Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hello!



Planning on driving to France this summer with E who will then be 17/18 months. Has anyone been anywhere close-ish (we want to minimise driving time for obvious reasons), with nice scenery, pref on the coast (maybe the West Coast?) that's suitable for a toddler? Better still does anyone have a recommendation of a place to stay (self catering)?. Was thinking of the Dordogne but might be too far...


Sorry a bit vague but thought I'd pick your brains whie I find the time to read the Lonely Planet guide!

We've had a similar challenge - we adore the Basque corner or France, but too far to drive with littlies unless you're very brave! Would recommend St Jean de Luz though if flying (into Biarritz with Ryanair).


Not coastal, but one idea may be the Loire Valley - lovely, but not that exciting. (Unless you're getting plastered on le vin.)

We've done Eurocamp several times in France with the children at various ages. Staying in a mobile home means you get a bathroom and toilet if you don't fancy 'proper' camping. All the campsites have fab swimming pools and playgrounds etc.(last years had a bouncy castle!)and loads of other chilcdren around to play with. Also lovely outdoor living and the sites all have shops with fresh bread, croissants etc in the morning and restaurants and take aways too. We tend to go for the smaller sites but there's loads of choice depending on your preferences. In fact, last couple of times we've picked sites from the Eurocamp brochure and then booked a chalet / mobile home direct with the campsite as it's cheaper and we've found the EC reps to be pretty rubbish so not worth paying the extra for.

We've done the Dordogne which was a long drive but feasible in a day with an early ferry and few stops (easier if children still in nappies!) and also Loire which was obviously very easy in a day. The Castels chain of campsites in France are all great - Eurocamp go to most of these and there is at least one very good one in the Vendee as well as Loire.

We used www.totstofrance.co.uk last year and are going again this summer. Have places all over France (although they do seem to be very popular over the summer months so you may be out of luck this year). Great because you don't have to take all the usual stuff you carry - they supply cots, bed guards, baby baths, high chairs, monitors, sterilisers, blenders, stair gates, toys, etc and most places also have outdoor equipment to keep them busy - swings, sand pits, wendy houses. We took our 6 month old and 3 year old last year and had everything we would need (although we still managed to fill the car to the rafters!)


Jx

We went with Key Camp to Camping de la Baie, near Trinite-sur-Mer on the south coast of Brittany when our two were around 18 months and 3. It was perfect. They loved the ferry over and we only had a two hour car journey the other side. The campsite is ideal for small ones with a wide sandy beach just across the lane, a small playground and a swimming pool and toddler pool. We were lucky enough to be right at the far end of the site, in a sort of cul-de-sac which meant our kids and the ones in the neighbouring caravans could charge about in a little gang without us worrying about the (few, slow) cars coming in and out of the site. Best of all was the playground right next to the bar, so the parents could relax with an evening drink and watch the sunset whilst the smalls got rid of the last of their energy before bedtime.


My husband was horrified at the thought of a caravan park holiday, but even he accepts that it was a great holiday.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Indeed ianr, I didn't have time to include all Royal Mail options, thanks for that extra bit, they have been spot on for me, I use them a lot and have never had any issues with delivery, touch wood!
    • People are switching to electric cars irrespective of fuel prices.  100s of millions that could be spent on hospitals and schools for example have been lost due to fuel duty freezes and a supposedly temporary reduction.  Fuel is relatively cheap at the moment.  With a stonking majority when is it time to rightly take on motorists? Farming, I simply referred to Paul Johnson of the IFS who knows more about the economy that you, I and Truss will ever know. Food?  Au contraire.  It's too cheap, too poor quality and our farmers are squeezed by the supermarkets and unnatural desire to keep it cheap.  A lot less takeaways and more home cooking with decent often home produced, food should benefit most in our society. Be honest you do t like Labour. 
    • In fact there was a promotional leaflet came through the letter box today, for sending by RM's parcel post by buying online.  There are also options mentioned for having the labels printed  at a Collect+ store or at a Parcel Locker.  More info at https://www.royalmail.com/.
    • Is it? Let's see  Farming is a tough gig with increasingly lower returns, if farms have to sell off land to pay inheritance tax it will reduce their ability to survive. Which in real terms could mean more farm land lost and more reliance on imported food which sees money flowing out, not in to the country.  But I guess as long as you get cheap food that doesn't concern you 😉  Lol "what about the cars"  again Mal... like a broken record....  Governments know that squeezing car drivers for more fuel duty will drive down income from taxes as people switch to electric, which would leave them with a black hole in income. Guess the fuel duty is a fine balancing act tiĺl enough electric cars have been sold to raise tax revenue from their use. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...