Portugal - Hotels and Itinerary
#1
Original Poster
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 21
Likes: 0
Portugal - Hotels and Itinerary
Will be heading to Portugal for the first 2 weeks of July as a honeymoon.
We booked our flights in and out of Lisbon, but nothing else at this point.
I have read about so many interesting cities in Portugal I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions on places to see and hotels to look in to.
The current plan is to spend the first few days in Lisbon to adjust to the time change and then go explore.
Your thoughts/suggestions are appreciated!
We booked our flights in and out of Lisbon, but nothing else at this point.
I have read about so many interesting cities in Portugal I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions on places to see and hotels to look in to.
The current plan is to spend the first few days in Lisbon to adjust to the time change and then go explore.
Your thoughts/suggestions are appreciated!
#4
Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 190
Likes: 0
Our itinerary arrived and departed from Lisbon as well.
We did the following loop:
- arrival at Lisbon, drive to Obidos
- Fatima
- Salamanca (Spain)
- Segovia (Spain)
- Madrid (Spain)
- Toledo (Spain)
- Granada (Spain)
- Costa del Sol (Malaga)
- Sevilla (Spain)
- Faro (Portugal)
- Lagos (Portugal)
- Lisbon (Portugal)
Don't miss the Algarve! They have the most beautiful beaches that I have ever seen.
We did the following loop:
- arrival at Lisbon, drive to Obidos
- Fatima
- Salamanca (Spain)
- Segovia (Spain)
- Madrid (Spain)
- Toledo (Spain)
- Granada (Spain)
- Costa del Sol (Malaga)
- Sevilla (Spain)
- Faro (Portugal)
- Lagos (Portugal)
- Lisbon (Portugal)
Don't miss the Algarve! They have the most beautiful beaches that I have ever seen.
#5
Original Poster
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 21
Likes: 0
Thanks for the responses!
bobthenavigator, is that a thumbs down or a thumbs up for the Algarve?
Anyone have an experience with rentals cars in Portugal? I have heard Portugal is one of the more dangerous places to drive in Europe, but the train network does not look as thorough as I have experienced in other European coutries and makes me think a car might be necessary.
bobthenavigator, is that a thumbs down or a thumbs up for the Algarve?
Anyone have an experience with rentals cars in Portugal? I have heard Portugal is one of the more dangerous places to drive in Europe, but the train network does not look as thorough as I have experienced in other European coutries and makes me think a car might be necessary.
#6
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 2,260
Likes: 0
The pros of the Algarve are: turistic resorts, night live, extensive usage of English language, lots of tourists, nice beaches, mild temperature, sunny days, higher sea water temperature, cosmopolitan atmosphere.
The pros of proper Portugal are the opposite, less tourists, quiet night live, more sense of history, castles, rural houses restored and adapted to tourism, open spaces, more authenticity.
The choice depends very much on the kind of person you are.
The pros of proper Portugal are the opposite, less tourists, quiet night live, more sense of history, castles, rural houses restored and adapted to tourism, open spaces, more authenticity.
The choice depends very much on the kind of person you are.
#7
Joined: May 2004
Posts: 651
Likes: 0
We rented a car for two weeks in April and had a great time. We found the roads in great shape with little traffic and we thought the drivers better than in most places in the US. If you are comfortable with a stick shift, flexible enough to accept roundabouts over intersections and don't freak out when you get lost I think you would have a great time exploring Portugal via car. (Being able to parallell park would also be a plus.)As everyone suggests on this forum do not rent a car until you leave Lisbon, as you do not need one and will just have to pay a high fee to park it.
One other thing. My husband does all the driving and I the navigating because up until this last trip I considered myself a pretty good navigator. This time I found that I either knew exactly where we were or had absolutely no clue! I would think seriously about renting a GPS system next time. In your case as newlyweds this tip may save your marriage.
On a different note one of our favorite areas was the coastline south of Lisbon. It is just beautiful, small towns and not many people. Enjoy!
One other thing. My husband does all the driving and I the navigating because up until this last trip I considered myself a pretty good navigator. This time I found that I either knew exactly where we were or had absolutely no clue! I would think seriously about renting a GPS system next time. In your case as newlyweds this tip may save your marriage.
On a different note one of our favorite areas was the coastline south of Lisbon. It is just beautiful, small towns and not many people. Enjoy!
Trending Topics
#9
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 16,525
Likes: 0
Here is my Portugal photo gallery, but they are all old slides I converted to digital so the quality is not as good as some:
http://www.slowphotos.com/photo/show...y.php?cat=3832
http://www.slowphotos.com/photo/show...y.php?cat=3832
#14
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 224
Likes: 0
Bob the Navigator, Do you speak Spanish? You seem to have traveled Europe extensively and I wondered if my husband and I would have trouble in Spain or Portugal as we only speak English (and a very limited amount of German and Italian). Thanks in advance for any help you can provide. 

#15
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 16,525
Likes: 0
After 23 trips to Europe---including 13 to Italy and 6 to Spain/Portugal---I still have a basic tourist vocab in both Spanish and Italian. I am not a linguist--never have been. But, you should learn a basic 50 word vocab and be able to read basic signs. My son is fluent in Espanol and owns a townhouse in Merida, mexico.




