Tag Archives: Archaeology

Musee du Cassis

Standard

Wednesday, 10-July-2024



Driving to museums is cool and all, but you know what’s even cooler? Walking approximately 120m (just under 400ft) to an art museum! A combination Art / History museum!

Not art history, that is to say. But a museum that showcases both art and history. Cassis is a small town, okay? The town museum isn’t super extensive, just roll with it.


And… I’ll be frank, here, the museum is clearly underfunded. I’m not saying that I could do better, but… as far as town museums go, this one didn’t quite reach the benchmark of “this museum showcases at least the summary of the town’s wikipedia page”.

It was neat, though, don’t get me wrong! Just… left me wanting, in terms of actual content.



What was there, then? Well – It was two stories; the first one being some interesting artifacts that had been recovered from the Mediterranean surrounding Cassis, and the second being paintings by Jacques Troupel. The artifacts were mainly Amphorae, the types of large stoneware jugs that were used in Greek and Roman times. The paintings were mainly “fire paintings”, where Jacques would paint with flammable material, and then light it to produce the interesting flame-scoring patterns.

It was neat, definitely… but I’ll still add a quick link to Wikipedia for those of my readers interested in the more detailed history of the town.


Link = https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassis

My Irish Spring – Archeology museum & wandering (Thursday)

Standard

Wow… How long has it been since I’ve done an international trip? How much longer since I’ve gone international solo?

Let’s see. The last international trip was to Scotland, right before the Pandemic hit. When I had that really bad flu… right before the Pandemic. With COVID. That presents sort of like a flu. That I’ve somehow avoided getting, as if I’d already gotten it and gained an immunity… Okay we’re not going down that road the last time I went abroad was January 2020. Three years and change.

The last time I went on a solo international trip? Well, that’d be New Zealand, back in 2012. 11 years.

It’s high time I explored.


I got accepted to Trinity College’s MBA program back in November, and accepted the offer that same month… though I delayed admission until 2024, to give me some time to finish up in Oregon and save up a bit more money. While talking to the admissions officer though, I learned about a Business forum put on by Trinity in March – a perfect opportunity for me to stretch my international adventure legs and see if Dublin would make a good home for a year or three!

I planned, I packed, and I set off on my first solo international trip in over 10 years…

(Please note that these are my raw notes from the trip. I’m proofreading them for obvious mistakes… but they’re still short-hand. Because life is busy, and blogs don’t need to be perfectly edited.)



Thursday, 09-Mar-2023



Wake up later than planned… huh. I guess the forum was more taxing than I expected? I mean, I know socializing is draining, but… hmm. Interesting.

Grab a full Irish breakfast nearby, and start into some scavenger hunting for the day… mainly looking for a rock climbing guidebook for myself. Which… turns out, is really hard to find! Three outdoors stores and a bookstore later, no one has anything in stock. Kinda strange, but I’m not quite ready to call it a conspiracy just yet… That’s fine, though – I got some good walking in, and was able to scratch a few things off my scavanger hunt thanks to exploring so many shops, so… win!



My drive to find a climbing book quelled in failure, I turned to my usual for this trip – Museums! See… advantage to National Museums – they’re free, which makes wandering in super convenient. Which led me to my favorite museum of the trip so far – the Archaeology museum! A full walkthrough of human inhabitation of Ireland, from the earliest stone-age through to “modern” Christianity! It was really cool, and I spent quite a bit longer in there than I have at any other museum so far – so much so that I actually closed down the museum, being one of the last people out the door!



I wandered some more, toward an early dinner and an early bedtime, aiming for an earlier start tomorrow morning. Dinner was a surprisingly amazing BBQ spot, literally at least as good as anything in Oregon, if not better. Then home to do some laundry and relax away from the absolutely frigid rain!