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Jardins de Monet são reabertos ao público na França

Atração é um dos locais mais visitados da Normandia, uma província do norte francês. Jardins de Monet, na França, são reabertos ao público Os jardins de Claude Monet, a inspiração de suas famosas pinturas dos “Nenúfares”, reabriram ao público na segunda-feira em Giverny, na Normandia, no momento em que a França está saindo de três meses de isolamento. Os jardins do pintor impressionista normalmente ficam repletos de turistas, atraindo mais de meio milhão de visitantes por ano, o que os torna um dos locais mais visitados da Normandia, uma província do norte francês. Como as fronteiras do país ainda estão fechadas para turistas estrangeiros em meio à suspensão cautelosa do isolamento, a reabertura oferece uma experiência íntima para os visitantes locais, a maioria vindos das cidades próximas de Rouen e Paris. Para manter as regras de distanciamento social, nenhum grupo é permitido na propriedade, os visitantes têm que usar máscaras, precisam seguir uma rota de mão única e devem agendar as visitas pela internet. “Nesta época do ano, normalmente recebemos de 4 mil a 5 mil pessoas por dia, agora podemos ter 900 pessoas no máximo”, disse o jardineiro-chefe, Jean-Marie Avisard, que trabalha nos jardins há 32 anos. “Estamos muito felizes de mostrar o que fazemos… as pessoas verão o jardim um pouco como uma visita particular”, acrescentou. Monet morou com a família em uma fazenda abandonada de Giverny de 1883 até sua morte, em 1926. Ele a transformou em uma mansão rosa pitoresca, cujas dependências giram em torno de um jardim com milhares de rosas, narcisos, tulipas e peônias e um jardim aquático de estilo japonês com uma ponte em meia-lua verde que atravessa o lago de nenúfares. (Por Emilie Delwarde e Clotaire Achi)

Este artigo G1 > Turismo e Viagem foi publicado em https://g1.globo.com/turismo-e-viagem/noticia/2020/06/09/jardins-de-monet-sao-reabertos-ao-publico-na-franca.ghtml



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