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Day trips from Paris... Rouen?

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Day trips from Paris... Rouen?

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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 07:35 AM
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Day trips from Paris... Rouen?

My husband, teen daughter, and myself hope to be in Paris the last week of March, 2014.

Husband and I have been before, for a full week, and this time, we want to see things we missed and show my daughter a few of the "highlights".

Originally, we were going to stay in Paris five nights and go to Avignon or Aix-en-Provence for five nights, but... My regular pet-sitter bailed on me. In light of possibly having to board our dog now, I'm probably shortening the overall trip, but extending our stay in Paris to a week. This is kinda-sorta up in the air, but as of now, I'm planning for a week based in Paris. (And yes, I have a hotel booked for the full week already.)

So, we were planning 3 to 4 full days in Paris, and a couple of day excursions, by train or tour bus.
Of the latter, haven't really found anything worthwhile...

One trip is definitely to Chartres, which we missed last time. That leaves another.

Fwiw, we have been to Versailles and were underwhelmed, not looking to go again. None of us are interested in seeing the Loire Valley castles.

I really love medieval architecture and history, and was wondering if Rouen was worth while for a day trip. Is it fairly straightforward to get to?

What about Giverny? I'm not a huge Monet fan, but it looks pretty. Will it be in late March though?

Just looking to see some of the surrounding area, but within one to two hours away by train...

Thank you in advance for your tips and suggestions.
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 07:47 AM
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I really love medieval architecture and history, and was wondering if Rouen was worth while for a day trip. Is it fairly straightforward to get to?>

Rouen is a typical large French city - fairly modern and only with pockets of medieval architecture outside of course of its famous cathedral.

I enjoyed a day trip to Provins which will fulfill your desire for medieval architecture that Rouen or Chartres or most larger French cities will not.

https://www.google.com/search?q=prov...=1600&bih=1074
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 07:51 AM
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Rouen is an easy train ride from Paris and would make a great daytrip. There are three notable Gothic churches in the central area, and lots of medieval buildings.

Another choice might be Provins, a smaller town that is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, famed for its medieval fairs.

Look into both of these and, for more options, search through recent Fodor threads for one on daytrips from Paris.
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 08:25 AM
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For something different, you can go to Dijon for lunch. It's 1-1/2 hours by train from Gare de Lyon. Tickets are as low as €43/RT
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 08:36 AM
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Thank you both! I've heard of Provins but never looked it up... Looks like a nice outing.
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 08:39 AM
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I would think Rouen would be good if you like Medieval architecture so much, I think it is one of the best preserved Medieval cities in France (or Europe), or so I've read. Here is info on Medieval sites in Normandie, of course, you could go to Bayeux, also, and see that tapestry.
http://www.normandie-tourisme.fr/art...es-1194-2.html

I would NOT go to Giverny in March if you aren't even a big Monet fan. Obviously gardens are not going to be great in March, they aren't in the northern US, either. So if you are just going because you seen photos that are pretty, why bother, it won't look like that.
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 09:32 AM
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The gardens at Giverny do not open until April 1, so that eliminates one choice! I enjoyed wandering around Rouen. And it is easy to get to by train. I really enjoyed Chartres. I would recommend to time your visit to the Cathedral with one of the tours. I think they are by Malcolm Miller if I recall. Made the Cathedral come to life and enjoyed all of his stories. (My visit was a few years ago so I am not sure if the Malcolm MIller tours are still available.).
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 09:46 AM
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Rouen also has a nice museum with a good Impressionist wing.
Really, you can't board your dog for that length of time in order to maximize a trip to France!!
Truth be told, you and your daughter will fill up a week easily. "Maybe" one day trip.
Too bad about the Loire--it would be a nice day trip. Rather than Rouen, maybe Chartres? Nice town and great cathedral. Auvers sur Oise, for a Van Gogh "fix".
And a lunch in Dijon would be fun.
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 09:55 AM
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Has anyone here actually been to Rouen?

One inadequacy of France's motorway system is that the basic route from London to La France Profonde or most of Spain has a 30-mile motorway free gap around Rouen, and a recent idiot petrol tanker driver crashing into a flyover means you now have to go through Rouen rather than round it.

From a car in a hurry to get to the next overnight, the place looks as unprepossessing as Leicester. And the breathless prose on the Normandy website could describe practically any city in Europe (three Gothic churches, of themselves, hardly rate a detour if you've got dozens within a 15 minute drive of your front door)

How do its nice bits compare with, say, Salisbury? Or Lucca?
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 10:11 AM
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Actually, Gretchen, a family friend has agreed to stay in our house and watch the dog! That just happened this morning.
However, he will be gone at work for very long hours during the second week, the part of our trip we would have been in Provence. So, I'm still very much leaning toward just one full week based in Paris.
Part of it has to do with my daughter's school schedule too. She wasn't thrilled about missing school, even for a 2-3 days (yeah I know, my kid is weird!) and she's too young to leave home by herself! Or I'd leave her home with the dog...
I don't plan on dying anytime soon, so I will go to Provence some day, even if I have to hobble there in my old age. Hopefully, I will stay fit and that won't be the case, . And I'm assuming it will still be there, waiting for me...
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 10:16 AM
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And thank you all for these day trip suggestions! Looking up places now, as I eat lunch.
What about Senlis and Chantilly? Anyone been there? This actually looks more appealing to me than Provins or Rouen.

I will look into Dijon as well...
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 10:20 AM
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The old quarter of Rouen is lovely, with its pedestrian area lined with half-timbered houses, the square where Jeanne d'Arc was burned at the stake, the grande horloge. It has some great restaurants as well.
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 10:59 AM
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Agree with StCirq.
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 11:22 AM
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Hard to find a more medieval centre than Troyes!
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 11:27 AM
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Has anyone here actually been to Rouen?



From a car in a hurry to get to the next overnight, the place looks as unprepossessing as Leicester. And the breathless prose on the Normandy website could describe practically any city in Europe (three Gothic churches, of themselves, hardly rate a detour if you've got dozens within a 15 minute drive of your front door)

How do its nice bits compare with, say, Salisbury? Or Lucca?>

No comparison IME of having been there several times - yes it like all French cities has a restored old quarter but overall the city just don't compare with a Lucca or Salisbury IME - not saying Rouen don't have some medieval architecture but not much of it IME as few large cities in France do, including Paris - at least in northern France - southern France lots do.
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 11:51 AM
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Actually, Rouen is quite famous for the amount of surviving medieval architecture.
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 11:55 AM
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It's been a while since I've been there so things must have been spruced it and with your characterization will take another and perhaps better look.
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 12:00 PM
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What about Reims? Has multiple UNESCO sites and that stuff with the bubbles...what's it called...oh!...champagne! It's an easy train ride from Paris.
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 12:11 PM
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https://www.google.com/search?q=roue...=1600&bih=1074

well these images of Rouen certainly support St Cirq's assertion!

Reims I am very very familiar with and it has little medieval architecture but a host of really nice sites, including the famous cathedral and Champagne Houses - visits to the daves and cellars are superb - some have works of art in them and you get to taste the bubbly at the end of the tour.

Reims would be an excellent day trip unless a really old looking town was your goal.
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Old Jan 8th, 2014 | 01:08 PM
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flanneruk: <i>Has anyone here actually been to Rouen?</i>

Yes, I went last May as a day trip. Rouen was really nice.

If Monet's garden is open - for others traveling after April 1 - you can do Rouen and Giverny (Vernon) together as an easy day trip by train. They are on roughly the same train line. I did this: train from Paris to Vernon, tourist bus (or long walk, or perhaps rented bike) from the Vernon station to Giverny, then train on the Rouen, train back to Paris in the evening.
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