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Bruges as a daytrip from Paris

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Bruges as a daytrip from Paris

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Old Sep 15th, 2019 | 02:35 PM
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Bruges as a daytrip from Paris

I know it would be more time on a bus or train than actual time in Bruges. I know it will be rushed. I also know that if I love it, I will try to go back another time. I've looked at Paris Vision and Viator for organized tours. Some comments feel the tour and guide offers a decent overview, others say it's much too little free time to see anything of import. If anyone has experience with or suggestions about an organized (or solo?) day trip to Bruges from Paris this October, please share your insights. Thank you.

Last edited by elaine; Sep 15th, 2019 at 02:38 PM. Reason: missing information
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Old Sep 15th, 2019 | 04:09 PM
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I think you will get more relevant info if you can articulate why you are interested in an escorted tour rather than doing this on your own. The caveats you mentioned regarding the time overhead is a consequence of the escorted tour and not a day trip to Bruges on its own.

An example of Paris Vision:
7:15am - 11am Paris to Bruges by coach
11am-4:30pm Tour of the city - 5 hours (according to the brochure)
4:30pm-9pm Bruges to Paris by coach
All for about 169EU.

Compare this to doing this on your own with max time in Bruges since you mentioned time in the city:
6:13am-8:54am Paris-Bruxelles-Bruges by trains
9:30am-7:30pm Tour of the city = 10 hours taking into account time to walk between the station and the city
7:58pm-10:35pm Bruges-Bruxelles-Paris by trains

So, as you can see, a tour spends 7.5 hrs traveling to give you 5 hrs in Bruges.
If you take the max time train option, you spend 5.5 hrs traveling to give you 10 hours in Bruges. Furthermore, you chose what you want to see in Bruges..
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Old Sep 15th, 2019 | 04:39 PM
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I mentioned a solo trip as an option. I am wondering about getting from the train station to the city center and principal sights, and then perhaps to a canal boat trip. I don't have a great sense of direction, and I dread becoming lost in a place I have never visited. That can also be a waste of time. Thanks.
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Old Sep 15th, 2019 | 04:54 PM
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Two years ago, we took an early train from Paris to Bruges. You can either walk to the city center or take a local bus. We did everything on our own, took in the sites and climbed to the top of the bell tower (not an easy task). We hopped on a boat tour since we were there for such a short time. We were able to see Bruges from the water's view which was pretty. We walked, shopped, dined and sampled a few beers. We caught the bus back to the train station (evening train) and were back in Paris by 9:30pm. Very doable and easy to do without a tour.
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Old Sep 15th, 2019 | 04:58 PM
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>>I am wondering about getting from the train station to the city center<<

The train station is IN the city center. It is at most a 15 -20 minute walk from the major sites.

It would be hard to get lost -- but you can alway ask directions.

The biggest problem with the group tour (besides being expensive and not very time-efficient) is it plops you in Bruges in the middle of the day with all the thousands of other day tripper who are only there from noon to 4PM.



•••• If Bruges is important to you you could even consider 'eating' a night in Paris and taking an early morning train to . . . and a morning train the next day back to Paris ••••
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Old Sep 15th, 2019 | 05:25 PM
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I enjoyed Bruges, actually spent five nights there, but IMHO, it is not worth spending too much time to get there. I certainly would not sit on a bus tour to do it, and if Bruges is the only interest (not surrounding areas), then one day is enough. Take the train the fastest way and do a tour completely on your own. Make it a long day, have dinner, wonderful local ice-cream, apple tart and stay until lights are on. Bruges is especially pretty then. There, all done with Bruges.
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Old Sep 15th, 2019 | 05:27 PM
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That's reassuring--thanks.
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Old Sep 15th, 2019 | 05:28 PM
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Bruges is very small. You won’t get lost.
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Old Sep 15th, 2019 | 05:28 PM
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That's helpful; thanks.
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Old Sep 15th, 2019 | 08:53 PM
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Hi Elaine, I know how you feel as I have zero sense of direction too. I've been to Brugge twice - would go back tomorrow, love it - and although it's fairly small I still think it's possible to get lost, especially for those of us challenged in that area. Luckily I travel with my husband whose sense of direction astounds me (how does he know??) otherwise I would still be wandering hopelessly around Europe. We found people helpful and friendly in Belgium and most seem to speak enough English to help should you get lost. Don't hesitate to pop into a shop or cafe if you are unsure about your direction.

Also I'd recommend studying a street map of the area, the route from train station to the centre etc so you are more comfortable once you're there. Joining a guided walk might be nice to meet others, we did one for about an hour which included a few of the wonderful chocolate shops. I think if you can be fairly comfortable with the 'getting lost' thing, you could do it on your own, rather than a tour. You can then please yourself how long you spend at each tourist spot and linger in a cafe if you choose.

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Old Sep 15th, 2019 | 09:54 PM
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Originally Posted by elaine
I mentioned a solo trip as an option. I am wondering about getting from the train station to the city center and principal sights, and then perhaps to a canal boat trip. I don't have a great sense of direction, and I dread becoming lost in a place I have never visited. That can also be a waste of time. Thanks.
Just follow the tourists walking down Oostmeers, and walk towards the St Salvator steeple. That's all there is to it. Look it up on google maps and streetview before you go or ask for directions. (hard, I know).
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Old Sep 15th, 2019 | 10:00 PM
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There is a trivial way to get into town from the station if you are afraid of getting lost. Take a taxi to the Markt or if you already know which canal boat company you want to take, tell the taxi driver to drop you off there.
There is likely a mass of visitors getting off the train with you heading the same way to the city center.
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Old Sep 15th, 2019 | 11:47 PM
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If you don't like to walk from the station to the centre, take one of the buses at the station. They all go to the centre and are very frequent (every 5 minutes).
Here's some general information and you will find a map in the 'discovering Bruges' section: https://www.visitbruges.be/en/public-transport
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Old Sep 16th, 2019 | 06:36 AM
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Train advice

Thanks for the encouraging replies. Do I go to the Sncf website to look at train schedules Paris-Bruges? Raileurope? Thanks.
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Old Sep 16th, 2019 | 06:55 AM
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I've been to Bruges a gazillion times. It never did much for me except maybe satisfy that urge everyone has for a Disney-like European experience. I would spend lots more time and lots more money getting to lots more places from Paris that have lots more punch historically, many of them in Belgium and the Netherlands, like Hoge Veluwe and Den Bosch and Delft and Ghent. Bruges does kind of win out on the pictorial aspect, though.And then of course France itself is full of day trips from Paris.

No, don't use Raileurope. Use SNCF.
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Old Sep 16th, 2019 | 08:18 AM
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Thank you. Delft is on my bucket list. I didn't realize it was doable, distance-wise, as a daytrip from Paris. Hmmm.
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Old Sep 16th, 2019 | 09:17 AM
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If I were going to do that (and I wouldn't as a day trip from Paris), personally, I'd prefer the tour as it sounds a lot less tiring. No way would I want to get to a train station at 6:30 am and not return until 10:35 pm nor would I want to spend 10 hours touring Bruges anyway.

I think there are better tours than the example cites, though, and cheaper Like this one

https://www.francetourisme.fr/tours-...html?prov=sugg
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Old Sep 16th, 2019 | 09:30 AM
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>>> I didn't realize it was doable, distance-wise, as a daytrip from Paris.
This is a car centric thinking where the distance can be a proxy for the travel time.
In case of train travel, the relevant metric is the travel time.
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Old Sep 16th, 2019 | 01:10 PM
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Originally Posted by greg
>>> I didn't realize it was doable, distance-wise, as a daytrip from Paris.
This is a car centric thinking where the distance can be a proxy for the travel time.
In case of train travel, the relevant metric is the travel time.
I am not car-centric as I do not own one and rarely think in terms of driving-time.
When I spoke of distance, I was thinking about travel time. Sorry I was not more precise about the metric.
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Old Sep 16th, 2019 | 08:43 PM
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We went to Bruges last year. We drove to the station and parked there in the car park, then caught the bus into town. On the way back we caught it from the same location, back to the station. Bruges is easy to walk around. You could do it by yourself; if you took a tour, odds are that they would open the door of the bus and say: see you here in 4 hours, so there might still be some element of self-navigation. I have done some tours like this and felt under a lot of time pressure in case the bus left without me.

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