Search

Paris with Kids

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Jun 28th, 2004 | 08:57 AM
  #21  
 
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 434
Likes: 0
Given only four days to work with, I would definitely skip Versailles -- especially since you're doing other daytrips. It will be hot, and although it's not difficult to get to, it would suck up most of a whole day. Museums might be a good way to get inside when it's hot. The nighttime boat tour of the Seine is fun, too.
Carmen is offline  
Old Jun 28th, 2004 | 09:03 AM
  #22  
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 6,374
Likes: 0
missypie; my 12-year old read the Da Vinci Code, and is now excited about visiting the Louvre and St Sulpice. She thought it was a great book.
Tulips is offline  
Old Jun 28th, 2004 | 09:59 AM
  #23  
 
Joined: Nov 2003
Posts: 4,874
Likes: 0
We arrived on a Saturday morning and left on a Sunday morning...we had 7 non-travel days, plus the Saturday. We spent 2 days at Disneyland Paris, giving us 5 days for touring Paris.

Arrival day was a problem and I don't have any advice. Everyone was very very tired. We stocked the flat with food, ate lunch, then went to St. Chapelle and a few other places. I'd always heard to never take a nap on the first day, so I didn't let anyone. I would have done fine with just going to bed early, but the kids were totally wiped out. I have a picture of the three kids and my husbgand totally asleep on the Seine River cruise!
missypie is offline  
Old Jun 28th, 2004 | 10:05 AM
  #24  
 
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 563
Likes: 0
Tulips, just a reminder that the final "clue" in DaVinci Code is in the shopping mall under and to the west of the Louvre (entrance on southside of rue Rivoli), not in the Louvre museum itself. It was fun to see the parquet floor in the Louvre, the line in the floor of St. Sulpice and the obelisk to which it leads, and the inverted pyramid in the mall.
palette is offline  
Old Jun 29th, 2004 | 02:29 PM
  #25  
 
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 104
Likes: 0
My 16 and 13 year old are girls, youngest (10) is a boy. The oldest wanted to go to Versailles, as she'd studied some of that history, and she enjoyed the inside rooms. The younger two weren't very interested, but all liked the gardens and the chance they provided to run, zip up a different staircase etc. We rode so often on the Metro that the trip to Versailles was fun because we saw some scenery above ground, since we took a bus there. But it isn't essential, and might work better with older kids.
eeyann is offline  
Old Jul 11th, 2004 | 04:16 PM
  #26  
 
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 1,019
Likes: 0
A friend does this with her kids when she wants to visit art museums.

First, they go to the museum store and find postcards of the art on display. The kids can pick the postcards they like (limit the number).

Next, they take a museum map and the kids have to find the art and direct the family to it. It's kind of like a puzzle and gets the kids really involved. The kicker is you get to choose some postcards too so if there's something you really want to see, be sure to get a postcard of it.

It's kind of a museum scavenger hunt.
SalB is offline  
Old Jul 12th, 2004 | 05:04 AM
  #27  
Original Poster
 
Joined: May 2004
Posts: 274
Likes: 0
Thanks for the museum tip. I have come across the postcard game before and was thinking of using it. Good to hear about another experience with it.
Europewithkids is offline  
Old Jul 12th, 2004 | 07:41 AM
  #28  
 
Joined: Jul 2003
Posts: 700
Likes: 0
At the Museum of Natural History, ,near
Austerlitz station, there is an exposition about the mammouth which is terrific-good for doers and lookers...
All the others given options are good, specially Eiffel tower-but arrive early if you want the lift(by feet, there is no time to wait...),
Parc de la Villette and there is an exposition about the sun and the climatic changes(interactive expositi-
ons).
The Palais de la Découverte, near the Grand Palais is a good experience(the exposition about the predators will be out, but the one about the animal way of communication will be still active, also interactive and from here, you can go to the arc de triomphe...).
For all the family a lunch at the restaurant of the centre pompidou is a good experience, less crowdy than at night, not too expensive and view is terrific and the feminin personal a must for the teens...It's closed as the museum at tuesday...
Finally a nice small museum and so not
too....much for the teens is the Marmottan museum about the Monet's painting very interesting.
Finally at the musée du Luxembourg, there is an exposition about the self-portrait which is very nice and not too long.
Try also the "passages"-there is a poster in Fodors european forum about them and you can have an half day exploring this interesting "covered streets" of Paris-but ...beware, there are a lot of small shops...so, can be dangerous for the budget...(not too because prices aren't too high..).
Erik.
monpetit is offline  
Related Topics
Thread
Original Poster
Forum
Replies
Last Post
skatterfly
Europe
11
Mar 3rd, 2013 05:24 AM
apoolshark
Europe
7
Jan 4th, 2007 01:18 PM
kdk1965
Europe
49
Feb 16th, 2006 11:41 AM
mackenzie
Europe
8
Mar 2nd, 2005 11:45 AM
waterloo
Europe
12
Nov 6th, 2003 10:09 AM

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are On



Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement -