30 Days in Europe - 29 y/o male
#1
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30 Days in Europe - 29 y/o male
Hey everyone!
I've done some searching and found great information so far and am looking for some final suggestions on my first trip to Europe.
I'm a 29 year old male and am looking for amazing nightlife and restaurants and some great historical sites to visit. I really enjoy urban exploration and immersing myself in a culture to get a feel for how locals live. The million dollar question: If you had 30-35 days to spend in Europe and wanted to party, eat, dance, and explore, what 4-5 cities/areas would you pick?
I'm currently planning on 7 days in each of the following cities:
London
Paris
Madrid
Rome
I'd like suggestions on possibly one more city to add or a city that you think I should replace one of the above with. I've heard great things about:
Porto
Barcelona
Florence
Amsterdam
and so many others!
I've done some searching and found great information so far and am looking for some final suggestions on my first trip to Europe.
I'm a 29 year old male and am looking for amazing nightlife and restaurants and some great historical sites to visit. I really enjoy urban exploration and immersing myself in a culture to get a feel for how locals live. The million dollar question: If you had 30-35 days to spend in Europe and wanted to party, eat, dance, and explore, what 4-5 cities/areas would you pick?
I'm currently planning on 7 days in each of the following cities:
London
Paris
Madrid
Rome
I'd like suggestions on possibly one more city to add or a city that you think I should replace one of the above with. I've heard great things about:
Porto
Barcelona
Florence
Amsterdam
and so many others!
#2
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If you're a young adult and looking for a good time, I immediately think about Munich, Prague and Budapest. Then fly on a budget air carrier to Paris and take the train to Amsterdam. You could visit London if there's time.
#3
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Amsterdam's nightlife has something for everyone and more! Especially for your age - Madrid is an outlier compared to the others in option A - I'd replace it with Amsterdam and Barcelona, much closer to Paris than Madrid.
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The only reason I'm leaving Munich off this list is that I have a good friend here in San Diego who is from Germany and I'll have an opportunity to go visit Germany with her in the next year or two.
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I'd eliminate Paris, Rome, and Barcelona and leave it at four cities, if your main interest is nightlife. In central Rome, there's very little nightlife apart from drunken northern Europeans. Roman youth party outside the center, and I think it would take too long to find the scene. Maybe I'm wrong, and I'm certainly past the age, but I don't think of Paris as a big party city for young people. And, based on accounts of Italian young people, I have the impression that the night life in Barcelona can be a bit risky.
Be very careful about partying in strange cities, especially if you tend to drink a lot. All of the recent really bad things that I've heard of happening to young tourists have involved drinking, especially pub crawls. A young Australian fell over a wall along the Tiber in Rome while on a pub crawl, and his buddy was so drunk he didn't even notice he was missing until hours later, too late to do anything for him. A young Italian in Barcelona left a party with Mr. Oh-so-very-wrong and came home to Italy in a box. A young Brit drowned in a canal in Venice. I could go on and on, but you get the idea. In a strange city, you aren't able to pick up on the vibes as easily as you do at home. If you get disoriented, you don't know how to get back on track.
Be very careful about partying in strange cities, especially if you tend to drink a lot. All of the recent really bad things that I've heard of happening to young tourists have involved drinking, especially pub crawls. A young Australian fell over a wall along the Tiber in Rome while on a pub crawl, and his buddy was so drunk he didn't even notice he was missing until hours later, too late to do anything for him. A young Italian in Barcelona left a party with Mr. Oh-so-very-wrong and came home to Italy in a box. A young Brit drowned in a canal in Venice. I could go on and on, but you get the idea. In a strange city, you aren't able to pick up on the vibes as easily as you do at home. If you get disoriented, you don't know how to get back on track.
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I lived in munich for 13 years. Munich is great and if i ever return to germany, it would be one of the two cities i would want to live in. But, a 29 yo male looking for nightlife and urban exploring will have much more fun in Berlin. It is THE place, actually for you.
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You should read online about the nightlife in the great cities on your itinerary.
We're going to Budapest in 3 weeks. They have event companies staging huge Saturday night parties in a couple of Turkish Baths. It's quite a sight to see with fog machines, laser lights, DJ's and hundreds of barely clothed thoroughly intoxicated people.
We're going to Budapest in 3 weeks. They have event companies staging huge Saturday night parties in a couple of Turkish Baths. It's quite a sight to see with fog machines, laser lights, DJ's and hundreds of barely clothed thoroughly intoxicated people.
#16
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well those six cities are far removed from each other - how are you planing to get between them - even flying can take most of a day - did you figure in travel time - overnight trains can be nice especially for younger folk and you save on a hotel as well. If going by train to all those cities look at some kind of railpass.
there are night trains between Amsterdam and Prague for example at least last I knew.
there are night trains between Amsterdam and Prague for example at least last I knew.
#17
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One option you may consider is the overnight ferry between London and Amsterdam. We have done it twice and thought it was a very efficient use of our time, and a fun adventure!
You can read all about how to do it and what it's like in our trip report
http://www.fodors.com/community/euro...-adventure.cfm
You can read all about how to do it and what it's like in our trip report
http://www.fodors.com/community/euro...-adventure.cfm
#20
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overnight ferries for young folk IME can be a lot of fun indeed - party and dance the night away - IME many younger folk stay up most of the night in the pub area! Saves on a hotel and you can get some nice discounts by booking online far in advance -
http://www.stenaline.co.uk/ferry-to-holland
You can take 'boat trains' from London Liverpool Street Station to Harwich Port right at the boat I believe and then in Holland trains will be waiting at Hook of Holland to take you to Amsterdam or other Dutch city.
I think you can buy good deal all-incousive tickets for trains and boat.
http://www.stenaline.co.uk/ferry-to-holland
You can take 'boat trains' from London Liverpool Street Station to Harwich Port right at the boat I believe and then in Holland trains will be waiting at Hook of Holland to take you to Amsterdam or other Dutch city.
I think you can buy good deal all-incousive tickets for trains and boat.