2 wk Europe Trip Advice
#1
Original Poster
Joined: Dec 2013
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2 wk Europe Trip Advice
Hello,
My husband and I are planning on going to Europe this coming spring and am looking for input on travel. We are planning on flying into London and staying with family for 2-3 days.
The idea is then either take train to Paris x1 day and fly to Italy or fly from London to Italy. We want to spend majority of time in Italy (Venice, Rome, Cinque de Terre, fly out of Milan)
Would appreciate any input or advice for such travel arrangements as I have never been to Europe. Best way to get from place to place? How long at each city? Yes we know it will be a fast paced trip, but unfortantely can not take more time off.
My husband and I are planning on going to Europe this coming spring and am looking for input on travel. We are planning on flying into London and staying with family for 2-3 days.
The idea is then either take train to Paris x1 day and fly to Italy or fly from London to Italy. We want to spend majority of time in Italy (Venice, Rome, Cinque de Terre, fly out of Milan)
Would appreciate any input or advice for such travel arrangements as I have never been to Europe. Best way to get from place to place? How long at each city? Yes we know it will be a fast paced trip, but unfortantely can not take more time off.
#2
Joined: May 2011
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Just a few more questions need answering before we can advise you best:
1. are the 2-3 days (make it 3 btw) in London in addition to the 2 weeks or part of the 2 weeks in total? And does that 2 week period also include travel from/to home?
2. If you've not been to Paris before, is there a reason for you considering only 1 day there?
3. What are you interested in seeing/doing? If we have a little more information your interests and things you've already considering doing in Europe, that will help with advice.
If you only do London and Italy, then you would be best flying between London and a point (eg Rome or Venice) and working you way to the other destinations by train once in Italy - it's easy and quick.
You may also find that you have to narrow down your choices for Italian cities/places if you have only 10 days in which to travel Italy.
1. are the 2-3 days (make it 3 btw) in London in addition to the 2 weeks or part of the 2 weeks in total? And does that 2 week period also include travel from/to home?
2. If you've not been to Paris before, is there a reason for you considering only 1 day there?
3. What are you interested in seeing/doing? If we have a little more information your interests and things you've already considering doing in Europe, that will help with advice.
If you only do London and Italy, then you would be best flying between London and a point (eg Rome or Venice) and working you way to the other destinations by train once in Italy - it's easy and quick.
You may also find that you have to narrow down your choices for Italian cities/places if you have only 10 days in which to travel Italy.
#4



Joined: Jul 2006
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getting about, read www.seat61.com on Italy to get an overview
#6

Joined: Oct 2013
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It looks to me as though Bilbo is counting up the nights spent in each city, because otherwise, it would come to more than two weeks. One night in Paris, arriving from London and departing for Venice, is really only a few hours in Paris. The same goes for the other cities. To know how many days you'll have in a city, you have to subtract one from the number of nights.
You don't say in which month you'll travel. If it's in March, you may not find decent weather in the Cinque Terre, and unless it's later in the spring, I would recommend skipping that also.
As for the rest of the time in Italy, I would spend more nights in Rome than in Venice, because it's a much bigger city, with a lot of things to see.
You don't say in which month you'll travel. If it's in March, you may not find decent weather in the Cinque Terre, and unless it's later in the spring, I would recommend skipping that also.
As for the rest of the time in Italy, I would spend more nights in Rome than in Venice, because it's a much bigger city, with a lot of things to see.
#7
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Joined: Dec 2013
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Yes bilboburgler that is kind of what we were thinking?
We said maybe only 1 day in Paris really to just see Eiffel tower with hopes that we will be back to do Paris/Germany.
We want to see architecture, museums, good food, maybe hike, etc.
We were thinking staying at hotels centrally located once in cities to walk vs renting apartment for 3 days?
We said maybe only 1 day in Paris really to just see Eiffel tower with hopes that we will be back to do Paris/Germany.
We want to see architecture, museums, good food, maybe hike, etc.
We were thinking staying at hotels centrally located once in cities to walk vs renting apartment for 3 days?
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#9
Joined: May 2012
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"We said maybe only 1 day in Paris really to just see Eiffel tower with hopes that we will be back to do Paris/Germany."
But that becomes an expensive trip to the Eiffel tower. (Eurostar fare + time)
"Italy--what happened to Florence?!!"
I don't think every first trip to Italy needs to include Florence. The OP needs to be selective of where to see.
But that becomes an expensive trip to the Eiffel tower. (Eurostar fare + time)
"Italy--what happened to Florence?!!"
I don't think every first trip to Italy needs to include Florence. The OP needs to be selective of where to see.
#10
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I've never been to Europe so I'm not quite sure of all we have to do in such a short amount of time with traveling.
I know we will fly into London and stay 2-3 days and then go on from there. We could spend 2 days in Paris and then fly to Italy. Our must stops are Rome and Venice. Have also heard outstanding reviews of Cinque de Terre, so that's how I came up with our list.
I'm just looking for input, advice, recommendations and am open to feedback! We're interested in seeing as much as we can, experiencing the culture.
I know we will fly into London and stay 2-3 days and then go on from there. We could spend 2 days in Paris and then fly to Italy. Our must stops are Rome and Venice. Have also heard outstanding reviews of Cinque de Terre, so that's how I came up with our list.
I'm just looking for input, advice, recommendations and am open to feedback! We're interested in seeing as much as we can, experiencing the culture.
#11
Joined: May 2005
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Here is what I would suggest....
London 4 nights
Fly to Rome 4 nights
Train to Florence (or Siena, Lucca, or some other Tuscan town) 2 nights
Train to Venice 3 nights
Train to Milan 1 night, fly home
If your interest in Milan is minimal (as it is for many), arranging to fly home from either Venice or Rome will gain you an extra night in one of the other locations. It might be a little more expensive, but remember you will save train fare, time, and hassle, while getting another night in a place you really want to be. If you fly home from Rome, you could reverse the suggestion above so that you fly London to Venice.
As you continue to plan, keep in mind that you will typically lose half a day to travel logistics each time you move to a new location. Happy travels!
London 4 nights
Fly to Rome 4 nights
Train to Florence (or Siena, Lucca, or some other Tuscan town) 2 nights
Train to Venice 3 nights
Train to Milan 1 night, fly home
If your interest in Milan is minimal (as it is for many), arranging to fly home from either Venice or Rome will gain you an extra night in one of the other locations. It might be a little more expensive, but remember you will save train fare, time, and hassle, while getting another night in a place you really want to be. If you fly home from Rome, you could reverse the suggestion above so that you fly London to Venice.
As you continue to plan, keep in mind that you will typically lose half a day to travel logistics each time you move to a new location. Happy travels!
#12
Joined: May 2012
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Everyone in their own way is suggesting you scale back the number or destinations for 2 weeks and spend more time in each, particularly major cities that take time to see. So either allot 3 to 4 nights in Paris at minimum or skip it altogether and fly straight from London to Italy.
There does become a trade-off whereby trying to see too much can mean you don't give time for even basic sightseeing, much less experiencing the culture.
At the very least I would start thinking of your itinerary in nights, as bvlenci suggests - and 3 nights means 2 full days. That way you can factor in travel time between cities.
Apartments are probably not worth the bother for a 3 day stay.
There does become a trade-off whereby trying to see too much can mean you don't give time for even basic sightseeing, much less experiencing the culture.
At the very least I would start thinking of your itinerary in nights, as bvlenci suggests - and 3 nights means 2 full days. That way you can factor in travel time between cities.
Apartments are probably not worth the bother for a 3 day stay.
#13



Joined: Jul 2006
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yes look at nights not days, it makes it easier to understand
CT in March would probably be a waste of time but May might be lovely. So Spring needs to be cleared.
I wouldn't rush Paris, it needs a bit more time than you are offering it and at the end of the day the Eiffel tower is just a pile of bits of metal.
I'd try this
London 3 train to Paris
Paris 3 fly to Venice
Venice 3 train to Rome
Rome 3 train to Milan
Milan 1 (the really nice bits of Milan are very close together if you ignore the fantastic cemetries and the odd little canal and just focus on the Duomo and last supper)
CT in March would probably be a waste of time but May might be lovely. So Spring needs to be cleared.
I wouldn't rush Paris, it needs a bit more time than you are offering it and at the end of the day the Eiffel tower is just a pile of bits of metal.
I'd try this
London 3 train to Paris
Paris 3 fly to Venice
Venice 3 train to Rome
Rome 3 train to Milan
Milan 1 (the really nice bits of Milan are very close together if you ignore the fantastic cemetries and the odd little canal and just focus on the Duomo and last supper)
#14
Joined: Jan 2007
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our top countries/cities are London, Paris, Amsterdam, Rome, Venice and Florence.>
14 days means 12 days really - arrival and departure days not being counted really.
Land in London
day 2, 3, 4 London
Take Eurostar train to Paris (2 hours - lose one hour on the clock)
Paris
Day 5, 6 , 7
day 8 - Paris and overnight train to Venice or fly
day 10, 11 Venice
12, 13 Cinque Terre (though I would say substitute Florence for the Cinque Terre if you have never been to Italy!)
14, 15, 16 Rome
fly home from Rome
If can only do 14 days something has to be cut.
Take trains between cities because IME cars are useless once in cities, trains go up to nearly 200 mph on many routes, etc. Check www.eurostar.com for Eurostar tickets London to Paris - book your own online; www.thello.com for the Paris to Venice overnight train and for general info on European trains I always spotlight these superb IMO sites - www.seat61.com; www.ricksteves.com and www.budgeteuropetravel.
Well there is an itinerary that I believe is perfect for first time visitors and according to your prefernces - add in a few days if you can in Venice and Florence and may be do day trip from Florence to one of those fabled Tuscany hill towns, like Siena - a cheap short bus ride from Florence as a day trip.
14 days means 12 days really - arrival and departure days not being counted really.
Land in London
day 2, 3, 4 London
Take Eurostar train to Paris (2 hours - lose one hour on the clock)
Paris
Day 5, 6 , 7
day 8 - Paris and overnight train to Venice or fly
day 10, 11 Venice
12, 13 Cinque Terre (though I would say substitute Florence for the Cinque Terre if you have never been to Italy!)
14, 15, 16 Rome
fly home from Rome
If can only do 14 days something has to be cut.
Take trains between cities because IME cars are useless once in cities, trains go up to nearly 200 mph on many routes, etc. Check www.eurostar.com for Eurostar tickets London to Paris - book your own online; www.thello.com for the Paris to Venice overnight train and for general info on European trains I always spotlight these superb IMO sites - www.seat61.com; www.ricksteves.com and www.budgeteuropetravel.
Well there is an itinerary that I believe is perfect for first time visitors and according to your prefernces - add in a few days if you can in Venice and Florence and may be do day trip from Florence to one of those fabled Tuscany hill towns, like Siena - a cheap short bus ride from Florence as a day trip.
#17
Joined: Jan 2007
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That was from a different thread/different OP. The exact same copy/paste itinerary doesn't fit every situation.>
Well it does fit in this because both asked the same question and I gave the same answer tweaking it to substitute the Cinque Terre for Florence - why should I type the exact same thing again - I did forget to remove the first statement and should have corrected but some of us are humans and do make mistakes!
Well it does fit in this because both asked the same question and I gave the same answer tweaking it to substitute the Cinque Terre for Florence - why should I type the exact same thing again - I did forget to remove the first statement and should have corrected but some of us are humans and do make mistakes!
#18
Joined: Jan 2007
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We are looking to go end of May and really want to go to Cinque de Terre>
If not going to Florence for a stay from the Cinque Terre you can take a train all along the coast to Rome - a more scenic route than the other possible route via taking trains to Florence and then high-speed trains to Rome. High-speed trains take an all-new rail line that skirts cities and is often in tunnels or views blocked by wind blocks, etc - not saying that you can't see anything but the slower IC trains along the coast are just more scenic and from the Cinque Terre just as quick - you will have to change trains from any Cinque Terre village at La Spezia usually and perhaps at Pisa but there are frequent La Spezia to Rome coastal trains - www.trenitalia.com for schedules and prices.
If not going to Florence for a stay from the Cinque Terre you can take a train all along the coast to Rome - a more scenic route than the other possible route via taking trains to Florence and then high-speed trains to Rome. High-speed trains take an all-new rail line that skirts cities and is often in tunnels or views blocked by wind blocks, etc - not saying that you can't see anything but the slower IC trains along the coast are just more scenic and from the Cinque Terre just as quick - you will have to change trains from any Cinque Terre village at La Spezia usually and perhaps at Pisa but there are frequent La Spezia to Rome coastal trains - www.trenitalia.com for schedules and prices.
#19
Joined: Jan 2010
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I would add a day or two to London then fly directly from there to Italy. You are shortchanging Paris so skip it for this time and have a better chance to really enjoy Italy. If you have two full weeks, that leaves about 10 days in Italy. Spend 4 in Rome and 3 in Venice and 3 in Cinque Terre (Note: it is Cinque Terre, not Cinque de Terre). Getting to Cinque Terre will take the better part of a day from either Rome or Venice. Then spend the last night in Milan to fly home. You have a lot planned for a short time so plan well to assure that you will remember more than train stations and airports.
#20
Joined: Jan 2007
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3 days in the 5 Lands? That would depend on what they want to do - hike all the time or use it as a day trip base but if not into hiking or visiting nearby places spending 3 days in these tiny villages would bore most folks so it depends - you just want to experience the Cinque Terre and do the classic 7-mile hike between the 5 villages 2 days or a day and a half would be plenty - but if you want to day trip along the coast, etc - I would suggest spending a few days in Florence instead of 3 days in the Cinque Terre as an alternative.
Even one full day in Florence would be great - most of the main things are located in one compact historic center.
Even one full day in Florence would be great - most of the main things are located in one compact historic center.



