Saturday, March 24, 2012

Nice "Must See"

We have 2 days in August in Nice and want to pack it in. Any suggestions on %26quot;must see%26quot; and maybe a ranking of them?




|||





Just back from 5 days in Paris %26amp; 4 in Nice. Did exactly that in Nice - Packed it all in- Avoid going on trains if you%26#39;re 1st trip %26amp; spend some money instead on Monaco Excursions which is a minivan holding upto 8 people with a/c.



If going on trains from Nice avoid the computer terminals %26amp; go to ticket counters even if there is a line because at least you will get the correct tickets. Computer not the greatest at producing the ones I wanted.





Got to see Monaco, Eze (more perfume) in 1/2 day then went to Antibes,Cannes, Gourdion, Grasse (perfume place) Terretes de Loop in one day.



If you get Paschal as one of the drivers then you will have hit the jackpot, he HAS a sense of humour.





At night plenty of Restaurants etc but walking down the promenade at 2 or 3 in the morning was a delight. Best thing in Nice though are the shops %26amp; people watching.





Nice is more than Nice. Do not waste your time going to St Tropez you have been warned lol.




|||



Are you driving? My suggestions from a 4/04 trip.



1. Go to the market in Vieux Nice (a stone%26#39;s throw from the waterfront), buy lunch, drive the middle or high corniche towards Monaco ... along the way, stop for picnic lunch overlooking Monaco. VIsit church w/Princess Grace%26#39;s tomb.



2. Walk the Promenade Anglais and visit the Hotel Negresco - Salon Royal has cool artwork.



3. Spend some time in St. Paul de Vence (we stayed at the Hotel de Hameau w/in walking distance of SPdV - incredible). Relaxing dinner at La Concorde.



4. Tourettes-sur-Loup has narrow streets with local artisan%26#39;s shops



5. Fun to take the perfume tour at Fragonnard in Grasse.



6. Great Chagall museum in Nice, a bit challenging to find - need a good map.



St. Tropez takes forever to get to, and we didn%26#39;t feel it was worth the drive.




|||



With luck one of the regular posters will return here and provide you with his great itinerary for visiting Nice.





Must sees from me:





the Promenade des Anglais





the view from the Château





the Cours Saléya outdoor market





the winding streets of Vieux Nice





the Matisse and Chagall museums





a car or train ride along the coast toward Eze




|||



The %26quot;must see%26quot;%26#39;s of Nice in 2 days? Get a feel for the city by visiting the morning food and flower market in the Cours Saleya followed by an exploration of the narrow streets of the Old Town. A stroll along the Promenade des Anglais is mandatory as is a climb (or take the lift) to the Chateau for the wonderful view over the city and the Corniche. And, of course, lots of time to enjoy the wonderful Niçoise cuisine, Provençal wines and people watching. The essence of the Côte d%26#39;Azur.




|||



To dublin18Calling - How did you do the Antibes,Cannes, Gourdion, Grasse (perfume place) Terretes de Loop trip from Nice? By train? If so, can you provide details. Or did you go by minivan?



Thank you!




|||



You can visit Cannes, Antibes, and Grasse by train. To see Tourrettes-sur-Loup and the extraordinary perched village of Gourdon requires a car or perhaps a mini-van tour.




|||



You can visit Cannes, Antibes, and Grasse by train. To see Tourrettes-sur-Loup and the extraordinary perched village of Gourdon requires a car or perhaps a mini-van tour.




|||





Hi Helen,





I will post a new topic, on this subject today %26amp; my experiences in minivan.





Regards



John in Dublin




|||



Tourrette-sur-Loup and Gourdon are very nice villages to see but you DO need a car. If you only have 2 days, I%26#39;d keep them for your next visit.





I put up some sort of plans for a few days stay. Take whatever you feel comfortable with.Here are my usual suggestions.





They are only suggestions of places I%26#39;ve seen.Of course you will have to help yourself with a guidebook. Since you could be there for a week, I suggest you get one that gives info info mostly on Nice and not Provence and Côte d’Azur. I have one by Hachette Books titled “A weekend in Nice”, it includes also a city map.



Websites like the Nice city’s Tourist Bureau website http://www.nicetourisme.com/GB/somtxt.html and one for the Old Town http://www.oldnice.com/ may be helpful.



There are musts like walking on the Promenade des Anglais , both looking at the sea, the beach and the hotels.



The Old Town and the Cours Saléya: Start from Place Masséna and walk towards the Promenade on Rue de l’Opéra. Make a left on Rue St-Francois-de-Paule, check the boutiques but don’t buy there (touristy prices way too high). Walk straight ahead to the Marché aux Fleurs (Cours Saléya). There is a market every day except Mondays. Walk to the end of the market and you get to the Chapelle du St-Suaire. Make a left on J” Gilly street . It ends on Rue de la Préfecture. Make a left there and walk until you reach Rue Ste-Réparate. Make a right and you will see the Cathedral Ste-Réparate and get on Place Rossetti. Very typical (look at the warmth of colours if you are there 1hr or 2 before sunset). A left on Rue Rossetti until you reach Rue Droite. Make a left on Rue Droite and walk to its end. Stop by Palais Lascaris (free visit) and some nice artist shops (check Christian Dury’s gallerie =%26gt; he puts typical Nice things in Plexiglas frames). Rue Droite falls into Rue St-François the in Rue Pairolière. Both typical Old Nice streets with locals shops, food store, fish and meat stores, etc. Open your eyesand your ears and take a deep breath. Now you see the real thing. You get to the Place Garibaldi. Time for lunch. Help yourself, there are plenty nice spots at cheap prices.



From Place Garibaldi keep your right and stay on Rue Catherine Ségurane from where you will get a road that brings you up the Castle Hill (Colline du Chateau). Walk up to its top and have a look at the whole area (the Port, the beaches, the town). Stop by the Cemetery on your way down and wak to the Port. Look at the small fishermen boats on Quai des Deux Emmanuel. And walk back to town circling the Castle Hill by walking on the sea side to reach back Promenade des Anglais.



That one should take not far from a day long, especially if you stop often at boutiques or for an ice cream cone…



Another nice day is going to Villa Éphrussi Rotschild by Bus 81 (starts from Gare Routière). It accepts regular bus tickets (4 euro fro a day, around 15 euro for a week pass with unlimited travel). Ask the driver for the name of the bus stop right at the doorsteps of the Villa. A superb mansion with 7 fantastic gardens. 2hours of pure delight. Wanna have fun and see the real thing once again. When you get out of the Villa walk to your left. The road goes up a bit, walk on the road to your left. It goes down towards St-Jean-Cap Ferrat where you can stop for lunch and get back to Nice with Bus 81 once again. Or you could even walk on the seaside towards Bealieu-sur-Mer using the trail called Sentier des Douaniers. It is about an hour walk and you could then visit Beaulieu, its Villa Kerylos and get back to Nice by train.



You are there on a Friday. Take the train to Vintimille (Ventimiglia in Italian), a small Italian town where you have a well-known market. You can’t get lost. When you get out of the train station walk straight ahead. 200 ft and it’s crowded, you just found the market! Before getting in it, look on your right for the food market. You wanna see Italians wheeling and dealing? Get in there and have fun? Back to the real market, you can get good deals on leather, cashmere wool, etc. Beware the Africans dealers. It’s no good deal!. The morning is enough for the market. There are some nice rItalian restaurants at cheap prices if you don’t mind walking a block or 2 on your right (eastbound), getting away from the market. Back on the train to Nice, get down at Monaco (not the Ste-Dévote Chapel exit at the back of the train butr the on at the head of the train). Have fun for the afternoon in Monte-Carlo.



Already 3 days gone. Like art? Get a car or take the bus to Vence and St-Paul-de-Vence. It’s about ¾ hour from Nice and take the day for both villages. If you rented a car and feel like shopping with the locals crowd, stop by St-Laurent-du-Var Cap 2000 shopping centre. A huge one.



Museums? Like Modern Art? The Mamac Museum of Modern Art is a must. Then you have both Chagall and Matisse Museum on bus route 15 from the City centre.



Wanna shop? Rue Jean Médecin, rue de l’Hotel des POstes. Rue Gioffredi are all street you should not miss and you have the Centre de l’Étoile shopping Centre on Rue Jean Médecin along with the Galeries Lafayette, the Monoprix for food and clothes and the FNAC for records and books (along with Virgin Megastore across the street). There are walking only streets close to that area and they are fuil of shops and restaurants.



You could take the bus to Eze-Village, a medieval village that must be seen. Menton along the coast is also quite nice to see and has its own Old Town.



Westbound towards Cannes, you have Antibes and Juan les Pins that can be reached easily by bus.



If you rent a car, Mougins and Biot are quite nice to see.




|||



yymca6 - thaks so very much! I just checked back to this thread...and your detailed itinerary is amazing.

No comments:

Post a Comment