Europe for the first time
#21
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 74,699
Likes: 0
dw says,
>I believe that nine nites in Paris (or seven for that matter) are too many.<
chacun à son goût. Over the years, I have spent weeks in Paris and have always loved it. "Age cannot whither her, nor custom stale her infinite variety".
>I believe that nine nites in Paris (or seven for that matter) are too many.<
chacun à son goût. Over the years, I have spent weeks in Paris and have always loved it. "Age cannot whither her, nor custom stale her infinite variety".
#22



Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 30,646
Likes: 4
Amsterdam over Brussels every time if transport allows.
Depends how your team gets on with each other and being abroad. Holland has very high levels of International English available so makes an easy start (like London or Dublin) but is sufficiently different as to give the aborad feel (plus drugs, beer, night life etc).
Paris is clearly aborad and a foreign language. The danger isn only going for 4 days is that just about allows you to see all the top sites but you stay in the safe US state of mind. I reckon add a couple of days to get out say to Monet's garden or go to Epernay for the Champagne. Still world class sites but more the real france.
London a great place to finish.
Depends how your team gets on with each other and being abroad. Holland has very high levels of International English available so makes an easy start (like London or Dublin) but is sufficiently different as to give the aborad feel (plus drugs, beer, night life etc).
Paris is clearly aborad and a foreign language. The danger isn only going for 4 days is that just about allows you to see all the top sites but you stay in the safe US state of mind. I reckon add a couple of days to get out say to Monet's garden or go to Epernay for the Champagne. Still world class sites but more the real france.
London a great place to finish.
#23
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 967
Likes: 0
I like Bardo's itinerary. If you really want to go to Belgium, I would spend one night in Brugges on your way from Amsterdam to Paris. So, you could tweak Bardo's itinerary like this:
Fly into Amsterdam
3 nights in Amsterdam,
Train to Brugges
1 night in Brugges
Train to Paris
8 nights in Paris
Train to London
4 nights in London
Fly home from London.
In my opinion, you can't have too many nights in Paris. I could visit for a month and still not see all I want to see. . . .I definitely would save a trip to Provence for another time. If you want a side trip from Paris, go to Versailles for a day.
Have a wonderful trip!
Fly into Amsterdam
3 nights in Amsterdam,
Train to Brugges
1 night in Brugges
Train to Paris
8 nights in Paris
Train to London
4 nights in London
Fly home from London.
In my opinion, you can't have too many nights in Paris. I could visit for a month and still not see all I want to see. . . .I definitely would save a trip to Provence for another time. If you want a side trip from Paris, go to Versailles for a day.
Have a wonderful trip!
#24



Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 75,007
Likes: 50
One other thing to consider -- flying out of the UK costs quite a bit more than other countries. Their exit fees are much higher than France or the Netherlands or Belgium.
So open jaw is your best bet - but you'll save $$$ if you fly in to London and home from one of the other cities.
So open jaw is your best bet - but you'll save $$$ if you fly in to London and home from one of the other cities.
#26

Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 35,152
Likes: 0
I like Brussels, but wouldn't spend four days there, either.
AS for Paris hotels, it isn't so much that September is "high" season for hotels, it's just normal season and August is low season. I think August is about the lowest hotel rate season in Paris because there aren't many business customers. It's the same way in most any major city I know of (in Europe or US, anyway), September is never a cheap hotel rate period, it's always high.
AS for Paris hotels, it isn't so much that September is "high" season for hotels, it's just normal season and August is low season. I think August is about the lowest hotel rate season in Paris because there aren't many business customers. It's the same way in most any major city I know of (in Europe or US, anyway), September is never a cheap hotel rate period, it's always high.
#27
Joined: Apr 2003
Posts: 17,268
Likes: 0
"I would for sure do a trip to Glastonbury after a stop at Stonehenge. It's the Woodstock of Great Britain"
Wrong
The Woodstock of Great Britain is...Woodstock. The real one.
It's true that the Glastonbury Festival is mostly patronised by people who would have been active participants at the New York festival in 1969 if they'd have been able to afford the airfare.
But - unlike the deservedly obscure minor village in New York - Glastonbury has been attracting seriously A list visitors (From Jesus Christ, his mother Mary, Mary Magdalene, and Joseph of Arimathea, to King Arthur and Merlin) for around 2,000 years, all doing far more interesting things (like bringing the Holy Grail and Moses' Burning Bush) than just chanting "Give me an F" in a rainstorm.
DEFINITELY worth a couple of days. And several hundred pinches of salt. The real Woodstock's nice too.
Wrong
The Woodstock of Great Britain is...Woodstock. The real one.
It's true that the Glastonbury Festival is mostly patronised by people who would have been active participants at the New York festival in 1969 if they'd have been able to afford the airfare.
But - unlike the deservedly obscure minor village in New York - Glastonbury has been attracting seriously A list visitors (From Jesus Christ, his mother Mary, Mary Magdalene, and Joseph of Arimathea, to King Arthur and Merlin) for around 2,000 years, all doing far more interesting things (like bringing the Holy Grail and Moses' Burning Bush) than just chanting "Give me an F" in a rainstorm.
DEFINITELY worth a couple of days. And several hundred pinches of salt. The real Woodstock's nice too.




