Welcome to Paris!

This Paris page is designed especially for EuroCycler guests of the Hotel Saint Pétersbourg who are visiting Paris for the first time. The idea is to give you pieces of advice to acquaint you with the City of Light, and help you prepare for your stay. Read on!

Prepare well for a stroll

Once you have settled down in your comfortable hotel room and are getting ready to take your first stroll, take some time to dress appropriately .

First, put on a really good pair of walking shoes to feel comfortable in the Parisian streets. Walking in Paris means stopping often to look at amazing details and buildings. This constant stop-and-go will wear you down if you aren't comfy in your shoes.

Visiting the Eiffel Tower means waiting often over 30 minutes to gain access to the ticket booth, then waiting some more for the elevator on the way up, and waiting some more for the elevator on the way down. So to your feet, a pair of good shoes will make a big difference !

Parisian weather in summer is usually fine (70-85°F), August is generally hotter (80-95°F).

In any case, take your umbrella along, it may become your best friend - especially if you intend to take pictures of everything. Rain and camera lenses don't like each other.

Street-savvy tips

Now that you're dressed and all ready to venture outside, here are a couple of useful tips:

- Avoid taking a taxi during the day , and notably in the morning until 11:00, and in the late afternoon from 4:00 to 8:00. Streets are jam-packed during those periods, and seeing the meter run while you're a sitting in bumper-to-bumper traffic is a disheartening experience.

- Taxi fares: taxi meters show your fare and one of three letters: A, B, or C. If you are within Paris and on the ring outside Paris (the peripheral boulevard), the A rate applies from 6:00 PM and 8:00 PM, and the B rate turns on from 8:00 PM till 6:00 AM. When you leave Paris intra-muros, the driver will turn on the B rate during the day and the C rate from 8:00 PM. If you are far from Paris, the C rate always applies. You will pay extra for every luggage you load in the trunk and if you take the cab from an airport. Don't try to hail a cab in the street too close to a train station: taxi drivers can't load passengers within a 100-meter radius from the train stations. Go to the station taxi head instead, or further away from the station.

- French people do lunch between 12:00 and 1:30 PM, and dinner between 7:30 and 10:00 PM. If you wish to avoid the crowd, lunch at 12:00 tops and dine out from 6:00 to 7:00 PM. Restaurants rarely serve between 2:00 and 6:00 PM.

- Having a drink at the terasse of a sidewalk cafe is a necessary experience in Paris. However, terasse drinks are often charged premium prices.

- Although they are saddled with a reputation, cafe waiters are not necessarily rude: they're just in a hurry. So don't take offense if they are impatient with you. Smile and show them what you want on the menu. They won't return the smile, but you will get your order quickly.

- In Parisian restaurants, it is not customary for your waiter to come back to you once you are served to see if everything is alright: they assume this is the case. So don't feel you are ignored: just call the waiter when you wish to have your bread basket replenished. If you dine out at an expensive restaurant, waiters will tend your table diligently. Otherwise, it won't be the case.

- Gratuity : your restaurant/cafe check already includes a 15% gratuity. If you feel like giving an extra tip to your cafe waiter, leave EUR 1 ($.97) on the table. In a restaurant, you may leave EUR 3-5 ($2.7-4.5, more if you are in an expensive place) but again, that's not expected in either case. Your credit card receipt won't show any gratuity line.

Armed with these few basic advices, you are ready to conquer the asphalt. On to places to visit!