Extra Videos from Paris

Extra Videos from Paris

Flashbooking is a growing cheap hostel Florence and hotels directory specializing in budget accommodation for independent travellers, students, backpackers, families and all the ones that travel on a pocket. Flashbooking is becoming a recognized source of information and services for who loves creating a trip by him/herself and book bed nights securely online.
/>
In fact, thanks to a secure server certified SSL provided by Thawte (the global certificate authority) Flashbooking is able to guarantee instantly confirmed and secure online bookings. Thawte is a system which encrypts all the processed data and guarantees that this will not be read, used or modified by other parties.

Online bookings also mean that your holiday is just a click away, that you can get all the information needed to book online, that you can save time and money! The customer service is always available to suggest you the
perfect accommodation for your trip. A Skype account has been recently added in order to give more assistance to our travellers and backpackers needs. Flashbooking accommodation database is easily available online and comes completed with all relevant information about hostel location, description, contacts, prices, instant real availability, customer ratings, facilities and pictures. In particularFlashbooking provides a large selection of cheap or low cost accommodation offers in Florence where there are plenty of low cost solutions for backpackers in budget youth hostels, bed and breakfast Florence, family run guesthouses, cheap hotel deals.

Travelling safely on a budget, often means having your credit/debit card with you and some coins in your hand for daily needs. Flashbooking helps you saving money with a special promotion that allows travellers to earn money and credits of 1,5 euros by inviting other friends to subscribe and receive the monthly newsletter, rich of information about hostel and hotel deals. For each friend that sings up, our travellers get 1,50 euros: it is possible to earn up to 40 euros! These credits are immediately registered in the user’s personal online account ‘My Booking’ and at the reach of 40 euros they are automatically deducted to pay your online hostel reservations!!!

See Flashbooking database of selected accommodations worldwide and help us enlarging the hostel offer by reporting the contacts of some accommodations, lodgings, BandB, youth hostels and budget small hotels where you personally stayed. In fact, Flashbooking policy tends to privilege small and family-run hotels in order to promote an alternative tourism respectful of cultures and different societies.

Recently, Flashbooking staff and management have decided to put at travellers’ and partner hostels’ free disposal some useful tools as some pocket travel guides, written for giving the essential information about the most visited cities in the world. Especially created for a quick visit, a week end, a city break, these free pocket guides are printable and downloadable online. The staff efforts concentrate on making them simple to read and with a nice format and full of essential hints on where to go, things to see, shopping and markets, quality places reasonably priced where to eat or hang out in the nights, budget hostels and cheap hotel deals to book, emergency numbers and more.

Freshly issued is the Free Pocket City Guide of Florence that contains, in just 9 printable pages, all the essential information and very good suggestions about this famous Italian and Tuscany Art Capital as its renown leather shops and flea markets, Uffizi Museums, Academies and Art Galleries, budget Florentine restaurants and cheap lodgings, classic itineraries in the Chianti Tuscany hills or in Siena, transports and a lot more. Free for anyone who wish to book and go and rich of colour pictures, the Florence Travel Pocket Guide is at your disposal inFlashbooking.

If you also have a personal website or a travel blog, or even manage a youth hostel or a hotel accommodation, and are interested in the travel city guides, you can collect all of them and put at your visitors’ disposal.
Other city pocket guides of top European cities are: the London guide, the Rome guide, the Amsterdam guide, the Paris guide, the Prague guide, the Barcelona guide and more coming on soon!

Last but not least, the Flashbooking philosophy can be summarize in a few lines: ‘Those who love travelling light, those with a sense for adventure, those who love flexibility in their trip, those who like meeting locals and
travelling slow and low… THOSE ARE OUR TRAVELLERS!’

So mates, we are looking forward to finding you THE budget accommodation that meets your needs and pocket for your next trip!

Watch the video related to Travel Guide Paris

These are extra videos from Paris that I hadn’t uploaded yet

Help answer the question about Travel Guide Paris


About Author

This article was written by Michele De Capitani with support from Youth Hostels and cheap hotels deal and Mrs Vera Bonaventura. For any information on how travel insurance, please visit our website to download your free travel guides for Florence City in Italy.

13 Responses to “Extra Videos from Paris”

  1. tour buses usually have toilets

  2. This is a totally random question, haha, but are there toilets on the buses?

  3. The best guide to the sights of Paris is probably the Dorling Kindersley Eyewitness Travel Guide to Paris. You can order one from their website http://us.dk.com/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,9780756615475,00.html Its just vastly better than the usual Rick Steve's/Frommer/Fodor's junk.

    I know this sounds silly but being a "good" tourist is hard work and you should spend almost as much time preparing as you do actually being there. So don't just get a guide book but read thru it very carefully BEFORE you go.

    Make a list of what you want to see based on your personal interests and the amount of time you have. Of course, its fine to come back to this forum with more specific questions after you have had the time to do some research of your own.

    There's also a lot to Paris that is beyond the tourist sights. Its the ambience and the attitude of Paris which need to be lived and felt.

    You should spend some time just strolling around the city to appreciate its architecture and to get a feel for its medieval layout, the Belle Epoch improvements of Baron Hausman, and the modernizations seen in places like the Les Halles Forum and the new Opera in the Place Bastille.

    You should take a little time to just sit in a cafe in the Latin Quarter or St. Germaine and people watch. Go the Luxembourg Gardens and feed the pigeons. Watch little kids sailing toy boats in the big pond there.

    Be a bit courageous about food. Go to places that don't cater to tourists and don't have English menus. Just point to things on the menu or, better still, walk into a cafe at lunchtime and ask for the daily special which you'll almost always see displayed on a chalk board. don't worry if you don't know what it is! Try it! The worst that will happen is that you'll have a hilarious story to tell about how you got served a calve's head with cream sauce or something else too weird for you to eat.

    Mainly, don't stay in a tight little tourist cocoon. Strike up conversations with strangers, be open minded, put your map in your back pocket and just wander around, get lost, experiment, learn, take the time to really look at things.

    Bonne chance!

  4. I have Lonely Planet, Fodor's and Let's Go, but how would I ever be able to send them?

  5. Be sure to request a hotel with air conditioning!!!!!

    We stayed a few blocks from the Eiffel Tower and almost died of heat every single night! Because it was so hot during the day, it stormed every single night, which was kind of nice because we opened up our window and caught a breeze.

    Be sure to bring a compact umbrella for everyone in your group – you don't want to lug around a huge golf umbrella, but you will definitely need to take one every where you go because the weather is iffy each day.

    We visited the American Embassy when we first arrived, and they suggested we buy a pass for the underground train – not a good idea, as the train didn't stop near anything we wanted to see! So…….invest in some really good walking shoes and plan on doing the city by foot. It's the best way to really get close to the Parisians anyway. Remember — it's PARIS, so if you are easily offended, you'll be frequently offended! We witnessed a couple making love on the grass in a park right up from the Louvre! It fascinated my young son, who thought they were wrestling! LOL

    Enjoy your stay — and plan to spend several hours standing in line for the Louvre and Tower, but they are SO worth it!

    I wish you well!!!

  6. I'm not sure where you found this information, but a ticket on the Eurostar is just that, a ticket to travel on the train from London to Paris. There is no tour guide, or anything else, included. Suggest you check the Eurostar website: http://www.eurostar.com

  7. the RER is complicated and sometimes you have to wait a while.
    Better just taking the 3 line (green) to Opera and change for the 8 (purple) to Ecole Militaire.
    You will be at the other end of the Champs de Mars, making for a fantastic 1km walk and build-up to the actual tower (it's a park built in the tower's perpective, so you admire it all the time you're walking.

  8. You won't find it difficult to find your way around. Just get a good guide book, like Michelin, and it will tell you the places to go and how to get there. Much of Paris can be done by walking; just plan your days doing area by area so that you're not running around aimlessly.

    Bear in mind that the Metro is easy once you know to look for the station that is at the end of the line. (In London, you look for "Eastbound", etc.)

    I've done Paris many times, but spent a little time planning.

    It's a wonderful city; have a lovely time.

  9. I went on the same tour a few years ago! I am definitely moving to paris!

  10. The above advice is good, it's an excellent idea to get all the free information you can find. However, if you're shopping for a Guide Book I HIGHLY recommend Rick Steves' guide books for both locations. Rick has specific guides just for the cities of London and Paris as well as books on all of England and France in case you are traveling outside the cities. You shouldn't need to buy all 4, if you are leaving the cities, the country books alone should give you plenty of info.

    I've always been a fan of Rick's books because he points you in inexpensive and fun directions that help you travel like a local but see all the touristy stuff. He also designs self walking tours of towns and museums. Saves you the money of paying for a tour and you've got all the info at your finger tips.

    The Rick Steves books really are the most thorough and interesting. They also seem to be the only line that takes traveling like a local and costs in mind constantly. You can get used Rick Steves books on eBay, amazon or half. He comes out with a new version each year so you can get used 2005 or 2006 books that will still be accurate but will be a lot cheaper. Check out his other travel tips and info for London and Paris at his web site http://www.ricksteves.com

    The Lets Go Guidebooks are also heavily recommended, but I find them a lot more boring and I've had bad experiences with hotels and restaurants they recommended.

    Hope this helps, enjoy your trip!
    Cheers.

  11. I think this can help you:

    http://www.viamichelin.com/viamichelin/int/tpl/hme/MaHomePage.htm

    just give your start city and your end city and voila! you get all info you need

  12. This is probably not the answer you want to hear but my opinion is that all the travel guides are more of less alike and that no one guide is going to really be good for anything more than the usual tourist trip.

    As I type this i am looking at my bookshelf of travel books. I must have something like 150 of which 30 or 40 concern France generally or Paris in particular. These include such obscure things as "Seeing Paris," a guide published in 1931.

    I go to Paris just about every year and have been doing so for more than 30 years and yet before each trip I spend several weeks planning things out and researching. I read restauant reviews, check the blogs of ex-patriates in Paris, and make extensive notes. I have a database of Paris restaurants and night clubs with hundreds of entries that I constantly update with whatever information I can glean from the internet.

    The bottom line here is that you should consider doing your own research from many sources and compiling your own personal guide book.

    It will be better than anything someone else can give you and you may find, as I do, that the preparation for your trip is itself an interesting activity.

    Give it a try. I know it sounds like a horrible idea but it really works and its fun.

    .

  13. omg we had the same guide in Paris. Did you notice that she said “hmm” all the time.

Leave a Reply