View Paris from 500 feet – in a balloon

Getting a good view of Paris usually involves a trip up the Eiffel Tower, but what if you want to avoid the same view millions of people get every year?

The “Ballon air de Paris” is a massive helium filled balloon, with a basket capable of lifting 30 people at a time.

Unfortunately, it isn’t the kind of balloon that will take you on a tour around the city, it is anchored to the ground by an array of winches and cables. Still, at 150 meters you’ll be up high enough to get a really nice view – and be able to take a photo of the Eiffel Tower from a different angle.

The Ballon air de Paris is located in the Parc André Citroën (of the famous Citroën cars), about a mile downriver from the Eiffel Tower. The walk is of course lovely, but you can also reach the Parc with RER line C to the Javel station.

Admission is 12€ for adults (10€ during the week). Tickets for children are between 6€ and 10€ depending on their age.

Yeah, then why don’t you and the Eiffel tower get a room!

I’m pretty sure I’m not alone when I say I “love” the Eiffel Tower – how can you not enjoy such a magnificent structure? The design, the sheer beauty of it, and the atmosphere around the tower in such an awesome city make it one of the most popular landmarks in the world.

But there are some people who take their love of the structure just a tad too far.

That is what Erika La Tour Eiffel has done. Not only did she “marry” the Eiffel tower, she actually has sex with it.

Let that sink in for a minute – this lady is so in love with the tower that she climbs it, and consummates her relationship with the Eiffel Tower.

These people are called “objectum sexuals” and their relationships are with objects instead of people. Another lady is so in love with the Golden Gate bridge that she sleeps with a piece of the bridge, and does stuff to it I don’t want to know about.

Click the read more link to see a documentary about these people, and to learn more about how deep their love goes for tourist attractions and other objects.

Watch Married To The Eiffel Tower [Part 1] | View More Free Videos Online at Veoh.com

(Via: TV Carnage)

Bizarrely, this behavior is not against the law in France.

There are 261,690 photos of the Eiffel Tower on Flickr. So why do we still take pictures of it?

Yes, 261,690 photos. Of one man-made structure. If every possible photograph of the Eiffel Tower has not already been taken, we’re probably coming dangerously close to exhausting the limits of human creativity. Same goes for all the hundreds of thousands of photographs of Times Square, Buckingham Palace, the Pyramids, Angkor Wat, and every other tourist destination to which millions of camera-clad tourists flock every year.

Photos of all these places– many of the shots better than anything most of us could take– are on Flickr right now and available for us to download and print out or upload onto Facebook.

But we don’t do these things, do we? After we come back from Paris, we don’t show our friends other people’s photos of the Eiffel Tower, even though many of them are probably better than our own. It seems as if we’d prefer to look at (and show others) inferior photographs of our own creation rather than beautiful shots done by somebody else, even when both photos are of the same thing. But why?

Well, in many photos, we like to stand in front of tourist landmarks as a sort of proof that we were there– the ol’ “This is me in front of the Eiffel Tower” shot. You can’t simply download these photos off Flickr, so it makes sense to take these pictures. But, assuming we don’t have some great photographic abilities, why do we spend time and energy photographing just the Eiffel Tower itself when so many great photos of it are already available?

I think it’s because we get satisfaction when we produce an image, even when it’s (sometimes highly) imperfect. It’s human nature to hold up something we’ve created and proudly say, “I made this. Sure, maybe others have done it better, but this was what I did.”

And others enjoy seeing what we’ve created as well (rather than just where we’ve been), even if it might lack the polish of the work of someone more talented. It’s the same reason your mother was always happier to receive a hideous hand-made card on Mother’s Day rather than a beautiful one that could be bought from the store. (Well, up to a certain age, I guess.)

If we were really only interested in showing people where we’ve been, we’d print out a bunch of photos from Flickr or upload a bunch of stock photography to Facebook. But we’re equally interested in that “I made this” feeling, the one that comes from showing others– and ourselves– how much beauty we can create when we give ourselves the chance.

Photo of the Day (1/1/09)

Dave and Chi snapped this nice shot of the Eiffel Tower last night during New Years festivities. The tower had been blue for the past six months in celebration of France’s rotating presidency of the European Union.

Blue was nice, but it’s great to see it back to the original color. Looking closely, is that one stray blue light still shining on the tower? Did someone forget to pull that plug?

Thanks Dave and Chi for another great shot!

Are you a Flickr user who’d like to share a travel related picture or two for our consideration? Submit it to Gadling’s Flickr group right now! We just might use it for our Photo of the Day!

Photo of the Day (12.06.08)


For some reason I always have a severe longing for Europe when December rolls around. Yes, of course, it’s cold and gray, but I miss the lights and sounds of European countries gearing up for Christmas. So when I went to look for today’s Photo of the Day I obviously had a bias and therefore chose this great shot of the Eiffel Tower by Luke Robinson. I think it’s fitting that he chose to do the photo in black and white; it fits the temperatures of the season. But at the same time, underneath the stark architecture and strong lines you can easily imagine the lively action going on down in the streets. I’m jealous of anyone that’s currently there!

Have your own shot that you want considered for Photo of the Day? Submit it to the Gadling Flickr Pool.