Longing for Paris week: Trapped in the Gare du Nord
We had everything figured out--our train from Calais pulled in to the Gare du Nord train station in Paris at 2:30, we had the metro stops all planned out (Doug named them after people we knew, so that we could remember the names; at one point we had to take the Dave Ballard line), and then we were meeting Erik at 4 p.m. at the Eiffel Tower, which was about six blocks from our hotel.
So we were feeling confident, if not downright cocky, when we got off the train.
We had not figured on getting stuck in the Gare du Nord.
We bumped our suitcases down the endless concrete steps to the Metro and approached one of the many blue ticket machines, pressed "buy tickets," and "pay cash" and got out our Euros expectantly.
The machine took only coins.
We had no coins. Only Euro notes.
So we hit "start over," or whatever the French equivalent is, and then hit "pay with credit card."
It rejected our cards. All of 'em. my Visa card, my debit card, Doug's MasterCard and his credit union card. All firmly rejeté.
(We discovered later that European credit cards have some kind of computer chip in them that American cards don't have. This wasn't a problem anywhere but in the train station. But at the time, this was just one more worry--would our cards work nowhere in France?)
All around us, people were blithely marching up to machines, buying tickets, pushing through the turnstiles, getting onto trains. All we needed was three euros for the tickets. We had three euros! We had a hundred damned euros! But we had no coins. Damn Rick Steves! He hadn't warned us about this!
I was almost in tears. There were no clerks, no change machines, nothing. So we hauled our suitcases back up the concrete steps and went into the main part of the train station. Doug left me with the luggage while he set off to solve the problem.
I stood at our suitcases as he vanished down an escalator, and I watched the clock tick past 3. We were going to be late meeting Erik. How long would he wait? How would we find him later? We didn't know his hotel; he didn't know ours.
Even in my state of dread, the Gare du Nord was a fascinating place. People of all shapes and sizes and colors dashed by, racing for trains, or the exit, or vanishing down the same escalator that Doug had gone down. Pigeons swooped overhead in the soaring open ceiling. A little knot of French soldiers stood near me, with rifles and hats. The clock ticked on. 3:15.
Eventually Doug came back. He was shrugging in a rather Gallic way, and I knew that he had failed. "I found the ticket line," he said. "But it never moved." So he gave up and came back upstairs. I suggested that we try the money-changing booth. Surely that's what they're there for. So we rolled our suitcases across the station to the booth. The man at the window shook his head and pointed at the other window. OK. We rolled over there.
"Sorry," the woman told me. Despite the fact that the word CHANGE was above her head in giant letters, she was not allowed to give change, only to change currency. I was almost weeping by this point. It was almost 3:30. We had to meet erik in a half-hour. And we were trapped in the Gare du Nord.
Perhaps I looked pathetic. Perhaps I looked like I was going to start crying, or commit a crime. Or maybe this just happens all the time. In any event, the woman took pity on me. "If you want to buy a city map for two euros, I can give you change," she said. A map? Brilliant idea! We'll need a map! I shoved a 20 euro note toward her. She gave me a map, and, more importantly, a stack of coins. (I have a feeling she sells a lot of those maps.)
We grabbed our suitcases and dashed back out of the station, down the sidewalk, bump-bump-bumped back down the concrete stairs to the Metro, shoved our coins into a blue machine and were rewarded with Metro tickets. Just like we lived there. Just like we knew what we were doing. Just like Rick Steves was our best friend.
We hopped on the Metro, made the connection to the Dave Ballard line, and emerged, finally, into a sunny spring afternoon. We were on Rue St. Dominique, by a flower-filled park and a stunning view of the absolutely gigantic Eiffel Tower. We found our hotel, on Rue Amelie, checked in, dumped our bags, changed our sweaty clothes, and headed back out to find Erik.
And there he was, near the Eiffel Tower ticket booth nord, wearing sunglasses and a scruffy new beard. Big happy hugs all around. And then we trotted off happily to go see Paris.




















16 Leave a message!:
What an adventure, Laurie! We were so afraid this was going to happen to us in NY as both of us only had notes, no coins. So we were happy when our friend Beth arranged a driver for us (and in the end had to collect us herself, you know the story). It's a pity you don't get change/coins when you change your money into foreign currency when you plan a trip.
Glad you got out and didn't have to stay the night. ;-)
I know it's a bit late now, but ... why didn't you get a taxi? Of course you have to know the French for "taxi".
It's "taxi".
Great story, beautifully written. I like how observant you were even in your distress - "French soldiers with guns and hats" etc!
Those darn Parisians don't take pity on anyone do they? Such haughty people, unless you speak their language and can also be brutally haughty. They have a great unwillingness to fix a situation they could easily remedy.
Great story, Laurie. I'm convinced now that I want to visit England first!
I have to say, after hearing the horror stories of the rude and nasty French, everyone we interacted with was lovely.
That must have been terrible, Laurie. I hate it when things don't go as planned. Thank goodness Erik was still there!
Just last night I was longing for Paris. So wonderful to find these posts today.
I soooo want to see the Eiffel Tower one day. :D
Awww, I did the same in Paris too. I was attempting to buy tickets to Brittany and couldn't use the coin operated machines. Eventually, I gave up and cancelled my trip. Well done you for persevering. Have a great trip, it's a gorgeous and magical city.
They sure could use note changing machines, couldn't they?
I heard the map selling business is the greatest economic boon to France, BTW. ;^)
Told well, Laurie, I've been in that scene and like you, just a shout away from tears.
XO
WWW
That's it, I'm never going to leave Willow Tree! Too many foreigners for me.
Hooray you made it!!! Have fun... I was gnashing my teeth in sympathetic frustration.
Oh.. that would of made my head POUND!
I find it helps to go braless in a skimpy shirt and only approach male customer service people for help. This was a piece of advice my older half-sister Teresa (not a woman known for her couth, I must admit) gave me. She referred to it as "using the tits." It's never failed me.
And if you carry a light jacket or a button-down blouse, you can put it on over the skimpy shirt and pass muster with those who would not be impressed by using the tits.
Oh! I hope I never end up in a foreign country where no one speaks English...I would be in BIG trouble!! But, I am looking forward to reading the rest of your story!
Oh my, I had you and Doug pegged as Globe Trekkers, not Rick Steves followers! Lesson in this adventure: two people needed, one to stand by the luggage and look worried and the other to range out and actually find a solution.
I think there must be some bad karma in Paris train stations. I almost let my group get on the train without me. I was hanging back buying chocolate to help me make friends of new traveling partners and they disappeared from sight.
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