Archive for the ‘Travel’ Category
The T list
The T list contains your favourite travel and tourism blogs. It’s a way of using links to boost smaller blogs and getting more readers. Let me know if you enjoyed any of the blogs listed below.
Instructions
– Write a post.
– Copy/paste the link list from the post you’ve discovered the T-List into it.
– Make sure the links are active and correct.
– If your blog is on the list, remove it’s not a self-promotion post. As Tim Fehlman (Z-List) said : Don’t worry, because if your name is on mine, it’s on others and will spread.’
– Add your favorite tourism and travel blogs on it.
– Add the url of the blog where you’ve discovered the T-List as well.
– Publish the post.
– People will notice the T-List and continue it.
Here is the list
France This Way
Hotel Blogs
Les Explorers
Chrispitality Media Blog
A Luxury Travel Blog
Travel Rants
Travolution Blog
BootBlog
Erin Julian
My Travel Backpack
Happy Hotelier
Radaron
The Travel PR Blog
Europe A La Carte
Normandy Gite
Frenchless in France
French Journal
The Paris Blog
L’Oiseau
Maldives Live
Getting cheaper flights on Ryanair
We’re just getting organised for a trip to Belfast next week and have been pricing the flights on Skyscanner as that’s a much, much easier way to pick out the cheap flights compared to trying to do it directly on the Ryanair site.
As usual, it’s cheaper and more convenient for us to fly out of Carcassonne and back to Girona. Most people wouldn’t think of doing that as the historic assumption has always been that return flights are cheaper. That was certainly true in the days before discount airlines but although discount airlines will normally let you book a return ticket, in practice their flights are actually priced as one-way.
So, in our case, if you were flying from Dublin to the Pyrenees, the cheapest thing to do is usually to fly from Dublin to Girona and then fly back to Dublin from Carcassonne. The one complication in this scenario if you’re coming here is that international dropoffs of cars can be expensive so you need to price in that aspect of your trip before committing yourself to booking the flights. However, there are other pairs of airports in the same area where flights in one direction are substantially cheaper than those in the other direction so it’s worth spending 20 minutes or so looking at alternatives to simple return flights.
Another aspect of this is that you can often find that the flight times are more convenient to other airports in the same area in one direction but not in the other one. For instance, we find that the flight from Carcassonne to Dublin departs around 1pm so we can get to Belfast easily enough that day. Coming back, the 6pm flight to Girona is also handy for us as we can also do Belfast to Girona in one day vs the 9am departure for Carcassonne which would require a night in a Dublin hotel.
Don’t forget that Ryanair charge 4.50‚€ for each item of checked luggage these days (it’s more if you don’t declare the bags online in advance) and that the limit is now 15kg per person of checked luggage, 10kg per person of carryon (don’t forget to get some luggage scales to take full advantage of this). Possibly more significant is that children 2 years or older get a full luggage allowance and, crazy at it might appear, two adults with two kids can take 100kg of luggage with no overweight charges.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Winter in the south of France: global warming in action?

The photo shows the kind of weather we were expecting to get this February but in reality that photo was taken in January 2006.
Naturally, everyone went out and bought snow chains after the snow that you see in the photo. In fact, that is the only day that we have had snow in three years. All that snow landed in a matter of hours one day in January last year, was completely gone the next day and a few days afterwards we were back into the t-shirts.
This year we’ve not had any snow yet and have been in the t-shirts almost every day since February last year. Even the usual wind that comes mainly in the Winter in this area has kept away so we’ve been eating lunch outside nearly all of the time. Even more peculiar is the sight of the locals sunning themselves in the cafés around the town when ordinarily they wear really serious Winter clothing from mid-September through to the following May but with temperatures regularly over 20c for ages, even they are starting to adjust their habits.
Since we’re now equipped with snow chains, we were hoping to head out to one of the local ski resorts a few times over the Winter but even they have only been opened relatively recently compared to the more normal November to March. Net effect is that instead of ski-ers staying with us we’ve had normal tourists looking for somewhere a little warmer than more northerly parts of Europe.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.The most useful item of luggage
I’m sure that there are lots of opinions on this one, but for me the most useful item of luggage that I have at the moment is something that I received as a Christmas present many years ago: a set of luggage scales.
Having these means that I’m never one of those people standing at the Ryanair checkin desk arguing that there’s no difference to the plane if there’s 9kg in carryon and 16kg in checked luggage or 10kg in carryon and 15kg in checked because I have already moved that 1kg from checked to carryon before I get to the desk. In fact with these scales we were able to manage 85kg and no excess fees on a recent trip (2 adults, 2 children can carry up to 100kg on Ryanair, not counting the pram). Without them, we’d have been sure to be arguing that we should be able to share the checked luggage allowance.
You might think that you will be able to check the weight using one of the unused checkin desks. However, in newer desks the scales are switched off when they aren’t being used and, of course, the staff won’t let you weigh luggage in advance at a desk with no queue as that will clearly reduce the income received through excess weight charges.
It’s definitely worth purchasing a set if you’ve not got them already as they’ll almost certainly save their cost on your first trip. Now, all you have to do is to hunt them out as I’ve not seen them for sale for quite a while.
Of course, their disappearance coinciding with the arrival of more aggressive excess charging is just a co-incidence. Isn’t it?
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.
Activities in the south of France
Many people have the view that the south of France is simply somewhere that you go to get a suntan on the beach but there are many other activities here throughout the year.
Whilst many fishermen will call it a day once it gets into October or perhaps November in the UK, in the south of France it’s quite a different picture during the year. This photo was taken in the middle of February with temperatures getting on for 20c which is only disguised by the local habit of wearing Winter clothes when it drops below 30c; those of you from the UK would still be in t-shirts.
It’s a similar story with many of the activities that are considered mainly Summer time persuits in the more northernly areas of Europe. In fact, it’s often too warm to continue with many “Summer” activities when the Summer weather kicks in here. For instance, if your interests are in rambling and cycling then it’s not viable to do those in June or July. This is part of our guide to the Pyrenees.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.