Thursday, March 29, 2012

Christmas Theme

I am loking to book a trip on Nov 8th for 5 nights. Will xmas decorations be up then ?





Thanks




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They may just be starting to go up - however Halloween season is advertised until 4th Nov and then the Bonfire spectacular is 5th, 7th and 9th with official Christmas season to start on the 10th Nov so you should catch the end of one and the start of another.





You%26#39;ve got the best of both worlds!




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Removed on: 6:16 pm, August 20, 2009

HELP w/ booking Bluevan

I am going to book Bluevan roundtrip online. It asks me when I want picked up at the airport. My flight arrives 8:45am Wed 2/21, should I put 9:30am? Is that enough time?





Also on my return to the airport Sunday our flight leaves 11:45 amSunday 3/25 on Delta. What time should I give them for pickup?





Thanks





BJ




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Hi BJ,



I take Bluevan all the time and they%26#39;re great. It all depends on how much time you will need for passport control and getting luggage. With the shuttle, you just call them from any pay phone (no charge) when you get to the proper door at the proper terminal for pick-up. I would probably give yourself a later pick-up time and if you%26#39;re early, it won%26#39;t matter, you just call them and they should arrive quickly.





With all the horror stories about so many different shuttle services, I feel very lucky never having had any problems with Bluevan. I even missed a flight once and didn%26#39;t get in till the following day. As soon as I called them from CDG, they were right there to pick us up...no problem. I love that kind of service.





Hope that helps, Good luck



Annie B




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Hi BJ,



Sorry about skipping the second part of the question. I would ask for a pick-up for 6:30-7:00. That gives time for the shuttle%26#39;s other pick-ups, and on a Sun. there shouldn%26#39;t be too much traffic. I always think it%26#39;s better to arrive at the airport dreadfully early. Better safe than sorry.



Annie B




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Removed on: 7:17 pm, August 20, 2009

couple of questions

Hi





1. are there any brewery/alcohol/distillery tours in paris?



2. Are there any tours of chocolate factories etc



3. How long will our flight from Manchester to Paris take (I cant find this on the net anywhere)



4. Any recommendations for where we can go for a bit of a dance. My Boyfriend has decided he wants to go out, get drunk and have a dance to cheesy music! It would be this sunday or monday night





Thanks and sorry about the odd questions




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1. There is a wine museum (www.museeduvinparis.com). It%26#39;s perhaps a bit cheesy, but probably interesting nonetheless.





2. Paris is a very urban city and property values are much to high to make room for factories. Besides, French people eat chocolates produced in small artisanal %26quot;laboratoires%26quot; or %26quot;ateliers%26quot;. Sometimes, you can convince a chocolatier to show you his studio, but your French must be excellent and you must be absolutely charming.




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Manchester to Paris will take about 1 - 1.5 hours. To check, just go to the BA or Air France website and go through the process of reserving a random flight (don%26#39;t worry - until you give you credit card details, there%26#39;s no risk of accidently booking anything)




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A company called 2LO arranges chocolates schools:



http://www.2lo.fr/rubrique.php?id=1





So does La Maison du Chocolat - but I cannot get you the dates:



lamaisonduchocolat.com/fr/mdcs/parcours.php





Do a google for chocolat/ degustation/ atelier - or similar words.





I don%26#39;t know precisely about your flight, but wouldn%26#39;t you say about 1 hour 45 minutes ?




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Removed on: 10:17 am, August 24, 2009

Travel from airport to l'odeon area

Which is the cheapest and best way to get from Orly airport to the Odeon metro stop




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Maybe the Orlybus to Denfert-Rochereau, then Metro line 4 to Odeon?




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Removed on: 5:22 am, August 21, 2009

can anybody suggest a small hotel near Lyon?

we are landing in Lyon and would like to head directly to a village south of the big city to crash before heading further south. Any suggestions would be great. We haven%26#39;t travelled in this area before. Thanks




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Take a look at www.logis-de-france.fr/fr/recherch/index.htm. You can use their map to choose your hotel.




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You have already asked this question on Grenoble forum. I confirm my advices with the 2 options : Condrieu that is a 40%26#39; drive from the airport, Mirmande that is more or less 1h1/2. You may also check Vienne, that is not far south.





You%26#39;ll have anyway to drive at least 30%26#39; south because the close south of Lyon is very industrial (lots of chemistry plants !) and not nice at all.





My previous answer below :





You don%26#39;t want to spend the night in Lyon to get the opportunity to visit Lyon, do you ? You%26#39;re wrong, I think Lyon is really worth to be visited (it is a UNESCO Heritage Site).



If you want to drive south right away, you may stop in Condrieu in the Rhöne valley, a region of famous vineyard. It is a 35%26#39; drive from Lyon Airport. There is a nice restaurant and hotel there. Have a look on their website to see if you like it :



http://www.hotel-beaurivage.com



If I were you, I would prefer, either to stay in Lyon, or to drive a little bit further. I recommand a stop at Mirmande, that is a very beautiful village located in the northern part of Provence. Moreover you will find there a lot of nice guesthouses and B%26amp;B, for example : Les Fougères, La Maison de Marinette. Check this on the Mirmande Tourist Info site :



http://www.officetourismemirmande.com/



Driving south, you should stop in Avignon, Nîmes and Montpellier, before arriving at your destination.



You don%26#39;t say where you are going in The Roussillon, hopefully it is Collioure, that is a wonderful place with spendid lights (impressionist painters used to go there), don%26#39;t miss this place !



Wish you%26#39;ll have a nice holiday in our region (we loved Toronto where we spent 3 weeks with an home exchange) !




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thanks so much for your recommendations. we will definitely visit lyon on our way back as we arrive and leave from st. exupery airport. we are very excited to be visiting your region!! haven%26#39;t been able to find the 2 hotels you mentioned near mirmande, but will keep looking. We are visiting the village of Rousillon and will take your advice and visit collioure for sure.





Happy to hear you enjoyed your stay in Toronto! a house exchange is an appealing idea. did you arrange it through this forum??





Merci pour toutes.




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Here are the websites of the B%26amp;B I mentionned (you can click on %26quot;hotels%26quot; on the tourist info page to get more adresses in Mirmande) :





www.maisondemarinette.com/English/IndexE.html



mirmande-fougeres.com/accueil/uk_index.php





or in Cliousclat (we have been there once) :





www.latreillemuscate.com





I am happy that you plan to visit Lyon on your way back.





We organize our home exchanges with Intervac. It is a nice way to travel with kids.




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We will be traveling to France in May, and plan to spend two nights in Lyon. Can you recommend a small hotel or a B %26amp; B in Lyon itself?




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In order to be more accurate in my recommandations, could you please tell me what you mean with %26quot;small%26quot; hotel and what is the price range you have in mind ?





I f you are looking for a cheap hotel, try this one. It is very well located, on the very center of the city.





http://www.hotelbayard.fr/eng_index.htm





But you will may be expect more comfort or a more charming hotel. I suggest you have a look on the Lyon Tourist Info website :





http://www.en.lyon-france.com/





For a B%26amp;B, I like this one very much because the view is great; look on the website :





http://www.lyonguesthouse.com/us/index.htm





Enjoy your stay !




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Thanks, I%26#39;ve found the Lyon Tourist Office site most helpful. I, too, was charmed by the Lyon Guest House website, but the owner has not replied to either of the e-mails I sent. I found Artelit, a B %26amp; B, on the website http://www.likhom.com/anglais/ (linked from Lyon Tourist Office), and the owner replied almost immediately!




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Artelit is a very good choice too (but more expensive). It is in the Renaissance district , that is very beaufiful, and some distance away from the streets, that is very nice (as the neighbourhood is noisy as it is very touristical ).





Be careful with the restaurants in this neighborhood, a lot of them are %26quot;for tourists%26quot; and not good.





Enjoy !




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Removed on: 6:18 pm, August 21, 2009

Teenage shopper in Paris

Have been reading alll your postings and they are great but I need a solid lead on where to take a teenage shpaholic in Paris that fits her style without looking to American, doesn%26#39;t blow my plastic and that I can enjoy as well. She also loves jewelry.






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Bring her to the shops along the Blvd St. Michel...most of them are trendy and for young women.



A lot of people also like Zara, which you can find on the Champs Elysees. It%26#39;s originally a Spanish store but big in Paris.



Kookai is big with young girls. As is Morgan and La City.





Les




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Hmmmm.......Your teenager sounds like me, only she%26#39;s 4 decades younger. I%26#39;m sure she%26#39;ll find something she likes in Zara. I%26#39;m quite familiar with it since we have it here in Israel too, and the prices aren%26#39;t bad at all.




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My daughter and I just got back. She%26#39;s 13 going on 16. Liked Etam near the BHV on rue de Rivoli and loved Promod, various locations including near the BHV and also near the Opera house. Loved window shopping at the Bon Marche designer boutiques tho nothing purchase there. Good luck and have a great trip.




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Please adopt me. I want to become a shopoholic on your plastic too! LOL



To avoid looking %26quot; too American, %26quot; I guess that means the GAP is out LOL



I remember shopping down the Champs and finding lots of trendy stores along there, perhaps it is different now, I don%26#39;t shop much now. My 14 yr old son and I did shop for jeans for him, found some for about 150 dollars, and they were NOT the expensive ones!!!!!!!!!!!! I got off easy with a boy, you have a girl, second mortgage I%26#39;m thinking, unless you explain right now about the %26quot; conversion%26quot; !





Good luck and remember Paris is more then shopping, keep her busy at sights and hopefully you won%26#39;t have to sell your kidney to get her jewels too!!! LOL




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I too am taking my daughter in 3 weeks time and need advice on where you can get cheap retro vintage style stuff from, are there any markets and if so on what days, many thanks




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Try rue Etienne Marcel too. Specifically there is a Lollipops store that, on a recent trip, the 16 yr-old I was with went crazy for. She bought stuff for herself as well as all her friends there. And by all acounts, all the gifts were a raging success. I found it a lot of fun shopping with a teenager in Paris.




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Actually the Gap is incredibly popular in Paris. I have some 16 - 20 year old family friends in France who are rarely without their Gap tee-shirts and sweatshirts. So we%26#39;re all going to be wearing the same %26quot;uniform%26quot; soon!




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Try Pylones for funky but affordable jewelry. They sell these bracelets for about USD30 that are made of resin balls the size of big marbles. Each ball has a photo or drawing in it. Even my 14yo students -- all boys -- love this bracelet when I wear it! Pylones has locations throughout Paris. (We shopped at the one at 13 rue St. Croix des Bretonneries, Paris 75004, in the Marais.). Go to www.pylones.fr for more info.




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I agree the Gap is popular, but you can get the same stuff at home , we saw the actual Gap shirt I was wearing from home on sale in Paris, so it would be defeating the purpose of not looking %26quot; American%26quot; .




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Removed on: 12:26 am, August 22, 2009

Khakis??

I was reading a humorous article in a recent Budget Travel email discussing clothing items that define a tourist in Paris. I can understand that a baseball cap, white tennis shoes, and a messy sweatshirt probably would definitely define a tourist. The article also mentioned that khaki pants are rarely seen on Parisian men. What do you think of that? They are such a wardrobe staple here that it seems to be a strange concept.




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I think the article is right. I seldom see khaki here and I love it. The one time I wore a pair of khaki pants I fell very out of place. My French husband, however, occasionally wears a pair he bought in the States. He is one of those who wears what he wants.




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When my Parisian cousin visited New York last year, one of his priorities was purchasing Dockers. If I remember correctly, he bought 4 pairs. Needless to say he%26#39;s not really into fashion.




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It%26#39;s just so interesting to me. Are corduroys routinely worn by Parisian men?




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You may not see %26quot;khakis%26quot;, but I have seen khaki colored jeans and many other colors of jeans for that matter. Not a big fan of the tan jeans. Just my opinion though.




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There was a funny thread about this last summer--



tripadvisor.com/ShowTopic-g187147-i14-k66554…




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One hardly ever sees khakis being worn by men in Paris. Pants in khaki or beige color are acceptable and common, but they%26#39;re not generally made from cotton twill.





Corduroys are common.





Dockers are sold at the major department stores such as Printemps and BHV (can%26#39;t remember seeing them at GL), but they%26#39;re not the same as those sold in the US. They have a different cut and fabric.





The key between American and French casual/business wear pants is the cut and fabric. French pants make use of a much wider array of fabric textures, and they are never pleated. A man wearing pleated pants in Paris might as well have %26quot;American Tourist%26quot; tatooed on his forehead. French pants also tend to have a tighter fit in the seat and thigh, often have pocket openings that sit closer to the waist, and pockets that have a less angular slash than most American pants.




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Annette - that link was great! I%26#39;ve worked retail for many years so this topic is quite an education. American men of %26quot;a certain age%26quot; have great difficult letting go of their pleated, cuffed khakis. My husband is going to need a little guidance with his packing for our trip in a few weeks. He likes to feel that he looks nice, so will appreciate your input.




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From reading the posted thread, and other sources as well, can I conclude that %26quot;khakis%26quot; are defined not by so much by color, but by being a combination of: (a) pleated front, (b) cuffed, (c) cotton twill?





For older men who are not into jeans, what%26#39;s a good all-round pant type to not stick out as an American--dark, dress-pant type material? Here (U.S.) my husband is usually dresser than many of his colleagues (university), and continues with coat and tie for his teaching days. In warmer weather and when we%26#39;ve traveleled, he does wear something along the line of the infamous %26quot;khakis,%26quot; albeit he hates pleats and generally wears an uncuffed version. He likes and wears corduroy too, but for warmer weather and lighter travel, corduroys are defintely out.




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Who cares?





The key is that American men are not known for fashion coordination. The French and Italians put the idea to an entirely different level though. They have a habit of looking almost formal a lot of the time.





Even with khakis, it can be done, however. For an easy solution, walk into a Men%26#39;s Wearhouse. Their sales droids go through classes to figure stuff out.




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It%26#39;s weird, all this trouble to conceal our tourist condition?...I don%26#39;t think so.





I dress as comfortable and elegant as my luggage allows me.





Jeans, Khakis,Courduroy etc...as long as you know how to match, colors/fabrics/shoes/weather....you will blend in painlessly.

shopping at galleries lafayette

Has anyone shopped at galleries lafayette and what is your opinion ?? what do you feel is grossly overpriced and what a good value..I am mainly looking for fragrence,gifts for people back home..thanks ,Loretta




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Prices at Galeries Lafayette are typical department stores prices.



Many brands and styles are represented but it is definitely not a budget store.



Try to consolidate all your purchases in one day to benefit from the Duty free refund




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I have been there, but never shopped there. I can never actually FIND anything




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I agree. It%26#39;s pretty much the same old thing. BHV and even Monoprix are now owned by the mother corporation of GL and they%26#39;re slowly morphing into the same store but under different names. This week BHV opens their huge men%26#39;s store and at the same time downgrades their famous basement bricolage department. To us, the saddest result is the demise of the adorable little café bricolage under the stairs in the basement where we%26#39;ve enjoyed a thousand cafés. It will disappear in June.




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We went to Galleries Lafayette during our week in Paris in November (Thanksgiving Week). We awent to see the Christmas Decorations and let the kids have some breathing room from museums. Galleries Lafayette was extremely crowded. However, my 16 year old son did get a great pair of Vans that we still have not seen in Texas.




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The problem with GL, to which Wizard alluded, is that it%26#39;s nearly impossible to find anything. You can%26#39;t go to the store with a plan to buy a black v-neck sweater, because there is really no such thing as a %26quot;sweater department%26quot; with all the v-neck sweaters on the same shelves. You have to go check the Dior section to see what black v-necks are offered. And then you go to Façonnable. And then Sonia Rykiel (of course, she never makes anything in black, so you won%26#39;t find it there, anyway). It can take all day to make one simple purchase.





Printemps (at least the men%26#39;s store) is a bit easier to navigate, because they organize the store so that each floor has a different aesthetic (cutting edge city wear on one floor; elegant business attire on another; casual clothes on another, etc.).





I%26#39;m looking forward to the menswear store at BHV, but I didn%26#39;t realize the plans for the hardware department. Aside from Brico Café, Metromole, what are the changes?




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%26gt;%26gt; To us, the saddest result is the demise of the adorable little café bricolage under the stairs in the basement where we%26#39;ve enjoyed a thousand cafés. It will disappear in June. %26lt;%26lt;%26lt;



Is NOTHING sacred? This is, in its own way, as sad a passing as the loss of the Samaritaine%26#39;s rooftop café...



Ah well, plus ça change and où sont les neiges d%26#39;antan and other similar philosophical musings...




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Thank you all for your responses..Do any of you have a favorite department type store to shop.Running around the whole place is a definate turn off.Would much rather spend my time having lunch in the Luxenbourge Gardens...



So happy I posed the question..You have saved me a frustrating couple hours... merci beaucoup...Loretta




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C%26amp;A or TATI.





Both are more practical (and slightly downmarket). C%26amp;A is surprisingly good quality and value (Mrs Wiz swears by their black woollen slacks), and TATI is....... I dunno - would mad be unfair?





TATI rarely gets mentioned in here, which is a pity. Think along the lines of Chartier for clothing as far as organisation and asthetics is concerned. I have had some great bargains there, and they always seen to manage to have at least one totally impractical, wierd and ugly item that makes me want to reach for the wallet.




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I felt like GL was too expensive for me. We found some very nice fragrances and gifts at Sephora and they wrapped them so beautifully - free.




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if you take your passport to the service desk, they will give you a percentage off coupon on your purchases. I do this every time I go to the Galleries Lafayette. They also have some kiosks outside the store that are reasonably priced.

suggestions for one-day small town visit outside of Paris?

My wife and I will be spending a week in Paris in late May. The first few days we will be at the French Open. The next few days we will be exploring what Paris has to offer.





On the last night, my wife and I would like to find a small quaint town about an hour or two by train outside of Paris where we relax after our week of sightseeing. Ideally we would arrive mid-day, explore the town and spend the night at a local bed %26amp; breakfast or small boutique hotel.





This is a very common thing to do in America and we thought it would be fun to use our last day to find a place to unwind after going non-stop in Paris.





The only catch is we have a 2:30p flight from CDG back to the states the next morning. So we HAVE to ensure we our back at the airport in plenty of time to check in for the international flight.





Any suggestions?




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See following notes from my daytrip file. Not updated. Go to Transillion for transportation.





Hotel, logis de France member:



ldf.reservit.com/reservit/fiche_htl.php…





Auvers-sur-Oise (www.auvers-sur-oise.com). Michelin * sight. Van Gogh spent his last years in this small village on the Oise River northwest of Paris. You can visit his home, Auberge Ravoux (daily except Monday from 10:00 am - 6:00 pm, 01.34.48.05.47), and his gravesite. There is a 90-minute multimedia presentation with audio guide called a %26quot;Journey Back to the Days of the Impressionists%26quot; at the Château d%26#39;Auvers (also called the Château de Léry), 2 rue de Léry, daily except Monday, 01.34.48.48.48. Museums of interest include the Musée de l%26#39;Absinthe and Daubigny%26#39;s studio. SNCF rail access from Gare du Nord or Gare St-Lazare direction Pontoise. Change at Pointoise for the connection to Creil. Get off at Chaponval or at the main station at Auvers dur Oise. Or take the RER; from La Défense, take the RER going to Cergy Saint-Christophe. Get off at Cergy Préfecture, and take the 95 07 bus getting off at Butry station. Note: If taking the train, check at the %26quot;banlieue%26quot; ticket office of the train station for a joint ticket for the SNCF train and entrance to the Château.





VOYAGE AU TEMPS DES IMPRESSIONISTES. The Trip Back to the Time of the Impressionists, in the elegant Auvers château, is one of France%26#39;s most imaginative and innovative museums. You%26#39;ll receive a set of infrared headphones (English available), with commentary that guides you past various tableaux illustrating life in the Impressionist era, and although there are no Impressionist originals, 500 reproductions pop up on screens interspersed between the tableaux. Some of the special effects - talking mirrors, computerized cabaret dancing girls, and a simulated train ride past Impressionist landscapes - are worthy of Disney at its best. Rue de Léry, PHONE: 01-34-48-48-48. COST: EUR9.20. May-Oct., daily 10-6; Nov.-Apr., Tues.-Sun. 10-4:30. Here’s the chateau URL: www.chateau-auvers.fr/english/Sommaire.htm





Message: Auvers-sur-Oise, which we just did last summer, after 25 years of visits to Paris. Maybe I should qualify that by saying that you might want to see some of the more popular sights like Giverny and Chartres first, but Auvers-sur-Oise was wonderful. The whole town is a memorial to Van Gogh, with markers with his paintings on them all around the hilly town, and the home where he lived which is now a thriving restaurant, and his and his brother Theo%26#39;s graves up in a lonely cemetary covered with ivy in the fields beyond the town - and the château there had one of the best holographic exhibits about Impressionism I%26#39;ve ever seen anywhere in Europe.



Alternatively, take the RER out to the Ile des Impressionistes and visit the Maison Fournaise, where Renoir painted the boating party painting(have lunch there in the restaurant on the Seine). It%26#39;s only a short trip, but memorable.



On my last trip to Paris, 12-26-1-6, I took what I now consider to be one of the best day trips outside of Paris. I went to the village of Auvers sur Oise. This is the village where Van Goth spent the last 70 days of his life. He also painted 70 canvases during this time. The town looks familiar right away, as he essentially painted it, the police station, the auberge, the church, assorted other buildings and the fields. He was not the first painter to spend time in the village. Pissaro was the one that suggested he get away from Paris and live in this quiet village.



It is easy to get to, just take the Metro to the Gare St. Lazaar stop, stay underground and follow the signs to the RER Gare St. Lazaar station. Remember to have your ticket validated before you board. The train goes through the neighborhoods of Paris, out through an industrial area and finally farmlands and woods. You arrive about an hour later in Pantoise, transfer here to the local train to Auvers. The trains run frequently, there will be a



train waiting or one will come along with the next 15 or so minutes. Pantoise looked interesting, but I did not have the time that day. From Pantoise to Auvers, about a 10-15 minute ride, it is all farmland or woods. Travel time is about 1 hour, 15 minutes each way.



Directly across from the train station there is a good restaurant whose name I have forgotten. The meal I will not forget for a long time. There are a couple of other restaurants closer to the police station. The auberge where Van Goth lived may serve food, it was closed from 12-24 to the end of Jan. so I cannot say for sure. I did peek inside and it looked just like it did a little over 100 years ago. There were two small hotels in the village.





There are signs that direct you to the chateau and the church. Throughout the town there are panels with reproductions of his paintings as well as paintings of Cezanne, Pissaro, Corot and others who spent time here and painted the town. You can look at the painting of the police station and look up and there is the police station. Unfortunately, most of the paintings are no longer in the village, but in major museums worldwide.



From the auberge you can go to the church. I suggest the footpath as it gives you interesting views of the village. The staircase to the church is beautiful is a rustic sort of way. From the back of the church (the part he painted) you can walk to the cemetery where he and his brother Theo are buried in ivy covered graves along the left wall.



For the return to Paris you take the trian back to Pantoise, but this time the train runs from there to the Paris Nord station. You do go through St. Denis on the way back and if you start early enough you could plan to spend a good bit of the day in Auvers and stop on the way back to see the cathedral where the kings and queens of France are buried. I just do not know if you need another ticket.



All in all, it was a memorable trip and right now is my favorite day time. No doubt it will be replaced by a yet unexplored locale close to Paris on my next trip.



So if you have a day to spend outside of Paris, you might want to consider this trip.



Marie





AUVERS-SUR-OISE (France) March 13, 2003 - Even the wallpaper smacks of history in the old 19th house that once belonged to Paul Ferdinand Gachet, one-time doctor and friend of Vincent Van Gogh.More than a century ago, Cezanne, Monet, Pissarro, Renoir and Van Gogh were regular visitors at the house, some stopping by for drinks or dinner, others setting up easels in the garden, inspired by the hilltop view.On March 30, memories of the legendary Impressionist and post-Impressionist masters who frequented this village northeast of Paris will be revived when Dr Gachet%26#39;s home is opened to the public for the first time, as part of a slew of worldwide celebrations marking the 150th anniversary of Van Gogh%26#39;s birth. Full article:



www.utusan.com.my/utusan/content.asp…




|||



You could also consider a short trip to the little town of Sceaux, in the southern suburbs, and accessible by RER B ( about 30 minutes from Paris), but it does not require an overnight.





It is a charming residential place, but if you like gardens, its big plus is the large 17th-century Parc de Sceaux, with formal ponds, spectacular rows of pruned trees, a château and an orangery wich houses classical concerts in summer ( see www.parc-de-sceaux.net/, for the pictures if you can%26#39;t reed French). I think the fountains run on Sundays.





There are markets in Sceaux on Wednesday and Saturday mornings.




|||



thanks to those that have responded so far. to be more specific we are also looking for a cozy bed %26amp; breakfast or small boutique hotel in this town for one night.





please let us know if you have any suggestions!




|||



You really should not plan on anything overnight if your flight from CDG is at 2:30 the next day. You should plan on being at CDG three hours before flight time which would be 11:30 A.M. Allowing tme to get there, the morning would be a major rush especially with train schedules that might require leaving at 9 ish.





Thus you might want to look for a place that is on a direct CDG route so you would not have to go back into Paris but could go directly from wherever you are staying.




|||



Thanks Holger.





Ok so let%26#39;s refine the request even further. Anyone know of a small quaint town outside of Paris that also has a direct route back into CDG so that we can catch our 2:30 flight?




|||



You will need help from the Paris experts like IrishRovr and Phread. A good guide book might also work if it has shorttrips out of Paris and decent maps.




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St Germain des Pres is a very quaint suburb of Paris. You can get there easily by RER (suburban metro) and there is a lovely central area, a forest to stroll through and a chateau with a museum and impressive grounds. We stayed at a Relais et Chateaux when we visited, but found it to be just good, not great.



Unless SGdP is on the RER B line (I don%26#39;t recall) you should probably allow two hours for transortation to get to CDG, because you would have to return to Central Paris.




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thanks phread: this is exactly the type of information we are looking for!





anyone else?




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I think phread meant St Germain en Laye. St Germain des Prés is hardly a suburb of Partis.



There is a great hotel at St. G en L (Le Pavillon Henri IV, I think...) with stunning views from its terrace across Paris.Stg. G en L is west of paris on The RER A Line. It%26#39;s no more than 40 minutes from Châtelet/Les Halles. You could easily make CDG in 90 minutes from there.




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Yes, Irish is quite right. Sorry, I had my feathers somewhat ruffled here today. St Germain en Laye is what I meant.



Fountianbleau would be another good option.

Compare arrondissment in Paris

I am looking for an apartment for a week in Paris for our family of four (two of which are teenage girls). The 6th (St Germain) and 9th (Pigalle) both look good on paper (well okay on -line) . Do you have any feedback on these arrondissmente? Is there another we should investigate?





Thank you for your help.





Parker




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The best ones : the 11th and the 12th, according to my totally non-objective point of view. ;-)




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I would be interesting to know where in those arrondissements those properties are located. The infamous Pigalle ( about which all subsequent posters will no doubt warn you off...) is a small part of the upper 9th.




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Not sure why Luckyluc%26#39;s post was deleted. HHhmm. At any rate, if you do decide on the 6th, try looking at the Luxembourg Splendor apt offered by vacationinparis.com. We stayed there in Sept and it would be fabulous for your family. It has a king or queen in the master and twin beds in the 2nd br. It was clean, bright and in a secure building. I recommend it highly.




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I happen to prefer the Rive Droite and would opt for the 9th over the 6th. True, the 6th is more elegant, but the 9th is much more interesting, in my opinion.




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I can%26#39;t agree that the rive droit is more interesting than the rive gauche, because I think that discounts a large part of the city that is not the 5th/6th arrons, but I will agree that the 9th is considerably more interesting that the 6th.




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Phread, I wouldn%26#39;t say that the Right is more interesting the the Left, I was only comparing the 9th and the 6th. Both parts have their charms. I do think that aside from the Marais, the area around GL, and the 1st, that many people give scant attention to the Right Bank.




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Happy Goin. The photo seems to show this apt as upper level. Were the angle ceilings a problem? I am 6.2 and not wishing to knock my head.





Just let me know.





Parker




|||



Interesting discussion...



Don%26#39;t forget that the av. des Champs-Élysées is on the right bank too, Truffaut, and Mr. Steves tells us that that is %26quot;Paris at its most Parisian.%26quot; Who am I to argue with that opinion?



But in any case AnneParis is right — comme d%26#39;habitude! ;-)





So what *did* Lucky say?




|||



And Montmartre. But I am one of those guilty of giving the Rive Droite short shrift. Does anybody know which Bank has a larger population? The most hotels? I am curious.

What's in Season End of May (Foodwise)

We are renting a house with an outstanding (from all appearences) kitchen. There are eleven of us and about half are looking forward to enjoying the chance to cook in a nicely equipped kitchen, preferably with as much fresh locally grown veggies, cheese, wine and meats as possible.





We%26#39;re in Cucuron at the foot of the Grand Luberon.





What should we look for when we get to les marches. (I know there%26#39;s supposed to be an accent there somewhere, sorry.)





Brian





Looking forward to a couple of weeks of Iron Chef Expatriate Edition. ;)




|||



Although we aren%26#39;t going to Provence, I posted a very similar question on another travel forum (Slow Travel). Here%26#39;s a link to the question and responses:



slowtalk.com/groupee/…4871057472




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Thanks Pemquid. :)




|||



We always arrive end of May and one of the things I look forward to most, is the tart Red Currants! And if we%26#39;re lucky, there are still New Potatoes!




|||



Red currents in late May--great to know about that. My mother was Hungarian, and we were occasionally able to get currents in the grocery store when I was a child in NYC--my mother would be thrilled to have them, then disapointed that they weren%26#39;t as good as what she had as a child in Hungary.





How about strawberries and peas?




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Strawberries and above all cherries - unless we have a disaster with the weather.




|||



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Removed on: 1:27 am, August 25, 2009

st florent

Is it more expensive to eat and drink at St Florent than other area%26#39;s i.e Calvi



thanks




|||



No, it%26#39;s about the same. You can spend a little or a lot depending on your tastes and budget, but prices don%26#39;t vary that much between the coastal resort towns.




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There is a large choice of restaurants and cafes open in the summer in St. Florent to suit every budget. Many are very good value.




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Removed on: 1:26 am, August 26, 2009

Paris to Zurich - Train/Plane?

Hi all,





I was wondering does anyone know how long the train ride is from Paris to Zurich? Any good websites?





Or is it more efficient to take the plane?





Thanks in advance!




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It would take you about 6.5 hours to travel to Zurich by train. There are very few direct trains and most routings will require at least one change. Mulhouse, Basel, Geneva or Lusanne are all possible transfer stations.



The only budget airline that *might* fly this route is Air Berlin and I am not too hopeful that they will have direct flights.. www.airberlin.com



If you are travelling RT definitely check Air France and Swiss. In fact check them in any case.



For train timetables try www.bahn.de. You might be able to get some idea of fares at www.voyages-sncf.com. If you think you want to travel by rail check this page by MorganB before trying to book your tickets: http://tinyurl.com/qpdef



If you can tell us when you are travelling and if you are returning to Paris or just making a one way trip somebody might have some other ideas.




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I%26#39;m heading into Paris on the 30th, staying for a day and then I%26#39;d like to travel to Geneva/Zurich the next day. I%26#39;m trying to cram as many cities as I can into my trip. I checked some flights and they only go into Geneva - is Geneva to Zurich close by train?





Thanks....!




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Paris-Geneva ~3hrs25 by direct TGV. I wouldn%26#39;t even consder doing this by air.



Geneva-Zurich ~2hrs40 by direct express. www.sbb.ch





But if you just want to get to as many cities as possible in the shortest possible time, you are headed in the wrong direction.



Paris-Lille ~ 1 hour



Lille-Brussels ~35 minutes



Brussels-Rotterdam ~2 hours



Rotterdam-Amsterdam ~40 minutes



and so on...







Is this some kind of student bet thing?




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Easyjet fly from Paris-Geneva - you can get some very cheap flights if you%26#39;re lucky. You won%26#39;t find the flights on the regular travel agency sites (expedia/anyway/lastminute etc) you should look directly on their website. I use this route a few times a year and it%26#39;s fine. Door to door I%26#39;d day it%26#39;s quicker than the train.




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Paris-Zurich travel time will be cut down to 4hr30 from June 2007, thanks to the new TGV Est line (the train will run through Strasbourg and Basel).




|||



What was the name of that site that used to give you links to ALL the budget airlines? It was organized by city.




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I found it: http://www.whichbudget.com/




|||



Thanks for the input!





I%26#39;m going with school to Eastern Europe for 2 weeks and I%26#39;ve extended an extra week so I can do some more travelling. Do you think it%26#39;s worth staying in Paris for 2 days or 1 day in Paris and 1 day in Switzerland instead? I%26#39;ve never been to either and I know there must be a lot to see.




|||



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Removed on: 10:16 pm, August 26, 2009

carcassonne to agrgeles sur mer

hi just wondering if anyone has driven from carcassone airport to argeles sur is it easy enough






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To make it any easier you%26#39;d have to have them put your car on a flat-bed and yourself in a chauffeured limousine. You should be able to do it in 90 minutes easy. Check viamichelin.com for routes.



Bonne route!




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It is very easy. It is about 130 km.



The road is very good, 3 lanes most of the time.



When you reach Perpignan, continue straight ahead following the direction %26quot;Argelès%26quot;.



You can also take the highway (toll), exit at Le Boulou, then follow the signs %26quot;Saint André - Argelès.




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thanks for replies drove in france last year for first time and a 4 hour trip turned into 7 hours mised exit on motorway so thats why wondering was it straghtforward enough




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I do not see how you could get lost following either of the two roads I indicated.



From Carcassonne, follow the direction Narbonne, then Perpignan.



Argeles is 30 km from Perpignan.





If




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thanks a lot for that hopefully i wont again




|||



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Removed on: 12:26 am, August 27, 2009

Advice Needed on getting family of four from GDN to Hotel

Hi - My family (husband, 21 year old son, 9 year old daughter) will be arriving in Paris at the Gard du Nord. We are coming on the Eurostar from London at the end of May for a four days before going on to Rome to visit family. My question to all of you is how would you suggest is the best way to get my travelling party to our hotel in the 16th Arrondissement? We will each have at least one suitcase and one carry on type bag or pack pack. I am thinking we may be too big of a party for a taxi, but I want to get your input??? Does anyone have any ideas or suggestions? Please let me know, and thanks in advance for your kindness.




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I take the metro with my family (kids 9 and 12) but we are used to it and pack lightly. If your bags are large, take a taxi. They do have cabs big enough for your family.




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Thanks for the info on taxi size. We would take the metro, but the metro stop is a bit far from our hotel from what I understand. I had a rather nasty ankle injury this last December and I am just now walking without crutches so %26#39;hoofing it%26#39; with baggage would be a little hard. I want to not push it too much this trip.





We have also been lucky enough to travel quite a bit with our kids so they are really good about being able to get around all over the place fairly well. It is just %26#39;old mom%26#39; who is the issue this time around.




|||



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Removed on: 6:17 pm, August 27, 2009

Khakis for women?

I%26#39;ve seen a lot of talk about what is %26quot;appropriate%26quot; for male tourists to wear in Paris, but what about women? I am going in October.




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Outside of cutoffs and sandals, I suggest wearing whatever you feel comfortable wearing. Tourists rarely go many places where more than sensible and comfortable clothes are required.





Do not forget comfortable shoes, your feet will thank you.

30th Dinner

I%26#39;m going to Paris in April for me 30th birthday and looking for someone special to go for dinner on a Friday night. Ideally like somewhere that requires dressing quite formally (like to look a bit glam while still in my 20%26#39;s!) but that doesn%26#39;t cost over 150 euros for 2. French cusine preferred. We%26#39;re staying near the Opera Garnier but the restaurant doesn%26#39;t have to be close by. Any suggestions would be wonderful. Cheers




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Maybe the Cafe de L%26#39;Homme, the restaurant at the musee de l%26#39;homme? It has a view of the Eiffel Tower, however I don%26#39;t believe they have a formal dress requirement.





And trust me, the 30s are much more glam than the 20s are...at least in my experience!! Happy birthday!





Les




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the diner cruises on some of the boats are rather formal, but I don%26#39;t know the budget.




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MontheBiffy, I too am going to Paris for my 30th in May. We have reservations for the night of my birthday at le Café de l%26#39;Homme. It is supose to have very good food and in the budget that you are looking at too. Here is the website and they also have an English Menu you can look at. Also, they have terrace seating that is supose to have a spectacular view of the Eiffle Tower.



http://www.lecafedelhomme.com/





Curious, when will you be there? My husband and I will be ther May 23-29th.




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Bit of a typo earlier - message should have read %26#39; looking for somewhere special%26#39; not someone special! I%26#39;ve already got that bit sorted as going with my husband.





Thanks for the suggestions though




|||



MontheBiffy:





Sorry, I was not asking you to dinner. I was just curious if our birthdays were close. Being that we are both spending out 30th birthday in Paris. LOL, and you probably thought that some crazy person was trying to pick you up on the TA website. I too will be visitng Paris with my husband.

Shops Champs Elysees 1. May

Does anyone know if the shops on the Champs Elysees are open on the first of May?




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francetourism.com/practicalinfo/general.htm





Here is the page from the website of the French tourism office in the U.S. that discusses holidays. It indicates shops would be closed on May 1, and that is what I recall from the one time I was in Paris on May 1. However, I also recall a few small neighborhood shops were open. As far as the Champs Elysees is concerned, I don%26#39;t know.

TGV tickets and senior rates

How come the senior rates are sometimes higher than the prems?



Does anything happen if you buy a regular fare and you are a senior?




|||



PREMs are always the least expensive fares. Anyone, regardless of age, can buy a ticket with a PREMs fare. Nobody will ask you for proof of age or anything of that sort.



The major difference is that PREms tickets are completely non-refundable. Tickets with a senior discount are refundable, at least in part if not entirely.




|||



Does anything happen if you buy a regular fare and you are a senior?





To get senior rates , you must be over 60 and buy a %26quot;senior card%26quot; which costs €53 and is valid for one year.





You get a 50% or 25% discount depending on the day/hour of your train.. You have to show the card AND your ticket in the train.





Most senior tickets are exchangeable/ refundable up to the very last minute before the train leaves the station - not after.




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Re senior rates--





When I go on the SNCF site (English version), it just asks age of traveler, and I can%26#39;t see a question about having a senior card. We haven%26#39;t actually tried to book senior-rate tickets on-line yet (have just done the PREMS so far), but if we did, would we be asked to give a senior card number, or would we have to show such a card when we pick up the tickets in France? I somehow missed or overlooked the requirement for purchasing the senior card to get the discount in all the various postings and instructions about SNCF booking.




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I%26#39;d have to check this to be absolutely certain, but there are *some* automatic discounts you can get on account of age without having to buy a Carte Senior. I%26#39;m pretty sure of that, in fact but I do not recall the details. In any case the discount is less than it would be if you had a Carte. I suppose you might be asked for proof of age if you had selected a fare with an age-based discount.



The Carte Senior provides an automatic discount on all fares (50% on TGV and Corail Téoz trains, 25% on most others, with some exceptions) but it is probably not worth buying unless you are travelling extensively, and definitely not if you can take advantage of PREMs fares. The main advantage it provides is that you can get the Senior discount even on last minute bookings



I there is a lower fare, provided it is an adult fare, than the fare you would be eligible for as a Senior with or without a Carte, you can certainly travel on that fare.



There is also a more expensive Carte Escapades for those younger than 60 that provides a discount of up to 40% on round-trips longer than 200 km with a Saturday or Sunday overnight. At 85€ however it is probably not useful to most visitors staying only a few weeks.




|||



When I go on the SNCF site (English version), it just asks age of traveler, and I can%26#39;t see a question about having a senior card. We haven%26#39;t actually tried to book senior-rate tickets on-line yet (have just done the PREMS so far), but if we did, would we be asked to give a senior card number, or would we have to show such a card when we pick up the tickets in France? I somehow missed or overlooked the requirement for purchasing the senior card to get the discount in all the various postings and instructions about SNCF booking.





I am on the French version of the SNCF site.



I suppose the reason they do not mention the Senior Card is because few visitors would buy it. You have to make at least one big trip a year (like Paris-Nice and back for instance) to %26quot;get even%26quot;. I do not think you can purchase the senior card on line, it has to be done at the station or SNCF boutiques (photograph required).





You do not have to provide your card number when you order your ticket nor do you have to show your card when you pick up your ticket. They will check BOTH in the train. They ALWAYS do.





Irishr%26#39;ver : I beg to disagree. The Carte Senior does not guarantee automatically a 50% discount on all TGV%26#39;s but a minimum of 25%.on all trains.



They probably have a certain number of seats available with a 50% discount and when they are sold out, you only get 25% off. Sometimes it is worth travelling 1st class at 50% off the price than 2nd class at 25%




|||



So, is the definitive answer: SENIOR FARE RATES ARE ONLY APPLICABLE IF YOU HAVE AN OFFICIAL CARD? It truly is not all that clear on the English version in the SNCF booking site. Instead of askiing for the traveler%26#39;s age, shouldn%26#39;t it read: Are you a holder of a senior card?




|||



%26gt;%26gt;%26gt; Irishr%26#39;ver : I beg to disagree. The Carte Senior does not guarantee automatically a 50% discount on all TGV%26#39;s but a minimum of 25%.on all trains. %26lt;%26lt;%26lt;



Not according to the SNCF site where you will find the following at http://www.senior-sncf.com/carte/avantages/







50 % de réduction





• Dans les TGV et les Corail Téoz ainsi que sur les places couchettes ou sièges inclinables des Corail de nuit et Corail Lunéa, dans la limite des places disponibles pour ce tarif.





• Sur les places assises des Corail et Corail Intercités, les voitures-lits et dans les TER, pour les trajets commencés en période bleue du calendrier voyageurs (calendrier disponible en gare).







25% de réduction





• Dans tous les autres cas!





• Et aussi lors de vos séjours en Europe dans l’un des 27 pays européens adhérents à RAILPLUS : Italie, Espagne, Norvège, République Tchèque… (Offre soumise à conditions).




|||



%26gt;%26gt;%26gt; So, is the definitive answer: SENIOR FARE RATES ARE ONLY APPLICABLE IF YOU HAVE AN OFFICIAL CARD? %26lt;%26lt;%26lt;





No. Just plug in your age. if a senior discount is available — and there are SOME circumstances under which they are REGARDLESS OF WHETHER YOU HAVE A CARD OR NOT — it will automatically show up in the tabulation of fares for the train(s) you have selected.




|||



Ah, just a moment. I see what you are saying, PVoyageuse. The operative phrase you are referring to is this one, yes? %26quot;dans la limite des places disponibles pour ce tarif.%26quot;





OK, now I think we are in agreement. A 50% reduction IS available on all TGVs but if you are too late in booking you may only be eligible for a lower discount, namely 25%.



My apologies for misunderstanding what you were saying.




|||



Thanks Irish. That%26#39;s what it looked like to me, but the other poster had me confused. It%26#39;s bad enough to be eligible for senior rates, but to be confused on top of that . . .!

Eurostar hotel deals for a weekend in paris

can anyone recommend a hotel that comes in the package from eurostar?



we dont want opulence, but clean and large ish rooms with en suite please!maybe 3 or 4 *



Arrondissements 6/7/8





TIA- first post!




|||



I have never used the Eurostar package, I have used Shortbreaks http://www.short-breaks.com/ who have been totally reliable.





I always stay in bottom end hotels - I am never IN the hotel except for sleep, and money is for spending on food anyways!




|||



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Removed on: 9:18 pm, August 15, 2009

calvi honeymoon

We are going to Calvi for 10 days in June for part of our honeymoon. Does anyone know of any windsurfing schools in or near Calvi? Any other watersport/canyoning recommendations also welcome.



Thanks




|||



Centre de CALVI



Calvi Nautique Club



Base Nautique- Port de plaisance



20260 CALVI



Téléphone : 04 95 65 10 65



Fax : 04 95 65 09 00



Portable : 04.95.35.96.84.



E- mail cnc@calvinc.org





http://www.calvinc.org/





If you are beginners at windsurfing, though, Calvi%26#39;s not a great place to start because, alhtough relatively sheltered, the wind is always 180% against getting back to where you started. And it%26#39;s a bit feeble and inconsistent in the corner from where you start (near the port) . You tend to find yourself surfing amongst the small children paddling





You might do better in Algajola, provided the wind isn%26#39;t too strong - it often is - because the wind blows more across and into the beach rather than out to sea and you can get back. Algajola is THE top place for windsurfing in Haute Corse.





http://www.algajola-sportetnature.com/





You can just turn up and book when you arrive, from a shed on the beach, you can%26#39;t miss it. They%26#39;re friendly guys and the rates are reasonable. But their English isn%26#39;t great.




|||



Not sure I have ever seen any windsurfing schools in Calvi. There are some diving schools however. Try the office of Tourism, they may be able to help:





http://www.tourisme.fr/calvi/




|||



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Removed on: 1:24 am, August 16, 2009

Carcassone

Will be there for seven days in september; is 2 days sufficient to explore carcassone or is it worth a longer look? I had thought of a trip to the coast, but does anyone have any `must see/must do` suggestions? all replies gratefully received.



Gingerguy




|||



What interests you? Castles, beaches, abbayes, villages? There is a lot to see in the area.





2 days in Carcassonne is plenty.




|||



I believe 2 days in Carcassonne is more than enough time. At the beginning of September there may be some activity near Narbonne Plague and other beach locations but much after August the area is rather deserted. Collioure and Sete are interesting year round as well as some of the more important Cathar landmarks (chateau de Quéribus and chateau de Peyrepertuse). Some find Narbonne interesting.





It%26#39;s really best to have a car to explore the coastal area.




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Incidentally, there is nothing %26quot;Cathar%26quot; about the %26quot;Cathar Castles%26quot;.



The whole cathar hype is just a marketing ploy.





All these castles were built before them.





The cathars may have numbered 20,00 in an area extending from Toulouse to Béziers down to Ariège. They were not builders. They were very peaceful, hence had a lot of sympathizers among the local populace. The %26quot;crusaders%26quot; were mercenaries who had been promised by the Pope all the land they would conquer. Their interest was to kill as many as possible in order to gain as much land as possible.



The poor people and the Cathars took refuge - as was common at that time - in the castle of the local lord..





For those of you interested in the Cathars, the authority is historian Michel Roquebert who has written several books about them.

Spa

I am looking for a day spa for my husband and i to get couples massages - any suggestions?




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The FourSeasons George V has a very extensive spa menu which includes a couple%26#39;s massage:







www.fourseasons.com/paris/spa/massages.html





Les




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We have been to les Bain du Marais a few times over the years.





This past xmas I treated my husband to the full %26#39;spa experience%26#39; - steam/gommage/massage (about 3 hours in all)





They have lady days, men days and couple days - on mixed days you must wear a swimsuit in the steam rooms. It%26#39;s open until quite late.





It is really quite a lovely place but not cheap. It%26#39;s on Rue des Blancs Manteaux and here%26#39;s the website (french only).







http://www.lesbainsdumarais.com/bdm_site.html




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Thanks!





do you know of any close to the Novotel Effiel




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This is a question for janesatelier. I looked at the site for -les bains du marais. It looks lovely. Would it be dificult for a non French speaking person (like myself) to have a nice time there? It sems like a great idea for a Monday when all of the museums are closed. I%26#39;m sure I could have our hotel make the reservation, but once I got there would it be an issue? Also 35 euros doesn%26#39;t seem like much for a massage? Am I missing something?




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Hi Minko,





Each time I have been the guys on the front desk speak some english. My husband goes alone and speaks no french at all, except the usual %26#39;bonjour%26#39; and %26#39;merci%26#39;. I have not had a problem telephoning for an appointment and never feel %26#39;out of place%26#39; there.





The 35 EU, I believe is for half hour and doesn%26#39;t include the Hammam/Sauna. We usually get one of the full packages:





%26#39;Journee Beaute Soins du Corps%26#39; 130EU



Hammam/Sauna first then Gommage then a long oiled Massage 130EU.





or the %26#39;Journee Beaute%26#39; package 70EU:



Hammam/Sauna + Gommage + shorter Massage





If you look on the website under %26#39;Formules%26#39; you%26#39;ll see the different packages.





The %26#39;Gommage%26#39; is when they scrub your body with what feels like a yard broom but is actually a rough mitt. You won%26#39;t believe how soft your skin feels after.





They have lockers for your %26#39;stuff%26#39; and provide robes, towels, slippers etc. There is a wonderful %26#39;relaxing%26#39; room to take a nap in afterward and a nice cafe to have tea or something. We found the place by accident about 5 years ago and now make it a point to go at least once each year.





%26gt;%26gt;This is a question for janesatelier. I looked at the site for -les bains du marais. It looks lovely. Would it be dificult for a non French speaking person (like myself) to have a nice time there? It sems like a great idea for a Monday when all of the museums are closed. I%26#39;m sure I could have our hotel make the reservation, but once I got there would it be an issue? Also 35 euros doesn%26#39;t seem like much for a massage? Am I missing something?%26lt;%26lt;




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%26lt;%26lt; Monday when all of the museums are closed.%26gt;%26gt; ALthough some museums are clsed Monday, MOST of them are closed Tuesday, but OPEN Mondays.




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Thanks Jane!



Thanks Phred!




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Removed on: 7:23 am, August 17, 2009

railway station car rental

I will be Auray, France in Brittany and would like to rent a car online. I have done extensive research but have never actually rented online never mind overseas. Does anyone have any recommendations? I have looked at what%26#39;s available at this trainstation and the reservations are possible through Europcar, Avis, Auto Europe or autoreservaton.



Any suggestions would be much appreciated.






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My personal favorite is Europcar. Their cars tend to be very new and I have never had any problems with them. They have loads of locations.




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Autoeurope is a broker through you may rent from Europcar at substantially lower prices than contacting them directly.





You may book either on line at www.autoeurope.com or call them at 1-888-223-5555 (from North America only).





Other companies include:





http://www.kemwel.com/



http://www.interrent.com/



http://www.europebycar.com/





No matter which company you choose:





1. make your reservation prior to leaving North America



2. request a diesel, it will save a lot of money in operational costs.




|||



HI Sarastro



Thanks for the links and recommendations. I lived in France as a students many years ago but never had to worry about such things as a car...too poor. And, there was no online anything.



So, once again. Thank you,



Jane




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You%26#39;re welcome Jane.





I love Calgary (a bit too cold in winter however). Went to the Stampede some years back, wildest covered wagon driving I have ever seen.





You don%26#39;t drive on the roads like that do you?




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We are renting cars in France in May on two individual occasions. We chose pick up and drop off at railway stations of smaller towns because of the fear of navigating in the larger cities while mastering driving on the opposite side of the road from what we are use to and because our French is very limited. We also found that Michelin gives you very comprehensive directions to and from the train stations of most towns. So for example we will be training from paris to Cahors where we pick up our car from the station and drop it off at Beziers station 5 days later. We are using Europcar only because I found their online booking seemed easier for me.



Two things I have noted are – it appears to be impossible to get a car on a Sunday and the same Auto transmission in the smaller cars.



Good luck!




|||



Hi Sarastro



Well, it%26#39;s not called %26quot;The Wild West%26quot; for nothing! And being from Dallas I%26#39;m sure you have seen wild driving,too. But I plan to just toodle around and since I am visiting some friends I am offering to drive and will not be wild or yahoo too much.





I just checked Europcar and their prices don%26#39;t include insurance while Autoreservation.com does. And Autoreservation also mentioned offering %26quot;basic rental suitable for US customers %26quot;. That seems the way to go. Ever dealt with Autoreservation?



Jane




|||



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Removed on: 7:24 am, August 17, 2009

How's the weather right now?

Hi, I%26#39;m arriving Paris on Saturday. Just curious about the weather.




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It%26#39;s low to mid 50s (F) and mild for the next week, as it%26#39;s been all winter (if you can call that winter). Really pleasant. Today was beautiful.




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Thanks! Sounds very nice for walking. Can%26#39;t wait!




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I will be in Paris in May and I thought it would be mild. However, I know someone who was in Paris last May and she had to buy clothes because it was so cold. What will an average May be like? Thank you.




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brudda, I think all bets are off on predicting the weather. When I said we had no winter I meant we LITERALLY had NO winter this year. Paris weather has never been easy to plan for but this is a really unusual year. I don%26#39;t think the historical stats are of any use at this point.




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Weatherbase does have the history though: www.weatherbase.com/weather/weather.php3…




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The last 2 days bave been absolutely beautiful and mild. Many people already sitting outside in parks and cafes.




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I think your best bet when packing for Paris is to bring a bit of everything...especially things you can layer. I%26#39;ve experienced such cold in July that I%26#39;ve had to buy a jacket, followed the next day by extreme heat. Weird....




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This may explain why I have found such divergent weather forecasts on Accuweather, the BBC, and wunderground. What weather website do Parisians use? We%26#39;ll be there for two weeks beginning March 19, and one long-term forecast includes snow!!!!! We have no idea what to bring, given these conflicting forecasts.




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Try http://www.meteofrance.com





Les




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My Farmers ALmanach guess would say that you could expect a hot, dry May, but that has nothing to do with typical. The crocus are in bloom and I can already smell summer in the air, which sounds silly, but I haven%26#39;t missed yet!

airport shuttle book inadvance?

I arrive in Paris tomorrow night at 9.55pm friday, I have not booked the shuttle bus I tried to just now and it would not take bookings less than 24 hours in advance, will I definetly be able to catch the shuttle, is it a ryanair bus?for going home om monday 1.15pm flight, do i need to book the bus in advance?thanks




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If you do not book a shuttle how will the driver know to pick you up?



I guess you can call them when you arrive and they%26#39;ll come for you.



There is also the RER train and a taxi.




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Are you refering to the Air France Shuttle bus or just a private shuttle company?





If you are refering to the Air France bus you can pay the driver when you get there and you are boarding the bus.




|||



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Removed on: 3:19 pm, August 18, 2009

Day trip from cruise ship

Will be in LeHavre for 14 hours and have been to Paris several times so not at all interested in taking longgg ride into city and back. Suggestions for easy way to spend day much appreciated. Assume port and city it%26#39;s in are pretty industrial so thought a day in Honfleur might be the ticket. Comments re attractions, restaurants, transport much appreciated. Regards,




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Le Harve to Honfleur can be done by bus (Bus Verts du Calvados) . Timetable is here busverts.fr/_hiver/…L20S1.pdf





I dont know how far from the port the bus picks up though - a taxi to the bus station (gare routier) might be necessary.




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Thanks for the link to the bus route..........since I don%26#39;t know the area, can you advise where one boards Line 20 in LeHavre and where is the best stop for tourists in Honfleur? Thanx........




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Hi khkh





the bus %26#39;station%26#39; in Honfleur is on the Rue Des Vases just by the new part of the port, from here it%26#39;s a short walk to the old harbour, with all the interesting sights of Honfleur, the old church, Belfry, Lieutenance, and Old Harbour itself.





I should imagine that most of the Buses verts will stop there - but guess that the website already provided will have this information





Bon Chance!





EW




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Removed on: 11:17 pm, August 19, 2009

Costs of toll roads?

Is there a good place to preview tolls besides Via Michelin?





Thanks.




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http://www39.mappy.com/




|||



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Removed on: 10:18 pm, August 20, 2009

airport shuttle reliable?

can you rely on the shuttle bus to be there after a late flight???




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Our experience has been that private shuttle buses are not particularly reliable - and it%26#39;s one thing when you%26#39;re arriving on a late flight, and another when you%26#39;re heading to the airport hoping not to miss your flight.





The Air France / RATP buses leave on a regular schedule, and taxis of course are always available.




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Removed on: 11:18 pm, August 22, 2009

st germain apartment

has anyone stayed at an apartment thru paristay called the Benoit It is on rue st benoit and st germain pres..is that a noisy street?




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also would someone tell please what is it like bet rue st sebatien and rue st ambroise in the nation area




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mfprovence, I used Paristay in October to stay in a different apt in the St. Germain des pres district. My appart was on Rue Mazarine not far from your selected apartment. I was very, very happy with my apartment which I have listed below. Your street is not a high traffic area, although I don%26#39;t know exactly what is on the street.



I was happy with Paristay, except that they require for you to wire money for deposit and final payment. But everything went rather smooth for me !!





http://www.paristay.com/395




|||



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Removed on: 6:18 pm, August 27, 2009

Gare de Nord Metro/Eurostar

Someone has mentioned in a post that the Metro was downstairs/below the railroad station.





So when I get off the Eurostar do you go into the station and then there are signs directing you to the Metro station/lines?





I have mapped out my route, longer than route planner but bypasses the Châtelet stop/station which I understand is quite a long walk between connections.




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I believe when you get off the train you are actually IN the station... that%26#39;s how it is with the Thalys. You walk from the platform into a wide open %26#39;hall%26#39; and from there you will see signs pointing to the metro. Between the Eurostar, Thalys and then the metro tunnels are the ticket windows for your metro tickets or pass. You might try the %26#39;bar car%26#39; on board the train before arriving in Paris to see if they sell metro tickets, then you can bypass the ticket windows and get on to the metro to your hotel.




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It%26#39;s been awhile since I%26#39;ve had to do it but if I remember correctly, your RER ticket was good for continuing travel on the Metro. Try using your RER ticket to enter the Mztro before you buy a Metro ticket.




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travelnutty: thanks for the tip about the tickets I%26#39;ll have to check it out. Hey I%26#39;m going to hit the bar car anyway, well maybe.





It%26#39;s been a long time since I made that particular trip and I was at the station about 6 AM. All I vaguely remember is walking down a very long corridor and then up an escalator for checkin and on return late I took a taxi back to hotel.




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metromole -



You are up WAY too early! Go have a cup of coffee and then you%26#39;ll be awake enough not to confuse the Eurostar with the RER!



It must be all these new Paris Expert responsibilities that are causing the nuits blanches... :-)




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How embarrassing. You%26#39;re right except I%26#39;m actually up way too late. I haven%26#39;t even been to bed yet.




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You can spot the metro by looking for a giant yellow M. It will be to the left of the area where the Eurostar arrives, then you go down stairs and continue to follow the signs. And, actually, line 4 and line 14 are not a long walk if you change at Chatelet. I do it all the time. If you can get tickets in the bar car on the train, that would be great because there are always really long lines to get metro tickets at Gare du Nord.




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When you arrive with Eurostar or Thalys, turn left and go one level down where the access to the metro is. It looks like you have to buy your ticket from machines and it is very crowded down there. I do not remember seeing a person selling tickets.




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You can buy Metro carnets from the Eurostar office at Waterloo before you travel - beat the queues.




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%26gt;%26gt; So when I get off the Eurostar do you go into the station and then there are signs directing you to the Metro station/lines? %26lt;%26lt;





As previously stated, there is a giant M that will point you to the Métro acess staircases. However, inside SNCF stations, the signage is SNCF responsibility - and they take some %26quot;pride%26quot; in keeping %26quot;their%26quot; giant Ms in white-on-blue livery ...





Gian yellow Ms are found over the street accesses (and not all of them, incidentally, some do retain the former %26quot;Art Nouveau%26quot; or %26quot;Art Déco%26quot; designs).




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haha, the first time we were in Paris I thought the large yellow M signs were for a McDonalds, so I kept looking elsewhere for the nearest metro station!

Cows in Paris...

Only three days left of the Salon d%26#39;Agriculture, the largest farm in France, which assembles itself once a year. It is a VERY popular event in Paris, filling up FIVE entire halls at the Porte de Versailles convention center.



I only made it through the ground floor of the livestock hall, but it was pretty amazing, the diversity of the crowds, cows the size of elephants, a live auction, lots of tastings and plenty of culinary treats...




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Dont forget the methane of course.........




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There were a couple of good pictures on Eric%26#39;s Paris daily photo blog.




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That%26#39;s a hoot! I%26#39;m impressed that you went!



Do you go to the salon du chocolat??




|||



Of course, she does. Where do you think she buys her daughters%26#39; chocolate milk?




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Removed on: 3:31 pm, March 08, 2007


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I saw cows all over Paris, last time I was there... they were painted in wild colors... oh...well, not the same I guess... :))




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I%26#39;ve always liked cows. They%26#39;re so pretty--especially with those luxurious eyelashes.




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Ya%26#39; gotta%26#39; love the incongruity of, %26#39;..life-down-on-the-farm..%26#39; brought into the city. I%26#39;m trying to imagine sheep, cattle, chickens, geese, horses, et al on display at the Javitt%26#39;s Center in NYC ??...Perhaps the only thing better might be eaves-dropping on conversations..... %26quot;..What%26#39;s THAT?.....Oh...just a very rare BIG MAC....watch where you step. I don%26#39;t think THAT%26#39;s %26#39;..special sauce..%26#39;....Leg of Lamb...Kentucky Fried Chicken...Carnard l%26#39; Orange....dog food and glue....%26quot;.




|||



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