A Good Trip to France Doesn't Always Need a Big Itinerary
Sometimes a morning market, a walk by the river, and a relaxed dinner are enough. France works especially well when you leave space between the points on the map.
Experiences, questions and conversations
A public, moderated space for travel memories, kitchen stories and practical France questions. Calm, useful and connected to the premium magazine without becoming a noisy forum.
Sometimes a morning market, a walk by the river, and a relaxed dinner are enough. France works especially well when you leave space between the points on the map.
Slow travel does not mean experiencing less. It means seeing more carefully. A train station, a bakery, a riverbank, a quiet place: such scenes often explain more than the next mandatory appointment. Our travel sections try...
A rainy day, a strike, a full parking lot: traveling becomes easier when you have alternatives prepared. A small museum, a market under arcades, or a café near the train station save more days than you...
A festival poster at the train station, a small theater, a concert in a church: Those traveling in France should take local cultural calendars seriously. Often, the difference between a visit and a genuine encounter lies...
I love starting a French city from the train station. You can see the rhythm there: who is rushing, who is waiting, where the main street leads, where the first café is. It's not a romantic...
Discovering France by car also means occasionally mistrusting the motorway. National roads, mountain passes, and small departmental roads often reveal more about the landscape and daily life than the shortest route. Current information on roads and...
Those who discover France by bike quickly notice that distance isn't everything. A climb, wind, a shop closed at midday, or a market on the village square can change the day. That's not a problem,
Paris is of course important, but the truly charming places in France are often in small and medium-sized towns. Markets, riversides, old streets, local restaurants, and those squares that aren't in a hurry to please tourists....
Crossing the border into France often means changing the way you stop. Villages seem to ask for a longer pause, a less hurried coffee, a look at the signs and markets. It's a small
I now plan trips to France less by sights and more by daily rhythm: early to the market, something simple at midday, a museum or a railway line in the afternoon, a place with light and...
Sometimes a morning market, a walk along the river, and a leisurely dinner are enough. France works especially well when you leave space between the points on the map.
A rainy day, a strike, a full parking lot: Traveling is easier when you have alternatives prepared. A small museum, a market under arcades, or a café near the train station save more days than you...