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Learning a Language, and a Few Life Lessons, in Fr...
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Good Morning
Greg and 
SFTGG Guides.

Great photo of a 
SF Tour Driver and a 
SF Tour Guide.
Over the last 60 years+,
that I’ve worked in the 
SF tour industry, 
I’ve observed the following.
Despite the fact that both 
tour drivers and 
tour guides must work very closely together for a tour to be both harmonious and successful, and therefore must know at least the basics of each others occupation,
There have very few,
SF tour drivers who have become 
SF tour guides.
Similarly,
There have been very few,
SF tour guides,
who have become 
SF tour drivers.
It’s happened,
However,
Very rarely.

Please file this under less important facts to know and share.

Cheers,
Bob 



Sent from my iPhone

Guide and driver


I spent a bit over a week in Arles in Provence in October of 1964, while waiting for a ship from Marseilles to Africa. There was nothing going on in Arles, Aix, or anywhere in Provence in1964. It was pastoral and looked and felt much like the wonderfully retrospective films "My Mother's Castle" and "My Father's Glory".


After a painful breakup, the author travels to Provence for a language immersion homestay and learns the value of facing up to mistakes.


By Jenny Gross

Reporting from the South of France

Oct. 14, 2024 - NY Times


When I booked a one-on-one intensive language program in France, I envisioned a dreamy getaway, where I could practice French while getting to know Provence through the eyes of a local.


But as soon as I arrived, I had immediate doubts. Days earlier, my long-term relationship had collapsed. As my head spun, I wondered how I was going to weather four days of forced small talk, away from home, in another language, with a stranger.

Or was this exactly what I needed?


Brigitte Miramont, the host of my program, suggested over the phone that we meet at the Starbucks near the Marseille train station’s “dépose minute.” I had no clue what that was, but at our agreed upon time and day, I found the Starbucks and met a beaming Ms. Miramont. She pointed out the “dépose minute,” explaining it meant “drop-off point.”


That explanation was the last exchange we had in English.


Learning a Language, and a Few Life Lessons, in France


Greg

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