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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 08:27 AM
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Paris advice

Our family will be in Paris for a few days in July. Sadly, we will only have two days to explore the beauty of Paris. We will be in the city on a Sunday/Monday.

I have done some research and have ideas of what we'd like to see. I've also asked my children what they would like to see to make sure they are included. I've read many itineraries and looked at many sites/books about traveling to Paris with children. Ours are in the "tween" age frame, are good walkers and interested in museums and history. They have studied Paris at school and will be keen for the two days. However, I do not want to overload the days so they are exhausted and do not remember the experience!

Two priorities are the Luxembourg Gardens and the Eiffel Tower. I've heard the gardens are beautiful. My children definitely want to tour the Eiffel Tower.

I would also like to visit Musee D'Orsay and the Louvre, although it would be brief. I know that hours could (and should) be spent in both, but this is not doable. We will just be afforded a visit to each to see a few items pre-chosen. I would like to factor 2 hours each museum, one per day. This is highly controversial on this forum, but it is something our entire family wishes: a brief glimpse is better than none.

We would also like to do the walk to see the Champs-'Elysees and the Arc de Triomphe. We would also like to see the outside Notre Dame but understand a tour takes a long time.
Lastly, we would love to do a Seine River cruise. Possibly this cruise covers the sights just listed?

Our hotel is a 30 minute train ride from downtown Paris, so we will factor this into our day. Realistically we will have from 10:00 am - 4:00 pm in the city for two days. Any courageous souls want to take a stab at some suggestions of how to organize our days?

Thank you in advance.
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 08:33 AM
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I don't see anything wrong with spending two hours in a museum, I do it all the time. It just can be expensive that way as some Paris museums aren't cheap (ie, the Orsay and Louvre). But at least your kids won't pay.

You can't see much of any sight from a Seine cruise. You are on the river which is much below ground level. So you can see some big buildings right along the Seine, like Notre Dame, and the bridges. You should get a view of the Eiffel Tower. You certainly can't see the Champs-Elysees from the Seine, nor the Arc (if you see the top of the Arc, it's pretty far away, but I rather doubt even that). I suppose you can see the Louvre or Orsay from the Seine, I don't recall, but if you do, it won't be that impressive due to the distance and perspective and would be the top of the buildings.
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 08:49 AM
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Why only 10-4 if you have two days? In July it's light out till after 10pm in Paris. I can see not wanting to exhaust yourselves but you are only talking half days. When my daughters were "tweens" we did a couple days in Paris and they were able to go from 8 or 9 am till well after dark.

Another question - you say you want to "tour" the Eiffel Tower. See it from up close definitely, but to go up in means waiting on a long line in July and is just not worth it in my opinion. Total waste of half of one of your precious days. Same for the Arc de Triomphe. Do you need to climb up it, or just see it?

My suggestion would be get to the Louve first thing, spend your two hours, then walk through the Tuilleries Garden to Place de la Concord, which is the start of the Champs-Elysees. You get a great view of the Arc du Triomphe from there. Then I'd walk along the Seine to the Eiffel Tower. If you still want to go up in it, and you really only have till 4pm that will fill that day.

The other day start at the D'Orsay for your two hours, walk along the Seine to Ile de la Cite and see Notre Dame. You can just walk in it without a tour. If you want to climb the tower (in my mind that is better than either the Eiffel Tower or the Arc du Triomph for a "climbing" experience) then you do have to wait in line. Then walk down Boul St Mich to Luxembourg Gardens.

If you can stay in Paris till after dinner at least one of your days, an evening cruise is wonderful.

Personally, I think the best part of Paris is walking through some of the neighborhoods, my favorite is the 5th (Latin Quarter), but the Marais and St Germain are nice too. And Montmaratre and Sacre Coeur are also wonderful. If you can stretch your time till dark each night and forgo climbing any towers you'd have time for those things.
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 09:04 AM
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Thank you both for your replies.
*Christina - thanks for the words on the brief museum tours. I was bracing myself for harsh words on only 2 hours in the Louvre!
Thanks also for the thoughts on the Seine cruise. I thought we'd see more sights.

*Isabel - thanks for your suggestions. I'm not sure how late the transportation runs to the area we are staying, so I thought I'd pick 4:00 as a safe bet. Plus, our Paris exursion is at the tail end of 4 days in London and then a very port-intensive 10 night Mediterranean cruise. I'm prepared for a tired family!

We just want to see the Arc de Triomphe. We don't need to climb it. I'd love to, but I hear the lines are long.

Thank you for the advice on Notre Dame. That's good to know!

If we prebook tickets to the Eiffel Tower, does it save time? Our kids have their heart set on actually going in it. I'd hate to spend half a day in line, but I wish to respect their biggest wish of the entire European vacation

One big wrinkle in our plans... we will be there Sunday and Monday. I understand the Musee D'Orsay is closed on Monday, so we will have to reverse the days you suggested. That would have us at Notre Dame on a Sunday... is it still possible to walk in and climb the tower?

How close are the neighborhoods to walk through? I'd love that. Our children are in French Immersion and are really looking forward to being immersed in the true French culture!
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 09:17 AM
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So, if we follow this suggestion:

Sunday:
Start at the D'Orsay for your two hours, walk along the Seine to Ile de la Cite and see Notre Dame. You can just walk in it without a tour. Then walk down Boul St Mich to Luxembourg Gardens.

Monday:
Get to the Louve first thing, spend your two hours, and then walk through the Tuilleries Garden to Place de la Concord, which is the start of the Champs-Elysees. You get a great view of the Arc du Triomphe from there. Then I'd walk along the Seine to the Eiffel Tower.

Unless we decide to tour Notre Dame, I think we could fit something in after the Luxembour Gardens on the Sunday? Anything suggested within walking distance? Perhaps a neighborhood to explore?

Also, I forgot to ask... which Seine River cruise is recommended and where do you find it?

Thanks
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 09:17 AM
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>>>is it still possible to walk in and climb the tower?<<

Very long lines/ In Sept/Oct when we were last there, people were sitting on the sidewalk reading books/magazines while they were waiting.

We've spent many months in Paris, and really enjoyed the Seine cruise on our Sept/Oct trip (were there this past Christmas too). Great views of Orsay & Louvre, bridges, Notre Dame, buildings along the Seine etc. I would definitely try to fit it in. It was much better than I expected. My wife took lots of great pictures from the cruise.

We stay close to the the Eiffel Tower & pass by it many times on the way to/from opther venues. Monsterous lines mid-day. Don't know about reservations. Go VERY early in the day for the best chance of minimum lines.

Stu Dudley
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 09:24 AM
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IMO, a Seine river cruise is a good thing. It gives you a good view of some of the monuments and after walking so much, it's nice to sit down for an hour and see the city.

Luxemborg Gardens is the best on Sunday,there is always a lot going on.

D'Orsay is much more doable than the Louvre for a short time span, although a walk through the Louvre plaza is memorable.

We loved The Eiffel Tower at night, much shorter lines and stunning when it lights up.

Notre Dame is also a must and there is some great street entertainment there. Then also walk down Rue St. Louis en Isle to Amorino---fabulous gelato and they make each cone in the shape of a flower. There is a lot of controversy between Berthillon and Amorino, after many trips to Paris we just prefer Amorino.

The Arch de Triumph is another good monument for a 1st visit, but we find The Champs just a huge, long, wide boulevard with stores you would see in N.Y. or Chicago, very uninteresting IMO.

The Marais and Place Vosges are both wonderful as is The Carnavalet museum(quite small and lovely).

An example itinerary would be:

Sunday---D'Orsay in the morning, then Luxemborg Gardens, maybe with lunch at the cafe in the park, then a walk in the St. Germain, St.Michael area, followed by a river cruise and the Eiffel Tower (again we prefer it at night, but maybe you would prefer to go during the day).

Monday---The Arch de Triumph and, if you must, walk down the Champs to The Tuilleries and the Louvre Plaza, then along the Seine to Notre Dame, down Rue St. Louis en Isle (maybe grab a burre,succre crepe at the window and a cone at Amorino) then through The Marais to Place Vosges for a bite to eat.Followed by The Carnavalet.

Again, just my suggestions of someplace to start on an itinerary. There is so much to see in Paris, whatever you do will please you.
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 09:24 AM
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be forewarned that the elevator to the top of the Eiffel Tower is very claustrophobic..if you are that way inclined

if you are counting on no lines at the Louvre because you are there early...I wouldn't count on it. That said I think oyu can see "highlights" in 2 hours, especially if (as we did) you choose what you want to see beforehand and have a plan
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 09:31 AM
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Very near Notre Dame is Sainte Chapelle. I still remember the slides my French teacher showed us in high school of the gorgeous stained glass windows there, and it was one of my top priorities when I first went to Paris. Very worth the visit, although you will have to wait in line at security, since Sainte Chapelle is located in the same building complex that contains the courthouse.

Nothing wrong with two hours in a museum. Just take a look at the web sites and plan where you want to go so you don't waste your time looking around at the parts you are not interested in. This is especially true at the Louvre, where some galleries are closed on certain days. You should check the schedule to make sure the things you want to see are in galleries that are open the days you want to visit. The schedule of room closures is on the web site:

http://www.louvre.fr/llv/pratique/ho...86&bmLocale=en

In the Musee d'Orsay, if you are mostly interested in the Impressionist paintings, they are on the top floor. There is an escalator at one end of the ground floor that will take you directly to the top.

The Latin Quarter is on the left bank directly across the Seine from Notre Dame. I suggest you look at some guide books to get a sense of the neighborhoods.
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 09:34 AM
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http://www.vedettesdupontneuf.com/

This is the boat tour that we like . It leaves from the Pont Neuf. We have done this both day and night.
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 09:42 AM
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http://www.bateaux-mouches.fr/lang-pref/en/

Here's the website for the popular Bateau-Mouches boat trip that leaves from the Eiffel Tower. We've never done this one, but many people do.

You can read trip reviews on both river cruises on Trip Advisor to help make your trip.

I have to add, the one we didn't like was Bat'O bus. Yes, you can off and on at different places, but there is no commentary and it really is just a bus with people pushing to get in and out at all the stops.

If you Google Seine River cruises you can find more.
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 09:48 AM
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The Vedettes du Pont Neuf referenced above leaves from a spot close to Sainte Chapelle, and could easily be combined with your tour of Notre Dame and your stroll through the Latin Quarter.

On the website there is a discount coupon you can print at home to bring with you.
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 09:54 AM
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I'd do the Seine tour at night...bridges, buildings and Eiffel lit up. You will see the Louvre from the Seine.
For Louvre, I'd arrive first thing in the morning, entrance via Metro station.

Ditto for early morning to Eiffel.

Champs is... unimpressive IMHO. Nice views from Place de la Concorde end, and views from top of AdT, but apart from that...

As an itineray, perhaps...

Louvre/Tuileries, Champs and Arc are geographically well bunched. Add in Palais Royal time permitting. I would skip lunch on Champs, maybe just Metro to St Paul and walk over to Ile St Louis for lunch (Brasserie de L'Ile perhaps)

After lunch St Chappelle and ND. Diner...then cruise from Vedettes du Pont Neuf which is nearby. Some good dinner places on Ile St Louis also (Tastevin perhaps).

This is a FULL day...

Next day Eiffel, RER to Orsay, then walk into St Germain area. Lunch, wander...and end up at Luxembourg gardens

Another full day
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 10:07 AM
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We have done the Vedettes cruise several times. They have an online discount coupon, but you can also prepay online which is an even deeper discount. You don't need a set date or time for that either. You just take your printed out tickets and show them when you want to take the cruise.
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 10:25 AM
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I might also do my first approach to Eiffel via Trocadero metro stop on the Right Bank.Walk in between the Palais de Chaillot buildings...magical
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 10:41 AM
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Thank you all so much for your wonderful advice!! This is such a great forum.

I just looked online at the Eiffel Tower webpage and apparently they have a new service of prebooking tickets online over the computer. You need to state your time and date. That sounds much better than waiting in line for hours!

If we choose to do the Orsay and then walk along the Seine to the Eiffel Tower (via a glimpse of the Arc at the start of the Champs), how long a walk would we expect? It's hard to judge from the map, having never been to Paris. TY.
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 10:43 AM
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Agree that with so little time you don't want to waste it standing in lines if it can be avoided. Here is the website for Eiffel Tower reservations: http://ticket.toureiffel.fr/index-se...-pg1-lgen.html

Also, plan to enter the Louvre through the metro station as Michel_Paris suggested, or the Carrousel entrance (you can exit through the pyramid if you want the chance to be "inside" that).
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 10:47 AM
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Walk from ET to Orsay....20 minutes??
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 11:01 AM
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Nah...longer than that. 45 mins -1hr

Mappy.com is a good site to calculate walking times
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Old Feb 21st, 2010 | 11:05 AM
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My first time in Paris was just for 4 hours. But, it was worth all the trouble. Have been back 5 times since then and
enjoy it more each time. The last trip was in April and it was beautiful, the weather was outstanding, we did nothing but walk, enjoy and eat. Lovely, do nothing trip. In fact I'm sitting here in one of my Paris sweatshirt souviners, and loved reading about other peoples plans.
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