Base for short Normandy Trip
#1
Original Poster
Joined: Aug 2016
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Base for short Normandy Trip
Hoping to do a short layover in France before a longer trip in Greece.
Flying into CDG and plan to rent a car, stay in the Normandy region. 3-4 nights,
Would like suggestions for a place to base out of and a specific lodging recommendation if known.
We're OK with a central spot that's walking distance to dining, but a rural setting with a great view would be OK as well.
Hope to visit WW2 sites including Omaha Beach, Mont St Michel, & whatever else is suggested for this region.
July, 2023
Flying into CDG and plan to rent a car, stay in the Normandy region. 3-4 nights,
Would like suggestions for a place to base out of and a specific lodging recommendation if known.
We're OK with a central spot that's walking distance to dining, but a rural setting with a great view would be OK as well.
Hope to visit WW2 sites including Omaha Beach, Mont St Michel, & whatever else is suggested for this region.
July, 2023
#4


Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 26,491
Likes: 4
Bayeux is pretty central for the D-Day landing beaches and things like Arromanches, the cemeteries. Just about all the main sights are within a 30/40-minute drive, including the excellent Peace Memorial (museum) in Caen. Having said that, it would be too far for me to drive after arriving at CDG on an overnight flight. In that situation, Evreux is about as far as I would want to drive. Or I'd train to Caen and pick up the car there.
Some people like to pair Mont Saint-Michel with the WWII sights of Normandy. I think it's too much of a detour.
Some people like to pair Mont Saint-Michel with the WWII sights of Normandy. I think it's too much of a detour.
#6

Joined: Jul 2005
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We stayed in Port-en-Bessin, which is on the coast a few minutes outside of Bayeux. Nice little town with a fair number of restaurants, and a number of rental properties available on VRBO, AirBnB, etc. I highly recommend it as a base for anyone with a rental car looking to see the D-Day sites. Mont Saint-Michel is a couple of hours away from all the D-Day sites. You may want to consider doing an overnight stay there, at the end of your Normandy segment, then drive to Rennes where you can drop the rental car and take the TGV back to Paris.
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#8

Joined: Dec 2006
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I've been to Normandy immediately after arriving from the US on three different trips. All involved landing, cab to Gare St. Lazare, train to Caen, pick up rental car there and drive to the Peace Museum (15 minutes from station), then 30 minutes to Port en Bessin. Each time our groups had dinner there, then were in bed fairly early to start the first full day. To my knowledge, nobody died as a result.
To the OP, if you're interested in the WWII aspects of Normandy, Port en Bessin is a coastal town that sits on the border of the US Omaha sector and the Gold sector handled by the British Second Army. To the west are the US sectors of Omaha and Utah, to the east are the British and Canadian sectors. We usually do a British sector day to see the various sites. We start by traveling the 45 minutes to Pegasus bridge and museum, then work our way back along D514 through Arromanche and the Longues sur mer battery.
We also took one day for the Omaha sector - the American Cemetery, Point du Hoc, the German Cemetery outside La Cambe and visit the Maisy Battery then have dinner in Grandcamp Maisy. It is a decent, but fairly long day.
We've taken one day for the Utah beaches area (45 minutes to Saint Mere Eglise) and the various museums and sites. I recommend the Church in Angoville au Plain be on your route a very interesting site and story. Also, the town of Graignes has an interesting history and memorial related to the landings.
Three of the four trips included a day trip over to Mont St. Michel, with a slightly out of the way stop at the Brittany American Cemetery just south of the Mont.
Good luck and enjoy the planning, it's as much fun as the trip itself.
#9
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Joined: Aug 2016
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It's a 3 hour drive.
I live in the Midwest, where everything is a 2-3 hour drive.
Will have lay-flat seats & I can sleep easily on the plane. Arriving mid-morning, so will be all daylight driving.
The Bayeux area sounds like it will fit our needs.
#12

Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 3,634
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Saint-Aubin -sur-Mer; Hotel St. Aubin, nice hotel.
Very good restaurant.
Courseulles-sur-Mer: Hotel de Paris, an OK hotel, good restaurant.
I am Canadian/Polish and that was my focus but both are short drive from all the important places.
Leave early enough and drive against the flow of tour buses and you will miss the crowds.
Very good restaurant.
Courseulles-sur-Mer: Hotel de Paris, an OK hotel, good restaurant.
I am Canadian/Polish and that was my focus but both are short drive from all the important places.
Leave early enough and drive against the flow of tour buses and you will miss the crowds.
Last edited by cdnyul; Aug 23rd, 2022 at 09:36 AM.
#13



Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 30,648
Likes: 4
Why the lecture, because we find that offering helpful and life saving advice is what people should do.
I'm glad you have not hurt anyone else yet, I have to drive those roads and I'd like to get home alive.
Please this is nothing to do with your manhood, womanhood, bravery, skill at driving. I don't believe different people react differently to flying conditions. Research seems to suggest the most critical issue is air pressure of flight. I think only one airbus offers sea level pressure .
I'm sure you feel fine and comfortable, but thinking of others is part of visiting another country.
I'm glad you have not hurt anyone else yet, I have to drive those roads and I'd like to get home alive.
Please this is nothing to do with your manhood, womanhood, bravery, skill at driving. I don't believe different people react differently to flying conditions. Research seems to suggest the most critical issue is air pressure of flight. I think only one airbus offers sea level pressure .
I'm sure you feel fine and comfortable, but thinking of others is part of visiting another country.
#14
Original Poster
Joined: Aug 2016
Posts: 210
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Why the lecture, because we find that offering helpful and life saving advice is what people should do.
I'm glad you have not hurt anyone else yet, I have to drive those roads and I'd like to get home alive.
Please this is nothing to do with your manhood, womanhood, bravery, skill at driving. I don't believe different people react differently to flying conditions. Research seems to suggest the most critical issue is air pressure of flight. I think only one airbus offers sea level pressure .
I'm sure you feel fine and comfortable, but thinking of others is part of visiting another country.
I'm glad you have not hurt anyone else yet, I have to drive those roads and I'd like to get home alive.
Please this is nothing to do with your manhood, womanhood, bravery, skill at driving. I don't believe different people react differently to flying conditions. Research seems to suggest the most critical issue is air pressure of flight. I think only one airbus offers sea level pressure .
I'm sure you feel fine and comfortable, but thinking of others is part of visiting another country.
But thanks for the Port-en-Bassin tip!
#15


Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 26,491
Likes: 4
Funny that I regularly see posts that everyone is affected differently by "jet lag", and yet this kind of post happens.
I've been to Normandy immediately after arriving from the US on three different trips. All involved landing, cab to Gare St. Lazare, train to Caen, pick up rental car there and drive to the Peace Museum (15 minutes from station), then 30 minutes to Port en Bessin. Each time our groups had dinner there, then were in bed fairly early to start the first full day. To my knowledge, nobody died as a result.
I've been to Normandy immediately after arriving from the US on three different trips. All involved landing, cab to Gare St. Lazare, train to Caen, pick up rental car there and drive to the Peace Museum (15 minutes from station), then 30 minutes to Port en Bessin. Each time our groups had dinner there, then were in bed fairly early to start the first full day. To my knowledge, nobody died as a result.
alandavid, you can obviously do whatever you like, but most of us who have made these sorts of trips dozens of times recognize the risk in long drives after long, overnight flights. Even if you think you'll get good sleep on the plane, you'll be driving in an unfamiliar car on unfamiliar roads with signage in a foreign language. It really doesn't take much in this scenario for your attention to falter.
#16



Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 75,008
Likes: 50
Please don't be upset by concerned members advising that driving after an over night flight isn't a great idea. (Terrible idea IMO) We are concerned about the travelers -- AND the locals on those roads. Have I done it -- sure. Have I lived to tell the tale - sure. But since then I have read a TON of the literature about micro sleeps and other effects of jet lag. One may feel just hunky dory bopping off the plane -- and wouldn't get into any trouble . . . until they do.
Between the time shifts, disrupted sleep patterns, unfamiliarity with the road signs, rules of the road, traffic patterns . . . just don't drive that first day.
All meant in the nicest possible way -- honest.
Between the time shifts, disrupted sleep patterns, unfamiliarity with the road signs, rules of the road, traffic patterns . . . just don't drive that first day.
All meant in the nicest possible way -- honest.
#17

Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 3,634
Likes: 17
Just a tip about driving, GPS and small places in Normandy.
When I tried to enter the address for the St- Aubin hotel before leaving Brussels, the car's GPS could not find the town.
I used the Lat/Long method but forgot that the Prime Meridian runs through Normandy so entering east instead of west would have put near Dieppe.
Most rental cars have build in GPS, check that the previous renter did not activate "Avoid Toll Roads" setting, potentially turning a three hour trip into an eight hour ordeal.
When I tried to enter the address for the St- Aubin hotel before leaving Brussels, the car's GPS could not find the town.
I used the Lat/Long method but forgot that the Prime Meridian runs through Normandy so entering east instead of west would have put near Dieppe.
Most rental cars have build in GPS, check that the previous renter did not activate "Avoid Toll Roads" setting, potentially turning a three hour trip into an eight hour ordeal.
Last edited by Moderator3; Aug 24th, 2022 at 04:17 AM. Reason: Removed disparaging comment
#18
Original Poster
Joined: Aug 2016
Posts: 210
Likes: 0
...alandavid, you can obviously do whatever you like, but most of us who have made these sorts of trips dozens of times recognize the risk in long drives after long, overnight flights. Even if you think you'll get good sleep on the plane, you'll be driving in an unfamiliar car on unfamiliar roads with signage in a foreign language. It really doesn't take much in this scenario for your attention to falter.
Have flown across the Atlantic many times, I can usually sleep ~6 hours straight during the flight, and I'm used to driving 8 hours in a day.
I've logged nearly 700K miles without an accident over my career.
Driving 3 hours after getting a decent amount of sleep is not daunting to me at all.
I've gotten great advice on Fodor's over the years, but always irked by those who read way more into a post than what exists.
Last edited by Moderator1; Aug 24th, 2022 at 07:24 AM. Reason: removed disparaging comment
#19

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,525
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I would agree with you alandavid. I too get plenty of sleep on the flights, and lie flat beds certainly help that. It really depends upon where in Normandy you plan to start your visit from my perspective. If you plan on leaving CDG and heading towards Rouen, a stop in Giverny would break up the driving, but it you really plan to focus on the D-day side of Normandy, I would strongly recommend the train to Caen and rent there, especially if you don't have a large amount of luggage. Large luggage would necessitate the rental to start from CDG. FYI, Port en Bessin is about 6 miles from Bayeux with several rentals available and a comfortable (albeit spartan) hotel on the Quay from the ibis brand. It's actually referred to as the ibis Bayeux-Port en Bessin and is reasonable and accessible.
#20


Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 26,491
Likes: 4
alandavid, I didn't intend to sound like scolding. Lots of initial posts here don't always give complete or pertinent information, such as how experienced a traveler the poster is. Advice given is only meant to help you have a great and safe trip (the point of this forum), but you can take it or leave it. You can always, always do whatever you think is best for you.
I hope you have a wonderful visit to Normandy. It's a beautiful and interesting area.
I hope you have a wonderful visit to Normandy. It's a beautiful and interesting area.

