Post 1022: …in which the heroine flies her three Bombay cats to Paris!

A friend I’ve written about earlier, Deborah, sent this amazing account of how she got her three Bombay cats from the USA to Paris. It is long, her story, but I think you will be entertained! I know I was. I knew the outcome (the cats made it to to France), but never would have guessed the perversity Deborah had to endure to get the job done.

Ralph, Debroah, and Cathy send Tim (hanging out of the window) and me off to Kaiserslautern after our Paris visit. We were very sad and the goodbyes long.

Ralph, Deborah, and Kathy send Tim (hanging out of the window) and me off to Kaiserslautern after our Paris visit. We were very sad and the goodbyes long.

A preliminary detail or two. This is a photo of my army buddy Tim and me (behind camera, of course!) departing from Paris in 1971. The three people on the platform put up with us for a week, I believe, and it was a wonderful, full week of France, Paris, talk, and food. Oh, and lots of wine, of course!

Deborah is the person who took this delightful cat photo in Hunawihr, Alsace.

Deborah borrowed my camera to take some souvenir photos of Hunawihr. When I got the film processed after I returned to Kaiserslautern, this charming photo was among those she'd taken!

Deborah borrowed my camera to take some souvenir photos of Hunawihr. When I got the film processed after I returned to Kaiserslautern, this charming photo was among those she’d taken! (Foreshadowing here…”black cat”!)

So much for that! Now onto Deborah’s cat adventure:

Dear Doug,

This is a pretty good story about my cats.

I was going to Paris to help a friend (Ralph). Of course the cats were coming with.

deborah's cats 1

So I booked passage on the Queen Mary and made reservations in the QM kennel for the cats.  After my non-refundable passage was paid for, the cats got bumped by a dog — undoubtedly a dog accompanying a first class customer is my surmise.  I did check out the kennel while onboard, and ALL the occupants were canines.  The kennel master obviously discriminated against felines because according to him the kennel was fully booked for eternity.

Anyway, I was in a pickle.  How to get the cats to France?  Fly them as unaccompanied cargo was the only choice. But they would have to leave eight days after me because I would be on the Atlantic Ocean for that long.

deborah's cats 2My son was the hero who got them the necessary paperwork, retrofitted the cages to meet airline requirements, and delivered them to Logan airport in the middle of the night for their flight to Paris.  The paperwork was a nightmare requiring the State vet to certify their health exam which had to be done by a special state certified vet within 48 hours of the flight and that certification can only be done via the post.  To say timing was tight is an understatement.  Also the airline could refuse them for any reason (even with reservations) and the temperature at departure and arrival had to both be within certain ranges.  BTW, it is lucky they were not Persians because Persians are on the no fly list along with Himalayans.  Bombays are also “pug faced” but apparently they still fly under the radar so to speak.

Anyway, they flew on a Saturday and presumably arrived on a Sunday morning.  (They don’t have cell phones yet.). I went to the Air France counter at Charles De Gaulle airport and after being sent hither and yon was finally informed that they would be at a cargo center several kilometers away if in fact they had been on the plane.  Cats do not make the manifest list.

None of the taxis wanted to take me there because they preferred the much more lucrative fare into Paris.  An Air France employee finally tipped me off to say I was going to Paris but making a “short stop” on the way.

deborah's cats in taxi

The “short stop” will be one of the punch lines of this tale.

A very nice taxi driver of African origin finally agreed to take me.  When we got to the cargo area everything seemed to be closed: it was Sunday after all and the French take Sunday very seriously.  We knocked on doors, drove to any building where there were signs if life, were sent hither and yon yet again until after an hour or so, we located someone who knew where the cats were.  But of course!  Their paperwork had to be stamped by some official and an import fee paid.  We were dispatched to another building (that was closed) and so started yet another hunt for the mysterious official.  Another hour or two later I had the stamped documents in hand and my purse was lightened of a few hundred euros.  Meanwhile the taxi meter had rolled over and was starting its climb toward 999 again.

deborah's cats 5

I took the papers back to the man who knew where the cats were and he reluctantly got up from his card game.  Obviously not that many cats get imported on Sundays.  He fetched the three carriers on his warehouse truck and I finally heard the cries if my kids.

deborah's cats 4

The taxi driver seemed invested in their welfare at this point and carried two of the carriers to his taxi.  We finally got on the road and arrived in Paris about eight hours after I had left for the airport.  The question in my mind was: how much is this going to cost?  I had reason to worry: a sleight of hand ATM artist had tricked me into believing the bank ATM had eaten my only two cards the day before and that I would have to get them from the bank when it reopened on Monday.  Meanwhile, he and his gang were busy making charges all over Corsica — but that is a story for another day.  The result was that I only had the cash I already had on hand for the weekend and the import fee (which is not stated anywhere) had made a serious dent in that.  The taxi driver had me basically empty my wallet — a couple of hundred euros –as payment for his several hours on the great cat mystery tour through the warren of the CDG cargo area.  I would have gladly paid him more if I had been able to do so.

You would think that standing on the sidewalk in front of Ralph’s place on the beautiful rue de la Montagne Sainte Genviéve finally reunited with my kids would be the happy end of the tale, but no, there is more.

deborah's cats 7

I relayed the three carriers into the building and decided the safest thing to do was send them up in the elevator together since I could only carry two at a time up the five flights of stairs.  So I stacked them into the very tiny corner elevator — no room for me — pressed the 5th floor and raced up the stairs.  When I got to the top I heard a banging sound coming from the elevator.  I raced back down and found that the inside elevator door was banging against a carrier and couldn’t close.  Meanwhile the outside door was locked as the elevator was presumed occupied.  The cats could not rearrange their carriers, smart though they be.

So my friend had to call the Otis elevator repair person on a Sunday.  The dispatcher asked if there was anyone trapped inside the elevator — obviously those cases get first priority.  My friend replied that there were three cats but no people.  “Trois chats, Monsieur?  Vous avez dites trois chats?  Seulement trois chats?  Mais dis donc!  Ça c’est un peu incroyable!”   [“Three cats, sir? You say three cats? Only three cats? But tell me! That’s just amazing!]”The dispatcher was obviously a little incredulous.

deborah's cats 3

Meanwhile, the cats were obviously distressed by the banging door constantly hitting the carriers as evidenced by their cries.  Another tenant in the building who wanted to use the elevator for his suitcases treated me to a refresher course in French swear words.  After a wait of an hour or so, the repairman appeared and quickly solved the problem.  Then he helped me carry the cats up the five flights of stairs.  Chivalry is not dead.  Fortunately he did not ask for payment for the rescue on the spot.

I opened the carriers and out came Charles, André, and Serena, a little the worse for the wear, but basically fine.  What’s for lunch, they asked in unison.  Why paté of course.  Actually the French make a very gourmet wet cat food that has identifiable bits of seafood in a tasty sauce that all three of them loved.

And that was the start of our French adventure.  It actually got much easier after this rather bumpy start: the French allow cats on trains for a mere 5 euros, I found a fantastic rolling carrier with mesh windows that was roomy enough for all three to travel in together, and Charles joined me for lunch at The Brasserie on the Isle Saint Louis several times — cats are welcome in French restaurants! [My emphasis! Doug]

three cats

I purchased this painting in a tiny shop nearby — two black cats and a sable cat at Cluny, the medieval cloister also nearby.  The artist, Pouchelon aka Pouch, was an illustrator for Le Monde.  Most of his paintings feature cats!  He obviously anticipated the arrival of my two black kids and my sable kid.  Even the proportions are perfect: hefty Charles in the lead, wiry André in the middle and dainty Serena bringing up the rear.

=(^+^)=

Wasn’t that fun?

 

42 thoughts on “Post 1022: …in which the heroine flies her three Bombay cats to Paris!

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  5. Travelling to France with thee cats , the heroin by the Queen Mary and the tree cats by plane ! What an exploit . Principally when the cats arrive on a Sunday away from Charles de Gaulle and you have to empty your wallet to pay the taxi .:) much for the wait than for the distance !
    And the three cats squeezed in the lift ! 🙂 What a dram . And all of that on a Sunday!!
    Frankly your friend should write a book in French . She will sell enough to fill her empty wallet !!:)
    There is also th travel in th past . travel of the Queen mary or the ship “France” was a dream. Those giant liners no more exist .
    Thanks Dough for this story . This show also you and your friends love France .
    In friendship
    Michel

    • Deborah is fluent in French, actually! I’ll pass this on to her. I know French love their books, so perhaps she can add to the library!

      We do love France! I found the Parisians were even nice for the most part, though they have a reputation for being a bit snobby. I think the main thing people need to realize is most places are friendly if you respect the residents and the local customs. When accidentally breaking a rule, one can turn things around by saying something like this: “I’m sorry! Thank you for letting me know that isn’t acceptable here. I was unaware.” Of course, before travelling abroad, a person really, really needs to read up on local customs because even familiar countries like yours or Germany have customs unique to them, ones you should know about ahead of time.

      As for crabby Frenchmen/women, the only people who were a bit unfriendly was a customs agent at the German/French border, a woman in the main post office in Strasbourg, and a young man in Paris who mistook me for a “typical tourist” because I was carrying a camera. I was visiting Ralph and Deborah, who lived then on rue des Boulangers. The customs man was snotty because I didn’t produce my passport when he asked me (coming from Germany into France). The clerk in the post office was upset because I had a camera around my neck. Of course, with the lens cap on, there was no way I could take a photo, but apparently that was forbidden to do at the time in French post offices.

      None of these people ruined my trips or changed my mind about what a wonderful country France is! The post office incident helped me learn something useful. The customs official probably had a bad day. (Once he learned I was American, he was disdainful toward me, but he was just one Frenchman of millions!) The young man in Paris mocked me by making the universal hand signal (no, not that one….!) of taking a photo and “sneering the word “click!” I returned the favor and aimed my camera at him and “clicked!” him back. I had that slide of his ugly puss for years. Perhaps I still do.

  6. Thanks for sharing this marvelous story. Deborah’s cats must be as amazing as their person, mine would have had a complete meltdown just getting to the starting airport.

    • It started out as a request for pictures of her kitties to go along with a short paragraph describing them that Deborah wrote me on Facebook. When she sent this account with several photos, I felt her account was worth sharing. Delightful, isn’t it?!

  7. Those poor kitties sure had an ordeal to get over to France. I love that painting, that is such a nice coincidence that they match her cats.

    • All the animal lovers and cat people reading this can put themselves in Deborah’s shoes, eh?!

      I found her account well worth posting. Maybe her experience will help others facing the same challenges.

      Yes, the painting was a happy find indeed!

  8. This tale was wonderfully written. I loved it and laughed so hard as I could picture the obstacles. I had my 2 Siamese shipped up to Prince Rupert from Vancouver in the 70’s and it was quite the ordeal so I do understand.

    Thanks for the laugh Doug.

    Jean

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