Great Travel tips with Corliss Group for Visiting Paris in Springtime
by Raelene Mcguire The Corliss Group Travel AgencyWith flowering public
gardens and boulevards made for strolling hand-in-hand, this is the perfect
time of year to visit the City of Light. Here, we share our favorite tips for
finding the perfect views, affordable meals, and making Paris your own.
Have a plan, but be flexible
John Baxter, author of The Most Beautiful Walk in the World: A Pedestrian in Paris, recommends that you pick one must-see for
each day in Paris, but improvise the rest of the day. This combination of
planning and spontaneity is ideal for Paris, a city that offers not only
super-famous sights like the Louvre, Notre Dame, and the Arc de Triomphe, but
also super-secret spots that are all the more special for being off the beaten
path. "Paris can't be done with just a map or a guidebook. You have to get
lost, frustrated, Overwhelmed. Only then will you find that
perfect café, that market that seems like a local secret, or that hidden
garden. You have to discover Paris for yourself and then it will be yours,
"says Rebecca Geoffroy-Schwinden, a Ph.D. candidate in musicology recently
returned from a year in Paris.
Get the perfect view
Dubbed "this useless
and monstrous Eiffel Tower"
by the city’s most prominent artists when it was proposed by engineer Gustave
Eiffel, Parsons ultra-iconic observation tower debuted as the entrance to the
1889 World’s Fair and quickly became so popular that it was never taken down.
These days, the only "monstrous" thing about the tower is the line to
buy tickets--the Eiffel Tower attracts more than 7 million visitors each year.
It may no longer be the tallest man-made structure in the world (it held that
title until the 1930 completion of New York City’s Chrysler Building), but the
view of the City of Light from the top--including the Arc de Triomphe, Sacre
Coeur, the Seine and its many bridges, and the surrounding countryside up to 40
+ miles--has no earthly match. The elevator to the top: 15 euros (buy tickets
online to sidestep the line). You can toast the view with a glass of Champagne
(from 10 euros), and beat the crowds by visiting later in the evening--the
floodlit tower is open until 11 p.m. through mid-June, then to midnight in
summer.
Insiders suggest that you
take the No. 6 Metro line to the Bir-Hakeim station--youll get an unforgettable
view of the tower as your above-ground train approaches the station. Looking
for a less-crowded view? The top of Notre Dame cathedral can't be beat, and the
view from the Arc De Triomphe is spectacular as well. Or try this insider tip:
"Head to the top of Tour Montparnasse around 4: 30 p.m. for a Champagne
overlooking the Champs de Mars and the Eiffel Tower," suggests
Geoffroy-Schwinden.
See the gardens
Sure, museums like the
Louvre and D'Orsay insist on keeping world-famous paintings like the Mona Lisa
indoors and that’s where you've got to go to see them. But if you visit Paris
in springtime, don't stay cooped up inside. The Louvre's collection includes
not only paintings, drawings, and sculptures, but also the Carousel gardens and
Tuileries, which offer explosions of spring color, fragrant paths, and inviting
landscaping. And for a real dose of spring flowers, don't miss the Luxembourg
Gardens and a day trip to Versailles!
Do lunch
A lot of sit-down
restaurants in Paris will set you back hundreds of bucks at dinner time. Save
them for a (really) special occasion. But Baxter reminds us that prices at some
of the top joints can be 50 percent lower at lunch time. He also suggests you
can't go wrong at lunch time picking up a spot where the diner’s stuff napkins
into their collars and mop up their plates with pieces of baguette--if picky
Parisians are happy with the place, you’ll likely find a $40 lunch that
includes a good wine. Don't be a wine snob: House wines in Paris are among the
best in the world. And don't forget that tips are always included in the bill,
so don't tack on an extra 20 percent.
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Created on Dec 31st 1969 18:00. Viewed 0 times.