getting too close to each other, multiple screenings and identity checks are in place (have your traveled to Italy or China?…. Just Paris? how long….check all entry stamps….) , the boarding is slightly delayed to sanitize the cabin, all good things. The concern of the Corona Virus is reaching into nearby countries. Within the past day or two the precautions are being discussed: no events with more than 1000 people ( it was 5000 only yesterday). In flight there is no sneezing or coughing as there often is on a winter flight somewhere. People are clearly more cautious of their contact with others and are keeping a little space.

A strong head wind on the way home made the flight about an hour longer on the way there, but all in all, a great flight. We landed at JFK and once again, things went efficiently and effectively. The concern with the virus is driving the crowds down. The airport is certainly not bustling. We are home, though, so all is well. The wine now is a little more expensive, the bread is not quite as fresh. Our deck view is no longer that of the Seine River and Notre Dame, but as Dorthy said after her own world wind of travel… There’s no place like home!
(Now to 14 days of self-quarantine…spoiler alert.. we are posting well after our 14 days, and happily we are healthy and well.. hope you are, too!)
Until we can travel again…..


WOW! You REALLY dodge several bullets! Sooo glad you guys made it home safely and health! Hurray!! 👍❤️😊
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Glad to hear you are doing well. That grand baby of yours is so darn adorable.
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You guys could be travel book authors! So fun!
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Thanks for reading them, Becky. We are having a ball!
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