
May 14, 2025, we left on our second tour called the Best of France. Our first stop was Beaune (population 21,000 approximately) and we went to a museum called Hôtel Dieu – Hospices de Beaune. A very interesting museum and founded in 1443.


Hospital Beds 
Wonderful art on the walls 
Kitchen 
Cute mural
A few photos of Beaune

Cute building 

An old carousel 
From there we drove to Lyon and stopped for the night but we had the evening to ourselves. Lyon is in east-central France at the confluence of two rivers, the Saone and the Rhone, population 520,000 approximately.

on the way into Lyon 
downtown Lyon 

Macarons 
So pretty the way the flowers frame this 

Saint Bonaventure Church
Off to Avignon, Monaco and the French Riviera next !

love those old buildings
LikeLiked by 1 person
Me too! Such stunning architecture 😊
LikeLike
Love those old buildings. Can’t get enough of them.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Me too! And I also like to take photos of doors, I don’t know why, but I think some of them are so cool
LikeLike
I like the street photography with the flowers dripping from the window boxes – very nice. I always like the pictures of the narrow cobblestone streets as well, including the picture of Clint in the street. That museum of the Hotel Dieu is pretty amazing in showing how it looked back then, right down to the kitchen. The beds from older eras in these buildings always seem so small don’t they?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, they do look smaller, but I was always told that people were smaller back then. Do you think that’s true? I love cobble Stone streets.
LikeLiked by 1 person
You know I do remember learning about people being smaller back then too Susan. How did we get to be so tall – better nutrition probably. In school I had a professor that taught ancient history. He did not go by the book very much which was great as he had some very cool side gigs or hobbies (not sure which). He and a dentist friend of his at the university participated in studying several mummies and taking slides of their findings for a study on dental and bone structure. He brought the slides into class how they were unwrapped and also they x-rayed them first … they were fully-grown adults and so slight you would think they were children.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Now that would’ve been an interesting class!
I have always been fascinated with Egypt and the mummies and the Tombs and all that stuff. One day I hope to get there.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, the teacher made the class very interesting. He had all these slides from the time the mummy (a/k/a PUM II) was delivered to Wayne State University and they had photos of how they unwrapped him and did the extensive autopsy, then a thorough dental examination by his friend. I went to the King Tut exhibit when it was in Toronto at the Art Museum in the 70s. It was very interesting.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Your vibrant photos illustrate the name of the tour. Beautiful! All wonderful… the perspective in the downtown Lyon photo is fabulous!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you Michele!😀
LikeLiked by 1 person