Départ dans l'Ouest américain
by Meii
This discussion is in French, the community’s main language.
Original post
Bonsoir, le départ pour un circuit dans l'ouest se fait dans une semaine, j'ai hâte et je fais des chek up pour ne rien oublier avant de partir.
J'ai quelques questions:
-J'ai réservé au camping Crane flat à Yosmite mais je n'ai pas l'adresse exacte, j'ai vu que ce n'était pas loin de Mariposa mais cette route n'est pas fermée en ce moment?
-Quelles sont les choses à vérifier lorsqu'on prend une voiture de location? j'ai pensé au kilométrage, à la roue de secours, au griffes ou éventuels coups. Histoire de le spécifier avant de partir avec.
-Comment payer le péage à San Francisco? j'ai vu que lorsqu'on passé le pont on devait payer donc si je passe 2 fois dans la semaine je dois payer 2 fois?
Merci d'avance pour vos renseignements
Voiture de location, le kilométrage inclue est la plupart du temps illimité, c'est écrit sur votre contract.
Je vérifie presque à la loupe tous les dommages surtout mineurs ( éraflure ) et les fait inscrire par le préposé.
Le niveau d'essence.
Le pont de SF, je ne l'ai jamais pris mais j'ai lu qu'ont pouvais payer par internet après le passage ou payer à un endroit dans la ville. Mais on ne pourrais pas payer sur le pont même.
Le pont de SF, je ne l'ai jamais pris mais j'ai lu qu'ont pouvais payer par internet après le passage ou payer à un endroit dans la ville. Mais on ne pourrais pas payer sur le pont même.
Le vol est trop important dans un voyage pour ne regarder que le prix.
Salut, tu dois payer le retour vers SF; tu as 48h pour le faire sur ce site: https://www.bayareafastrak.org/en/howitworks/oneTime.shtml.
Tu dois y indiquer la date du passage et l'immatriculation du véhicule. Il vaut mieux le faire, car l'agence de location du véhicule le fera et ça te coûtera un peu plus cher.
https://voyageforum.com/v.f?post=9188837;#9188837
https://voyageforum.com/v.f?post=7615942;#7615942
https://voyageforum.com/v.f?post=6756775;#6756775
https://voyageforum.com/v.f?post=8150032;#8150032
Bonjour
Pour la voiture, vs avez un contrat avec la CDW/LDW donc on ne vs demandera rien au retour pour les dégâts (sauf si vs êtes passés par certains intermédiaires qui jouent le rôle de leur propre assureur)
Donc inutile de perdre du temps avec les petits bobos éventuels.
Faites plutôt attention à refuser tous les suppléments qu'on pourrait vs proposer. La roue de secours... Pas mal de vehicules n'en ont plus.
Pour le GGB, notre ami vs a donné la meilleure solution. Vs pouvez vs enregister sur n'importe quel ordi, en indiquant la periode ou vs allez passer. Tous vos passages seront enregistrés.
Attention à ne pas utiliser le transpondeur fourni (parfois) avec la voiture. Le loueur vs facture alors un droit d'utilisation pour tous les jours de location et pas seulement pour les jours d'utilisation à SF.
Faites plutôt attention à refuser tous les suppléments qu'on pourrait vs proposer. La roue de secours... Pas mal de vehicules n'en ont plus.
Pour le GGB, notre ami vs a donné la meilleure solution. Vs pouvez vs enregister sur n'importe quel ordi, en indiquant la periode ou vs allez passer. Tous vos passages seront enregistrés.
Attention à ne pas utiliser le transpondeur fourni (parfois) avec la voiture. Le loueur vs facture alors un droit d'utilisation pour tous les jours de location et pas seulement pour les jours d'utilisation à SF.
D'accord merci. Concernant le camping à Crane flat à Yosmite, est ce que quelqu'un connait et pourrait me dire si la route sera fermée? Je ne pense pas car sur la carte c'est au dessus de Mariposa.. mais pour être certaine. Je dors la veille à Lee vining donc je prends la tiago road pour y aller
Re
Les routes vers Mariposa sont ouvertes.
Vs faites simplement la confusion avec le trail de Mariposa Groves, situé à la sortie sud du parc, qui lui est fermé.
pour tous les renseignements sur les parcs, regardez le site NPS.gov. Pour aller au camping : https://www.nps.gov/yose/planyourvisit/cranecamp.htm
pour tous les renseignements sur les parcs, regardez le site NPS.gov. Pour aller au camping : https://www.nps.gov/yose/planyourvisit/cranecamp.htm
Le camping est accessible par la route 120 d'après Google Maps.
goo.gl/maps/mZB4hV4wmZs
Roues de secours; les voitures de locations que j'ai eu à 2 locations par an aux États-Unis ont toujours eu des roues de secours. Encore en avril dernier. J'ai dû être chanceux ?
Je ne prétendrais pas que toutes les voitures ont toujours des roues de secours par contre.
Les "bobos "habituels sur la voiture ; je n'ai jamais eu déclarer des dommages sur les voitures de location et je me disait que d'identifier ces dommage légers au départ peut peut-être éviter des discussions ou de remplir des papiers au retour de la voiture et avant de prendre l'avion quand on est habituellement pressé ?
Je ne sais pas comment ça se passe au retour si il y a des dommages.
goo.gl/maps/mZB4hV4wmZs
Roues de secours; les voitures de locations que j'ai eu à 2 locations par an aux États-Unis ont toujours eu des roues de secours. Encore en avril dernier. J'ai dû être chanceux ?
Je ne prétendrais pas que toutes les voitures ont toujours des roues de secours par contre.
Les "bobos "habituels sur la voiture ; je n'ai jamais eu déclarer des dommages sur les voitures de location et je me disait que d'identifier ces dommage légers au départ peut peut-être éviter des discussions ou de remplir des papiers au retour de la voiture et avant de prendre l'avion quand on est habituellement pressé ?
Je ne sais pas comment ça se passe au retour si il y a des dommages.
Le vol est trop important dans un voyage pour ne regarder que le prix.
Salut Louis
Certaines voitures de location que j'ai eu avaient de tous petits "bobos"...
De toute façon, au retour, le préposé au check out ne regarde même pas la voiture. Il scanne le contrat, (il voit donc qu'on a pris la cdw avec zero franchise) verifie que le plein soit fait et releve le kilometrage, et il me donne tout de suite le ticket avec 0$ comme solde.
Certaines voitures de location que j'ai eu avaient de tous petits "bobos"...
De toute façon, au retour, le préposé au check out ne regarde même pas la voiture. Il scanne le contrat, (il voit donc qu'on a pris la cdw avec zero franchise) verifie que le plein soit fait et releve le kilometrage, et il me donne tout de suite le ticket avec 0$ comme solde.
"De toute façon, au retour, le préposé au check out ne regarde même pas la voiture. "
Jpg13
C'est possible, mais dans mon cas oui il regardait car ce sont mes assurances personnelles qui me couvrent aux États-Unis.
C'est possible, mais dans mon cas oui il regardait car ce sont mes assurances personnelles qui me couvrent aux États-Unis.
Le vol est trop important dans un voyage pour ne regarder que le prix.
Bonjour Melanie,
Tous les ponts sont payant.
Le Golden Gate et le Bay Bridge lorsque vous entrez dans San Francisco, sortie gratuite😎
Le Dumbarton, le San Mateo et le Richmond bridges sont aussi payant mais je ne pense pas que vous aurez esoin de les traverser.
Pour vos visites de notre ville de San Francisco voyez mon log en bas de page. Cordialement Alex
Pour vos visites de notre ville de San Francisco voyez mon log en bas de page. Cordialement Alex
http://durandale2.blogspot.com/
How heavy do I journey on the way,
When what I seek (my weary travel’s end)
Shakespeare sonnet 50, vers 1- 2.
hello😉😉
pour le paiement du GGB, nous sommes allés sur leur site pour le paiement, toujours "out of order" pendant 2 jours.
entretemps, nous nous sommes dits : on va passer dans leurs bureaux pour payer, eh bien, non, arrivés à l'adresse indiquée, ils avaient déménagé. Donc, on a abandonné.
Depuis notre rentrée en France (le 3 juillet), aucune somme n'a encore été débitée sur notre compte par AVIS...... wait and see... cordialement SONIA
Depuis notre rentrée en France (le 3 juillet), aucune somme n'a encore été débitée sur notre compte par AVIS...... wait and see... cordialement SONIA
Je ne sais pas comment ça se passe au retour si il y a des dommages.
Sept voyages aux USA avec location de voiture. Chaque fois le retour se fait de la même façon : le préposé note le kilométrage, regarde le niveau d'essence et parfois si la roue de secours est bien dans le coffre. Ils n'ont jamais jeté le moindre petit coup d'oeil sur le reste et portant à deux ou trois reprises, il y avait des choses à voir ...
Sept voyages aux USA avec location de voiture. Chaque fois le retour se fait de la même façon : le préposé note le kilométrage, regarde le niveau d'essence et parfois si la roue de secours est bien dans le coffre. Ils n'ont jamais jeté le moindre petit coup d'oeil sur le reste et portant à deux ou trois reprises, il y avait des choses à voir ...
http://mjm-nosvoyages.blogspot.fr/
http://surlarouteasiatique.blogspot.fr/ : périple de 5 mois en Asie et 3 mois dans l'ouest Américain
Comme l'a mentionné Jpg13 c'est sans doute que le préposé a vue que tu avais les assurances CDW sans franchise. C'était le cas ?
Le vol est trop important dans un voyage pour ne regarder que le prix.
Comme l'a mentionné Jpg13 c'est sans doute que le préposé a vue que tu avais les assurances CDW sans franchise. C'était le cas ?
Oui. Ceci explique cela.
Oui. Ceci explique cela.
http://mjm-nosvoyages.blogspot.fr/
http://surlarouteasiatique.blogspot.fr/ : périple de 5 mois en Asie et 3 mois dans l'ouest Américain
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We’re leaving in 9 days for a two-week trip to Madeira, mainly to hike.
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Personally, given the massive influx of tourists to the island in recent years, I don’t mind paying a fee to help maintain the trails. Similarly, setting a limit on the number of people who can hike them per day is certainly preferable to preserve this priceless heritage.
However, what’s much less fair is that in reality, most of the available spots are reserved: 1/ for Madeira residents (which is normal); 2/ for "economic operators" (meaning local tour operators). For example, if you’re a non-resident (independent tourist), no booking is possible for the Pico Arieiro hike for an early morning start before September! So, unfortunately, we’ll have to skip this hike. It’s the same issue for Ponta de São Lourenço, the 25 Fontes, Pico Ruivo... in short, all the most popular hikes. Oh well, we’ll skip those too!
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Bonjour
Souhaitant faire de la randonnée sur cette île, je voudrais d'abord savoir quelle serait la période la plus favorable sachant que j'avais passé quelques jours en novembre 2018 pas pour cette activité mais plus pour une simple découverte de l'île et le temps n'était pas top notamment en montagne. Donc peut on choisir une organisation en étoile sachant que je louerai un véhicule avec éventuellement 2 points d'hébergement.
Je n'envisage pas d'intégrer une structure mais de partir à 2 et de s'organiser sauf si vous me conseillez une agence locale ou un guide local. Enfin même si je compte me procurer les différents supports, carte et topo guide plus gps je vous remercie de bien vouloir me communiquer les randos à faire en priorité
Merci beaucoup pour vos informations
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New to this forum, I’m planning a pretty big project for 2028. I’m heading to Nepal to do a trek from Kathmandu all the way to Everest Base Camp (a cool 5,300 m 😄). This trek is a bit special because even though I’ll be part of a group, I’m going solo (so far, no problem—I’m used to it). But it’s my first real trek, and it’s also a humanitarian one: once I reach base camp, I’ll stay an extra week to help clean up the waste left by tens of thousands of climbers! Since I’m originally from South America, from two countries that share the Andes, I have a deep respect for mountains—they fascinate me. So Everest… it’s kind of the trip of a lifetime!
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Hello!
We’re spending a few days in Toraja country at the end of May. We’d love to do a day trek—taking our time—on a route that’s stunning in terms of scenery, but not a level 5 in difficulty!
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I’d like to do the Mare a Mare Sud in May over 4 days. I’ve found quite a few places to stay along the route, but I’m stuck on the start and finish. I’ll be arriving by plane on Sunday evening and would like to start pretty early on Monday morning. Ideally, accommodation right at the trailhead (Alzu di Gallina) would be amazing, but I can’t find anything. Any tips? Also, for the transfer from Figari Airport to Porto Vecchio or Alzu di Gallina? At the end, I’d like to pick up a rental car—any advice on that too?
Thanks in advance!
Caro
I’m traveling solo by plane to Catania in May and plan to hike the northern side of Etna, starting from Linguaglossa where I’ll arrive by bus. After that, I’d love some info on how to get up to Piano Provenzana (shuttles or hitchhiking), since it seems there’s no public transport except in the summer. Can you sleep there in a free or cheap refuge, or camp? And how far up can you go without having to hire a guide? Thanks in advance. Bernard.
Bonjour a tous,
je pars en voyage au Maroc en aout et nous allons commencer par nous arrêter a Chefchaouen(nous sommes en voiture).
Ma question: quelqu'un peut il m'indiquer un itinéraire de rando en boucle d'entre 5 et 7 jours aux départ de Chefchaouen dans le parc de Talassemtane passant si possible par le pont de dieux?Ou un guide papier qui en reunis quelques uns?
Nous privilégions le camping sauvage et les gites.
Merci d'avance
Hi there, for those who’ve been recently—is it possible to find other solo travelers in March on the island to share transport or room costs? It doesn’t seem easy to travel on a budget.
If you have any recommendations for simple lodgings or places with dorms, I’d love to hear them.
For those who’ve done multi-day treks while moving around: do you need to bring your own sleeping bag? I’d love to hear about itineraries you’ve done without a guide, just with a map and GPS.
Thanks, and have a great day!
Hi everyone!
We’re planning a 15-day road trip to Scotland this summer, specifically to explore and hike on Lewis and Harris—places we’ve never been before. We’ve visited other islands on previous road trips in Scotland (we usually go in April for a week). This would be our first time in Scotland in the summer and for 15 days. We’re looking at late August to early September.
I’m currently drafting the itinerary. We’d be crossing from Ullapool and were thinking of spending 3 nights on Harris and 4 nights on Lewis.
Does that sound balanced to you? Is it better to keep the same accommodation on Harris and the same on Lewis to explore the area? I’d love to hear about any past experiences you’ve had on these islands. Thanks!
I’m currently drafting the itinerary. We’d be crossing from Ullapool and were thinking of spending 3 nights on Harris and 4 nights on Lewis.
Does that sound balanced to you? Is it better to keep the same accommodation on Harris and the same on Lewis to explore the area? I’d love to hear about any past experiences you’ve had on these islands. Thanks!
Hi there, I’m trying to leave for 15 days very soon to São Vicente. I’m either looking to join an agency or figure things out on my own to go hiking on one of these islands or both. From what I’ve seen, it’s not easy to organize with local transport, so it gets expensive. Can I use the services of a small local agency? I’m looking for the simplest way to hike for several days. Also, how do you get from São Vicente to São Nicolau? Thanks in advance and have a great day!
Aichatou
Hi there,
I’ve been wanting to do this for several years, and this year’s the one. Next September, I’ll be trekking in Tusheti (Georgia), from Omalo to Shatili. Of course, I won’t be renting a vehicle that’d just sit unused. No problem getting to Pshaveli, but from there to Omalo, it’s a dirt road (still the case?) There must be some form of public transport since there are so many guesthouses, and not all travelers come in a 4x4. If any of you have been to Omalo, could you confirm that these shared transports exist and how often they run?
I’ve been wanting to do this for several years, and this year’s the one. Next September, I’ll be trekking in Tusheti (Georgia), from Omalo to Shatili. Of course, I won’t be renting a vehicle that’d just sit unused. No problem getting to Pshaveli, but from there to Omalo, it’s a dirt road (still the case?) There must be some form of public transport since there are so many guesthouses, and not all travelers come in a 4x4. If any of you have been to Omalo, could you confirm that these shared transports exist and how often they run?
hi
we’re planning a trip to Yellowstone and hoping to do a three-day backcountry hike if we get a permit. if any of you have done this before, could you let me know if it’s possible to find water along the way? And if we can transport it, are we allowed to use a stove?
thanks for any tips!
sandra
we’re planning a trip to Yellowstone and hoping to do a three-day backcountry hike if we get a permit. if any of you have done this before, could you let me know if it’s possible to find water along the way? And if we can transport it, are we allowed to use a stove?
thanks for any tips!
sandra
Hello,
I’ll be in Nepal from March 6th to 29th (we’re flying into Kathmandu via Varanasi and leaving via Delhi).
I’m a bit confused about the regulations requiring a guide.
My wife and I (we’re 63 and 64) aren’t experienced trekkers—we’re more used to walking on terrain with very moderate elevation changes. I’m looking for fairly easy hikes, possibly day trips. Here are my questions: - Does the Poon Hill trek from Pokhara require a guide, or is it better to go through a local agency? (I’ve seen a lot of them offering 4-day packages) - I’d like to do a few multi-day hikes around Jomsom (Kagbeni, Mukitinath, Lupra, Marpha)... Do you need a guide for those, and can you find accommodations easily without booking in advance?
Last question—I’m really hesitant to lug around a sleeping bag or down jacket during our 6 weeks in India. Can you easily find these kinds of items at reasonable prices in Pokhara?
Thanks in advance for any tips you can share! Yann
My wife and I (we’re 63 and 64) aren’t experienced trekkers—we’re more used to walking on terrain with very moderate elevation changes. I’m looking for fairly easy hikes, possibly day trips. Here are my questions: - Does the Poon Hill trek from Pokhara require a guide, or is it better to go through a local agency? (I’ve seen a lot of them offering 4-day packages) - I’d like to do a few multi-day hikes around Jomsom (Kagbeni, Mukitinath, Lupra, Marpha)... Do you need a guide for those, and can you find accommodations easily without booking in advance?
Last question—I’m really hesitant to lug around a sleeping bag or down jacket during our 6 weeks in India. Can you easily find these kinds of items at reasonable prices in Pokhara?
Thanks in advance for any tips you can share! Yann




