Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Arles to Cassis


Hi, we are planning a day trip from Arles to Cassis in the first week of October.



What is the best way to reach Cassis and back? Any sights that you would recommend, is welcome.



Alex




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The easiest way is by car.



You can drive through the centre of Marseille - not my choice.





From Arles go to Salon de Provence onto A7 autoroute, A6 autoroute to Aix en Provence and turn onto the A52 autoroute after Aix and follow signs to Cassis.





Aix is worth a visit but you may not have time to cobine it with a visit to Cassis.





When in Arles have a drive around the Alpilles area - often overlooked.




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Thanks for the suggestion. I guess there is no direct train to Cassis from Arles then?




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Sorry not a train expert.



Can I suggest you post this on the Arles forum too?





As an overall observation to get the best out of the region a car is a must if you can.




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Also not a train expert, but I like researching! There look to be trains from Arles to Cassis via Marseille St Charles, 32.20 € return, www.voyages-sncf.com/dynamic/_SvHomePage…



The station is a couple of miles outside Cassis - there was a regular bus shuttle service to the town centre during the summer holiday period, but I can%26#39;t find current details.



Tourist information is at http://www.ot-cassis.com/



We went on a beautiful sunny day, intending to have a boat trip round the Calanques, but it was very windy, so the boats did not do the full circuit - worth checking the forecast if that%26#39;s what you%26#39;re planning!




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Removed on: 4:16 am, September 08, 2009

Arcimboldo: A great new exhibit at Musee du Luxembourg

An exhibition of paintings by the 16th Century fantasy painter, Arcimboldo opened this past weekend in the Luxembourg Gdns. It features many of his notable paintings including %26quot;Spring%26quot; -- which depicts a portrait of a man comprised of fruits %26amp; vegetables. If you are a fan of surreal/fantasy art, then this show is a must.



The exhibition runs through Jan. 13, 2008 and tix are 11 Euros.





Site: http://www.museeduluxembourg.fr/




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Thanks for the info -




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I so want to go. His work is fabulous!!!!!!




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Removed on: 5:16 am, September 09, 2009

Staying in Latin Quarter - where to eat?

We will be staying at the Hotel du College in the Latin Quarter. Planning to do a lot of picnics and such for lunches. Can you recommend some good streets/areas for affordable dinners? Have read negative things about Rue Huchette, where else would be good to wander and check out menus at night? Hoping to stay under 20 Euros per person or so. We like all types of food. Thanks!




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Ooops meant 40 Euros per person max Thanks for any recs!




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Many really good restaurants in your price range on Rue Guisard and Rue des Canettes.




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One in and two near the Latin Quarter...





As far as eating goes, we have several favorite restaurants which we go to each trip now; the Brasserie D’Ile St Louis for charcroute garni and the onion tart and a bottle of wine (49.90 euros). Le Borbon in the Latin Quarter for salad and moules frites (38.50 euros). And a little place just off the Blvd St Germain called L’insulaire. We have a prix fix meal here which ends with a cheese assortment. This year it came to 38.00 euros which includes the ever present bottle or carafe of wine.





hth



Pjk




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Directly across the street from the HDCDF is La Pre Verre. In fact you can look out your hotel window and check out what the diners are eating before you decide whether you want to go there or not.




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Removed on: 9:17 pm, September 09, 2009

Where would you go?

My fiance and I are planning our honeymoon. We plan to fly in to London and out of Rome, stopping in Paris, the Cinque Terre, and Sorrento on the way. However, we have three days not yet accounted for that we are trying to figure out what to do with. What would you do?





More time in the UK? More time somewhere in France other than Paris? Tuscany? What would you vote?






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How many days in each location?




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Well, our itinerary so far is:





London-3



Paris-3



Cinque Terre-3



Sorrento-3





?-3





We could squeeze those last three days in anywhere from London to Sorrento- what would you do with them?




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Add 3 more days to your Paris itinerary.




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Removed on: 2:16 am, September 10, 2009

5* Hotel + Private Beach

Which 5* hotel, if any, would have a private beach? Just returned from a stay at Positano%26#39;s Il San Pietro. While on the small side, the beach was perfect and occupied by hotel guests only. Would love to find a similar set up in the south of France.






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The Belle Rives at Juan les Pins is the only one I know where the hotel is not cut off from its own sandy beach by the highway. (No doubt somewhere are others)





slh.com/france/juanlespins/hotel_juabel.html





Its very classy




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Le Club de Cavaliere at Le Lavendou has a private beach.





www.clubdecavaliere.com





Has a very short season though from May to September (but at the prices they charge...)




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Don%26#39;t forget also Monte Carlo, especially the Beach Club that has a small but nice private beach.




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Close to Ste Maxime the Beauvallon has a private beach, it is across the road but there is a private underpass.



http://www.lebeauvallon.com/



La Pinede Plage at Croix Valmer



pinede-plage.com/pinedeplage/…index.php



Also at Le Rayol Canadel is Le Bailli de Suffren



http://www.lebaillidesuffren.com/



Once you get into the Var you have many choices of hotels with private beaches.




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Royal Riviera at Cap Ferrat





La Reserve de Beaulieu in Beaulieu




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From briefly looking at all of the recommended properties it looks that Royal Riviera is the only 5*. I%26#39;ll continue researching and thanks everyone for replying.




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La Reserve is much more exclusive and much, much more expensive than the Royal Riviera but does it really have a beach? If I was spending that sort of money I would go to the Grand Hotel du Cap Ferrat. No beach but a beautiful pool and private access to the Med.




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Just to mention and maybe muddy the waters a bit.



Shouldn%26#39;t get too hung up on the hotel stars system in France. The classification is different to the US and most other places.



Until very very recently there was no such thing as an official 5 star hotel - the top rating in France was 4* deluxe . Many of the best hotels may not have been regraded yet..





Hope this doesn%26#39;t confuse things!




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%26lt;i%26gt;La Reserve is much more exclusive and much, much more expensive than the Royal Riviera but does it really have a beach? If I was spending that sort of money I would go to the Grand Hotel du Cap Ferrat. No beach but a beautiful pool and private access to the Med.%26lt;/i%26gt;







I%26#39;m really hung up on the property having a private beach. Right now it looks like Monte Carlo Beach Hotel is the closest thing to what I%26#39;m looking for.





Can you give the exact name of the La Reserve property as I can%26#39;t seem to find it among the La Reserves that come up on TA. Thanks.




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Put Beaulieu in the TA search box and it will appear as the top, although not universally liked hotel, hotel.

Where would you go?

My fiance and I are planning our honeymoon. We plan to fly in to London and out of Rome, stopping in Paris, the Cinque Terre, and Sorrento on the way. However, we have three days not yet accounted for that we are trying to figure out what to do with. What would you do?





More time in the UK? More time somewhere in France other than Paris? Tuscany? What would you vote?






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How many days in each location?




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Well, our itinerary so far is:





London-3



Paris-3



Cinque Terre-3



Sorrento-3





?-3





We could squeeze those last three days in anywhere from London to Sorrento- what would you do with them?




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Add 3 more days to your Paris itinerary.




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Removed on: 2:16 am, September 10, 2009

Atlanta to Paris--Rome to Atlanta Airfare

Hi All,





I am looking for inexpensive air fare Sept. 16 Atlanta-Paris and leaving Rome to Atlanta Sept. 29. I found $442 oneway on mobissimo.com for the ATL to Paris as of today. Having trouble with the Rome to ATL.





Any suggestions on cheap airfrare websites. Ive looked at expedia, travelocity, mobissimo and zuji. Any recommendations will be helpful. Also, I%26#39;m I looking to early for airfare. I thought Rome to ATL for around $1500 and up was very expensive.





Thx Kendr390




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Did you think about just booking multi stop trip tickets instead of two separate one ways? The prices I got using your dates were around $1100 for the whole trip, from Travelocity. There%26#39;s at least one plane change though.




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one way tickets are almost always more expensive -- book this open jawed -- and you will probably do better




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Thx Nanami,





I have looked into booking round trip fare but I just thought it was quite expensive. I know the old saying...You Get What You Pay For.... The 1100 you found on Travelocity was the best I%26#39;ve seen.





Do you think Im searching to early for a cheap fare. Also, is it good idea to travel internationaly on a buddy pass if its available. My dates are flexible for sure.





Any advice you or any one can give will be greatly appreciated.





Thx Kendr390





PS. I love your name...




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Thx Graceh9,





My co-workers who have traveled abroad. Recommends the same as you.. I will look into that as well. I thought maybe the one way would be cheaper. I do have a travel agent and co-workers who I know will help find me great airfare. I also have access to buddy passes if that is doable for international fares--Northwest and maybe Continental, possibly Delta.





Thanks Kendr390




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I know this is late, but I found a great website for airfare. 1800-flyeurope.com



leaving ATL to Paris for $598.32 RT per person. I did a search for this company and found some good results. I booked these tickets about 2 weeks ago. I haven%26#39;t found a better deal yet.



As far as Rome, they will prob have a good price as well.




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my last post should have also had that this is for late Nov-early Dec travel. Not sure what your dates are also.




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Thanks So Much Lam,





I am always looking for great low fares. I will look into that site.





However, I postponed my trip to Europe until 2008.





thanks again





kendr390




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As noted...an %26#39;..open jawed..%26#39; flight itinerary will probably produce the best results. Though the lowest fares tend to be point-to-point round-trips...%26#39;open jawed%26#39; itineraries can often take some advantage of lower point-to-point fare sales and %26#39;specials..%26#39;. Airlines that offer service (or partner airline %26#39;code-shares%26#39;) from Atlanta to BOTH cities will probably be your best bet. If an airline offers a %26#39;..code-share..%26#39; with a partner airline, it%26#39;s usually worth checking the partner%26#39;s fares as well. One would think that the fares of both would be the same...but this often isn%26#39;t so.





Though %26#39;..open-jawed..%26#39; will make the most of limited time available, comparing %26#39;point-to-point%26#39; with independent one-way connection at one end or the other . As an example VEULING offers budget service between ROME-Fiumicino(FCO) and PARIS-CDG---which, if schedules permit / mesh, may allow you to make the independent connection. When checking for %26#39;connections%26#39;, be sure to also check the local airports that flights use. As an example, EZ Jet offers service between ROME-Ciamoino(CIA) and PARIS-Orly(ORY)...which might require and inter-airport transfer at one end or the other, that eats-up available time and benefits.




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Removed on: 5:21 am, September 10, 2009

Purchase museum pass in London?

I swear I read somewhere that the Paris Museum Pass could be purchased at Waterloo station (we%26#39;ll be taking the train from London in November), but when I visit the Museum Pass website it does not mention this.





Does anyone now if this is indeed fact?





And if so, where in Waterloo might I look for it.





THANKS!






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BJL,





When we last travelled on the Eurostar (in May) you could buy Metro tickets and museum passes at the information desk within the check-in area. This doesn%26#39;t seem to be widely known, but they announced it over the tannoy whilst we were waiting to board and it saved us lots of time at Gard du Nord! I do not know if you can get them anywhere else. Also, don%26#39;t know what time in November you are travelling but the Eurostar changes from Waerloo to St. Pancras around that time, so things could be completely different!




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Thanks so much, Riotstar! I KNEW I%26#39;d read it somewhere - but even the offical Museum Pass website doesn%26#39;t list it under its %26quot;Points of Sale%26quot; (or I missed it).





We%26#39;ll be taking the Eurostar on November 8 - a week before it moves location, I believe.





Thanks again, much appreciated :-)




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One more question, Riostar ~





When you purchased the Pass in Waterloo - was it in Pounds or Euros?





Thanks!




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It was in pounds, but we worked it out to being the same price as offered in Paris :-)





Enjoy your trip!




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Merci!




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Day 6: Maison du Lego

Day 6: Today was our last full day in Paris, and we had decided to take it relatively easy. We got up late, and headed back out to Notre Dame one last time to finally see the Crypt (it had an interesting display of the history of the structure). By the time we were done with that, we decided to head back over to the Orsay to finally try the restaurant. We made it there before the rush, and I am glad we tried it. It was reasonably priced, and I found the food to be good. We each had the plat du jour, which was fish (cod, if I remember right) over fettucine. For dessert, Hubby had the best ice cream I have ever tasted (and that includes all the gelato I ate in Italy), and I had a “Floating Fountain.” I’m not quite sure what a “Floating Fountain” is, but it tasted like a big, toasted marshmallow in a caramel sauce. That was good too.





After lunch, we went to the Orangerie to see Monet’s lilies. In my opinion, if you like Monet/Impressionism, this is a must see. The paintings were breathtaking. I had originally had the Orangerie on the list of sites we’d see if there was time, and I am really glad we ended up going. That man was just a genius. I can’t believe he painted so many pieces of that size. Amazing.





When we were finished at the Orangerie, we had one last thing on our Paris itinerary: toys. We make our way to the nearest metro and headed in the direction of Toy Centre. I wished we hadn’t done that. It ended up being a waste of perfectly decent metro tickets. Toy Centre was on a little side street, probably technically in the 2nd arr., but I think was really closer to the 10th arr. than the 2nd arr. When we finally found Toy Centre, we realized it was really more like Toy Closet. It was a tiny, tiny space, filled with cheap plastic trinkets. Hubby took one look and said, “Uh, no.” So we turned around and headed toward Les Halles.





And there Hubby found his own little piece of Parisian heaven. Not only were there two or three stores that had many collectible cars, there was also…dum da dum dum…Maison du Lego. Yep, a whole store filled with nothing but Lego sets. But somehow, by some act of God, Hubby didn’t see anything he wanted at Maison du Lego. Oh Happy Day! The only set he found unique to Paris was the Eiffel Tower set, and he wasn’t interested in paying 210 Euros for it. We did, however, spend about an hour wandering back and forth between two other shops so Hubby could decide on which car collectibles he wanted. After that, we headed back to the apartment one last time to pack/clean up in preparation for tomorrow’s (very early) Easyjet flight.





We loved our time in Paris. We had, of course, been forewarned of the “they hate Americans” misperception, but we found that everyone we interacted with could have schooled all service personnel in the U.S. on what proper customer service really looks/sounds like. Everyone patiently put up with my complete butchering of the language, and 95% of the people responded back immediately in English. Everyone was completely professional.





Our Easyjet flight was…easy. We had called for a cab the night before, (G7) and I was a little nervous that it wouldn’t show, but it appeared right at 4:30 a.m. on the dot. With the exception of one big air pocket during the landing in Rome in which I thought we were all going to die, the flight was uneventful and on time.





And so ended our Paris adventures. I am very grateful that we had an opportunity to see this great city, and again, want to thank all of you for your advice in our preparations.




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Thanks so much for taking the time to entertain and inform us all with your witty and well written posts!




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I have enjoyed reading your reports, and I hope when you get home you tell those nasty rude people that make up stories about how %26quot; they don%26#39;t like Americans%26quot; that they are full of it, and then ask them how THEY know that since they most likely haven%26#39;t even been to France. They just can%26#39;t be honest and say what the real issue is, THEY don%26#39;t like the French because they watch too much crap t.v. and have a warped world view.





NO other nationality has as many posters say that %26quot; they heard the french were rude%26quot;, or t%26quot;he french don%26#39;t like us%26quot; as Americans. Why can%26#39;t soem Americans seperate politics from PEOPLE.




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Very much enjoyed your report. Could what you call a %26quot;floating fountain%26quot; have been an %26quot;Île flottante%26quot; (floating island)? It%26#39;s a popular French dessert classic, though there seem to be an infinite number of variations.





Maybe you could have saved some time (and metro tickets) if you would have checked out the %26quot;toy centre%26quot; on the internet - the French version of the yellow pages has photographs of (nearly) all buildings in Paris. All you need is the address. www.pagesjaunes.fr




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Shall we follow your travels into Rome next?




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We might have to go to the Rome forum (there are some fun posts about the London segment of their trip on the London forum).




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I%26#39;ve been reading your posts with interest since I%26#39;m also from Minneapolis and I am leaving in less than two weeks on my honeymoon to London and Paris.





Good stuff! I%26#39;ve really enjoyed reading them.




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Thanks everyone for your encouragement! I%26#39;m glad you enjoyed the trip report. I We certainly enjoyed living it. :) f you really are interested, I%26#39;ll be posting the Rome portions within the next couple of days or so.





Joan: I, too, wonder where that stereotype comes from. I suspect that part of it is due, unfortunately to Americans who visit Paris who have no concept that there is an entire world outside our borders and act (and therefore are subsequently treated) accordingly. It%26#39;s very unfortunate that the French are perceived that way, since it couldn%26#39;t be farther from the truth.





Jan: Yes! A Floating Island! That is indeed what it was. I%26#39;m not sure where I got Floating Fountain... :( And I%26#39;ll keep the tip about the search for next time.





DJP: I hope you have a great time on your honeymoon!




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You had fantastic reports. Just so you know I started to read them because your London reports were being mentioned on the NYC forum.





I%26#39;m always amazed at how people who have never been to Paris can make judgements about the people. Usually they have some second hand story that is proposterous at best about some sort of French injustice towards Americans.





My wife and I headed to Paris with friends in November and I have used parts of your reports for planning purposes.




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Where oh where is Maison du Lego?! I am heading to Paris with my 12 year old son in January. He loves Legos! I want to take him there. I would love to have him build the Eiffel Tower. I%26#39;ll start saving my ever shrinking dollar for that treasure! Moms




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TP: Thank you. I%26#39;m glad the reports were able to help. It%26#39;s nice to be able to repay all of the help that we%26#39;ve received from Trip Advisor. :)





Moms: I will have to get back to you on Maison du Lego. Hubby isn%26#39;t sure he kept his notes as to where it was, I was completely not paying attention to where we were due to lack of interest, and I can%26#39;t find it on the Web. Hubby thinks he might have the receipt still, so I%26#39;ll get back to you when we%26#39;re able to find anything. It might be several days though.

power...usa to france

really silly questions but...can i just use an adapter for my camera, cell phone, laptop, etc? or do i need a transformer as well?




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There will be many posts in previous months on just this topic but here goes: check to se if you electric item is dual voltage already. On the electric details printed on the item it will say something like 110/220 volts. If this is the case then all you need to do is buy a pug adaptor. This is most likely the case.





If your item is switchable like some hair dryers that I have had then just switch it to 220v and use the plug adaptor.





If the item is older and is neither 110/220 v compatable or switchable then you need a power converter. Just be sure you get a converter that has sufficient current capability (watts)




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thank you!




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I was wondering this as well and since there are SO many topics on this, it is nice to see it summarized so well. Thank you.




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Removed on: 6:23 am, September 10, 2009

Paris at New Yea

Hi





Myself and my partner are thinking of travelling to Paris for the new year celebrations.





Has anybody been to Paris for new years eve? Any ideas what on? Does the city shut down on 1 Jan like some other cities?





Any help woul be appreciated!





Andy




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There are a number of recent threads on Christmas and/or New Years in Paris - try a search (in the box right under the green bar just above the lists of forum topics) and you%26#39;ll come up with many ideas and a great deal of information.




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Removed on: 5:19 pm, September 09, 2009

Help! Where to eat?

Hi guys...my mom and aunt are visiting and i have absolutely no idea where to bring them for dinner as i usually just munch sandwiches here



i stay near arc de triomphe, any advice on relatively cheap traditional french meals? thanks!




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For a cheap French meal head into one of the hundreds of %26#39;Brasseries%26#39; which are dotted around the city. You can%26#39;t miss them. Head down Avenue de Friedland (one street over from the Champs Elysées near the Arc du Triumphe) and you will find a good one.




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There have been some recent threads about Paris on a tight budget - you might want to do a search (type your search terms in the box under the green bar right above the list of forum topics) to get ideas people have offered.




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Removed on: 4:37 am, September 10, 2009

Designer outlet shopping in Paris

Can anyone advise where the designer outlet shopping (clothing )spots are in Paris . I believe there is something near Disneyland - is this correct ?




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If you go to Blvd Haussman there are a number of places (incl y=the large department stores) that have designer stores in them. Also Bon Marche near St Germain is good.




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The %26#39;..outlet mall..%26#39; you%26#39;re thinking of is--





LA VALLÉE VILLAGE Outlets--



http://www.lavalleevillage.com





acessed from Paris via the RER %26#39;A-4%26#39; ligne (heading in the direction of Marne La Valée-Chessy...any %26#39;A%26#39; train with a %26#39;..Q xxx..%26#39; designation), to the VAL d%26#39; EUROPE station and then regional bus or shuttle out to the outlet area.




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The town of Troyes (about 2 1/2 hours outside Paris) is supposedly the factory outlet shopping centre...2 major shopping centres. This article explains it well....



bonjourparis.com/Articles/…




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Removed on: 6:21 am, September 10, 2009

Train Options

My wife and I are taking the train from Paris to Aix, then 5 days later from Aix to Barcelona? Should I buy a pass or drive from Aix to Barcelona?






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Visit http://www.voyages-sncf.com to check individual train ticket prices. To rent a car, a one-way rental will incur 500USD or more drop off fee.




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You can check on railsaver.com, but I don%26#39;t believe a pass will be cost effective.




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Removed on: 8:16 am, September 10, 2009

Slacks to dinner?

My husband and I are going to keep most of our visit very casual, but thought one %26#39;expensive%26#39; night out would be really nice. We%26#39;re looking to spend no more than 100 - 150euros for the two of us. Would this price range warrant my wearing a dress? Or would nice slacks and a dressy shirt/scarf/heels work okay? Aparently the weather will be hit or miss (we%26#39;ll be there in the middle/end of Oct). I am trying to pack as conservatively as possible, and don%26#39;t really want to pack a dress if I can help it.





Also, we haven%26#39;t picked a restaraunt yet, any ideas in this price range? A nice view would be a big plus for me.





Thanks in advance!




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You don%26#39;t need a dress - what you are suggesting is perfectly fine.




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You will look absolutely fine. Heels and a classy scarf or necklace can really dress up simple but elegantly cut plain slacks and top.



I have not been but would like to try as I have seen good reviews on a restaurant called %26quot;Le Reminant%26quot; , I have been to%26quot; La Couple%26quot; and enjoyed it very much. Google, both have web sites. Bofingers also looks interesting.



This board have many good suggestions on it, just enter %26quot;good restaurant%26quot; in the search box here, I am sure there have been hundredes of posts on it! LOL




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I wouldn%26#39;t bring a dress just for one use....I agree that you should leave the dress at home. Especially for October. A nice pair of pants that you can dress up or down with a nicer top and nicer shoes..scarf...Accessories make the outfit in Paris.




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Removed on: 10:16 pm, September 09, 2009

Out and about in Paris!

Hi, heading to the City of Lights next week and I would like to know any suggestion on places to go out at night.... Bars, cool clubs... Anything helps!!!





Thank you.........




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I go to Paris often and I usually go here:





http://lesdessous.chez-ginette.com/





101 Rue Cualiancourt in the 18th, above the Lamark-Cauliancourt Metro station.




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Removed on: 1:22 am, September 10, 2009

St Jean Pied de Port

Hi there,



Have booked gite accommodation near St Jean. Flying into Biarritz on 13 October. Any advice re. weather, places to visit etc.



Many thanks



Argyll




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Two nice walks are les Gorges de Kakuetta (La Forêt d%26#39;Iraty) and les Gorges d%26#39;Holzarte. If you only do one, I recommend Gorges de Kakuetta.




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Never bean to St Jean Pied de Port, but a day trip to Bayonne is a must. There is a rather infrequent train service to Bayonne. The town is a wonderful place to while away a day, with a lot of beauty, cafés, restaurants (affordable), parks and a good art museum.




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Removed on: 8:17 am, September 10, 2009

paris nord or paris Lyon

Hi all,



i am going to paris for thre nights during christmas thius year. I will be arriving at paris nord frm thalys and I leave to geneva by TGV from paris lyon station. Kindly advise me where should i base my self. Near gare nord or gare lyon. are these two stations connected by public transport? I plan to see eifel tower and make a trip to versailes. We are not into museums very much.



Also suggest if we can reant an apartment for 6 persons for three nights (two couples and two children)




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Hi,





stay whereever you want, but not somewhere near Gare du Nord or Gare du Lyon, because these areas aren%26#39;t that nice ...





Many %26quot;newbies%26quot; like to stay in the Quartier Latin ...





Map of metro in Paris: www.ratp.fr




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Thanks for your reply. are these two stations connected?




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Yes, The RER line D connects Gare du Nord and Gare de Lyon.





I agree the areas immediately by the stations are not pretty, but they are perfectly safe and hotels are cheaper than the single figure arondissements. I nearly always stay in the 10th: transport is great to all parts of the city. Bus 65 also links the 2 stations and serves Blvd Magenta and Republique where you will find plenty of bars restaurants and hotels.





Hope you enjoy your trip




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There are several apartments on Vacation in Paris (www.vacationinparis.com) that have only three night minimums, and there are several that either are large, or there are two in the same building that can be rented together. I agree that it%26#39;s not necessary (or very nice) to stay in the immediate area of one of those stations - stay in a more central area, and just take the Metro or RER (or taxi) to the station when you depart.




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Thanks very much for the info. I will have a lok at the matro map and select a place to stay then.




|||



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Removed on: 2:15 am, September 10, 2009

Does ATM accept 5 digits PIN

For some reason my banks only offer 5 digits pin will it be accepted in ATM in Paris




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I%26#39;ve never found a European ATM that accepted anything but a 4 digit PIN. Actually, I%26#39;ve always had a 4 digit PIN and it%26#39;s worked in ATMs all over Canada, America and Europe except for Russia where I didn%26#39;t find any ATMs at all.




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A second thought - look on the back of your ATM card - do you see the logo for Plus and/or Cirrus? If not, you probably can%26#39;t use your card internationally. Consult your bank. - You may have to open an account in a different bank to have ATM services overseas.




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ATMs in Europe only accept four-digit PINs. You may need to open an account at a different bank for this purpose, if your bank can%26#39;t give you one.




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Are there ATMs in most of the major Hotels? We are staying at the Hotel de Sers. If not are they readily available - and are they bank specific?





Thanks,



j




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I don%26#39;t know about ATMs in major hotels, as I haven%26#39;t stayed in them. They are everywhere on the streets, and will accept any cards with the symbols indicated. I have never had a problem with a garden-variety ATM card, so I seriously doubt they are bank-specific.




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Our bank issued the ATM with a 4 digit PIN with the Cirrus and Plus symbol on the back. (We also notified them of the dates we would be in Europe).





Does that sound like a formula for success?





Thanks in advance for your response!!





Jodel




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%26gt;ATMs in Europe only accept four-digit PINs





Excuse me, but it is an urban legends. Just the fact that it is repeated so often here on TA doesn´t make it true. For example Swiss debit cards have 6 digit PINs, Italian ones often 5 digit PINs, and all of these work just fine in the rest of Europe (yes, with the 5 and 6 digit PINs).





It may have been true 20 years ago.




|||



I can confirm what altamiro says. It is much more common now that ATMs in France accept five or even six digit PINs. I can%26#39;t say for sure if it is all banks, but I know for a fact some at least do.





In Paris, there are very few stand-alone ATMs. The vast majority are attached to bank branches. And they are everywhere.




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i agree.





as far as %26quot;ATMs in Europe%26quot; last summer (%26#39;06) in siena, rome, volterra, my 6-digit pin worked fine. this dec-jan in hamburg also no problem. my card is a visa debit card and i use cirrus and/or plus machines. my husband travels frequently for conferences- in august he was in düsseldorf , the hague, and budapest and used his 5-digit pin throughout- no problem. last week he was in paris also no problems with his 5-digit pin.





i posted to another thread last week because on the heels of a trip to paris i was confused by this information that conflicted with our recent experience and worried about my additional digit.





my bank rep said regardless of pin requirements of the native bank account, the transaction is relayed electronically to your bank for verification- if the pin is valid for the account, it%26#39;s accepted.





use machines that are part of an interbank network or ATM consortium- i.e. cirrus, PLUS, maestro. if there%26#39;s a relationship with your bank the better- reduced/ bypass fees- depending on the bank.




|||



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Removed on: 9:22 am, September 10, 2009

Decent Food Very Near Charles de Gaulle Airport?

Hello all! My husband is going to France for the first time in twenty years, and unfortunately without me :-(





His first five hours of a very short 3 night trip are going to be waiting for his connection to the TGV to St Pierre des Corps (and onwards to Amboise).





He%26#39;s wary about trying to get all the way into Paris and back jet-lagged and without much French. (If I were going, we%26#39;d be Seine-side ASAP, but, alas, that%26#39;s not to be!).





I can%26#39;t bear thinking of him eating airport food in France. Is there a cafe in one of the airport hotels that has a decent pan au chocolat, or even real french bread and strong tea that you could recommend?





Many thanks in advance!






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The cafes in the airport have decent pastries and coffee/tea -- this is France - bad food simply isn%26#39;t tolerated, with the obvious exception of McDonald%26#39;s and Quick.





Granted, it%26#39;s not as good as a cafe in the heart of Paris, but they%26#39;re more than acceptable, far better than those soggy lumps they try to pass off as a croissant on the plane, and the coffee is actually brewed, not some weak and watery instant version.





There isn%26#39;t anything close enough to CDG that would be of a quality worth the hassle of finding a place to stow the luggage, finding a cab, getting away from the airport, and then having to reverse it all within 5 hours.





He can also check at the TGV station -- many times if there is an earlier train he%26#39;ll be able to get on the earlier train without any hassles. I%26#39;d be very surprised to see a 5-hour gap in the schedule between CDG and Amboise.




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the two worst meals I have ever had in the world were at a Marriott in Provo and the airport Hilton in Paris -- the Hilton was both awful -- truly deeply awful and expensive and the staff were incredibly rude





I would chance an airport cafe before the airport hotels




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One of the best meals I had was in the Sheraton restaurant at CDG. A little pricey but excellent - in fact, wonderful!




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Well, there is a very nice looking Champagne bar near gate A49. They had some snacks....





the woman next to me in the terminal got a ham sandwich from the upstairs cafe and said it was excellent... I dont know what type of taste she has, of course!




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Thanks to you all!





No airport food this time, I found (via these boards!) another way for him to get to Amboise via Gare d%26#39;Austerlitz, and have lured him into spending a couple of hours nosing around the 5e. Now he%26#39;s got a list of about 5 cafes, brasseries and boulangeries I want him to hit -- let%26#39;s hope he doesn%26#39;t fall asleep and lose his luggage in Place Dauphine! :-) (ps, so embarrassing to misspell pain!)




|||



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Removed on: 9:25 am, September 10, 2009

Coat check???

Hi there, as my previous trips to Paris have been in the late spring/summer, I%26#39;ve never worried about this before... I%26#39;m wondering if the museums (larger ones, ie the Louvre/Orsay) have a coat check service? We plan on being at the Louvre for a full day, and the Musee d%26#39;Orsay for at least half a day and am wondering about carrying all of these %26#39;layers%26#39; I%26#39;m being told I need for mid/end of Oct. Does anyone know?





Thanks in advance!




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From the Louvre website:





%26quot;To make your visit as enjoyable as possible, the Louvre offers a range of visitor amenities. These include information desks, cafés, coat checks, strollers and wheelchairs, and a membership center. %26quot;





From the d%26#39;Orsay:





%26quot;Cloakrooms are free of charge for individual visitors and groups, to store coats, large umbrellas, rucksacks, small bags, etc, but not large items (over 40 x 60 x 60 cm), nor valuables such as cameras, money, identity documents, fur coats, etc.%26quot;




|||



Wow, I feel ridiculous. lol. Thanks.




|||



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Removed on: 9:26 am, September 10, 2009

Giving Directions to a Taxi Driver?

When giving directions to a taxi driver in Paris what information do you give them. like here in NYC you give the Avenue then the Street. Please advise since I know we will probly use a taxi a couple of times while we are there.





Cheers,




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Just have the address written down.




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Yes, write down the address and hand it to the driver but make sure you include the postal code. There are duplicate street names in the different districts. That little detail cost us an extra 70FF on our first visit to Paris.




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I agree about writing it down (that%26#39;s what I%26#39;ve always done) but I did not know that the postal code should be included (or why) - thanks for that bit of information, metromole!




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As noted, simply write down the address. Unlike NYC, which tends to have a basic %26#39;..grid-system..%26#39; street plan....Paris%26#39; %26#39;..plan..%26#39; (if it can even be called that) is much more labyrintine. Few streets or avenues in Paris run for more than a couple / few blocks, before encountering a square or place named for a famouus soldier, statesman or streetsweeper, then continuing on with a completely different street name.





If you%26#39;re trying to get to your hotel or apartment from the airport, you can use the PagesJaunes mapping site to print out a detailed local street map of your destionation (w/ one-way street indicators)...or if your hotel has a web site, a print out from the %26#39;..Location / Accès..%26#39; page...to hand to the driver should there be any question of where you%26#39;re going.





PAGES JAUNES--



http://www.pagesjaunes.fr/pj.cgi?lang=en




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Thank you all for the advice, after being on a plane for 7 hours this is the last thing I want to worry about.





Cheers,




|||



KDKSAIL:





Thanks for this website....but I can%26#39;t get it in English. It automatically re-directs to the French website and there doesn%26#39;t seem to be anyway to find it in English. Am I doing something wrong???





Thanks again.




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%26gt;%26gt;%26gt;KDKSAIL...Thanks for this website....but I can%26#39;t get it in English. It automatically re-directs to the French website and there doesn%26#39;t seem to be anyway to find it in English. Am I doing something wrong???%26lt;%26lt;%26lt;





Evidently not. The URL I provided was the %26#39;..back door..%26#39; into the English language page of the old-format (simpler) for PagesJaunes. They%26#39;ve been up-dating and re-formatting the site for several months now and evidently they%26#39;ve closed this %26#39;back door%26#39;. There%26#39;s always been an English language version of this site...and I expect that this simply hasn%26#39;t been re-formatted yet. In the meantime, use this URL...which chould be simple enough to figure out, even in French





pagesjaunes.fr/trouverlesprofessionnels/…




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Hi, KDKSAIL:





Thanks again for the reply. I tried the other link you suggested. Still no English.





However, I know enough French to be able to interpret the site. (I am just more comfortable in English.)





Thanks again. Merci.




|||



pagesjaunes.fr/trouverunnom/RecherchePagesBl…




|||



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Removed on: 10:16 am, September 10, 2009

Gorges du Verdon

I am planning on driving to Gorges du Verdon in October. I am wondering if:





1) October is a good time to visit (I don%26#39;t see why not myself, but just in case!);





2) I will be leaving from Nice to get there. I probably won%26#39;t drive around the entire route so I just plan on going east to west until I hit Moustiers Sainte Marie and then eventually to Provence. I heard the south route is more scenic? Can someone please advise exactly the preferred roads to take.





Thanks!








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We were there last fall and it was lovely.



If you want to get to Moustiers you would take the northern route. It is a beautiful town. On the northeren route traveling west there is a very nice viewpoint (pt Sublime I Think,) before you get to Moustiers.



I have also done the southern route and do prefer it - It was spectaular - but the northern route is certainly a fine trip with great views also.



When we drove up from Nice to do the southern route, we stopped in Castellane for picnic supplies etc - pretty town



Whichever way you go, it is a great scenic drive



jhgrady




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Thanks Janeharriett. Can you please tell me how long it took to drive from Nice to Verdon?




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As I recall I think it was about 2 hours to get to Castellane and then we were on the gorge roads for about another 2 - that%26#39;s with stops etc. if you want to plan out your route with times etc, check out www.viamichelin.com Its a great site for planning times, routes - I use it all the time when I am planning our trips.



I could be wrong on the times - it was several years ago that we did the south route.



jhgrady




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If planning to have lunch in Moustiers, make a reservation at Les Santons.




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We were there last week except we went the other direction from Moustiers towards Castellane via the D957 and D71, which they call the Corniche Sublime, due to the spectacular scenery.





In retrospect it would have been better to do it the other way around as the lay-bys and best view points were on the other side of the road.





Probably less traffic in October, but ensure it is a clear, preferably sunny day.





Go from Comps-S-Artuby towards Moustiers on the D71 for the best views.





S %26amp; S





Farnborough, England.




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Having been to Verdon several times I would also recommend the southern route if driving towards the East as the last poster said. Also stop at this hotel for a drink, lunch or just to see the view, Hotel du Grand Canyon du Verdon. The hotel is perched at the top of the cliff.



http://www.aiguines.com/cav1.html




|||



Thanks for the suggestions. I think I will indeed go east to west from Castellane to Moustiers as well.




|||



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Removed on: 10:19 am, September 10, 2009

we have only one day in the Marais

My husnabd and I are making a %26quot;flying%26quot; visit to Paris and like the sound of the Marais district. For our overnight stay we are looking at the Pavillion del a Reine.





Any feedback on this hotel --which room to pick --or NOT -- any ideas for sightseeing and dinner would be appreciated.





Thanks





Aldonna




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If you haven%26#39;t already done that, check it out on the %26quot;hotels%26quot; search function (top of this page) to see everyone%26#39;s comments. It%26#39;s a really lovely place, in a great area. I%26#39;m sure you would not be disappointed by it.




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Visit the Place des Vosges - and then go into the house of Victor Hugo (in the corner) and see what it was like to live in one of these gracious houses. It is a beautfil square - take a baguette and enjoy lunch there people watching. Also Musee Carnavalet (spelling) is fascitnating. It is the hoistory of Paris. It is an intriguing part of Paris.




|||



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Removed on: 10:20 am, September 10, 2009

Paris apartment with 3 kids?

I am taking my 3 boys to Paris and would like advice firstly on a hotel for Disneyland on recommendation and Paris itself. Must be 2 bedroom apartment, self catering, close to the rail system. Has anyone had a stay at Val d%26#39;Europe Mallee ? I believe Disneyland hotel is great but very expensive? What about Paris? They tell me that the Marais area is OK WHAT DO YOU GUYS SUGGEST? Boys are 4,11 and 14. Any useful info would be greatly appreciated. Thanks from Australia!!




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Try Vacation in Paris (www.vacationinparis.com), and search by the area you are interested in. The Marais (4th) would be fine, as would many others. Most apartments are within 2 or 3 blocks of a Metro station, so no problem with transportation. There are many other apartment sites as well - do a search on this forum and you will find many posts listing sites. (To search, type your terms in the box under the green bar at the top of the list of posts - you also can search for ideas about traveling with kids/teens, the same way - use %26quot;teens%26quot; or %26quot;teenagers%26quot; as your search term.)




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Thanks for your suggestions its appreciated.Would you happen to know about Eurodisney?In particular the Disneyland Hotel that looks great but seems expensive, can anyone advise?




|||



Sorry, I live in California so I%26#39;ve never had any inclination to visit Eurodisney. I can tell you, however, that if you want to see much of Paris it would be very inconvenient to stay there. You can do much better (in terms of convenience, and also cost) by staying in Paris and just taking one day to go out to Disneyland.





Most apartments, because they are specifically aimed at tourists, are within a block or two of a Metro station, which makes it very easy to get around if you are right in Paris (plus, many of the Paris sites you will want to visit are going to be within walking distance of many of the apartments that are most popular). Do check out some of the apartment web sites, and then check a map for the location of the place - you will quickly see what I mean about how close things are (even what looks like %26quot;a block%26quot; generally is not a very long distance - i.e, not like New York or other large cities, where ten blocks is a long way to walk).




|||



Yes, I can advise, lol, the Disneyland hotels are ALL expensive!



You will pay dearly for the convenience of staying by Disneyland , that said I have heard the %26quot;Santa Fe%26quot; one is nice enough and not the most expensive. For a self catering apartment you will most likely have to stay outside the Disneyland world. Frankly , stay in Disneyland for two nights, splurge on a nice hotel, then move to Paris and get a nice apartment for the same price. Look up posts regarding %26quot;Paris with children%26quot; and you will find that there is lots for kids in Paris. Find an apartment near Luxembourg Park, it is wonderful for kids, and maybe one day one of you can take the younger ones to the Park and the other one could be taken to the %26quot;Catacombs%26quot; ( google that, better then the haunted house at Disneyland any day!)( not for the little one !)



My kids loved the Eiffel Tower, and climbing the bell towers at Notre Dame is fun for everyone, let the little one watch the %26quot;Hunchback of Notre Dame%26quot; on video first,, the Disney version.





There are serveral apartment rental companies that seem to be reliable, based on what I have seen on these boards anyways.Do a serach. There is also a hotel/apartment chain, Citidines, which is very popular for families and reasonable prices.



Good luck




|||



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Removed on: 10:17 am, September 10, 2009

packing for my stay in Paris - and a good yoga studio!

Hello to all and thanks in advance for your input...



I am going to be staying in Paris for (at least) a few months beginning in May. My question is...are longer, tailored bermuda type shorts appropriate to wear in summer (I%26#39;m 34) and also, what about shorter skirts. Are they frowned upon? I saw a post about shorts awhile back but I%26#39;m not talking about short or baggy athletic shorts.



Also looking for a place to take either Bikram style yoga or hatha yoga. Do any of you Parisians know of a nice studio in the 5th? I%26#39;ll be staying on Rue Mouffetard.




|||



Did you find a good yoga studio in Paris? If so, I%26#39;d be really interested to know where. Thank you.




|||



Short skirts, I%26#39;ve read are all over Paris right now. As for the shorts, I believe a no-no.




|||



blueskyholiday- hope you%26#39;re enjoying!





jciop-



there were a few yoga studio reccommendations in this thread: http://tinyurl.com/2be24t





and david lebovitz has some good resources on his blog: davidlebovitz.com/archives/2006/12/yoga_in_p…





i plan on checking out Samasthiti and the bikram studio.




|||



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Removed on: 10:17 am, September 10, 2009

Carnet question!

We will need to travel from Gare du Nord to the Latin Quarter, and also from the Latin Quarter to CDG. We were planning to just buy a carnet of tickets for the few days we are there. Will the tickets that come in the carnet cover the two trips mentioned above (both RER and Metro)? Or are those trips outside of the %26quot;zone%26quot; of the carnet tickets? Any advice would be appreciated!




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Going out to CDG will require a different zone, but you will certainly use that many Metro tickets just around Paris. You will find out quickly that the Metro is convenient and easy to use, so a carnet of tickets is a good investment regardless of how you get back to CDG.




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From the Gare du Nord to the Quartier Latin is no problem - both are in zone 1. Roissy-Charles de Gaulle airport, however, is far from the city centre - it is in zone 5, so the normal carnet tickets are no good there.





You can find maps of the metro and RER networks, including a %26quot;carte des zones tarifaires%26quot;, on the RATP website: www.ratp.fr





By the way, the carnet tickets are good for the entire metro network, and for zones 1-2 of the RER network.




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Pefect, thanks so much for the info!!




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NO...the ticket required for the RER %26#39;B-3%26#39; ligne train from Paris out to CDG is a special RER ticket, which must be purchased separately (or have a Carte Orange or Paris Visite pass valid for at least Zones 1-5...the one-day Mobilis pass is specifically EXCLUDED for use for allairport transfers). You cannot simply use multiple Metro tickets for this trip.




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Removed on: 10:18 am, September 10, 2009

Le Havre to Amiens

I need to travel from Le Havre to Amiens without going to Paris. is there a direct train or bus?





Thanks




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You can get a local train from Le Havre to Rouen-Rive-Droite, and change there for Amiens. www.voyages-sncf.com/dynamic/_SvHomePage…




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Thank s Diz that%26#39;s really helpful.




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I just had a look at the train timetables and it%26#39;s going to take nearly 4 hours with the train which will be a problem for me. i wonder if anyone knows if there is a direct bus. I need to return to Le Havre on a Sunday afternoon which could be a problem too. Perhaps I will just have to hire a car.




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Removed on: 10:20 am, September 10, 2009

Day trip to Normandy?

My husband and I are planning a rather last minute week in France. We%26#39;re planning to spend a few days in Paris and a few in Beaune. Are we crazy for attempting a day trip to Normandy as well? Can you get there by train from Paris? We%26#39;d prefer to avoid renting a car. On the one hand, I don%26#39;t want to be overscheduled since it IS a vacation, however, I think seeing the D-Day beaches at Normandy would be incredibly moving.




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We went to Dieppe for a day, actually split with Rouen (which the train stops at on the way back.) It was wonderful, and a nice change fromt he quicker pace of Paris. Seeing the beaches was an unbelievable experience that I wouldn%26#39;t have missed for the world.





ww.sncf.com is the official French train website. Click on the British flag to get the English version. You can check schedules and also book tickets online if you want.




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WE took the Cityrama tour or Parisvision tour. They are great if you are short on time.




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YES...you can get to the Normandie region by train from Paris...and it would help to know which portion(s) / area(s) of Normandie or specific places, you%26#39;re interested in visiting...and for how long. DETAILS MATTER.




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I am also wondering about a day trip to Normandy from Paris when I go in December. I am hoping to arrange it at the last minute upon arrival, because I am concerned about booking it and then having to go on a stormy day. Other websites that I have looked at are:





http://www.gotoparis.net/minivan.html#nlb



Look at their Normandy trip. It seems to offer two trips - one you get yourself to Caen on your own on the train and they meet you at the station. Another trip is one where they pick you up at your hotel and drive you to Caen.





Also: classicwalksparis.com/tour/walking-tours/the…





Does anyone else on this forum have more information about these trips?



Thanks.




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take the early morning train from Paris to Bayeux, see the Bayeux tapestry and the cathedral, then join the afternoon Overlord Tours 1/2 day afternoon D-day tour 1-5pm(overlordtour.com). Take the evening train Bayeux-Paris(approx. 7:15pm)




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Most of the organized tours out of Paris seem to go to Caen. Is there an advantage in going to Bayeux?




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Bayeux is closer to the D-day American beaches( Omaha and Utah). Only thing you miss is the Caen D-day museum




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There is a full day trip to Normandy (Caen) which includes lunch and a visit to the American cemetery. This is offered by both Cityrama and Paris Visions. Both agencies are located on the rue de Rivoli diagonally opposite the Tuilerie Gardens. If you look for the big gold statue of Joan of Arc, Cityrama is right behind it and Paris Visions is nearby. Go to their offices a couple of days before you plan to take the trip and look at the itineraries. Then book the trip which leaves early in the morning around 7:00 or 8:00. You can also look at the Paris Visions website. The cityrama website is currently under construction--at least it was last week when I checked it for a friend. Both companies are excellent.




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Removed on: 11:15 am, September 10, 2009

Christmas Decorations

When do they go up? Going end of Nov.




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Christmas season starts on the 10th November




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Thank You.




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Removed on: 11:17 am, September 10, 2009

Villa Baud, Morbihan, Brittany, France

My husband and I, along with my parents, stayed in this villa in the town of Baud for one week, this summer. We had spotted the villa on the Internet, and the photos and description seemed amazing. However, on arrival at the villa we were disappointed, to say the very least. Firstly, the villa did not look as if it had been properly cleaned since the last people left.





A month or two before the holiday, we made contact to find out if animals were allowed, as my mother is allergic to dogs. We were assured that there were no dogs about the villa. However, when we got into the villa, the first thing I noticed, on the living room table, was a framed photograph of a small white dog. I didn%26#39;t think too much of this, until I noticed a bit of a %26#39;dog%26#39; smell about the villa. It was confirmed the next morning when my husband picked his socks up off the floor - they were covered in white hairs, probably from the dog in the picture. My mum suffered breathing problems for the whole week as a result of this.





It states on the Internet that the villa sleeps 6 people. There were just 4 of us staying, and I was extremely glad that it wasn%26#39;t more, as there was only one bathroom! Not only that, the bathroom was at the end of the house upstairs, and you had to go through the two bedrooms to get to it. My parents stayed in the room adjacent to the bathroom and my husband and I stayed in the room next to theirs. This meant that, whenever either of us had to use the bathroom, we had to walk through our parents%26#39; room! I could not believe the layout - I was only glad there weren%26#39;t 6 of us, I don%26#39;t know how we would have managed!! As if that wasn%26#39;t enough - there was no door on the bathroom either.





I could go on for pages about our disappointments with this villa, like the unfinished tiling jobs and the ‘bad DIY’ appearance of the place. However, I just wanted to write a brief review to let our disappointing experience be known about. Our main problems with the villa were the standard of cleanliness, the layout and lack of bathrooms and the fact that there was a dog allowed in the house, when we were specifically told that this would not be the case.





We expected to spend a week in an extremely luxurious villa, and we paid a lot of money for the accommodation. However, it certainly did not meet our expectations.




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Thanks for the warning - it sounds horrible! Only thing is, I have just googled %26#39;villa baud morbihan%26#39; and got about a zillion hits so not sure which one it is! Could do with a bit more info to save confusion!




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Hi there! Yes, I know the property is quite difficult to find on the Internet. It is actually a thatched cottage rather than a villa - it looks gorgeous from the outside!! The website for the villa is www.abritel.fr (although I%26#39;m not sure if I%26#39;m supposed to post web addresses). The property number is 602494. Hope this gets you there! Good luck




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Removed on: 11:19 am, September 10, 2009

help - only 1 day

Hi





we have only one day in Bordeaux next week and i would desperately love some advice as to 1 or 2 wineries to visit just for the day for some wine and cheese tasting or something along those lines. would love one in beautiful scenery etc.





we are flying into Toulouse the night before and then driving to Bordeaux, staying the night then have the whole next day to explore before driving to Millau that night (too much i know)





advice on 1 or 2 wineries someone has experienced and can reccomend and that accepts drop ins would be so helpful.





Thank you




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In theory, visiting a couple of châteaux on a drop-in basis should be a simple thing. There are many--especially in the Médoc--which post large signs saying %26quot;Visite-Dégustation%26quot; (visit and tasting).





These are the smaller producers who welcome spur-of-the-moment visitors because this is how they sell a good portion of their wines; thus, be prepared to buy a some bottles at the end of the tour. This is the understood protocol, since the person taking you around the property is the owner or the owner%26#39;s wife, and they would otherwise be busy making their wine.





Which brings us to another point: this is harvest time, and so it is likely that these owners are in the midst of bringing in their grapes and making their wine, so despite the signs these properties are not able to provide the quality of visit that they usually offer--or any visit at all.





Since you plan on dropping in, the only way to find out is to simply drive up and knock on the door. However, don%26#39;t be too disappointed if your tasting is not accompanied by cheese. In my experience, such accompaniment is not the norm in Bordeaux.




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Removed on: 11:17 am, September 10, 2009

provence June 08

Hi, Im planning on spending 2 weeks in Provence in June..we think we want to start in Marseille, maybe stay in a small, inexpensive hotel in the centre (any thoughts!?) then we would like to travel north west into Orange, Aix etc...we dont really know much about the area but ahve always longed to see the lavender fields in Avignan...does anyone have a 2 week fool proof itineray that may be of use?? any hidden gems welcome! thanks a mill oh and we%26#39;d love to rent a little cottage/house/apartment somewhere so as we can really soak it up- we%26#39;re planning on renting a car too!




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The lavender fields aren%26#39;t in Avignon, which is quite a large city--they are out in the country side, especially in the Lubéron. A good place to see them is near the Abbey of Sénanque. If you go to the fodors.com fEurope forum site you will find a guy named Stu Dudley who has put together an entire lavender-viewing itinerary--he%26#39;ll send it to you if you ask.





Orange is north of Marseille--about a 2 to 3 hour drive depending on your route. If you like Roman ruins, be sure to visit Arles as well as Orange, along with the magnificent Pont du Gard.





By the way, unless the weather is unusually hot the lavender fields won%26#39;t be in bloom until late June.




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Hi, If you are looking to be central for all of the places you want to visit, look at my review for Chateau de la Loubiere in Pertuis (approx 40 mins from Marseille, 20 mins from Aix, 50 mins from Avignon). They have 3 different size gites depending on how may of you there are with lots of lavender in the grounds, plus pool, tennis courts etc.





The website is www.laloubiere.com





We have visited Provence many times and this is such a lovely location and very well positioned to get the best out of your visit to Provence.





Dont forget to svisit Fontaine de Vaucluse, Gorges du Verdon, Isle sur la Sourgue, Gordes, Vaison de la Romaine, Cassis, St Remy and of course Aix and Avignon all within easy driving distance.





If you want to get in the mood for Provence, get the DVD, A Good Year based on the Peter Mayle story starring the lovely Russell Crowe all shot in the area particularly in Gordes.





Hope this helps




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Removed on: 10:17 am, September 10, 2009

car hire france to spain

I want to hire a car in France (Montpellier) for 2 weeks and drive to Spain (Barcelona). It%26#39;s difficult to get clear info about all the costs. Can anyone recommend a good hire company where I can do this? Thanks. Paul




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Most car hire companies charge horrendous additional amounts to drop off a car in another country.





Much better to take the train Montpellier - Barcelona and hire another car there if needed - if you like nightmares driving around Barcelona is just for you.




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If you want a one way hire your best bet will probably be one of the multinationals like Avis and Hertz which have a presence in France and Spain - I did a sample rental with Avis on line and it came up costing an additional £250 (about 600 Aus Dollars?) to drop off in Barcelona rather than back in Montpellier . So it%26#39;s possible ... at a price ....




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i have been through the same thing going the other way. its not worth it, the costs are horrendous.





fly or train to the other country then hire a car again.




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Don%26#39;t do the one way rental to Spain. Take the train.





If you mean that youwant to get a car in Montpellier then drive to Barcelona (4 hours) then drive back to Montpellier then I would recommned a brroker like www.holidayauto.com You will probably have to pay extra insurance though to take the car out of the country. I have not done France to Spain but have the other way round and its normally around 7 euros a day.




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Removed on: 7:17 am, August 25, 2009

Best starting point in Corsica

I%26#39;m planning to fly to Corsica from Paris. I can fly into Ajaccio, Calvi, Bastia or Figari. I%26#39;ll be travelling solo so I%26#39;d prefer not to rent a car--don%26#39;t think I%26#39;d be comfortable driving without a companion. For a solo traveler interested in nice beaches (I like calm, clear water), casual hiking, cultural/historic attractions and nightlife which area of Corsica would be the best starting point? I plan to stay for 4-5 nights. Since I won%26#39;t be renting a car I%26#39;ll have to rely on taxis, buses and trains (which I understand are limited in service). I%26#39;d be grateful for any suggestions! I leave for Paris next week.




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You%26#39;ll see that iof you look at previous contributions on the Corsica forum that it is virtuall impossible to get around without a car. I wouldn%26#39;t worry about driving without a companion - they%26#39;ll be plenty to occupy your mind negotiating the roads!!





If you really are fixed on public transport only, I guess Calvi would be the best option, if only because of the coastal tramway between there and L%26#39;ile Rousse which would enable you to visit lots of different beaches. You might also pick up a local tour to the Haute Balagne. You will have to get a taxi from and to the airport.




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Just back from 2 weeks around Corsica. I went with my own car and the ferry from Toulon.



However in your case I would still suggest to rent a car (rent one with automatic gear). It is indeed very difficult to travel around otherwise. Wud suggest Ajaccio as you can easely drive to Porto area which is gorgeous. Take a boat trip overthere to Scandola.



It is correct that roads are turning a lot, simply drive a bit slower. The view are simply great. Worthwhile to rent a car!




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Removed on: 11:18 am, September 09, 2009

woman travelling alone



Isit safe for a 50-ish woman to travel on her own in Corsica?



Any situations/locations to avoid?





Thanks so much for any feedback!




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Perfectly safe I would have thought. Just avoid the town centres of Ajaccio and Bastia at night, although even they are relatively crime free.




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Yes, I would agree with the above - just in case you want another opinion for confirmation.




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Yes Corsica is safe and people are rather friendly. (sometimes a bit exited when driving, but still) Have been 2 weeks there and never felt uncertain.




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Removed on: 6:19 am, September 09, 2009

Topless Sunbathing

We assume topless sunbathing is common in Corsica. We are stying in Calvi and hope it is acceptable on the beach there ? If not are there any other quiet beaches nearby that it would be acceptable ?




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Topless sunbathing is pretty conventional in Corsica. I%26#39;d be surprised to see anyone topless in the harbour, but 10 yards onto the beach, anything goes. Probably 10% of the women on the beach are topless.





Out in the hills and along the rivers the percentage is higher and you%26#39;ll see a few people without a bottom half river-bathing from time to time




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I agree with the other comment. Topless is mostly not a problem and you will not be alone.



Now outside the season there are plenty ande plenty of even km/miles long beach with few people on.



Naturist is a bit more difficult when not on the real naturist beaches which do exist indeed. There you will have to try to find a small beach difficult to access by land but possible by boat




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Removed on: 5:17 pm, August 28, 2009