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How Reasonable Is This 8 Day Paris Itinerary?

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How Reasonable Is This 8 Day Paris Itinerary?

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Old Dec 2nd, 2007 | 02:43 PM
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How Reasonable Is This 8 Day Paris Itinerary?

Hello, This is my second time in Paris and my DH's first. We are wondering what you think of this itinerary. We are looking forward to walking around, being outside, dabbling in photography. I liked the Louvre a lot, but don't fancy spending too much time in museums. Are there any areas we are missing or not giving enough time for? So much to do! Its overwhelming - even the second time!

Sat: Fly to Paris

Sun: Arrive in Paris:
-Notre Dame w Towers
-Walking Ile de la Cite
-Walking Ile St-Louis

Mon:
-Louvre+Gardens (am)
-Forum Des Halles + rooftop garden
-Eglise St. Eustache (pm)

Tues:
-St. Chapelle +Conciergerie (am)
-Catacombs (am)
-Marais Area and Place Des Vosges
-Memorial De La Shoah
-Fat Tire Bike Tour, night tour (pm)

Wed:
-Day Trip Disneyland Paris

Thurs:
-Sorbonne area
-Pantheon
-Jardin Des Plantes
-Mosquee De Paris
-St Germain, Odeon+Luxembourg area
-Eglise St. Germain
-Eglise St. Sulpice
-Jardin Du Luxembourg

Fri:
-Day Trip to Rouen
-Paris covered archades (pm)

Sat:
-Chateau de Vincennes (am)
-Montmartre + Pigalle area
-Sacre Coeur
-A Paris Walk (pm)

Sun:
-Day Trip to Troyes (day)
-Place Concorde + Madeleine area (pm)
-Arch de Triumph (pm)

....then a final Friday 11 days later)

Fri:
-Afternoon train from Metz
-Galeries Lafayette
-Opera & Grands Boulevards area
-Final Walk Around

Any Thoughts?

Thanks,

MollyBrown


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Old Dec 2nd, 2007 | 03:12 PM
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Hello Molly. I think that your monday and friday are too hectic?
you can easily spend a few hours walking in the Marais, its beautiful with its boutique shops etc.
You should see monets lillys, at Musee O'rangerie, its closed mon and tues I think and it opens for the public at 12.30. Its in the tuiliries, close to the concorde stop.

I think you can add something to your sunday, like Jardin des plants and the mosque. Do visit the roof top of the institute de modern arabe, for views of the city. ( I live in this area, its great). From here a walk to St Germain , is 25 mins..

you are also seeing a lot of churches, is that something that you like?

Look at http://www.concierge.com/ for ideas as well.

If you need some suggestions for places to eat, I would love to recommend you some!

Bring a good map, I recommend the "Streetwise" brand, its easy to use, laminated and has all the major streets.

How abt Champs Elysee? are you coming here christmas time??

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Old Dec 2nd, 2007 | 03:23 PM
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Thanks ash - good suggestions! We will be in Paris at the start of May.

Its not that we are interested in churches per se....I figured we'd mostly just "pop" in and out of the majority and take a look around the outside architecture.

I notice I forgot to list the Latin Quarter in there too. We will want to walk about that area too.

I think we could use a book that focuses in just on Paris and various walking routes. Its hard to visualize how much ground we will cover. I know in my first trip I was not planned enough and found myself wandering in a very unorganized fashion that seemed to not maximize the time available.

Thanks!

MB
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Old Dec 2nd, 2007 | 03:47 PM
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If you don't mind spending a lot of time planning you can put together some very nice "walks" yourself. There are several entire books devoted to "walks in Paris", plus all the major guidebooks (in print and online) will have some walks. I usually take several and add and subtract things that interest me and end up with a personalized "walk" for each area. It looks like you've already started to organize your time geographically which is good. Once you have a rough idea you can google map it to get exact lengths, etc. But how much you can cover at one time depends more on how long you stop at things, more so than how many miles the walk is.

You have quite a few day trips planned, you might be short changing your time in Paris itself. While most of your daytrips are only an hour or so by train outside of the city, you have to figure in waiting for trains, and schedules, etc. Every trip to Paris (I've been 5 times) I've planned for day trips and most of the time I've ended up skipping them in favor of more time in Paris itself. If I were you I'd drop two of the four (and Disneyland Paris would be the first thing I'd skip, but that's just me).

My photo gallery is arranged sort of geographically, starting on the Ile de la cite and Ile St Louis, then going to the 5th, 6th, 7th, 3rd-4th, 1st-2nd, and then Montmartre and the outlying areas. You might get some ideas from looking at it, it's at pbase.com/annforcier

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Old Dec 2nd, 2007 | 04:37 PM
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Just asking..is Disneyland a must? I have been to Paris three times..the first visit was on a tour so was short but I did see quite a bit, the second was for a week, so had six days actually, and last year was nine days. I really thought that nine days would be a lot of time, and I'll tell you the time just flew and I didn't do at least a third of the things I had planned. It takes time to get places, to find places, and then you find something interesting and you're only going to be a minute and pretty soon you've spent an hour. I think some of your days seem a bit full.
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Old Dec 2nd, 2007 | 07:24 PM
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I just returned from my seoond trip to Paris, nine days but seven full considering flight time.

Gosh, your itinerary sounds very ambitious to me. But then there were six of us. Six women, and somedays by the time we all got gathered in the lobby after going back for umbrellas or cameras, etc., and then stopping into each Monoprix for batteries or gloves...well, you get my point. We did waste a lot of time, but we also did a lot of stopping during our foot excursions for a coffee or lunch or wine, etc. Lots of wine. And those were the best times. Lots of people watching and relaxing.

We were there over the metro strike so we had to foot it to most places, but even so we easily took in a lot: Louvre, Notre Dame, Eustacia, Montmarte (walking up and the funicular down), Eiffel Tower, Arch, Champs, Opera Garnier. We only took one side trip and that was to Versailles. And for evening entertainment we took the Seine boat trip and the Moulin Rouge. Yikes, I know...so very touristy, but most of our group was there for their first time.

But even with our limited agenda, we were busy every minute of the day and evening but we didn't feel unduly rushed. But like I said, we took a lot of bistro and shopping breaks.
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Old Dec 2nd, 2007 | 09:26 PM
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I don't see any major problems with an ambitious itinerary if you have the stamina to keep up with it. In any case, the details will work themselves out once you arrive.

Age and energy have a lot to do with it. Many people are looking at your list through eyes that are 60 years old or more. If you are significantly younger than that, I wouldn't worry about it.
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Old Dec 2nd, 2007 | 09:36 PM
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Your itinerary is hectic but certainly doable. But I do question taking 4 day trips (if one includes Vincennes) out of your 8 days in Paris. That may be fine for you since you have been before. But your DH has not been to Paris. I might think about dropping one or two of the day trips and spend that time in the city.
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Old Dec 3rd, 2007 | 04:07 AM
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Hi MB,

I think that you realize that you are overplanned, but that's OK as long as you realize that you can't see everything in one visit.

Why Disneyland?

Why so many daytrips?

You might find these threads helpful:

Paris Superthread
http://www.fodors.com/forums/threads...p;tid=34519236

100 Great Things to Do in Paris
http://fodors.com/forums/threadselec...mp;tid=1277898

Degas’s Paris Walks
http://fodors.com/forums/threadselec...p;tid=34712768

Jacquemart-Andre’ Museum http://tinyurl.com/p9pol

Enjoy your visit.


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Old Dec 3rd, 2007 | 05:07 AM
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Its quite fun to just wander, and discover things, as you walk, rather than plan every minute, for me personally!

if you want ot do the latin quater, than you can do the pantheon, walk from throught he latin quater, then come to Jardin des plants, mosque etc.
Or do latin quater when you do Cluny..

I love rides, but disneyland here is ok, if you dont really have it, just spend it in Paris!!

just a suggestion.
May will be a great time to visit.
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Old Dec 3rd, 2007 | 05:21 AM
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When you visit the Pantheon and the Sorbonne area on Thursday you will be in the Latin Quarter, no need to add it in somewhere else.

On Tuesday, you are hopping around a bit by throwing in the catacombs. Sainte Chapelle and the Conciergerie are close to the Marais, and you could pass the Deportation Memorial in between them, but the catacombs are in a different direction entirely. If you really want to leave the catacombs in, maybe you could go there first.

Ash, even if Molly doesn't ask for your dining suggestions, I would like to see them.
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Old Dec 3rd, 2007 | 07:05 AM
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Thank you all for your replies! I think we are seeing the wisdom of cutting one day trip. Decisions, Decisions.

Florida in the United States is not convenient, nor on our list of travel destination musts.... although we would like to see Disneyland. We know its not cultural, but thought it would be a lot of fun.

Rouen or Troyes....I agree that one daytrip need to go - but which?

Great links and great suggestions - thank you all! Ash we are always open to restaurant suggestions - being budget travelers mind you.

As I turn to the pile of work on my desk, May seem so far away....hmpf.

Cheers,

MollyBrown
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Old Dec 3rd, 2007 | 09:21 AM
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The French version of Disneyland is indeed fun. I will not criticize you for including it.
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Old Dec 3rd, 2007 | 12:35 PM
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Molly:
I'm looking at your itinerary with great interest as we're also going for a week next May and you gave me some more good ideas.

Isabel, your Paris photos are fantastic!
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Old Dec 3rd, 2007 | 01:15 PM
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If you are a photographer, you might want to consider Pere Lachaise cemetary. We just got back a few weeks ago and were there during the transit strikes and walked an average of 8 miles a day. Our photos from Pere Lachaise were taken on a cold, rainy day and they turned out gorgeous. The cemetary itself is one of the most fascinating and beautiful I have ever seen. Then again, I am a graveyard lover!
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Old Dec 3rd, 2007 | 06:04 PM
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Well, I am sitting here revising our Paris plans and I just have to say thank you Ira for posting the link to that "Degas Walks" thread - how fantastically helpful! And of course thank you Degas if you happen to see this!!

You have all give us some great ideas. I am a photography nut nolefan - thank you for the cemetary suggestion.

Best Wishes,

MollyB
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Old Dec 3rd, 2007 | 07:19 PM
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Did I overlook it or is a daytrip to Versailles not included?

Perhaps you visited Versaille on yoru first trip. I'd say it definately deserves at least a half day.
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Old Dec 3rd, 2007 | 09:39 PM
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Agree with CathyM about Versailles, and you can see it only in France.
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Old Dec 4th, 2007 | 12:01 AM
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Hi Molly
In the Marias, ( I just love this area), there is a place called Chez Jenou, its a small cute place, if you are on a budget, do the lunch there. Its provincial food.
The address and tel # are :
2 Roger Verlomme
75003 tel 01 42 72 28 41

Also, in the Marais,
L'As du FallafelAddress 34 rue des Rosiers, Paris, 75004
Phone 01-48-87-63-60
Price Complete meals for under $10
Reader Rating
(5 stars, 12 votes)Rate This


New York Times Review

The falafel sandwich here contains the requisite super-crisp, garlicky chickpea fritters, with creamy hummus, lightly pickled red cabbage (something between slaw and kraut), salted cucumbers, fried eggplant and just-hot-enough harissa. This is all piled into a pita in such quantities that eating it is an adventure in napkin management. You can make for a slightly neater experience by eating in, but aside from the cramped tables and the brusque though not unfriendly service, there is something about this sandwich that begs for it to be eaten outdoors.

You could pretend to be a European teenager and get fries on top, but then you would definitely need extra hummus and harissa, and the mess is further compounded. You might also think about a shwarma — a similar sandwich with lamb (6 euros) — but this is your chance to go meat-free and love it, so why not?

One thing you should know: You have to order from and pay the cashier on the right (a falafel is 4 euros, about $5.35 at $1.34 to the euro) before offering your receipt to the guys on the left, who produce your sandwich — a process that is fun to witness.


A must eat is ice cream in Berthillon, in Île St.-Louis .

I would suggest that you look at the newyorktimes.com
as well as concierge.com

just for ideas!

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Old Dec 4th, 2007 | 09:21 AM
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I've been on a lot of day trips from Paris, and if you have to choose between Rouen and Troyes, I would choose Rouen. I think there is more of interest to do and see, and more historical interest. At least for me, you could feel differently. Troyes is a nice town but I wouldn't consider it a must-see for anyone who hasn't been to France many times. If you are not at all interested in Joan of Arc history or the Hundred Years War, you might not think so.
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