France-Sénégal en camping-car
by Papillo
This discussion is in French, the community’s main language.
Original post
Peut-on aller facilement au senegal en camping car (2 pers)et en solo? Y-a t-il des difficultés pour faire halte le soir en securité?Si qq'un a déjà fait ce voyage je serais heureux des renseignements concrets.Merci pa avance
On peut facilement faire ce trajet maintenant puisque tu as de la route tout le long, à part 3kms1/2de piste dans le no mans'land marroco/mauritanien (tâche de suivre quelqu'un qui connait à cet endroit et ne passe pas dans les endroits très sablonneux, tu peux toujours les contourner
Pour les détails vois mon site
Pas de problème de sécurité connus.
http://membres.lycos.fr/janinejirou
SALUT !!
Je te confirme les dires de "janinejirou" !! et te demande de ne pas vidanger tes cassettes n'importe où !! il n'y a pas de bornes pour ce faire !! in n'y a que les wc de station services et les campings !!
Pour ce qui est de la sécurité et du camping sauvage (voir mon bloog) il n'y a pas de problémes !!
PS: ne pas oublier la canne à pêche, tu vas longer l'océan un bout de temps !!
PS/2: attention en Espagne, allez dans les campings plutot que les aires de repos d'autoroute !!! vol de nuit apres avoir gazé les passagers !! (mais les trois mois d'été sont fini !!)
PAPY
PAPY
En Afrique tout est possible, mais rien n'est certain ....!!
http://papyetmamyenvoyage.kazeo.com/
Merci pour la reponse à ma question, il y en aura sans doute bien d'autres car c'est le premier long voyage que nous envisageons depuis....nos 25 ans!!!ns pensons qu'un camping car ns rendra autonomes mais ce ne sera sans doute pas le reve pour aller ds les villages où ns aurons à intervenir ds la region de thies et peut etre meme en casamance de tte façon ns irons mais en avion s'il y a trop de pb! Merci encore je consulterai ton site.
Salut les papillons !
Et bien nous, nous partons... demain ! Nous serons en Espagne dimanche ou lundi. Direction le Sud, puis Maroc, où nous resterons quelques semaines. Ensuite, Sénégal (on risque de rester quelques temps sur Popenguine; si vous y allez, n'omettez pas d'aller casser la croûte chez Fatou, le petit resto "italien" - elle est Sénégalaise, comme ses employées !- à côté de l'hôtel La Métisse; passez le bonjour de la part de JC). Et puis au hasard des rencontres, dans toute l'Afrique de l'Ouest. A une prochaine, peut-être. Et écoutez les conseils de Papy !
Tonton JC et Asma
Et bien nous, nous partons... demain ! Nous serons en Espagne dimanche ou lundi. Direction le Sud, puis Maroc, où nous resterons quelques semaines. Ensuite, Sénégal (on risque de rester quelques temps sur Popenguine; si vous y allez, n'omettez pas d'aller casser la croûte chez Fatou, le petit resto "italien" - elle est Sénégalaise, comme ses employées !- à côté de l'hôtel La Métisse; passez le bonjour de la part de JC). Et puis au hasard des rencontres, dans toute l'Afrique de l'Ouest. A une prochaine, peut-être. Et écoutez les conseils de Papy !
Tonton JC et Asma
😇Salut.
J'ai effectué ce trajet l'année derniére en camping-car seul sans aucun probléme.J'en suis revenu entier, donc aucune crainte tu peux rouler!
Cordialement .SENEGAULOIS.😏
merci de ton message ce qui nous inquiete un peu maintenant ce sont tous les temoignages peu encourageants sur les nombreux "barrages" policiers où il faut..laisser un petit qq chose à chaque fois!! Est-ce vraiment aussi pénible que certains le disent, faut-il vraiment donner à chaque fois?
PS le camping car est de cette année....mais on ne sait tjs pas si il faut le prendre ou aller en voiture particuliere....beaucoup plus agée.
re bonjour
dificile de résumer conseils et avertissements pour la voiture plus vieille ça passe pas pour le sénégal (sauf carnet ATA) le bon conseil va voir sur le site de janine jirou pour le reste ne pas hésiter à communiquer avec les gens qui descendent et surtout récouper les infos se mefier de celui qui sait tout ou de celui qui à décider que c'était comme ça pour la descente ne pas hésiter à s'arrêter à Dakhla au premier camping et discuetr avec ceux qui descendent pas avec le taulier je l'ai pas trouvé sympa la dernière fois sinon passage frontière marocaine c'est devenu clean et trouver quelqu'u qui connait la piste jusqu'à la frontière mauritanienne après descent sur nouakchoot et alelar à l'auberge Menata chez Olivia si elle n'est pas envahie par les camping car ce qui ne l'empèchera de donner des conseils ou ... disfficile de tout dire tu trouveras les conseils sur la route pour le bakshich de moins en moins mais rester patient ferme et respectueux (ou faire semblant) difficile de résumer 20ans d'expérience de la route bon choix et bonne route cvhristian
dificile de résumer conseils et avertissements pour la voiture plus vieille ça passe pas pour le sénégal (sauf carnet ATA) le bon conseil va voir sur le site de janine jirou pour le reste ne pas hésiter à communiquer avec les gens qui descendent et surtout récouper les infos se mefier de celui qui sait tout ou de celui qui à décider que c'était comme ça pour la descente ne pas hésiter à s'arrêter à Dakhla au premier camping et discuetr avec ceux qui descendent pas avec le taulier je l'ai pas trouvé sympa la dernière fois sinon passage frontière marocaine c'est devenu clean et trouver quelqu'u qui connait la piste jusqu'à la frontière mauritanienne après descent sur nouakchoot et alelar à l'auberge Menata chez Olivia si elle n'est pas envahie par les camping car ce qui ne l'empèchera de donner des conseils ou ... disfficile de tout dire tu trouveras les conseils sur la route pour le bakshich de moins en moins mais rester patient ferme et respectueux (ou faire semblant) difficile de résumer 20ans d'expérience de la route bon choix et bonne route cvhristian
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I recently arrived in Uruguay and I'm currently thinking about the best solution for my South America travel project.
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but the exit ramp at Makaryevo isn’t accessible for our vehicle.
The captain joins him, and seeing our disappointed faces, they confer, discuss,
and load some planks to raise the ramp!
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8. At the exact moment our boat rounds the buoy and nears the monastery, the sun breaks through the clouds!

9. A breathtaking sight, with our boat gliding along the monastery walls in absolute silence.

10. The sky, now a deep blue, makes the vibrant colors of the onion domes pop.

11. We sail slowly past the monastery under extraordinary light— something our little compact camera can’t fully capture.

12. As promised, the captain and his crew adjust the exit ramp. You can’t tell from the photo, but even with the planks, it was a close call— the van’s chassis barely cleared the ramp. We thanked them warmly.

13. By the end of the day, the monastery is, of course, closed. But another miracle happens! It turns out the passenger who crossed with us is the mayor’s wife. When Sylvie told her we were from France, she called her husband, who immediately contacted the Mother Superior. Like in a dream, the monastery opens just for us. A nun and a guard come to meet us and take us through the chapels and gardens!

14. A visit all the more intimate since only the silent nuns, deep in prayer, are present in these sacred spaces.

15. After dinner in our little van, we enjoy the exceptional light illuminating the now-closed monastery. We’re the only visitors, and the site feels like a massive ship anchored on the Volga.

16. The setting sun now bathes the monastery walls in gorgeous pink hues!

17. Gradually, the legendary Volga itself takes on magical colors! For the night, I’ll just back the van up to level it. It’ll take us a while to fall asleep after such intense moments.

18. Just as inexplicably, the magic continues the next morning! Seeing I’m struggling with my knee, the guard lets us drive slowly along the monastery’s perimeter path. So there we are at dawn, solitary wanderers between the Volga and the monastery walls.

19. The morning light now illuminates the monastery’s eastern façade, which we hadn’t admired yesterday. An exceptional moment.

20. Even more impressive when we realize we’re on the nuns’ prayer path. We cross paths with them—tall, silent, black-clad figures, fully covered.

We leave Makaryevo with regret, following the Volga toward Kostroma on the Golden Ring. That’s about all there is to add.
We’ve already taken three long trips through Russia in our little van. The travel journals are shared in the link in our signature.
Best regards, Sylvie & Bernard
Today is January 7th, Orthodox Christmas Day.
It’s the perfect occasion to share on VF a religious site that left a lasting impression on us.
For a long time, we’d admired photos of the Makaryevo Women’s Monastery on Russian websites. They’re always taken from cruise hydrofoils that, in season, depart from Nizhny Novgorod.
This gave us the idea for a crazy challenge: to visit the monastery during a river cruise, with our little plumber’s van that’s become the common thread of our travels!
This challenge seemed impossible to pull off.
The equation was indeed impossible to solve
1. Find a dock 2. Load the van onto a boat 3. Cross the Volga 4. Arrive at sunset 5. Sail past the monastery 6. All with no reliable information. NONE!
Incredibly, every obstacle fell into place one after another! Gifting us unforgettable moments.
The photos follow our exact journey.
1. We arrive on the southern bank of the Volga, searching for a ferry to Makaryevo. First attempt, first failure—we’re way too far east. We find a second ferry, but it serves a different town on the northern bank.

2. We keep going and meet some fishermen. But even they don’t know where to board a vehicle for the monastery.

3. After several fruitless searches, a young man who speaks a few words of English points us to a dock where, in summer, boats *might* serve the monastery. Miraculously, at the end of a rough track, we find an old ferry moored. But no one’s on board, and a chain blocks the entrance.
After an hour of waiting, a worker arrives and tells us they *will* cross the Volga tonight,
but the exit ramp at Makaryevo isn’t accessible for our vehicle.
The captain joins him, and seeing our disappointed faces, they confer, discuss,
and load some planks to raise the ramp!Another miracle!
4. We board, with just one passenger accompanying us— the Trafic is the only vehicle on board.

5. The crossing was magical. And longer than expected, since the Volga here is several kilometers wide, and we’re navigating between countless islands!

6. Under a sky that gradually clears, we discover there are homes on the river— invisible from the banks—that form small communities where people get around by boat!

7. Then, suddenly, around a bend in the channel, the monastery appears in the distance on the northern bank.

8. At the exact moment our boat rounds the buoy and nears the monastery, the sun breaks through the clouds!

9. A breathtaking sight, with our boat gliding along the monastery walls in absolute silence.

10. The sky, now a deep blue, makes the vibrant colors of the onion domes pop.

11. We sail slowly past the monastery under extraordinary light— something our little compact camera can’t fully capture.

12. As promised, the captain and his crew adjust the exit ramp. You can’t tell from the photo, but even with the planks, it was a close call— the van’s chassis barely cleared the ramp. We thanked them warmly.

13. By the end of the day, the monastery is, of course, closed. But another miracle happens! It turns out the passenger who crossed with us is the mayor’s wife. When Sylvie told her we were from France, she called her husband, who immediately contacted the Mother Superior. Like in a dream, the monastery opens just for us. A nun and a guard come to meet us and take us through the chapels and gardens!

14. A visit all the more intimate since only the silent nuns, deep in prayer, are present in these sacred spaces.

15. After dinner in our little van, we enjoy the exceptional light illuminating the now-closed monastery. We’re the only visitors, and the site feels like a massive ship anchored on the Volga.

16. The setting sun now bathes the monastery walls in gorgeous pink hues!

17. Gradually, the legendary Volga itself takes on magical colors! For the night, I’ll just back the van up to level it. It’ll take us a while to fall asleep after such intense moments.

18. Just as inexplicably, the magic continues the next morning! Seeing I’m struggling with my knee, the guard lets us drive slowly along the monastery’s perimeter path. So there we are at dawn, solitary wanderers between the Volga and the monastery walls.

19. The morning light now illuminates the monastery’s eastern façade, which we hadn’t admired yesterday. An exceptional moment.

20. Even more impressive when we realize we’re on the nuns’ prayer path. We cross paths with them—tall, silent, black-clad figures, fully covered.

We leave Makaryevo with regret, following the Volga toward Kostroma on the Golden Ring. That’s about all there is to add.
We’ve already taken three long trips through Russia in our little van. The travel journals are shared in the link in our signature.
Best regards, Sylvie & Bernard
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"Hey fellow road-trippers! 🚐🔥
After 4 years on the road, I’ve noticed something simple: we’re all looking for the same things. Authentic welcomes, great local eateries, and stops that don’t feel like supermarket parking lots.
But it’s always bugged me to see small producers or local guesthouses getting their margins eaten up by big booking platforms.
That’s why I created TerraNomad.
The concept is straightforward:
The pro (farmer, restaurant, small campsite, guesthouse) pays no commission to be on our map. In return, they offer a special welcome or discount to members.
It’s direct, local, and human. We’re starting in France, then heading together toward Morocco, Spain, and Portugal. Quick question: Does this kind of "no-middleman" network speak to you? I’m opening the first 100 Founding Member spots this Friday night (special launch price at 12 € for the year—just 1 € per month). Can’t wait to read your thoughts and see if you’d be up for this adventure! 🌍✋"
The pro (farmer, restaurant, small campsite, guesthouse) pays no commission to be on our map. In return, they offer a special welcome or discount to members.
It’s direct, local, and human. We’re starting in France, then heading together toward Morocco, Spain, and Portugal. Quick question: Does this kind of "no-middleman" network speak to you? I’m opening the first 100 Founding Member spots this Friday night (special launch price at 12 € for the year—just 1 € per month). Can’t wait to read your thoughts and see if you’d be up for this adventure! 🌍✋"
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regions Brittany, Rhône-Alpes, and Massif Central (Auvergne Limousin)
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Hi everyone,
I’m planning a campervan road trip and would love some tips from those who know these countries: Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, and Slovenia again. At the moment, nothing’s set in stone, but for example, is it better to visit Slovenia or Bosnia? My preferences lean toward landscapes (rivers, sea, lakes)—basically anywhere there’s water! :) Wild camping, cheap or even free spots, and a *very* tight budget—it’s the discovery, curiosity, and meeting locals that drive me. I’ll visit cities and sites only if access is easy (by bike, for example, or by train from an affordable campsite) and if visitors aren’t treated like cash cows. Just reasonable stuff, really. So, any advice is welcome—like swimming spots or easy hikes along coasts or rivers. I love caves and offbeat visits (salt mines in Poland, La Roque Saint-Christophe in France, etc.). Castles and old ruins? Not really my thing... Thanks for your help! Sylvia
I’m planning a campervan road trip and would love some tips from those who know these countries: Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, and Slovenia again. At the moment, nothing’s set in stone, but for example, is it better to visit Slovenia or Bosnia? My preferences lean toward landscapes (rivers, sea, lakes)—basically anywhere there’s water! :) Wild camping, cheap or even free spots, and a *very* tight budget—it’s the discovery, curiosity, and meeting locals that drive me. I’ll visit cities and sites only if access is easy (by bike, for example, or by train from an affordable campsite) and if visitors aren’t treated like cash cows. Just reasonable stuff, really. So, any advice is welcome—like swimming spots or easy hikes along coasts or rivers. I love caves and offbeat visits (salt mines in Poland, La Roque Saint-Christophe in France, etc.). Castles and old ruins? Not really my thing... Thanks for your help! Sylvia
Hi, I’m planning to pick up a camper van in Dubai and drive it back to France... is this even possible? What’s the best route? What are the main challenges? Are there secure parking areas along the way? Is diesel fuel available for the whole trip? ... So many questions... Thanks for your help! See you soon!
I'm planning to drive to the UAE by road, going through Iraq. Has anyone done this and can give me some info? Specifically about the border crossings Turkey/Iraq and Iraq/Kuwait.
Hi there,
I’d love to hear your thoughts on a trip to New Zealand in a campervan. Is it a good idea to mix hotels and a car on the North Island and a campervan on the South Island? Or should I do the whole trip in a campervan—though visiting big cities seems trickier that way.
Other questions: which companies do you recommend, and what are the least tiring or most sensible routes? 😄
Thanks for sharing your experiences and ideas!
Hi there,
We’re planning to tour Scandinavia by camper van—Denmark, Sweden, Finland, and Norway (in that order)—for 5 weeks from late May to late June 2026.
I’ve done it before, but that was way back in 1980 😎 and by hitchhiking!
We’d love to hear from anyone who’s done this trip about the best routes, great tips, must-know advice, and what to do or avoid (ferries, campsites, etc.).
Thanks in advance!
hi there,
We’re heading to southern England this summer in our camper van, including a stop in London.
Does anyone have a good experience with a campsite near London that has easy access to public transport to get into the city center? Ideally, we’d like to leave the camper van at the campsite...
Thanks so much in advance for your help!
We’re heading to southern England this summer in our camper van, including a stop in London.
Does anyone have a good experience with a campsite near London that has easy access to public transport to get into the city center? Ideally, we’d like to leave the camper van at the campsite...
Thanks so much in advance for your help!
Hi everyone,
I’m planning a trip with my camper van in autumn 2026 to head to southern Italy from Genoa by ferry.
Ideally, I’d like to leave from Genoa for southern Italy (like Messina) or another city in the boot.
I’ve done some research online but haven’t had any luck.
Can you help or give me some advice?
Thanks in advance!
Vanouk
Hi there, we’ll be in Portugal from March 9 to April 14, 2026. We’ve booked our first five days in Lisbon for sightseeing. After that, we’d like to rent a campervan (RV), but we’re having trouble finding a good site for the rental. The rental would be for about three weeks. Do you have any suggestions for us? We think it’s best to book the campervan before we arrive. And since we’re not mechanics, we need a vehicle in good condition...
Thanks so much for your suggestions. We’re open to everything—even route ideas and places to visit! Pierrette
Thanks so much for your suggestions. We’re open to everything—even route ideas and places to visit! Pierrette




