Wednesday, April 25, 2012

autoroutes - questions - August/service stations/warning tr

Grateful for information on a number of questions





I will be travelling Calais - Brittany on saturday 2 Aug and returning on Saturday 16 August. Are these leikely to be mega busy dates or are French holidays more spread outr than they used to be?





Is there a website showing aires with fuel and restaurants on autoroutes so that we can plan our stops?





Is it true that from 1 July motorists have to carry a warning triangle and a reflective jacket (is that one per passenger?)



www.franceautoroutes.com/




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According to Bison Fute the 2nd August is classified as a black day on the roads and the 16th August a red day. However that said I think it will be much worse if you were heading South.



Yes from 1st July you must have a warning triangle and 1 refective jacket.



To find the aires you need to get onto the web-site of the company that runs the autoroutes that you will be using.



This map should help you.



autoroutes.fr/en/asfa/french-motorway-compan…





Good luck




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This is what the AA say about warning triangles/reflective jackets:





%26quot;The introduction of the regulation concerning the compulsory carriage of a reflective jacket will now come in to force on the 1st October 2008 (initially this was due to be introduced on the 1st July 2008). It will be compulsory for all French registered vehicles to have a reflective safety jacket on board which must me kept inside the vehicle and it will also be compulsory to carry a warning triangle. The authorities are yet to confirm whether these requirements will apply to foreign registered vehicles. This advice will be updated as soon as confirmation is received.%26quot;





So, seems that you don%26#39;t have to HAVE them, but certainly won%26#39;t do any harm to get hold of them. Looks like it will be one per car rather than passenger.




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Removed on: 1:21 am, October 06, 2009

Bastille Day!

Hi,





We%26#39;re going to Paris for 3 days (1/2 days on Sunday and Tuesday). Our only full day (Monday) is Bastille Day - at the risk of sounding totally ignorant, will the Louvre, Eiffel Tower, shopping centres be open?





Also, on Sunday night I%26#39;m thinking of booking the Bateaux Parisien cruise, then having dinner somewhere near the Eiffel Tower. Will there be restaurants open on a Sunday night?





Thanks!




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I%26#39;ve just read somewhere that all the Metro stations will be closed on Bastille Day. Is this true? We%26#39;re staying in Mairie de Clichy (quite a way away from everything).





Also, we%26#39;d like to go and see the firework celebrations at Trocadero - does anyone know what time it all kicks off, or roughly what time I should be there by?





Thanks... I apologise for the millions of questions!




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Hi! Both the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre will be open, as well as most other museums such as the Musée d%26#39;Orsay. The Louvre is free on Bastille Day, but it is always busy every day so I would recommend going early in the day.





Restaurants will be open as normal on Sunday night, and the metro is definitely open on Bastille Day BUT it will be absolutely packed!




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Sorry forgot a couple of points... shops will be closed on Bastille Day and the fireworks kick off after dark around 10ish. Trocadero is the best place to watch them but people start congregating there late in the afternoon / evening so it will be busy busy busy :o)





Enjoy yourself!




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Doh! I missed three words out...





*A lot of* shops will be closed (not all)




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PHEW!!! Thank you so much. I hadn%26#39;t realised it was Bastille Day until just now (just finished uni exams and my brain hasn%26#39;t yet recovered fully), and I was beginning to panic, especially since our hotel is relatively out of the way! I really appreciate the advice.




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Removed on: 3:20 am, October 06, 2009

Any "must sees" on the road from Paris to Dijon?

Hello, in the middle of September, after spending 3 days in Paris, my wife and I will be driving from Paris to Dijon. Does any one have any suggestions for %26quot;must sees%26quot; along the way?



By the way, we will be leaving from Gare de Lyon, on Friday at around noon. This should allow us to miss the morning traffic and not get caught in the evening rush, right?



Thanks!!!




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It depends which way you go but using the autoroute:



If you come off the A6 autoroute at exit 21 and go to Noyers (very pretty medieval village, used for films etc) then onto Montbard for a great abbey, Fontenay, which was owned by the Montgolfiers (the Balloon people).





Not far from the Abbey is the source of the River Seine.





Dijon itself is lovely - one of my favourite towns in France. All of Burgundy is lovely. Have a wonderful trip!




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You would practically be driving past Fontainebleau, so although it%26#39;s not very far out of Paris, it seems like a good opportunity for a visit eh??



http://www.uk.fontainebleau-tourisme.com/




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Removed on: 2:19 am, October 06, 2009

Weekend trip from Paris

Hello!



My finance and I are going to Paris for our honeymoon (!) and are hoping to do a small trip of 1-2 nights outside of the city. Something quaint, romantic, relatively close, not too expensive, and accessible by train. (Is that being too picky?) :-) Like a small town or coastal getaway.



Does anyone have any suggestions? I%26#39;ve been looking everywhere, and getting nowhere it seems.



Thanks!






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Bayeux?? - Mediaeval, Famous and fabulous Tapestry



Rouen?? - Great Cathederal, lovely city



Arras?? - Fabulous restored flemish style buildings around 3 large squares, good restaurants, good markets.



Reims??? - yes I know it%26#39;s not small, but it%26#39;s a great place to visit, and a FAST train goes there now, plenty of Champers and a fab Cathederal



Chartres?? - not too sure about the train for this one, but again a fantastic Cathederal, and great restaurants.



Deauville?? - Easy to get to by train, costal, great beaches, grand hotels %26amp; Casion



Le Touquet?? - Chic %26#39;Paris Plage%26#39;



St Malo?? - stay %26#39;Intra Muros%26#39; and walk the walls!




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Removed on: 2:16 am, October 06, 2009

Car rental from Paris to Strasbourg

Hi everyone!



My brother and I would like to rent a car to drive from Paris to Strasbourg next September.



Does anyone know what the best car rental companies are?





Thank you so much! :)





Ana Beatriz






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Hi Ana! I do not know of car rental companies, however, we just returned from Strasbourg and it was beautiful!!! We have lived in Paris a year, and this was our first time to Strasbourg...I fell in love immediately, and we have been all over Europe to many wonderful places! We only had 1 night there, and I wish it could have been at least 3 or 4...so I wish you the best!!! Someday I will get back!!!




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Hi,



Try www.avis.fr or brokers such as www.holidayautos.fr or .co.uk, www.autoescape.com .



But consider the high speed train TGV takes you to Strasbourg in 2h20 instead of 4 or 5 hours by car...





Bye,




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Ana-



We used EuropeCar when we rented a car for 3 weeks driving from germany to france. We had no problems with the company. We did drop off the car at Gare du Nord train station which i thought a nightmare but my husband and son thought exhilerating. If you do rent, try a rental location outside the Blvd Peripherique. It might be easier driving - any Parisians can help out with that info.... Driving was a breeze until the last few miles inside Paris.





Goodluck



LissafromArizona




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Actually the Gare du Nord is a good place to drive out of, very direct to the Peripherique, complicated to get back to with one way streets.





You may wish to to drive to Strasbourg and take a train back. If wishing to stop on the way, Nancy is a very attractive town.




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I so wished that the car company had advised us of the one way streets surrounding the station. We should have asked but ... we were thinking of the directions leaving Munich instead of the end of the trip. Also, that the drop off point was Underneath the train station. We found this by accident....





Good luck Ana!





LissafromArizona




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Removed on: 9:16 pm, October 04, 2009

Train from Monte Carlo to Cannes

Hi,





I%26#39;m over in Cannes for a wedding so will not really be travelling around and have limited time there in July. I%26#39;m going to Monte Carlo on the Sunday but need to get the train back to Cannes. Do you know if there is a website I can go to where I can look at the train times or get a map of the location of the train stations? Also roughly how long is the journey and the cost?





Thanks!



Angie




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Trains run along the coast, so it is quite easy to get from Monte Carlo to Cannes. I know that the train identified as Ventimille travels from Cannes in the direction of Monte Carlo, so you want the other one! Sorry I can%26#39;t remember the name of the line, but perhaps someone else can give you more information. An Express train would be your fastest train, and I think an Express will most likely stop at Cannes. Check on this, however, before you buy your ticket. The schedules are usually reduced on Sunday, so be careful about the last train to Cannes. The people selling the tickets are always helpful, so ask for help.





Hopefully, someone will join in with more info...I%26#39;m a start! If all else fails, you can pick up a schedule brochure at the Cannes station. It%26#39;s centrally located and about 5 or so blocks away from the beach area.




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Removed on: 4:20 pm, October 05, 2009

Eurail Pass vs Point-Point

Hello,





We are planning our first trip to Europe in Oct. We haven%26#39;t settled with which cities to scratch away, but i am starting to read about Eurail Pass. It seems a lot of people are saying Point-Point tickets should be the way to go. I was wondering, in order to take advantage of Point-Point, you should get it with the promo rate. For trips covering different cities, what if you are running a bit late or you want to change from one city to another? I guessed, it%26#39;s not possible with the Point-Point promo rate, and with Point-Point normal rate, i have to book way ahead in order to get the discount.





After some calculations based on the fare posted on individual train site, using the pass seems to work out better for us, maybe i am missing out something.







Paris - Brussels (stopover), thalys: 82, Promo 25, Pass Supplement 22 1st class (in euro)



Brussels - Amsterdam (2 nights) thalys: 55 , Promo 25, Pass Supplement 22 1st class



Amsterdam - Koblenz (stopover) ICE: 70, Promo 29



Koblenz - Mannheim (2 nights) EC/IC: 32, Promo 29



Mannheim - Zurich (stopover) ICE: 72, Promo 29



Zurch - Lucerne (2 nights) 25



Lucerne - Paris (TGV, 5 hours) to take flight to Prague, TGV: 107, Pass Supplement 22



Prague - Vienna (2 nights) EC: 30



Vienna - Venice (2 nights) EC: 70, Promo 29



Venice - Florence (stopover) ES: 38, Amira 25



Florence - Rome (2 nights) ES: 36, Amira 28







with non promo rate, total about euro 617 / usd 987



with promo rate, total about euro 381 / usd 609



Global Euro 15 day saver pass: usd 675 + 106 TGV supplement on 3 trips + 50 estimated reservation in Italy/Germany = estimated usd 830





What do you think?




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I know you didn%26#39;t ask me to comment on your schedule, but... I think you%26#39;re nuts. :)





Have you factored in the duration of each train ride, including checking out of hotel, getting to the station, leaving the next station and checking into next hotel? How much sightseeing time does that leave you in each city?





Other than that, I would go with the pass just to ease up the pain of your itinerary somewhat. This also gives you more flexibility over worrying about losing your %26#39;discount%26#39; on the promo tickets.




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Well you have done all the research and worked it out for yourself. Point to point tickets using the discounted rates are $221 cheaper than the pass but you won%26#39;t have any flexibility with your incredibly hectic schedule. If you think you might want to make changes then you should pay the extra and get the pass. If you are sure of your itinerary then buy the discount tickets. You can probably afford to miss 1 or 2 of the cheaper trains and still be ahead.



Please consider travelnutty%26#39;s advice. There is not much time to sightsee with this plan. You are going to spend 7 of your 15 days in trains and at train stations. That%26#39;s nearly half your vacation - are you sure that is what you really want to do?




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Thanks for replying... i agree, we have to take away some cities.. and i will just order the pass.





Thanks!




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Removed on: 4:17 am, October 06, 2009

Aix or Marseilles??

Hi,



We are flying into Marseilles for 6 days in November. I have looked at the map and see that Aix and Marseilles are equidistant from the airport.



Would it be cheaper to stay in Aix and then just travel in and out of Marseilles on day trips, or should we stay in Marseilles itself?



We love France and have been there many times, but never to Provence. We like authentic France, and prefer to be away from any major tourist crowds.





Any help greatly appreciated!




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Think I have just answered my own question! Just been looking at other posts about Aix and think it may not be for us.



Thanks anyway if anyone wants to comment!




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Hi,



I%26#39;ve just returned from a trip to Marseille and Nice. A stay in Marseille is not to be missed as it is full of character. Try and visit the vieux port in the morning and watch the activity in the fish market which is unbelievable. The grande tour on the hop on/off bus from the port is great too. Enjoy!!




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We%26#39;ve recently had a flurry of posts criticising Aix and I don%26#39;t really understand why, unless it%26#39;s that it isn%26#39;t a quaint Provencal town. Neither is Marseille for that matter. If I wanted to see Provence, I%26#39;d stay in Aix. I%26#39;d go to Marseille to see Marseille. It%26#39;s a great place but it%26#39;s not in the middle of things. For that you want Aix or Arles or Avignon.




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Removed on: 4:32 pm, July 10, 2008


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There is no comparison! Marseilles is a big, %26quot;dirty%26quot; seaport and Provence is a beautiful area full of interestng sights, markets, and interesting adventures. Ax in Provence, St. Paul de Vance, Nimes, Arles and etc. are charming. You have missed one of the best areas of France, if you have not visited Provence!!!




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Hello!!!! Marseille is in Provence. You can take either the train or the bus to Aix from Marseille. As suggested you could stay either in Aix or in Avignon and visit Marseille. While in Marseille I would suggest going on the hop on/off grand tour bus to get your bearings. This can be done if as Jagbird wants to stay in Aix and travel in and out of Marseille.





Jagbird, can you take day trips from Aix, if you found a good central place to stay? Then you can do both Aix and Marseille ;)




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Removed on: 3:21 am, October 01, 2009

Passport expiration

I know there are answers on here, but they are varied and I%26#39;m still confused. I%26#39;m traveling next week (July 15). The airline says there are no special passport requirements...that%26#39;s per Continental, American and Air France. And yet, I still can%26#39;t relax. My passport expires 9/30. I guess where I get hung up is on the term %26quot;valid%26quot;. There are plenty of countries listed on Continental website that say %26quot;passport must not expire for 3 months%26quot;, and some six, but for France it just says %26quot;valid%26quot; passport.





I think maybe the reason so many people think it has to be valid for 90 days is because IF you were were going for a long stay (90 days+) or are a student studying abroad, etc., you have to apply for a short stay visa. In that case, you must present a passport not expiring for at least 90 days, along with letters of credit, character refs from your local police dept., etc. But, for just a vacation, I think your passport just has to be good for the length of your stay.





With it being the 4th of July, I can%26#39;t ask a French Embassy, consulate, etc. till at least Monday. And my options are running out if I need to renew. Somebody please tell me I%26#39;m right. :)






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From a quick google I think your passport needs to be valid for 3 months after your intended length of stay. So it would seem that you need a new passport. You had better get on to this right away.




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If you *need* a visa, %26quot;Passport valid for at least three months beyond the applicant’s last day of stay in the Schengen states%26quot;. If you don%26#39;t need one (such as US citizen), you don%26#39;t need that extra validity.




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p.s. airlines are on the hook for paying for your immeidate return if you are refused entry at immigration due to basics such as passport validity/visa requirements. So the airlines KNOW what they are talking about.




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Here%26#39;s the link at Continental that led me to believe my passport is valid till date of expiration.





continental.com/web/…default.aspx





Of course, they have a disclaimer stating you should contact the embassy or consulate, but all in all it%26#39;s a pretty handy tool. I double checked in using Costa Rica, which I know requires that your passport be valid for some term beyond your stay, and it states 30 days.





Thanks for the replies! I%26#39;ve got to quit obsessing!




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Renew it. You might make it OK, but it%26#39;s not worth the risk.




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For the record, I called the French Consulate this morning. I got three different people and three different answers.





Bottom line is I have to renew. One person said I %26quot;might%26quot; be OK, but they had the right to refuse entry. Another said 3 months, another said 6 months.





I called the U.S. Passport office, and they disagreed with everyone who answered at the consulates stating it only had to be a valid passport. Her interpretation of %26quot;valid%26quot; was the date of my expiration as printed on my passport had to be after my trip dates, with no restrictions as to how many days later.





How frustrating. Oh well, as long as the expediter is reliable (and believe me I am sweating bullets nos), I%26#39;m good for another 10 years....no, make that 9 1/2.








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The States department and the 1st person at the consulate gave you the correct answers. You can be refused entry for any reason even if you have a passport that doesn%26#39;t expire for 10 years, or even if you have a visa.



Renewing makes you feel better and you don%26#39;t have to worry about it for 10 years.




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Yes Bob, you%26#39;re right. I was going to be nervous no matter what. I have googled ad nauseum, and I know we are right that if you are from one of the exempt countries, you don%26#39;t have to have a short stay visa, just a valid passport. Air France, Continental and American Airlines all concurred. I just got to the point that I felt that I had to err on the side of caution. Even if I boarded OK in USA, who knows, I could get an agent having a really bad day in France and get turned back around.





So....now all I have to do is bite my nails till my passport arrives back on Thursday. I thought about flying to Houston rather than using an expediter, but my husband felt the whole process was safer in the hands of an expediter. He thought the chance of something getting lost w/ Fedex was not as great as my flight being delayed, or getting stuck in traffic en route to the Federal Building in Houston.





I%26#39;m sure I won%26#39;t have any fingernails left by Thursday morning.




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Well, I guess the joke might be on me after all. Here%26#39;s a reply I got from the French Tourism Office.





I have great news for you. I just called the French Embassy in the US and told them about your passport.



You can travel to France from July 15 to 23 with your current passport. It has to be valid ONLY during the period of your trip, that is to say until the very last day (the 23rd).



Hope this clarifies.





If you have any other questions, suggestions or need specific information on France, please do not hesitate to contact me.



Cordially,





Information Department



French Government Tourist Office



825,Third Avenue



29th Floor



New York, NY10022



Phone: (212) 838-7800



E-mail: info.us@franceguide.com





And I%26#39;m impatiently awaiting my $360.00 expedited passport to arrive. Supposed to be tomorrow, though according to their fees, I think it should%26#39;ve been today.





We%26#39;ll see.







________________________________________




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Removed on: 8:15 am, October 05, 2009

Are there any Irish pubs in Paris?

Just curious here, as wherever we travel to there always seems to be a few, although I haven%26#39;t seen any in Paris.



Don%26#39;t get me wrong, if we wanted an Irish bar we%26#39;d stay at home, as I said just curious!!




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Don%26#39;t ask me where, but I know we saw several.




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I went to a pub a couple of doors down from Moulin Rouge that wasn%26#39;t too bad. I%26#39;d prefer a %26#39;real%26#39; pub in Ireland, though!




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There%26#39;s one in place St-Germain des Prés, right across Bd Saint-Germain from Les Deux Magots.




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And, in sync with suzanne, I%26#39;m sure I%26#39;ve seen several on the way into and out of town on the Roissybus, but God help me to remember what streets they are on. My advice, therefore, is to take the Roissybus in, and pay attention, including writing down the names of the streets you see them on. Or maybe your memory isn%26#39;t as full as mine...




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They%26#39;re all over Paris. I can think of three within a few blocks of where I%26#39;m sitting. Guinness beer signs are almost as common as Kronenbourg beer signs on the front of bars.




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There%26#39;s even an Australian pub in Paris....




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There is one in Rue St Denis, but perhaps there are more interesting things to be found there.




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Just down from the Moulin Rouge is the Irish Pub, Corcoran%26#39;s, on Blvd De Clichy and Avenue Rachel. Good place for a Pint and to catch up on the local Irish sports.




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Quigley%26#39;s Point (which I always think should be Quigley%26#39;s *Pint*)...





5, Rue Jour



75001 Paris, France





hth



Pjk




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Ther is one really good at rue Delambre, Montparnasse (close to Hotel Lenox). Think that is an special music presentation on thurdays.

dressing in Paris

How are women dressing in Paris these days?



I will be traveling there this August with my family.



What is most appropriate for day, and what for night?



Do the women wear jeans? What colors? I am assuming that they don%26#39;t wear white, but don%26#39;t know. Please advise.



Thanks.




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The women and the men are dressing tres chic in Paris. Many have a style all their own. Frankly unless your closet rivals the pages of (*insert name of magazine here*) and/or the finest pics from vintage boutiques and thrift stores, you won%26#39;t blend in. They just have %26quot;it%26quot;. You%26#39;ll see even the school kids have it. I%26#39;m convinced it%26#39;s genetic!



French women wear the same kind of clothes as Americans (jeans, slacks, dresses) but the fit, quality and the overall stylishness is far better than we American gals typically wear, especially with accessories and shoes.





You will see all kinds of clothing as there are many tourists. Wear whatever makes you feel comfortable. If you are dining in a nicer restaurant, leave the jeans and walking shoes in the suitcase. I would leave shorts and grubby t-shirts at home, period. Have fun!




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This question is answered ad nauseun on here. Use Search box (above your post to the right),put in %26quot;what to wear%26quot;. When you get results you can click to have the most recent ones first.




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Mumfordmom -





(My husband, teenage son, and I spent a week in Paris in mid june 2008)





Here%26#39;s what i saw and what we did.





The women in Paris are all over the board. From mom and baby daughter matching Chanel suits, to jeans, to leggings with short skirts. We were based in centre pompidue so we saw a lot of students wearing jeans, lots of jeans. Some were skinny legged - some were bang on the american baggies! I saw crops - (i wore crops) all types of fabric from jean to linen. Summer skirts and dresses were big. Not many T-shirt type shirts of women. No big bright colors or patterns. Lots of black. No shorts on women - although i did see shorts being sold in the department stores. Shoes - again all over the place. I saw lots of flats and heals and platforms. I also saw french women wearing Converse type tennis shoes or maybe Simple brand with jeans.







My son wore his jeans (not too baggy, not too skinny) or his plaid shorts ( he got lots of odd looks on these but also had more than a few kids ask him where he got %26#39;em) and his European Soccer/Football jersey. He had one for every team.... He wore his Vans (they sell %26#39;em in Europe) or his flip flops.





My advice - wear what you want. The French will know you aren%26#39;t French and will stare at you no matter what. People watching is an art in Paris....





Oh my take on the chic %26quot;Black%26quot; they all wear - it%26#39;s cause it%26#39;s a big city and if one wore white they%26#39;d be filthy after one metro ride.





Enjoy



LIssafromArizona




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thanks! This was very helpful.




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I%26#39;ll tel you what the difference is and why they look so chic - French women are not fat. So everything looks good on them, even a potato sack tied with a rope. Just add scarf. Voila! C%26#39;est tout.




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If the weather is hot or very warm in August you could wear white tops, nice cool sun dress, short or long skirts...lots of pheasant skirts are worn. These are much cooler.





Jeans or cotton slacks are good for cool weather. In the evening you could wear a scarf over your shoulders or a sweater.





Just wear good comfortable walking shoes ...you will feel like you walked your feet off!




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For %26quot;Shack....%26quot;





…revivalsoy.com/2006/03/french_women_dont_ge…





This article was written in 2006 the increase now is from 11% to 15% and from 40% to 47 % in 2007.




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Just look clean and decent, no one cares, and they will know you are tourists anyway (my kids and I had fun picking out the other Americans, too!) It%26#39;s just something obvious, you can%26#39;t put your finger on it. The men and teen boys look different for sure, skinny black jeans on all ages, longish hair, %26quot;man bags,%26quot; and the women wore mostly dark colors, always a scarf maybe in a color (for style and warmth if it gets cooler or the sun goes in), their shoes a mixture, lots of flats (but then they were walking to the Metro, not from the Arc to the E.T.) I wore nice jeans or capris, usually long-sleeved shirt with fitted jacket or lightweight cotton blazer and felt stylish enough (the shoes were a giveaway, my athletic shoes or Topsiders were the only ones that would cut the walking.) Brought nice clothes for evening but most of the time we never went back to the apartment to change, just grabbed a bite while we were still out (then we didn%26#39;t go to Jules Verne, either, lol). And yes, I did notice the French in general were not heavy (but then lots of them smoked, too, unfortunately) And something weird, no blonds, or so it seemed! Don%26#39;t give your clothes too much thought, think understated and classic if anything. However, pass on the shorts for adults; fine for kids and teens, but the girls should to wear Bermudas or longer ones, but skirts are great for both women and girls. Just have fun.




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Mummom: Why does it matter how Paris women dress? You%26#39;re silly if you think you can %26#39;fit in%26#39;. My best advice is to wear comfortable shoes and wear what%26#39;s comfortable for the temperature.



Don%26#39;t make the mistake I did and worry about whether or not you%26#39;ll be spotted as being a tourist. I ended up spending the 2nd day of a 3 day weekend in my Milan hotel with 5 blisters on my feet.



For example, yesterday the day started out warm and humid. After it rained, which took about two hours to clear, the temperature dropped 15 degrees with a brisk wind. Think about how quickly Chicago weather can change and dress for that.



Some of the posters here have said that shorts are a no-no. Well, I disagree. I live in Stuttgart which is geographly due east of Paris and if it%26#39;s hot, women wear shorts or skirts.



Granted Paris is high fashion but not everyone can afford or find suitable affordable skirts. Most of the sun dresses I%26#39;ve seen around Europe aren%26#39;t fit for the cathedrals. You%26#39;ll need a scarf around your shoulders or a short sleeve t-shirt under the dress to cover your %26#39;armpits%26#39;.




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K Tournesol -





It%26#39;s interesting that you noticed that French women don%26#39;t bleach their hair - they don%26#39;t much perm it either - they just have exquisite hair cuts that are trimmed regularly so their hair is healthy and that%26#39;s what makes it so shiny.





I think one reason French women are so chic is that they don%26#39;t buy any junk. They buy top quality garments which are tailored to fit them perfectly, and then accompany them with first quality accessories, shoes and bags. Other women have a %26quot;little dressmaker%26quot; (I was told) who tailors beautifully crafted, made to measure garments out of fabulous yard goods. Either way, they look utterly chic.

Paris and Versailles, does this make sense

We are going to Paris for the 1st time in Nov. I am using Starwood points for my hotels. I wanted to stay at the Westin Paris for 5 nights but it is not available for the 1st night. We arrive at 5pm on Sat night.





I have 2 options





1 Arrive at CDG take a train to Versaille stay at the Westin in Versaille Sat night. Go thru Versaille on Sunday and when done with the Versaille take the train to Paris and stay there 4 more nights.





Option 2 is arrive in Paris and stay at the Le Meridian Etoile one night and then move to the Westin the next day. during the next 5 days see Versaille one day.





Any comments are welcome




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Option 2 without question.




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Removed on: 4:20 am, October 06, 2009

Restaurants with a view?

Can anyone recommend a good restaurant with a great view?..other than altitude 95 or tour Montparnasse. Maybe one which is more reasonably priced?



Even a nice bar with a view?





Thanks




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hi there... if you type %26#39;restaurant view%26#39; in the forum search, you%26#39;ll get all the threads where it was asked before (that, and the %26#39;hotel view%26#39; ones :)




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great thanks!




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Visit the web site for Les Hombres restaurant, located on top of the Branly Museum. Unique views of the Eiffel Tower, the bateauxs on the Seine, Sacre Couer and gourmet food to boot. Not cheap, but memorable at a more reasonable price.





http://www.lesombres-restaurant.com/





There is a bar across the Seine, near the Tracadero, in a hotel way up high. I can%26#39;t remember the name, but I don%26#39;t think they serve food. Maybe some other poster recalls.




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The bar mentioned above is at the Concorde La Fayette (info and photos on their web site). But, drinks are at least as pricey as those at Tour Montparnasse.





Have a look at Cafe de l%26#39;Homme





restaurant-cafedelhomme.com/en/…0.htm




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Removed on: 3:18 am, October 06, 2009

just got back from 4 days in Paris

I left NJ tues. night arrived wednesday morning. getting thru the airport was a breeze very easy. We stayed at Hotel Ares Eiffel. What a beautiful hotel, great location close to the metro, shopping, and a nice neighborhood. with the dollar being what it is (not much in france) the 15 euro per person breakfast at our hotel was actually a good deal. unlimited coffee, cocoa, tea, fresh juice, toast, crosaints, cereal, fruit yogurt. we loved the room bathroom, it was all modern and chic, and we would definitely stay there again.



the weather was warm but would rain off and on.



the day we arrived we toured notre dame, walked thru isle st louis, to the marais district, but victor hugos house and holocaust memorial were closing (5:30) very disappointed because the Rick Steve%26#39;s guide said they would be open until 9 pm. we had dinner in a cafe nearby.



day 2 thursday arc de triomphe, walk down champs eylsees, to petit palais and grande palais, to place de le concorde, back to hotel to get ready for dinner at eiffel tower, followed by seine cruise, and moulin rouge. This was a great tour i booked in advance before i left thru expedia. the food was good, the cruise was nice (although it doesnt get dark until 11 pm) and the moulin rouge feerie was very good we really enjoyed it) and ive been to vegas shows and broadway shows.



friday museum day, but we only fit in orsay and the louvre. Dinner at a great restaurant Le esplande.





Saturday bike tour to versaille thru fat tire. although riding the bikes thru town was fun, i would not recommend this tour. it rained most of the day, which was ok with our ponchos but we couldn%26#39;t picnic. and only had 1 1/2 hour in the chateau. this was an expensive tour but they didn%26#39;t include marie attoinettes domaine nor the fountains. i would definitely do the paris pass for 30 euro which includes admission, train back and forth, and access to everything. they didn%26#39;t tell us there was a discount if you have a museum pass so we didnt bring it. i was upset about this because i would have been refunded 27 euro if i would have been told. I also thought we would have access to things people who did not have bikes wouldn%26#39;t be able to get to, but that was false. i would definitely not book/recommend this tour. dinner at a friend%26#39;s house very %26quot;french%26quot; and the perfect end to a great vacation.



i loved paris, and will definitely be back again. there is so much more to see and do. everyone was friendly, most people spoke english, and it was easy to get accostumed to their lifestyle. i purchased a 2 day museum pass, a carnay of metro tickets, we took the metro everywhere, and i took rick steve%26#39;s guide book with me everywhere. it was helpful because it contained maps, metro maps, french phrases, restaurant recommendations, walking tours, and museum guides.



i love paris!




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Thanks for the excellent post.




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Glad you enjoyed it. It%26#39;s a great city.




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Glad you had a good visit and that you enjoyed Moulin Rouge since so many on TA suggested you not go.



Two things I would do-go to Rick Steves website and put the correct hours of those places in the Guidebook corrections. And I would write Fat Tire and mention that no where on their website does it mention that if you have a museum pass there is a discount(I looked)




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Your trip sounds like it was wonderful. Glad you had a good time. Thanks for sharing.




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thanks to all of you here on TA for all the great advice, suggestions, recommendations, and help. TA is such a valuable travel tool. Thank you all!





bmanley i did talk to someone when we got back from the fat tire bike tour, and their response was we don%26#39;t advertise that. the fact is i think the guide was short admission tickets and asked if anyone had a museum pass, when someone did have it, he said oh great i%26#39;ll give your tix to the 2 i%26#39;m short, you use your pass, and we%26#39;ll reimburse you when we get back.



they%26#39;re all young kids working there but as i said it wasn%26#39;t the rain and i loved biking thru the streets of paris, but i didn%26#39;t like having to lug my bike up and down train steps, and then being told we can%26#39;t go into marie attoinettes bedroom because that was 11 euro more, or we can%26#39;t see the fountains (we specifically booked the $100 pp tour for sat to see the fountains) because it was 11 euro more, we purchased our own food for lunch, and we%26#39;re left to our own audioguide tour in the chateau instead of a real person tour guide. I just would not recommend this to anyone as there was no value and was not able to see what i wanted even though i paid a hefty price.




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Removed on: 6:18 pm, July 09, 2008


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oh no, what%26#39;d i miss?




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while i didn%26#39;t get a chance to read the inappropriate post, i%26#39;m guessing someone from fat tire bike tours posted something. I%26#39;m not saying the bike tour wasn%26#39;t fun, or the company isn%26#39;t good, i%26#39;m saying that specifically the bike tour to versailles was not worth it. i cannot speak for their other tours they operate. I was not disappointed because of weather either as of course they cannot control that. but i felt for the price we paid they should have included lunch, or the fountains, or marie antoinettes domaine, and minimally a live guided tour thru the chateau. we actually had to wait 20 min. to get an audioguide. leaving us only 1 hour and 10 mninutes to rush thru the chateau. - it%26#39;s a pretty big chateau.



i guess this is more a %26quot;bike tour%26quot; than a versaille tour.




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Where do you get the Paris Pass for Versailles for 30 euros? And does anyone know if this is the same/better/worse than going to the SNCF and getting the Forfeit Loisirs Chateaux de Versailles pass that supposedly lets you bypass the lines??





Also, can you get the museum pass at any of the museums?





Thanks! We leave in 2 weeks, and I%26#39;m still not through some of my guidebook....still making plans...




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I read the post that was removed, it wasn%26#39;t from Fat Tire, it was someone referring to another website. While there was nothing %26quot;inappropriate%26quot; about it, it didn%26#39;t have anything to do with the trip report.

HELP! I dont know how to get to my Paris hotel

I hope someone can help me. I am travelling to Paris with my husband and two teenage kids and need to get from CGD airport to our hotel which is Hotel Arc de Triomphe at 10, rue de l%26#39;Arc de Triomphe.



I have had a look into the train option but it looks really complicated and we have never been to France before so I am a little nervous about it. We will have a fair bit of luggage and changing trains etc could be rather stressful. Can anyone suggest a better alternative that is not ridiculously expensive. Also, has anyone got any information about this hotel. All feedback (good and bad) is welcome.




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We have found that using a shuttle van is a good choice. We have used Parishuttle a couple of times and have found them reliable. You can book online and make a call when you arrive and they take you to your door. Enjoy your trip.




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hi sisioz,





thanks for your help. You dont recall about how much the shuttle was by any chance?




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Besides the RER, you could of course take a taxi - from CDG to your hotel is about 31 km by car. The taxi rates are relatively low, but depend on the time, luggage and also how busy it is - (read all about it on www.taxi-paris.net) my estimate: about 40 euro, more if there are traffic jams, more luggage, etc.





With regard to the hotel, I assume that you had a look at their website (http://hotel-arcdetriomphe.com)? They get quite good reviews on this website: tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g187147-d622305…




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Various options are detailed with prices at www.easycdg.com





I totally agree that your best bet is a taxi, though the fare could be €45-50, plus €2.75 for the fourth person and €1 for each bag, after the first, weighing more than 5kg will be added to the metered fare.





Just head for the taxi queue outside when you exit the terminal and stand together with your bags. The drivers are most efficient at quickly matching groups to appropriate sized vehicles.




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I just returned from Paris and had arranged Paris Shuttle from the AAirport to hotel- i would not reccomend using them as we were told upon arriving to call before getting luggage our eta was 4PM for pickup- plane arrived a bit earlier whcih we were excited about called them as isntructed at 330pm were told to call back after we got our luggage so i did at 340pm we were told about 30 min for pickup after waiting and using our cell phone to keep calling back driver finally arrived 2 hrs later at 530pm. since we had booked them for our return flight decided we could not continue to call and be told driver on the way risk missing our flight so we booked thru our hotel w/ airport shuttle. driver arrived exactly on time cost was 51 euros- considered this to be good considering we had 3 people %26amp;amp; 3 large suitcases. I would use them again.




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It has been a while since I have been to Paris and I am far from an expert- but as I recall , we took the Air France bus from the Airport and it stopped right at the Arc and theer were lots of taxis waiting if needed to go a little futher. But, because it has been a while I will need someone to help me remember:





1. How you tell which of the two AF Buses is the one that stops at the Arc





2. What the fare is these days ( may be higher than taxi as it is per person) , but unlike shuttle you would not have to hope it is waiting there





3. How close their hotel is to the actual AF stop- would they still need to taxi or could they walk?





etc etc





At any rate, I thought it was great to just get on the bus and have our luggage put below and just to sit and relax after that flight over. Maybe the other ideas are better- just thought I%26#39;d throw that one in...as it worked well for our party of two ...




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In my mind, given that therea re 4 of you I would take a cab. pennies les than all of you taking the air france bus. The shuttle is a wate of time and money for the 4 of you. ....just go to the cab stand and take a Paris cab..about 50 e.




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1. How you tell which of the two AF Buses is the one that stops at the Arc



- - there are two lines from CDG; Line 2 goes to the Arc de T





2. What the fare is these days ( may be higher than taxi as it is per person) , but unlike shuttle you would not have to hope it is waiting there



- - the fare is 14E pp, one way





3. How close their hotel is to the actual AF stop- would they still need to taxi or could they walk?



- - the stop is at 1 ave Carnot, about 400 meters from the hotel address (about a 7-minute walk, with a good street map printed out)







http://www.cars-airfrance.com/




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You guys are fantastic. I have only just discovered trip advisor and everyone is just so helpful and happy to give such detailed responses. Please know it is really appreciated!!!!!




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Removed on: 4:17 am, October 06, 2009

apartment

Has anyone stayed in an apartment called Rosette rented out through apartmentsapart.com



On the web site it says %26quot;Close to the places as famous as Montmartre, Moulin Rouge and the Sacre Coeur Basilica it also has an easy access to all the other parts of the city, as the Place de Clichy metro station is located just 2 minutes walk away.%26quot; Its only a tiny studio on the 6th floor with no elevator but its also only Euro 53 which is amazing. So whats the catch I wonder?




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Is that an American 6th floor or a French 6th floor (which is an American 7th floor)? My guess is that the rate is so low because that%26#39;s one heck of a walk-up. Also that area is a bit out from the more touristy areas.




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You know, you usually get what you pay for. That%26#39;s way too cheap to be good. The neighborhood is probably pretty sketchy and yes it%26#39;s probably a walk up which means you%26#39;ll be shvitzed before you enter your non-air conditioned apt. Why not look for a place on the left bank, or even near the Eiffel Tower.





this place sounds tres mal! (very bad!)




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It may or may not be a dump. I%26#39;ve stayed in several apts. in Paris in this price range and NONE of them have been dumps. So, it IS possible that it%26#39;s okay.





Unless you can name the agency / owner and the exact apartment address and see if someone here has actually stayed in it, it is a risk. Or, get some CURRENT names and contact details of previous rentors and contact them.





Only you can decide if you want to take it.




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I too searching for an apartment for our next year trip. Have a look at the link you gave, I noticed few points:



- the living area is 10 m2 - To me it just like living in a cartoon box



-The studio locate on 6th floor - that mean you have a lots of stairs to climb.



But if you are young, and travel on a budget, I think it better than a dorm -since it inc. a private shower-forgot to note about toilet then).




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Even if there%26#39;s no %26quot;catch%26quot;, it would be a stretch to call this place an apartment. The WC is in the hallway. That spells rooming house, not apartment. Plus the luxury of schlepping yourself up seven flights of stairs after walking your feet off all day through Paris. You get what you pay for.




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10 m2, that%26#39;s a different story. That IS a closet. Try looking here:





www.centreparis.com





They have studios from 55 euros per night with 3 night minimum, no security deposits.





Many of the studios are small, say 26 to 30 m2, but many are bigger. We stayed in one that was 45 m2 one bedroom, with separate living room, kitchen, bathroom and separate WC for 54 per night. It was fine. Yes, it was on the 6th french floor, with no elevator, but that was no big deal for us.





It really all depends on what you are looking for. There are thousands of vacation rentals in Paris. There is truly something for all budgets. If you want luxury, it%26#39;s out there. If you want budget, it%26#39;s out there too. The competition is stiff, so there are now some pretty good deals to be had.





I%26#39;d never recommend or stay in a dump.




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What toutou says is true. There%26#39;s no value in staying in an apt so tiny you can%26#39;t relax. Especially if it ruins your hard-earned and long-dreamed-of vacation to Paris.




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thanks everyone. I have found a place. I am going to stay in a small hotel called Hotel les gobelins. It sounds much better. I will check out a couple of places when I go there though for next time and also the web site that toutou suggested. Many thanks again to all.




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I%26#39;ve read nice things about that Hotel. I hope you have a great visit.




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To Toutou%26quot;



In regard to the %26quot;centreparis%26quot;web site:What does %26quot;a partir de %26quot; mean in their pricing schedule?



Thanks,

transport from train station to our hotel

We will be arriving in Nice by train (Nice Ville Station) and need to get to our hotel (Hotel Helvetique at 47 rue de l%26#39;Hotel de Postes). There will be four of us with quite a bit of luggage. What is the best option. Is our hotel very far?




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Less than a half mile - no big deal.Left out of the station to the main street av Jean Medecin,down towards the front just before Place Massena its on your left - I%26#39;d say ten to fifteen minutes maximum. Since the main street is traffic free due to the tram, your taxi will have to go around the houses. Up to you, but Nice is a city always best seen on foot.




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Removed on: 4:18 am, October 06, 2009

Auvers-sur-Oise (Auberge Ravoux)

We%26#39;ll be in Paris for a few days but would like to spend half a day in Auvers-sur-Oise experiencing the place where Van Gogh spent his final days.





We%26#39;ll be in Paris Sunday through Wednesday morning, so it seems like Sunday is the best day to go if we want to catch the Auberge Ravous when it%26#39;s open, among a few other attractions.





Is it worth it to ensure we visit on a day when the Auberge is open or is it not worth it? Also, is this a 1/2 day trip or should we plan to spend longer there?





Thank you!






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Bump...any opinions?




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Google for the Auvers Chateau--which I highly recommend.




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Removed on: 1:25 am, September 29, 2009

Hotel Pascal Paoli, Algajola

Has anyone stayed at this hotel is this a good area to see the real Corsica?




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Great location - just outside Algajola and across from a superb beach and a good base to explore (it%26#39;s at the foot of San Antonino). Hotel was a great place back in the late 80s but I couldn%26#39;t say what it was like now. Unless it%26#39;s had a refurbishment I would imagine it could be rather tired. Rooms were always simple and basic.




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I haven%26#39;t stayed there but it looks ok from the outside.





The only downside is that the main road (which is pretty busy these days) runs between it and the beach/village.





I think you might do better to stay right in Algajola itself - at the Beau Rivage, the Ondine or even the Hotel de la Plage, which looks like it might have had a face lift - unless you specially want the comprehensive French all-in Club experience.




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We stayed here for 2 weeks at the end of May/ beginning of June 08 and had a fantastic time. The hotel itself is clean and comfy with absolutley wonderful evening meals that are included in the half board price. The location couldn%26#39;t really have been better - a short walk to the beach and small town of algajola with plenty of restaurants and the sea-train that runs from Ile Rousse to Calvi.



Calvi is definitley worth a visit.



You can explore the beaches and the mountains from here. It%26#39;s a wonderful base and I%26#39;d definitley recommend it.




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Can anyone tell me what food they have here? I%26#39;m a really fussy eater and so %26quot;International and french cuisine%26quot; isn%26#39;t really enough information!




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Removed on: 4:20 am, October 01, 2009

Nice EasyJet flight-reliable?

Hello,



I have a transAtlantic flight at 10 am from CDG and found an Easyjet flight from Nice to CDG the night before. Are these flights usually on time, etc? Seems much easier than the train.



Thanks.




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I use Easyjet, usually London Nice, at least twice a month. Flights are rarely exactly on time but always arrive within 30/40 minutes of schedule. Only serious weather problems are likely to make things worse.




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I agree with LondonBob as we use Liverpool-Nice Easyjet. However there is one other possible cause of delays:- Industrial action. If there is a warning of impending industrial action (in our case it was French Air traffic Controllers dispute) so that they do not have aircraft grounded out of position, Easyjet cancel flights that are likely to be affected. This happened to us on one of our return flights so we had to overnight and return next day. It%26#39;s not nice to get to the airport and discover no plane! And we had to pay our own extra night%26#39;s accommodation cost including 2 way taxis,cost of phone calls home and to arrange standby accommodation,extra meals.





And after returning we discovered that although many flights to and fro across French airspace on the day of action had encountered delays of up to 3 hours only Easyjet had cancelled flights and not just ours. Easyjet said that they had sent me an e-mail while we were away to warn me of the cancellation but of course I didn%26#39;t get it until I opened up my desktop on return.







But we still fly with them!




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I%26#39;ve never flown Easyjet but I do know that their reputation for delays is not good. However, for internal flights, ie, Nice to CDG, I think you can be confident that you wil make he transatlantic flight the next day.




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And don%26#39;t assume the train will necessarily be better. If the train drivers strike, which is not uncommon, there%26#39;ll be no trains.




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Removed on: 7:16 pm, October 05, 2009

Bar showing football?

Hi,



I and my family are going to Bordeaux on the 20th August and going to Saint-Laurent-des-Hommes near Mussidan on the 23rd for a week. The problem I have is West Ham are playing City on TV on the 23rd but we want to be in S-L-d-H by then. Does anyone know if there is a town anywhere near there/Mussidan with a bar that would be likely to show the game? As far as I%26#39;m aware the French games are on at 8 in the evening so I don%26#39;t think there should be a clash.





Oh, and any other advice about that area would be greatly appreciated!





Cheers



Tom






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I have stayed many times in the Bordeaux/Aquitaine area and have never seen a bar showing English football on French or English TV outside of Bordeaux itself. (No doubt someone will come up with one though!)





I notice that Sky/Setanta have not yet chosen their TV games, so odds are that the game won%26#39;t be at 3pm (4pm in France) on Saturday in any case.





Bordeaux is a very pleasant city with plenty to see. I shall be there myself in about 10 days time.




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Removed on: 12:29 am, October 06, 2009

vacation rental near the D-day beaches

I am having a hard time finding a rental for the first few weeks of December with a view of the sea (a distant view is fine) and within walking distance to shops/bakery. Can anyone help?



Can anyone recommend a good vacation rental agency for the area? It is just for 3 people so we could go small or large...




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Try here:



gites-de-france-calvados.fr/…





Gites de France is a national organization for vacation rentals. Lodgings are rated from 1 to 4 %26quot;epis%26quot;.





Grandcamp-Maisy is very conveniently located, just between Omaha and Utah beaches and 3 miles from Pointe du Hoc.





More info on Grandcamp ar http://www.grandcamp-maisy.com




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Thank you! Those sites have been a big help!




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You could also try www.choosenormandy.com - I know there is at least one gite right on Utah beach.




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Removed on: 1:16 pm, October 05, 2009

Toulouse to Lourdes

My family including 3 children aged 5-10 are staying in a village 25km North-East of Toulouse in August. I am keen to show them Lourdes but wonder if it is possible to drive there and back in a day. Is the road very twisty as I have a daughter prone to car-sickness? I am also considering going by train,is there a good carpark close to the station in Toulouse?




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I saw a fairly large car park next to the station in Toulouse. I can%26#39;t tell you how much it costs, as I took the metro to and from the station when I stayed there a little while ago.





I can tell you that the traffic in the area seemed absolutely horrendous at 5pm on a Friday evening.





It%26#39;s a couple of hours from Toulouse to Lourdes by train and a distance of around 170km, so the driving time will also be around 2 hours, but add to that your 25km into Toulouse and getting around the city I think you could be looking at nearly a three hours drive. I cannot comment on the road as I have only ever used the trains in that area.





Hope that helps a bit.




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Removed on: 4:21 am, October 06, 2009

what to do in Paris

I am taking my partner to paris for a midweek break at the start of august fot 2 nights and want to do a river dinner cruise and a dinner show..





which do you advise, the moulin rouge or the Lido and bateau parisien or bateau mouche??





thanks




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Hi,



Last September my boyfriend took me to Paris we were going to go and see the moulin rouge but the only night it was on was the night we were arriving and we were afraid to book it incase our flight was delayed and we missed it. instead we went on the Bateau Parisien im so glad we did, it was amazing - the food was gorgeous, the wine was lovely and there was a live band on board with a singer playing good old songs that everyone knew as well as a few french ones...after the meal couples got up and had a little dance. you travel past all the sights along the river like notre dame and the louvre, it departs from the eiffel tower.



It was really really good and I couldn%26#39;t recommend it enough. it was really special because everyone got dressed up (women mainly in dresses or smart clothes and men in open neck shirts, trousers and suit jackets) it was really romantic too. you get to see quite a lot of paris too!



i think that the moulin rouge is also very good but make sure there is a dinner and show on the night you want to go because they dont seem to run everynight.



hope this helps!




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Removed on: 5:16 am, October 06, 2009

Marriott Courtyard-Neurilly Sur Seine

My wife and 2 children (ages 16 %26amp; 14) are planning a trip to Paris and I was planning on using my Marriott rewards points and staying at the Marriott Courtyard in Neurilly Sur Seine (Victor Hug Blvd).





Has anyone stayed there, how s the neighborhood, is it centrally located? I will have to apy an additional 56 Euro/night on top of my points. Is this worth staying there?





Thanks!




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I have stayed at this Courtyard (also using points) 3 to 4 times but haven%26#39;t been there for about 4 years as I am now staying at the Marriott Timeshare near DLP which I %26quot;own%26quot;.



I liked the Courtyard but it is not located centrally. It is about a 10 minute walk to the nearest Metro (line 3 - Anatole France) and a bit of a ride to the central part of town, but I didn%26#39;t mind this at all - I enjoyed walking through the area as it is quite lovely. I did love the neighborhood as it is not in a tourist part of town. I would consider it an upscale neighborhood that has some small restaurants, cafes, boulangeries, etc within walking distance.



If the 56 extra Euros are for an upgraded room, it is worth it. As I recall the standard room is small - OK for 2 people but for 4 way too small. I would certainly use my points to stay here again. I know how difficult it is to use points at the more centrally located Marriott properties.



If you use the search function in this forum citing Courtyard Neuilly-Sur-Seine you will find several posts - many are from people who think it is virtually sacrilegious to stay so far away from central Paris. All I can say is I LOVED it and the price (ha ha) was right!




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Highly recommend that you read the reviews of this hotel here on TripAdvisor from those who have stayed there...




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I don%26#39;t know about this hotel specifically but Neuilly-sur-Seine is really lovely.





I know it fairly well as one of my best friends lives there and although it%26#39;s not considered to be %26#39;central%26#39;, it%26#39;s still very easy to get to the centre quickly.





It%26#39;s a very affluent neighbourhood with lots of lovely shops, cafes, restaurants, a nice market and you really get a sense of what it%26#39;s like to live there as there are very few tourists.





A quick hop on the metro and you%26#39;re in town in a couple of stops, or you could choose to meander slowly towards the Arc de Triomphe etc stopping off at shops + cafes along the way.





L




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Removed on: 4:17 am, October 06, 2009

Chalet de Bossons - Chamonix

Just back from our summer hols, spoiled totally by the grotty accommodation booked and paid for in advance - Chalet De Bossons - just 3 kms outside Chamonix, booked through Independent Travellers, England. We paid £700 for a large chalet but as soon as we pulled up outside the door we realised why! This place hasn%26#39;t had a euro spent on it in YEARS by the look of it and our guess was that it probably is used by parties of youths who don%26#39;t mind where they stay so long as they can party, party, party .... The rooms stank, were musty, rotting wood in the shower rooms, rusty radiators, paint daubed on the wall in the hallway, disgusting old cooking pots and plates, garden over grown, but by far the worse was the bedding, we couldn%26#39;t even bring ourselves to sleep on the mattresses or cover ourselves with the blankets for fear of catching something. We spent a fortune booking into other hotels and paying for eating out all the time. What a waste of a week and our annual holiday.






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Hi



i am sorry that your holiday was spoiled by ( bad accommondation) specialy in a place i do love a lot ; that place should be writen under ( warning) to open traveler%26#39;s eyes about it. good job Maggie ,




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Removed on: 2:19 am, October 06, 2009

La Guriniere Bed and Breakfast; technophobe alert!

Hello, please can you help me find details of how to contact La Guriniere %26quot;b and b%26quot; as hailed as being a lovely b and b to stay in in Paris.



I%26#39;m a technophobe and don%26#39;t know where to search for the address or email contact or phone number for this place. Any offers and apologies in advance for being such a nerd! Bless you. x




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Use the SEARCH on this page and you%26#39;re there!!




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http://www.laguriniere.fr/cadres.html




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La Gurinière



6 Rue Raymond FASSIN



92240 MALAKOFF (Ile de France)



Tel.: +33 (0)6 12 58 42 72 Tél./Fax : +33 (0)1 40 92 17 98



laguriniere@hotmail.com



http://www.laguriniere.fr/cadres.html




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OH THANK YOU! THANK YOU! You are lovely! Just lovely! (new to tripadvisor and finding my feet..... love the real life reports and the very friendly and helpful forums.....!)




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Thank you for the posts. I too was having trouble finding a contact/link. I am in the midst of getting my travel plans in order. I will be in Paris with my daughter (20 years old) for about 5 days and was wondering if this would be the perfect location. Any recommendations...........? Thank you from Chicago.




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Hi there, we actually ended up staying in Hotel Residence Henri IV since La Guiniere was too far out of the way for us to explore Paris on foot. I can recommend it, we had a great stay there and could reach pretty much most places on foot from the great position of the hotel. I hope this helps, have a great time in Paris! Martina




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Thanks from me for the link as well . Have been trying all morning to find address. Not very smart at this sort of thing . Learning tho .



Hope they have room for me , when I visit next year , xxxxx




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%26quot;I will be in Paris with my daughter (20 years old) for about 5 days and was wondering if this would be the perfect location.%26quot;





- - I don%26#39;t know how this could be a %26#39;perfect location%26#39; since it is not in Paris at all. Find %26quot;Malakoff%26quot; on a Google map.




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Removed on: 12:23 am, October 03, 2009

Eiffel tower queues..

Is it better to book with a tour group to visit the eiffel tower or to go alone? If going with a tour group do you avoid the queues? Also when is the best time to avoid the queues?




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Hi Clare, I%26#39;ve ust spent a year working in Paris and went up the tower a couple of times. I can%26#39;t answer the tour group question directly as I didn%26#39;t book with one, but on the timing I%26#39;d recommend either first thing in the morning... get there for 9am, it opens at 9:30 so you should be in the first group of people up. Another good time is around 7-9 in the evening when people are either heading back to the hotels or out to dinner, if you can time it within an hour of dusk then you get the best of both worlds, Paris in the light and Paris all lit up. Queues in the early evening are generally around 30 - 45 minutes, middle of the day may be longer. You don%26#39;t say when you are planning to visit, but be aware that if it is in the middle of the main tourist holiday season (July / August) then you will queue everywhere.





If you%26#39;re feeling particularly flush, then you could treat yourself to the Jules Verne restaurant. It is run by Alain Ducasse and has 1 michelin star (so is suitably pricey), but the best thing is that it is on the first level with fantastic views and if you have a reservation you get to go in the private elevator to the first floor for free with no queues.





One more recommendation, if you have time the Bateaux Mouches is worth the trip... it%26#39;s a boat that gives you a 1 hour trip along the Seine and gives you a fantastic view of the tower.





Have a great trip!




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LeicsUK-



Thank you for saying the bit about the Jules Verne and the elevator up. We are booked for lunch at the Jules Verne later in July, and I wondered if we could get to skip the queues to go up in the Eiffel.




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Hi guidebooktraveler,





You lucky people! Go straight to the South tower, which is the one furthest from the river on the right (if you have your back to the river), you%26#39;ll see the menu boards outside. There%26#39;s a private lift that will take you straight up.





And a mistake in my previous post is that the restaurant is on the 2nd and not 1st floor.





Enjoy!




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Thank you so much! We thought we%26#39;d celebrate our 25th anniversary there with our teenaged children! We%26#39;ll follow your direction. Is there a queue from there that goes up all the way in the Eiffel?




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The issue with tour groups is that you are still our part of a herd of people.





My advice is go alone, be there first thing in the morning and walk up to the first level. Once there (and if you plan on going further up) line up straight away for the lift to the very top. Once there you can work your way down the tower at your own pace.




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Removed on: 3:19 am, October 06, 2009

Paris Metro instructions found on Youtube

OMG youtube is like my second best friend, of course tripadvisor is my first.



Was looking up what the metro looks like etc and found one that gives you instructions on how to use it and what even the ticket machine looks like, fabulous advice called %26#39;How to Ride the Paris Metro%26#39;:





www.youtube.com/watch…





for anyone interested :0)




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That link ought to be required reading for anyone planning their first trip to Paris who is thinking of using the metro.




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Removed on: 5:18 am, October 06, 2009

Getting to Disneyland - for dummies

Hi,





I%26#39;m visiting Paris for the first time in August for my honeymoon. We wanted to go to disneyland. Unfortunately we%26#39;ve never used the metro / RER and i%26#39;ve read all the posts and am still confused.





I%26#39;ve figured that the Metro is the underground train and the RER is a regular overground train. Is that right?





Firstly we%26#39;re staying in the Latin Quarter (Bel Ami hotel) so i%26#39;ve worked out we need to get the Metro first to Les Halles. Are all metro trips a set-price? So any ticket from a machine will do? Or so i need to specify what my journey is.





Then i%26#39;ve figured out at Les Halles to get the RER A to Marne-la-Vallee-Chessy. Do i just buy a return ticket for this at a booth? Or does it use the same tickets as the metro?





Thanks. I never really use Metros or trains in any cities. I always walk where possible.




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Hi,





Please see my answer at Paris Forum:





tripadvisor.com/ShowTopic-g187147-i14-k21024…




|||



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Removed on: 5:18 am, October 06, 2009

Porto Vecchio hotels

I will be arriving in Porto Vecchio by bus on September 8th and would like a recommendation for a nice hotel within walking distance of the bus since, the next morning, I have to take a bus again to Bastia. Any ideas would be appreciated.




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The two hotels closest to the Marine (which is where the buses leave from, I believe) would be Hôtel le Goéland and Hôtel Shegara. Both have websites, just google them.




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I%26#39;m now wondering whether the %26quot;Parking Ste Catherine%26quot;, which is where the Bastia bus leaves from, isn%26#39;t the car park by the cemetery in which case it%26#39;s quite a way from any hotel. The Hôtel Holzer would be the closest and at least it%26#39;s also close to the town centre.




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Do not go to the Shegara hotel. It%26#39;s is really noisy. it%26#39;s located directly on a busy road.



People are unfriendly and they do not know the meaning of hospitality.





We had a suite of Euro 400 a night with two rooms. Airco was not working while it was a 30 degrees Celsius. No compensation whatsoever and no way we could speak to management. It%26#39;s a tourist trap hotel. Mainly all customers are passing by by travellers who ned a quick hotel.





do not go there to enjoy your holiday!!!



People are rude.




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I am so sorry you had such a bad experience at hotel Shegara. I actually stayed there for one night last summer and I had the complete opposite experience. The staff couldn%26#39;t have been more helpful, my room was lovely and quiet, the restaurant served wonderful food and the waiter in the restaurant helped me also with all sorts of travel-related questions. All of that plus a great location across from the water and easy walk into town made it a place I would definitely return to when I go back to Corsica.




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Hi,





Ok, thats good to hear. We just went and had a very bad experience especially due to the staff.





They serve you a non functioning room (no airco) and just offer you some free drinks for keeping us waiting to enter the room (4 hours) adn see that as the entire compensation for having to sleep in a non airco room (Euro 400 a night). When we then ask kindly for a reasonable compensation we are being told that the Management for Shegara is too busy to come to the desk themself and use their desk employees to let us know thats all they feel obliged to to offer us. Some free drinks to keep us waiting for 4 hours. even while the airco wasn%26#39;t even fixed after that.





Besides that, and of course we had a negative connotation already it is located at a very busy street with a lot of noise. Which with open windows (due to the airco) is impossible to sleep with.





Any way. we had a bad experience which could have been solved by the management by acting professional and just have a quick chat with an unsatisfid customer instead of leeting the desk employees telling the bad news and being inflexible while paying Euro 400 per night.




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Removed on: 5:18 am, October 06, 2009