Calais to Tuscany - route ideas?

Calais to Tuscany - route ideas?

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smack

Original Poster:

9,746 posts

198 months

Tuesday 13th May 2008
quotequote all
Posted this on the Roads section, but over here you guys probably have done this run too many time to count?

Post in Roads forum

In short, Calais to Tuscany, 2 to 3 days each way, recommended routes. Google suggests the quickest is via Switzerland, but I have always been under the impression that it is somewhere best avoided (police, roads, local drivers, expensive), and via France or Austria is a better option.

What I had been mulling over was going via Germany (on a weekend though), with some Autobahn fun, and over the Alps via some nice passes.

Return leg via France, via the Annecy area maybe, but I will have my parents onboard for the trip to England, so it will be a slower run. And French food and drink will keep them happy (but I am sure they will still drive me up the wall!).

Any ideas and suggestions would be appricated!

Cheers,
Stuart

Louis.

516 posts

236 months

Wednesday 14th May 2008
quotequote all
so wre are you heading to in Tuscany ?

smack

Original Poster:

9,746 posts

198 months

Wednesday 14th May 2008
quotequote all
Louis. said:
so wre are you heading to in Tuscany ?
Hi Louis,

I will be meeting up with my parents near Montefiridolfi, where they are attending a conference. Although I haven't seen them for a year, they will probably drive me nuts within a day! So my plan was to do some more exploring around Tuscany. I have been over twice before, but it has been limited to Siena and Firenze for a few days. Last time I was over in 2004, I was banned from any twisty roads by my friend who was with me becuase she would get car sick! Flat out down the Austostrada in the rental car was fine though...

Where are you in Tuscany?

Stuart

Louis.

516 posts

236 months

Wednesday 14th May 2008
quotequote all
smack said:
Louis. said:
so wre are you heading to in Tuscany ?
Hi Louis,

I will be meeting up with my parents near Montefiridolfi, where they are attending a conference. Although I haven't seen them for a year, they will probably drive me nuts within a day! So my plan was to do some more exploring around Tuscany. I have been over twice before, but it has been limited to Siena and Firenze for a few days. Last time I was over in 2004, I was banned from any twisty roads by my friend who was with me becuase she would get car sick! Flat out down the Austostrada in the rental car was fine though...

Where are you in Tuscany?

Stuart
we are based near a town called cortona. you may have heard of the film "Under the tuscan sun" where the film was filmed (Well Cortona and Montepulciano)

Mattt

16,663 posts

225 months

Thursday 15th May 2008
quotequote all
AFAIK Switzerland is only bad if you want to speed everywhere - if you want to casually drive the roads within the limits you should be fine.

sleep envy

62,260 posts

256 months

Sunday 18th May 2008
quotequote all
having done London - Parma at least twice a year for the last 30 years the best route I've found is Bethune, St Quentin, Reims, Chalons-en-Champagne, Troyes, Langres, Vesoul, Belfort, Basel, Luzern, Belinzona, Como, Milan, Parma

all A-roads (bar Switzerland) and can easily be done in 15 hours - I usually leave London at 7pm and am 'in piazza' enjoying a coffee at lunchtime

no traffic, nice and cool, very few plod = toe down

smack

Original Poster:

9,746 posts

198 months

Sunday 18th May 2008
quotequote all
sleep envy said:
having done London - Parma at least twice a year for the last 30 years the best route I've found is Bethune, St Quentin, Reims, Chalons-en-Champagne, Troyes, Langres, Vesoul, Belfort, Basel, Luzern, Belinzona, Como, Milan, Parma

all A-roads (bar Switzerland) and can easily be done in 15 hours - I usually leave London at 7pm and am 'in piazza' enjoying a coffee at lunchtime

no traffic, nice and cool, very few plod = toe downwink
SE, that one sounds good - got the map out checking it smile

15 hours is very good going!

xjandy

1,216 posts

200 months

Wednesday 28th May 2008
quotequote all
smack said:
sleep envy said:
having done London - Parma at least twice a year for the last 30 years the best route I've found is Bethune, St Quentin, Reims, Chalons-en-Champagne, Troyes, Langres, Vesoul, Belfort, Basel, Luzern, Belinzona, Como, Milan, Parma

all A-roads (bar Switzerland) and can easily be done in 15 hours - I usually leave London at 7pm and am 'in piazza' enjoying a coffee at lunchtime

no traffic, nice and cool, very few plod = toe downwink
SE, that one sounds good - got the map out checking it smile

15 hours is very good going!
I do similar route regularly although I dont stop till sicily.
I do calais-Belgium[no tolls]-Luxembourg[for very cheap fuel]-then bit of France to French/German border then south to Switzerland[great motorways at speed and never been caught,have to pay for road tax though ..but lasts for year and is only about Eu50]then milan to bologna then across to firenza.

The french route through montblanc or La frejus is quicker by a couple of hours,and is about 30 miles shorter but costs lots in tolls and speeding fines.[Did that route from Calais in 5 hours once through the night, to Italian Border.]Done Sicily non stop in 21 hours,including ferrys, before they turned the complete Motorway from Napoli to Regio Calabria into a contraflow.

If you have 2 days you could take in alot of scenery!

catso

14,851 posts

274 months

Thursday 29th May 2008
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xjandy said:
The french route through montblanc or La frejus is quicker by a couple of hours,and is about 30 miles shorter but costs lots in tolls and speeding fines!
Just don't get caught speeding in Switzerland, or you'll find out how much a speeding fine can hurt!

I've tried a few routes to Florence but found that Montblanc > Genova etc or Switzerland > Milan are the easiest/quickest, of course if you're not in a hurry and want to take in the scenery there are loads of routes.

beer

xjandy

1,216 posts

200 months

Thursday 29th May 2008
quotequote all
catso said:
[
Just don't get caught speeding in Switzerland, or you'll find out how much a speeding fine can hurt!
do they demand cash? been flashed loads but never stopped.There again It is normally 2-3 in the morning when I hit Switzerland.

catso

14,851 posts

274 months

Thursday 29th May 2008
quotequote all
xjandy said:
do they demand cash? been flashed loads but never stopped.There again It is normally 2-3 in the morning when I hit Switzerland.
I've been flashed and they won't pursue it out of the country (well maybe French drivers) but the fines, if caught, are big (cash or impound vehicle) and means tested, (at least for locals) of course they've got to catch you first ... rolleyes

beer

sleep envy

62,260 posts

256 months

Thursday 29th May 2008
quotequote all
they love finding radar/speed detectors too

adds to their w/e beer kitty

smack

Original Poster:

9,746 posts

198 months

Friday 30th May 2008
quotequote all
Thanks guys for the tips. Heading off tomorrow afternoon, and on to Brussels for dinner and a few beers staying with a friend. Then taking Suturday to get down to the Alps, all dependant on what the traffic is like. I'll probably go via the east side of Switzerland as it looks like a few of the passes are opening up there.

I am just trying to decide if I take my mountain bike along for the week in the Tuscan hills.. Considering I am going to have the olds and 2 medium suitcases for the return leg - a BM 5 series boot is quite big, but not massive.


shost

825 posts

150 months

Monday 23rd May 2016
quotequote all
Thread resurrection - any new suggestions to this advice?

Planning a trip to Florence with the other half. Allowing two full days driving from London each way. Like to take in some passes in the Alps. Won't be hooning. Much. As the other half gets scared

Edited by shost on Tuesday 24th May 00:40

sybaseian

1,826 posts

282 months

Monday 23rd May 2016
quotequote all
shost said:
Thread resurrection - any new suggestions to this advice?

Planning a trip to Florence with the other half. Allowing two full days driving from London each way. Like to take in some passes in the Alps. Won't be honing. Much. As the other half gets scared
overnight in France around Mulhouse on the way down - cheaper than Switzerland and only 30 mins from Basel. The Schlumpf car collection is also in Mulhouse:-

http://citedelautomobile.com/en/home


jock mcsporran

5,036 posts

280 months

Saturday 16th July 2016
quotequote all
Late reply, I don't come in here much, and you've probably already gone.
My wife is from Livorno so we go down regularly. If we want to do it quick we go down through France and Mont Blanc tunnel (I used to do Glasgow to Livorno in 18 hours via Frejus in my younger days when MB tunnel was still closed). We'll stop off somewhere overnight now to break the journey. If I'm taking it easy we go down the German side to Interlaken, spend a night or two there, and then across the passes (Furka/Grimsel/Tremelo).

Iva Barchetta

44,044 posts

170 months

Monday 18th July 2016
quotequote all
Just to add,the toll cost for Lucca ovest to Calais in May was around 170euro via Mont Blanc.

Approx 50e Lucca to Mont Blanc.44e for the tunnel,couple of silly little tolls the other side of about

6euro then another 40-50 up to Reims then 24 I think up to Calais.