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Family trip to France - advice needed please
HI there - I have found these forums to be very helpful but am now so confused that I was hoping that I could get some help. We are travelling from Australia to France for approximately 5 weeks over Dec/Jan with our 4 kids (aged 12,11,8 & 6) . This is our first OS trip as a family. My husband loved France when he was following the Rugby World Cup 4 years ago, particularly the Provence region and this is the main reason for going. This is the only time that we can travel but being from Australia, experiencing the European winter will certainly be an experience the kids will never forget!
So far I have booked accomm in London (6 nights), Paris (6 nights) and Beaune (4 nights). We were going to head to Meribel for a White Christmas but found that we had to stay for a week and it was going to be quite expensive particularly for a family who have only skiied once before. So....have made enquires then at Vaison La Romaine (and use this as a base for approx 10 days) Is this too long? Then head to Sarlat and explore the Dordogne for 5 days. I have absolutely no idea whether this is too far to travel in one day. I had read about Carcassonne too. I am also then stuck with what to do for another 7 days before we fly back to Australia (out of Paris) - Bordeaux/Toulouse....Not sure. Any local advice would be warmly received. |
If this is a first overseas trip, and unless you have a lot of experience with, and enjoy, "dead places" in the middle of winter, I would rethink the Vaison-la-Romaine for 10 days part of the trip. It's a relatively small place and, while of course you can enjoy the Roman ruins and drive around to all the wine towns and through les Dentelles and up Mont-Ventoux and all that, in reality, there will be minimal activity, many things will be closed, and the days will be short. Same for the Dordogne, though Sarlat or Périgueux would be alive with local activity (including the truffle markets if you hit them at the right time).
I think you would be better off sticking with cities that time of year: Avignon, Aix-en-Provence, Nice, Montpellier, Toulouse, Bordeaux maybe (it's not wildly popular with visitors, though I'm fond of it). Even St-Rémy would have more activity in the dead of winter than Vaison, though it's not a city. I assume you're traveling by car? To calculate distances and whether you can drive from X to Y in one day you can use website like Michelin or Mappy or a regular old paper map. |
given the time you've got, what about a hop over the border to Barcelona?
plenty going on there any time of year and nice to get a taste of a different culture. |
I don't think 10 days is terrible in that area, but I wouldn't do it, even if I wanted to see Provence/Vaucluse in the dead of winter, I might do 5 days there and 5 days down in Montpellier or something like that.
Four nights in Beaune? now that sounds really boring to me but I'm sure you had some reason for doing that, I just can't imagine what. |
I agree that 10 days is too long in VLR. As suggested, try 4 or 5 days in that area or maybe base yourself in Avignon instead - I think the idea to go to cities more so than small country villages in the winter is a really good idea. And I am afraid I agree that 4 nights in Beaune might be at least two nights too many. Stay in Dijon instead and make Beaune a day trip. You might get a white Chirstmas by slipping across the German border - spend some time in Strasbourg and go from there.
5 weeks gives you a lot of time so you should have a chance to get all the climate differences you want - beach, mountain and so on. Last Spetember i spent 4 weeks in France and then one in Germany - and I loved it! Germany was a nice change of pace too. What a great time for you and the kids. |
Thank you everyone - OK, going to have a rethink and get back to you. I am having a bit of a panic now particularly about the "dead" of winter and finding things closed.
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Have you thought about spending some of the time in Switzerland. As long as you are going in the winter, you might as well enjoy a winter climate for a few days.
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It's not just finding things closed. It's the weather - often chilly and rainy, the very short days - dark by 4 pm or so - and not having much scenery to look at when everythig is sort of brown and crunchy.
I would agree to focus on some larger towns with more going on. Agree that Strasbourg would be great that time of year - and perhaps a trip over into Germany for the Christmas markets. And have you figured out what to do on the holidays - when everything actually is closed? |
Hi Ott,
>I am having a bit of a panic now particularly about the "dead" of winter and finding things closed.< Calm down. It's not as if the country turns into a ghost town. I agree with St Cirq. The Pont du Garde and the Gorges de l'Ardeche will be open. You might want to try a daytrip to the ocean while you are there, eg, Saintes Maries de la mer. I don't think 4 days in Beaune is too much. Use one day to visit Dijon. Lyon would be an interesting city for 2-3 nights. I prefer it to Bordeaux. Carcassone is what Eugene Viollet-le-Duc thought a medieval city should be. Think Disneyland. It is worth 1-2 nights. Bring warm clothes. Enjoy your visit. ((I)) |
Thanks for all these helpful tips.Sounds like Vaison la Romaine may be best for just a day visit. Our alternative thought is St Remy or Avignon but leaning toward St Remy. Our aim is to have one base and focus more on day trips. So now thinking St Remy as a base for 7 or so days then may be Toulouse as a base for 4 or 5 days before Sarlat for 5 or so. Is this making better sense?
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Yes, that's much better.
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Loads of great day trips near Beaune. Dijon, Autun, Châteauneuf, Vézelay, Abbey de Fontenay, Châteaux of Commarin and Bussy-Rabutin or just getting lost wandering along the small country roads and passing through centuries old charming villages.
A couple of other great places are the two walled medieval towns of Semur-en-Auxois and Noyers-sur-Serein and some charming nearby villages. I have a trip report about the latter that is full of photos that might give you some ideas. http://tinyurl.com/6dkeozh Here are some other links you may find useful: http://www.beaune-tourism.com/ http://www.visitdijon.com/en/ http://www.burgundy-visit.com/gb/index_gb.php http://www.vezelaytourisme.com/ linternaute.com/sortir/…11.shtml http://www.ville-semur-en-auxois.fr/ http://www.noyers-et-tourisme.com/ www.abbayedefontenay.com/abbayedefontenay.htm http://www.commarin.com/ bussy-rabutin.monuments-nationaux.fr/fr/ |
Having four kids and having travelled overseas (that is Canada and USA for us) when they were about your kids age, I know that logistics can become heavy at times. Saint Remy is not a bad base to start from. In France, short term accomodation are basically of two types: "Gites" are accomodations where you cook for yourself, but usually one week minimum stay. "Chambres d'hotes" are more like B&Bs with no minimum stay. For the former, prefer those labelled by "Gites de France" or "Le routard" for quality control. From Saint Remy, you can visit ochre mines near Apt (14°C all year round) and a couple of nice local hiking trails. Also Aix en Provence, but avoid Marseille. In Arles, there is a nice Museum about recent findings of Roman artefacts in the Rhone river, including a rare bust of Cesar, the only other one being in Italy. Les Baux de Provence being another site worth visiting. Those three cities are within 1-2 h drive from Saint Remy.
We now live in Montpellier. Quite a number of nice sites in the area: Saint Guilhem, Pont du Gard, Gorges du Tarn, a couple of spectacular caves. Also Aigues-Mortes, with a visit to the salt production plant nearby. While in Beaune, there is a fantastic site about a 2 h drive away: Guedelon, where a castle is being built with medieval techniques, and kids can participate by making medieval instruments, learning geometry as applied to the real world. But I am not sure it is open in winter. We have an apartment in the Alps, and the tourist office has been pressuring owners for renting for periods of less than a week, so you might want to shop around: 3 nights is now the minimum stay (http://www.lescontamines.com/): this site is about a small village more family oriented than Meribel, with a view on Mont Blanc from the ski slopes. |
Unfortunately Guédelon is closed from Nov. 2nd to April 1st. It is indeed a great place, for kids and adults.
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Thanks all - It is certainly mind blowing the local knowledge out there and when you are researching from Australia it seems quite overwhelming. However, I am going to take my time with your thoughts and put together another plan. My hubby did have some thoughts and we would welcome additional comments for the second part of the trip keeping in mind that these places are bases :
So, after St. Remy, Carcasonne then Toulouse (via Castres). Then onto Albi for a couple of nights, and Sarlat for around 5 days. We are getting tight on time then, so only have about three days before we fly out of Paris on the 14/1. Loire Valley ? Thanks heaps, Ottster06 |
For what it's worth, we are also Australian and took our two kids (then 12 and 9) to France (and other countries) for 5 weeks but in the Autumn. We landed in Paris and stayed in an apartment for a week. Our 12 year old did not sleep at all on the flight. He managed to stay awake until mid-afternoon and then slept for 17 hours straight. I was tempted to poke him to see if he was still alive! However, he was fine after that. So allow for some catch up time when you get there. Paris was great for the children (and us, of course). There are several threads on this forum on things which would attract children in Paris.
We also stayed in both Avignon and St Remy and I preferred the latter and would choose to base myself there, especially if I had a car (we didn't). Les Baux, although touristy, is a great place for kids but be careful as there are some high points where the rails are not great. We visited during a Mistral and nearly got blown off our feet. They have a treasure hunt designed for children which our youngest did with Dad in tow. Have never been to Loire Valley but it is big on cycling, which would be fun if it's not too cold. |
If you are not confident driving on the right hand side in busy traffic and possibly in wintry conditions, I would think about taking a train to a regional centre (e.g. Avignon) and hiring your car from there. If you want to purchase long distance train tickets, the cheapest available are generally Prems tickets which come on sale 3 months prior to departure. Check www.voyages-sncf.com. We paid 64euro for four tickets from Paris to Avignon, which is really cheap. We also found that the discounted adult tickets were cheaper than the children's tickets so bought four adult ones. Arrange to pick them up from a Paris train station. Take your email confirmation and the credit card you used to the ticket window. Tickets must be validated before boarding, I believe. There is heaps of information about French train tickets on this forum.
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Thank dreamon- appreciate the thumbs up on St. Remy and the tips
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If you buy the discounted advance PREM tickets from the SNCF website, you print them right out on your computer - no need to pick them up at the train station. They start selling them three months out from your travel date. You don't have to validate PREMs.
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Good to hear you can now print Prems tickets at home - couldn't do that when we last bought them. I have to book tickets next week so that's useful info for me. Thanks!
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