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Taking the Kids: Letting a little girl lead the way in Monet's garden

By Eileen Ogintz, Tribune Content Agency on

I can't stop smiling. I'm walking in Monet's famous gardens at Giverny (http://giverny.org/gardens/fcm/visitgb.htm) on a sunny day, gardens with nearly 100,000 plants and a riot of colorful flowers, not to mention the famous lily pads immortalized in Monet's work. But I admit I'm not really thinking about what I'm seeing, or the masterpieces Claude Monet created here outside his home just 44 miles from Paris.

I'm thinking about a little American girl skipping over the famous green Japanese Bridges and through the gardens with a big smile on her face.

That was my youngest daughter Melanie, 7 at the time, who was enamored of the book "Linnea in Monet's Garden," by Cristina Bjork, which is still very popular and tells the story of a little girl who on a visit to Paris, sees Monet's famous paintings and then visits his garden in Giverny, learning about art and Impressionism in the process.

From the time we told Melanie we were going to France that summer, she insisted we must visit Monet's Garden. It wasn't that far-fetched an idea; Monet' House and Garden http://giverny.org/, only open April through October, is a top tourist attraction, drawing 500,000 visitors a year and easy to reach from Paris by train.

A visit here can help kids and their parents better appreciate the creative process, especially after they've seen some of Monet's masterpieces in Paris museums, like the wonderful Musee de L'Orangerie (www.musee-orangerie.fr/) in the Tuileries Gardens with its curved rooms designed by Monet himself to showcase his huge water lilies painted at Giverny. In fact, Monet loved the light in the Seine Valley and painted 48 canvases of the lilies and 44 of the bridge, including paintings of his children and stepchildren in the gardens.

(A tip: Buy tickets in advance, or if you plan to see a lot of Paris' top museums, invest in the Paris Pass, http://www.parispass.com, which will enable you to skip the lines here and at other top attractions and museums.)

 

But at the time, I thought I was being very forward-thinking to allow a 7 year old to plan a day of our trip, especially when no one else in the family, including her older sister and a friend accompanying us, was very enthusiastic. Today, of course, many parents say kids influence their vacation decisions and they go to great pains to make sure everyone has a say in the itinerary.

So we took the train from Paris and brought sketchbooks and pencils, thinking the girls would have fun drawing in the garden. I didn't count on the crowds.

Mel didn't mind the crowds in the garden or Monet's house where he lived with his big, blended family (eight kids) and she was very pleased with herself that she had brought us there. I saw that day the power of travel for a child -- to see something real that they'd only seen in a book, to have the "grown-ups" and older siblings follow their lead.

This time we had returned to Giverny in the fall with some cousins, the first stop on an Avalon Waterways (www.avalonwaterways.com) cruise from Paris to Normandy. It wasn't terribly crowded and we could have sketched in the garden.

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