Family life without (almost) a car

It’s one thing for Bill and me to live without a car but I did wonder about how families with children cope. Everyone on our street with kids has at least one car and during the school year we see the daily parade of Mom or Dad shuttling their offspring to sports events, band practice, other extracurricular activities or just to visit friends. An article in one of our local newspapers, La Dépêche, addressed that very topic. The headline read, “These Toulouse residents have chosen to live without a car with 3 children,” and although that’s 45 minutes away from us, it was still going to answer my question.

Continue reading “Family life without (almost) a car”

Free for all

There’s been a lot in the news recently about train travel in Europe for this new year. Headlines have included, “Faster trains and cheaper tickets; 5 New European Train Routes; and, Europe’s night trains are making a comeback,” all aiming to show the benefits of new routes, lower costs, faster speeds, and lower emissions. We’ll see the beginning of sleeper services from Paris to Berlin plus Amsterdam to Prague with a direct service from there on to Budapest. Bordeaux will be linked directly to London with no changes required as will Barcelona to Geneva. While lower priced tickets will be good, “free” is even better and that was the topic of an article about travel in Luxembourg.

Continue reading “Free for all”

Canfranc Estación, a grand railway hotel

Although Bill and I are definite fans of rail travel, we seldom pay close attention to the station. For us it’s usually just the place to check the departure board and to pick up some buttery croissants or a freshly made sandwich to take onboard. If we’re changing trains along the way we might not even go inside the building; instead, we look at the display screen as we arrive to see from which platform our connection will be departing and then walk directly there. Oh sure, who wouldn’t notice the massive open interior of New York’s Grand Central Terminal, London’s impressive red brick facade of St. Pancras International, said to have been the world’s largest enclosed space when it opened in 1868, or the beautiful tile covered walls inside São Bento in Porto, depicting the history of Portugal. While we’ve seen those and one or two others that come to mind, we had never made travel plans specifically to route ourselves a particular way in order to visit a station…until we went to Canfranc, Spain.

Continue reading “Canfranc Estación, a grand railway hotel”

Surprising Bari, Italy

Last month on the way to Greece we changed trains in Lyon from where we could have taken a plane and been in Athens about 3 hours later. Instead we chose the “slow travel” option via Milan that included travel onboard the Italian Frecciarossa train in Executive class. The car had 10 extra-wide leather reclining armchairs (photo in this paragraph) so we had lots of legroom with at-seat dining choices of 3, four-course meals. We were onboard long enough to enjoy both breakfast and lunch and below I’ll include a pdf of the menu. (Tip: don’t be shy about asking for what you want to eat and drink.) While all of this comfort on the train was a pleasant surprise, an unexpected bonus awaited us at our ferry port destination.

Continue reading “Surprising Bari, Italy”

The island of Milos

Soon after we knew that we’d be going to Athens to meet up with my brother and sister-in-law, Bill asked me where else in Greece I wanted to go. With the stunning landscapes from the movie “Mamma Mia” playing in my head, where every quaint village is filled with whitewashed stone houses topped by domed blue roofs, I said, “the islands”. Although Greece has thousands of islands, only about 200 of them are inhabited including names I knew such as Mykonos, Santorini, Crete, and Rhodes but we chose one that’s not been so popular and it was less than 3 hours by ferry from Athens.

Continue reading “The island of Milos”

Car-free travel

We had the people who live on either side of us over for dinner on Friday night and part of the evening’s discussion centered on our quartier and the parking—or lack thereof—for the residents. Our street isn’t very wide so any of the legal spots that become available are highly coveted. It was during this conversation that one of our guests said with a grin, “You two are the ideal neighbors” that I was then hoping to hear words like “quiet, respectful, and orderly”. But no; the real reason that we are popular is because we don’t have a car so we don’t compete with every other house on the block. That prompted a question about how we travel both locally and long distance using only public transport which coincided perfectly with an article I had just read about visiting France car-free.

Continue reading “Car-free travel”

Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port

Last year while we were staying in France’s Basque country we made a day trip to the Atlantic coastal town of Saint-Jean-de-Luz and enjoyed it so much that we recently returned there to spend some more time. Having said that, in addition to revisiting many of the places we had seen on that first trip we also used it as a base for a trip into the Pyrenees mountains. We knew the name of this “other” Saint-Jean destination because walkers on the Camino pass through Carcassonne on their way there and now we were going to visit it ourselves.

Continue reading “Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port”