Now that we have finished the structured tour of our trip I thought I would add some things and answer some questions some of you may have.
What about photos? Well we have taken a boatload of them and when we get home we will download them, pick the best and put on a site you can access.
Would we come back to Europe? Most definitely, but to places such as Scandinavia, Spain, Portugal, Scotland, Ireland or even Russia.
Will we do it? Probably not, expensive and our age. We still have New Zealand and Australia on our list, that may or may not happen.
About our tour? Our tour consisted of of 48 people and by chance they were all English speaking. Only 2 couples from the States, the rest from Canada, New Zealand, and Australia. About 1/4 of group were singles and we can tell you about our tour mates later. We had the same bus driver, Fabio, from Italy, who is very good and can put a bus in places you would thing impossible. Our leader was Kevin and he hails from Australia and was very knowledgeable and has been doing this for many years, 17 I think.
We stayed in 4 and 5 star hotels, our baggage handling included, so we got rather spoiled. Breakfast was included and many of evening meals were also included. Many of our lunches were at stops on the highway. The better gas stations have pizza, sandwiches and a cafeteria to get a hot meal at a reasonable price.
I thing it was amazing that all of us the bus got along well and we could sit and visit or eat with anyone. We had all ages from 30 something to 70 something, just a good mix. They all did a good job of keeping track of Karen also.
Things are very expensive in Europe and incomes only moderate so I wonder how they make it, except the locals do not eat out that often.
Most of the countries accept the Euro. It takes about $1.40 to buy 1 Euro. Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria are not a part of the economic union but are a part of the European Union so they us their own currency, but accept the Euro and give change in their money. Switzerland also uses their own currency.
The highest price I saw for gasoline was 2.09 Euro per liter, 3.89 liters to a gallon so in US Dollars approximately $11.95 per gallon.
You can buy beer and wine in a restaurant or store for less than a cola. A cola in a restaurant will usually cost from 3 to 4 Euros or about $4.20 to $5.60 for a small coke. We have learned to order the plate specials at noon as they usually include a beverage, entree, and dessert for a very low price and this is what the locals do. Low 5 - 10 Euros.
Transportation in these countries is somewhat different. In the time we have been gone I have only seen 4 or 5 large vehicles, excluding trucks & buses. They drive all small cars and now that they can afford cars there is not place to park them. They park on curs, sidewalks, double and triple park, barely giving room for vehicles to pass. The Smart car has become very popular since by parking on a 90 deg angle rather than parallel park they can put two in one parking space.
Yes they do issue parking tickets, but I understand, at least in Italy, no one pays them and every few years the government cancels them and they start over again.
There are many bicycles and in many of the cities there are painted lanes on the sidewalks for the bicycles. Motor scooters and motor cycles are all over. They dart in and out and around traffic without a care. I think they have a death wish and sometimes wonder if all the sirens we hear are for ambulances going to scrape another motorcyclist of the front of a bus or truck.
All the cities have subways, buses and trolley systems that are not getting used like they were because everyone now has a car, The traffic jams are horrendous, just one big moving parking lot, Oh, and they use their horns a lot, as if that will move a bus or truck. I would not want to have to drive in this mess.
The rail system in Europe is fantastic, affordable, on time and fast. The TGV trains go up to 160 miles per hour ad the regular trains are quick also.
So, in means of transportation, many, many still use the mass transit systems or walk.
Language has not been quite the barrier I thought it would be. You somehow just get by, since many of the Europeans have some English skills, especially in the touristic areas, coupled with the use of pictures on menus, although many have English underneath the language or in some cases have English menus for us dumb Americans.
The Europeans are energy saving, since it cost so much. In many buildings, especially hotels, passageway lamps come on when you enter and go of when you exit. They do not use ice cubes as it cost to much, but are used in some mixed drinks. There are recycle bins all over the cities and they just don't waste much.
Schools in France. They attend Mon, Tue, Thur. & Fri. from 8:30 to 11:30 and 1:30 to 4:30 with no school on Wednesday. They have July and August off and 4 two week breaks during the school year.
Well I have rambled on to much so will close for now. We will update on Frejus in the near future.
Mom & Dad Browne