
Is there a luxury train from Paris to French locations?
Susan Barr
A Le Grand Tour, as the venture is known, talks a good game. The plan is for a six-day 'immersion in the French wonders'. Passengers will travel a total of 2,500 miles around France, packing in a host of sites. The experience starts at Paris Gare de l'Est, which I regard as the most elegant of the capital's stations. Day one takes in Reims for lunch (and presumably some champagne), continuing to Beaune in Burgundy, where a private tour of the ancient almshouse awaits.
Day two: Avignon, with a rooftop tasting 'of the region's finest wines and produce'. On the same day, the train will reach the southwest city of Carcassonne. For the third day, the first destination is, oddly, Pau: a second-division historical city, though with a decent view of the Pyrenees. In the afternoon, the Bay of Arcachon will improve humours, with a visit to the Dubourdieu shipyards and a boat trip.
Maritime appeal continues on day four, with handsome La Rochelle in the morning and a private tour of Chenonceau, the 'Château des Dames' later on. The finale appears to happen on day five. To quote the marketing: 'Le Grand Tour ends with a spectacular journey back in time at Puy du Fou.' This is a historical theme park southeast of Nantes. The sell continues: 'Over the course of a day, history blends with legend to come alive again until nightfall, when the grand spectacle of the night shimmers under the stars.'
You might think this an unusual choice of location for the climax (presumably day six is a trundle back to Paris to offload one set of passengers and take on the next lot). But it makes sense when you learn that the trip is promoted by the Puy du Fou enterprise itself.
The plan was set out in 2022 and little appears to have happened since. I have checked putative departures up to 2028 and can see none confirmed. So while a first-class trip around France in September sounds like a grand idea, get a first-class Interrail pass instead.
Q Our flight from Venice was delayed overnight. Who is responsible for sourcing our accommodation?
Ellen Saville
A Under air passengers' rights rules, anyone whose flight is delayed overnight is entitled to be provided with a hotel room and meals commensurate with the length of the delay. In addition, the Package Travel Regulations specify: 'Where the organiser is unable to ensure the traveller's return as agreed in the package travel contract because of unavoidable and extraordinary circumstances, the organiser must bear the cost of necessary accommodation, if possible of equivalent category.'
Both sets of rules point to the same outcome. Often when a flight in connection with a package holiday is delayed by 24 hours, your stay at the hotel will simply be extended by a night. But the airline or holiday company (which, in your case, are basically the same entity) may move you to a different property, such as an airport hotel, if necessary.
I think it highly unlikely that you will be left to sort out the problem yourself; but if you are, pay for the extra stay and meals and present the receipts to the company.
Q We are heading to North Macedonia and Albania this summer. My wife is worried about the driving. Is it bad?
Richard V
A Your wife is right to be concerned. I have consulted the Albanian traffic accident statistics for the past decade. They are tragically high. The average death toll on the roads is more than 200 per year. Adjusted for population, that is about 2.5 times the fatality rate in the UK. In terms of road miles, the accident rate is worse still, since Albania is a small country (the size of Wales) and long journeys are commensurately rare.
While I haven't studied the North Macedonia statistics, my observation from travelling around is that driving and road standards are equally poor. The reasons: bad driving (fuelled by alcohol in one in 25 accidents, the statistics relate), inadequate policing and some dangerous roads.
Rail travel is not a viable option in either country. In these circumstances, it is wise to rely on professional drivers. In both countries, I travel longer distances by bus or minibus, and make shorter journeys by taxi. This works out better than you might imagine. On arrival at Tirana airport, coaches are usually waiting to run into the capital – or, less frequently, to Durres on the coast. Coaches or minibuses run between larger towns and cities – many minibuses run on demand, departing when full. Crossing between North Macedonia and Albania is straightforward.
For shorter journeys, you can flag down a taxi (the North Macedonian capital also has Bolt, which is similar to Uber) or take a local bus. If you plan an excursion taking in three or four locations in the day, your hotel will know some reliable drivers who will offer a fair price.
I should stress that I am a non-car owner and a poor driver, and therefore always prefer it when someone else is driving. You can enjoy the many spectacular views – and meet interesting locals.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
11 hours ago
- The Independent
Would it be easier to fly to Charles de Gaulle or Orly for Paris?
Q For a forthcoming trip to Paris, I have a choice of flying to either Charles de Gaulle or Orly airport. Do you have a view on which is best? Patricia M A I certainly do. Just to provide some background: the relationship between Paris CDG and Orly is roughly the same as between London Heathrow and Gatwick. Orly, like Gatwick, is older, but CDG and Heathrow have grown to become twice as large. Orly and Gatwick are much more short-haul, low-cost airports, while CDG and Heathrow are predominantly long-haul. The vast majority of flights from the UK to Paris serve CDG, which is 14 miles northeast of the French capital. Orly, eight miles south, currently has connections only from Gatwick and Heathrow on Vueling, and from Southampton on easyJet. But given the choice, I would use Orly every time. Charles de Gaulle is complex and confusing, compared with relatively simple Orly. Until the summer of 2024, Orly had dismal public transport links. But just ahead of the Olympics, line 14 of the Paris Metro was extended to the airport. You reach the central station of Chatelet-Les Halles in 25 minutes, and access pretty much any RER or Metro station in the capital with a single change – so much easier than the cumbersome and often slow RER from CDG. Tickets from the airport are €13 to anywhere in the Paris region – an extensive area. The main drawback is when returning to the airport. While you can board the line 14 train with an ordinary €2.50 Metro ticket, the last leg of the journey to the airport requires a premium fare. You can pay on arrival at Orly, but it takes ages. So buy an airport ticket in advance. Machines at stations should dispense them. Finally, I would take CDG any day over the French capital's sort-of third airport, Beauvais. While Ryanair and Wizz Air describe it as 'Paris', you are a 75-minute coach journey to a remote Metro station, from which the journey to the centre takes about as long as from Orly. Q My husband and I are heading for San Sebastian for the first time in September. We've heard great things about it. The main problem is getting there. Fares were much cheaper to Biarritz in France than to Bilbao in Spain, so that's what we've booked. Annoyingly, there are no suitable buses from Biarritz airport to San Sebastian. Should we just book a transfer, and if so, how much do you think it might cost? Christina F A San Sebastian is an excellent choice. The Basque city was the first place I ever visited in Spain. I remain fond of San Sebastian's natural good looks: wrapped around a shell-shaped bay, La Concha, with a headland guarding the entrance on either side and an island in the middle. I also adore the old town, which probably has the highest concentration of outstanding places to eat on the planet. A transfer for the 50km/30-mile motorway journey from Biarritz airport to San Sebastian will cost a minimum of €100 (£87), possibly significantly more. Fortunately, the public transport option is fun and cheap. Bus line 3 departs from the airport every quarter-hour to the pretty French port of St-Jean-de-Luz, most of the way to the Spanish border. The journey takes 37 minutes for a fare of €1.30. You can use the same ticket to transfer to bus 4, which continues to the frontier town of Hendaye. You can hop off at Hendaye railway station to get to San Sebastian quickly. But if you feel like breaking up the journey with a swim, stay on the bus to the end of the line and you reach Hendaye's excellent Atlantic beach. This place happens to be the starting point for the marvellous GR10 long-distance footpath following the Pyrenees to the Mediterranean. To complete the journey, step aboard the Euskotren. This is an international narrow-gauge train that runs from a small terminus adjacent to Hendaye railway station, over the Spanish border and parallel to the coast, through to San Sebastian. Trains leave every half-hour. The appealingly meandering journey takes 40 minutes. The fare, once again, is €1.30 – so barely £2 each for the whole trip. Spend the savings on a feast. Q If the entry-exit system starts in October, when will we need visas to go into the European Union? Di, Fishwick A As The Independent revealed a week ago, the long-delayed EU entry-exit system (EES) is now expected to be introduced on a staggered basis from 12 October 2025. From that date a proportion of non-EU citizens entering the Schengen area will have their fingerprints and facial biometrics taken. Every frontier is due to have the EES in service by 9 April 2026. After that, passports will cease to be stamped. During the rollout of the system, British travellers will actually encounter even more red tape. As I tackle your question, forgive some pedantry. The EU in Brussels would like me to make clear that the proposed European travel information and authorisation system (Etias) is not a visa. It is intended for citizens of third countries (such as the UK, US and Australia) who do not require visas for the EU. It is, if you like, a permit in lieu of a visa. But I am on your side about what we call it. To get an Etias, you must provide lots of personal data in advance and pay a €20 (£17) fee to enable you to cross a frontier. Which looks to me very much like a visa. I dare say the permit will come to be popularly known as a euro-visa. When will Etias begin? The expectation is six months after EES is fully rolled out. That could be as early as October 2026, though the European Union is more vague and simply says sometime in the final three months of next year. But, to continue being pedantic, you won't need an Etias for the first six months of its existence. During this 'soft' rollout, if you meet all the other conditions for entry to the Schengen area, you will be admitted. So I calculate the earliest time you will actually need an Etias is April 2027 (assuming it starts in October 2026). But given the propensity of airlines to misunderstand the rules for British travellers to the EU, I don't recommend treating Etias as voluntary for those first six months.


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
French beauty experts reveal their anti-ageing secrets – and the products they swear by if you want to look as chic as a Parisienne!
It's holiday packing season, and I can't be the only woman who leaves space in the suitcase for beauty souvenirs (is there anything quite so satisfying as a tour around the aisles of a well-appointed Parisian pharmacy?) For those of us who are not off to France this summer (myself included), the good news is you can now buy most of those brilliant brands here.


Times
a day ago
- Times
French resorts ban shirtless men ‘wandering around half-naked'
France is a leading nudist destination with nearly 350 sites reserved for naturists, but the French can be prim when it comes to showing too much flesh away from the beach. Several resorts have declared war on bare-chested men by banning them from town centres this summer. Most also ban women in bikini tops from shops and streets, except for seafront promenades. 'It's a question of respect,' Yannick Moreau, the mayor of Sables d'Olonne on the coast of western France, said. 'The Sablais don't want people wandering around half-naked.' Anyone refusing to put on a T-shirt in town risks a €150 fine. • The French dare to bare — but there's a dark side to liberté, égalité, nudité This is in contrast with attempts by about 20 resorts to ban burkinis from their beaches over the past decade on the grounds that they are a religious symbol. Almost all the bans have been overturned by courts. There have been no legal challenges to the bans on wearing swimwear away from the beach, which are aimed at foreigners and French people alike. 'If you want to show off your pectorals and your best swimming trunks, 11km of beaches are there for you,' Moreau said. Similar bans have been imposed in many resorts, including Arcachon in the south-west, Narbonne on the Mediterranean, Palavas-les-Flots and La Grande-Motte, near Montpellier. Nice, Cannes and Saint-Tropez all have clothing restrictions. Signs in La Grande-Motte read: En ville, je m'habille (in town, I put my clothes on). Stéphan Rossignol, the mayor, said the ban was introduced in response to complaints about barely clothed holidaymakers going into food shops. 'It wasn't hygienic or respectful,' he said. In Cassis, a Riviera resort near Marseilles, a sign in French reads Tenue correcte exigée, with an approximate English translation below that says: 'Downtown well dress required'. Should anyone fail to grasp the meaning immediately, the sign has pictures of a man in shorts and a bikini-clad woman with a large red cross through them, alongside pictures of a couple wearing shorts and T-shirts without the cross. There is no national legislation on 'decent' clothing in France, but local councils can pass by-laws. Most resorts have issued no more than a handful of fines.