je vous remercie d'avance. Cordialement Arnaud
Voyage itinérant de Cotonou à Dakar
by Guicheney
This discussion is in French, the community’s main language.
Original post
Bonjour,
je me permet d'ouvrir une nouvelle discutions car je suis entrain de préparer un voyage itinérant pour l'été prochain et j'aurais besoin de conseils et d'avis de personnes qui pourraient me conseiller. Je vais faire un voyage itinérant d'un moi complet depuis Cotonou au bénin jusqu'à Dakar au Sénégal. je vais donc traverser en transport en commun le Bénin, le Burkina, le sud du Mali et enfin le Sénégal. L'idée est de dormir les soir chez l'habitant ou bien dans des petits hôtel pas cher. Je recherche donc un voyage économique et à la rencontre des gens du pays.
Y -a-t'il des personnes qui ont déjà fait ce genre de périple?qu'en pensez vous?
je vous remercie d'avance. Cordialement Arnaud
je vous remercie d'avance. Cordialement Arnaud
un mois pour ce parcours, ne crois-tu pas que cela fasse juste ?
un ami l'a fait en deux mois ce parcours là.
je prépare un circuit inverse, mais depuis Marrakech et passant par le sud de la Mauritanie puis sud mali, burkina et enfin Bénin jusque Cotonou. je connais déjà bien le Bénin, du nord au sud, (et le Maroc), le reste, je découvrirais ... je prépare avec la carte "afrique de l'ouest) (+ cartes du net) et les guides routard et lonely "Afrique de l'ouest". je lis un max de blogs, de sites divers et j'utilise aussi les forums comme celui-ci. je partirais avec le routard + un book perso avec une trame de voyage et toutes les infos glanées partout.
si y'a des choses à partager comme infos, pas de soucis.
je prépare un circuit inverse, mais depuis Marrakech et passant par le sud de la Mauritanie puis sud mali, burkina et enfin Bénin jusque Cotonou. je connais déjà bien le Bénin, du nord au sud, (et le Maroc), le reste, je découvrirais ... je prépare avec la carte "afrique de l'ouest) (+ cartes du net) et les guides routard et lonely "Afrique de l'ouest". je lis un max de blogs, de sites divers et j'utilise aussi les forums comme celui-ci. je partirais avec le routard + un book perso avec une trame de voyage et toutes les infos glanées partout.
si y'a des choses à partager comme infos, pas de soucis.
Salut,
Je dirais comme Béatrice, 1 mois, c'est en mode rapidos mais ça semble jouable compte tenu que tu ne feras pas grand chose au Mali
Théoriquement c'est faisable en 5 jours, chaque capitale est reliée par les bus, le plus pénible sera de faire Bamako-Dakar, la route n'est pas...très fraiche par là😇...Dommage d'ailleurs qu'il n'y a plus de train, ça aurait été bien de finir comme ça...
Tu trouveras sans souci pour te loger à pas cher si tu n'es pas regardant...
Si vraiment tu veux t'imprégner et que tu n'as qu' un mois, je te conseillerai de ne choisir qu'un ou deux point par pays pour mieux en profiter...
Tu prendras régulièrement des trombes de flotte sur le nez, il peut arriver parfois que des routes soient pendant quelques jours coupées, pense à intégrer dans ton organisation ce style d'imprévu... Et si je peux te dire une chose pas expérience de l'Afrique de l'Ouest, c'est que j'ai jamais réussi à suivre mon programme initial🙂...Je finis toujours là où je n'avais pas prévu d'aller, ce continent est très imprévisible...Moi je n'achètes jamais mon billet de retour car je sais jamais de quelle capitale je vais revenir...
Théoriquement c'est faisable en 5 jours, chaque capitale est reliée par les bus, le plus pénible sera de faire Bamako-Dakar, la route n'est pas...très fraiche par là😇...Dommage d'ailleurs qu'il n'y a plus de train, ça aurait été bien de finir comme ça...
Tu trouveras sans souci pour te loger à pas cher si tu n'es pas regardant...
Si vraiment tu veux t'imprégner et que tu n'as qu' un mois, je te conseillerai de ne choisir qu'un ou deux point par pays pour mieux en profiter...
Tu prendras régulièrement des trombes de flotte sur le nez, il peut arriver parfois que des routes soient pendant quelques jours coupées, pense à intégrer dans ton organisation ce style d'imprévu... Et si je peux te dire une chose pas expérience de l'Afrique de l'Ouest, c'est que j'ai jamais réussi à suivre mon programme initial🙂...Je finis toujours là où je n'avais pas prévu d'aller, ce continent est très imprévisible...Moi je n'achètes jamais mon billet de retour car je sais jamais de quelle capitale je vais revenir...
Bonsoir,
en effet 1 mois est surement un peu court pour faire cet itinéraire, mais je ne peut pas prendre plus de congé... et de plus je ne vais être que de passage au Mali. D'ailleur, en ce qui concerne le Mali, certaines personnes, qui entres nous ne connaissent pas l'afrique, me déconseille de passer par le Mali. Moi ça ne m'inquiete pas tellement à condition d'être vigilant et de faire attention , qu'en pensez vous?
Qu'elle est selon vous la solution la plus rapide et sécuritaire pour traverser le mali, et en combien de jour?
Merci à tous pour vos réponses qui m'aident beaucoup à avancer dans ce petit projet.
Arnaud
Salut Arnaud,
tu sais pour les voyages, il faut grandement se méfier des avis des gens qui n'y sont pas allé...
Moi, mes parents qui n'ont jamais vu un bout de l'Afrique et pas grand chose d'ailleurs, m'ont certifié que je risquerai ma vie à aller en Afrique tout seul en voiture...Ça fait presque 15 ans que je leur désobéi et je suis toujours en vie...
De même pour le site des voyageurs du gouvernement français...à les écouter, c'est moins risqué d'aller au USA ou à Madrid...Les terroristes aussi ont du se dire ça...
N'écoute pas les gens qui ne sont pas sur place...radio cancan est trop puissante...
Si tu veux être tranquille et faire la traversée la moins longue et la plus facile du Mali...Tu vas jusqu'à Bobo diolasso au Burkina et y a des bus quotidien pour Bamako via Ségou...Par contre, le soir tu arriveras assez tard, (je te conseil d'aller dormir à l'auberge Djamilla, Fanny qui tient l'auberge est une bonne connaissance, tu peux y aller les yeux fermer et c'est pas cher en dortoir)... tout dépend aussi du temps que ça mettra à la frontière mais en général c'est plus long dans l'autre sens, les burkinabés sont plus casse-bonbon que les maliens... ensuite, tu as aussi des bus quotidien pour faire Bamako-Dakar via Kayes...Sur ce trajet, il faut compter 48h..Pareil, ça peut être long le passage des frontières...Et les routes sont pas top... Les compagnies Sénégalaises sont souvent pas top, gaffe à l'une d'entre elle " ghana transport"...Leur spécialité est de tomber en panne à mi chemin et de laisser les gens en avoir ras le bol et abandonner le navire et donc leur billet...Comme ça, ils refont le plein à Kayes...ils le font de temps en temps d'un côté comme de l'autre...
tu sais pour les voyages, il faut grandement se méfier des avis des gens qui n'y sont pas allé...
Moi, mes parents qui n'ont jamais vu un bout de l'Afrique et pas grand chose d'ailleurs, m'ont certifié que je risquerai ma vie à aller en Afrique tout seul en voiture...Ça fait presque 15 ans que je leur désobéi et je suis toujours en vie...
De même pour le site des voyageurs du gouvernement français...à les écouter, c'est moins risqué d'aller au USA ou à Madrid...Les terroristes aussi ont du se dire ça...
N'écoute pas les gens qui ne sont pas sur place...radio cancan est trop puissante...
Si tu veux être tranquille et faire la traversée la moins longue et la plus facile du Mali...Tu vas jusqu'à Bobo diolasso au Burkina et y a des bus quotidien pour Bamako via Ségou...Par contre, le soir tu arriveras assez tard, (je te conseil d'aller dormir à l'auberge Djamilla, Fanny qui tient l'auberge est une bonne connaissance, tu peux y aller les yeux fermer et c'est pas cher en dortoir)... tout dépend aussi du temps que ça mettra à la frontière mais en général c'est plus long dans l'autre sens, les burkinabés sont plus casse-bonbon que les maliens... ensuite, tu as aussi des bus quotidien pour faire Bamako-Dakar via Kayes...Sur ce trajet, il faut compter 48h..Pareil, ça peut être long le passage des frontières...Et les routes sont pas top... Les compagnies Sénégalaises sont souvent pas top, gaffe à l'une d'entre elle " ghana transport"...Leur spécialité est de tomber en panne à mi chemin et de laisser les gens en avoir ras le bol et abandonner le navire et donc leur billet...Comme ça, ils refont le plein à Kayes...ils le font de temps en temps d'un côté comme de l'autre...
Bonsoir, et de plus je ne vais être que de passage au Mali. D'ailleur, en ce qui concerne le Mali, certaines personnes, qui entres nous ne connaissent pas l'afrique, me déconseille de passer par le Mali. Moi ça ne m'inquiete pas tellement à condition d'être vigilant et de faire attention , qu'en pensez vous?
Qu'elle est selon vous la solution la plus rapide et sécuritaire pour traverser le mali, et en combien de jour?
Merci à tous pour vos réponses qui m'aident beaucoup à avancer dans ce petit projet.
Arnaud
Bonjour,
J'interviens sur la sécurité au Mali, bien sûr personne ne peut affirmer qu'il y a la sécurité, pas plus au Mali qu'ailleurs, cependant je reviens d'un voyage au Mali, si vous le souhaitez, regardez le post que j'ai ouvert sur ce forum, a mon retour de Ségou " Retour au Mali après 2 ans d'absence" moi même beaucoup de mes amis me disaient que c'était une folie de retourner la bas, et pourtant pour moi que du bonheur et aucune angoisse sur place. Les gens parlent de choses qui ne connaissent pas, et quand un problème se passe a Marseille, en Corse ou ailleurs, doit on ne plus voyager en France?? Bon voyage
Bonjour,
J'interviens sur la sécurité au Mali, bien sûr personne ne peut affirmer qu'il y a la sécurité, pas plus au Mali qu'ailleurs, cependant je reviens d'un voyage au Mali, si vous le souhaitez, regardez le post que j'ai ouvert sur ce forum, a mon retour de Ségou " Retour au Mali après 2 ans d'absence" moi même beaucoup de mes amis me disaient que c'était une folie de retourner la bas, et pourtant pour moi que du bonheur et aucune angoisse sur place. Les gens parlent de choses qui ne connaissent pas, et quand un problème se passe a Marseille, en Corse ou ailleurs, doit on ne plus voyager en France?? Bon voyage
je suis bien contente de vous lire, j'espère que d'ici octobre où j'y pointerais le bout de mon nez (enfin mon de mon sac à dos) y'aura pas d'aggravation de la situation.
je parle pour moi, mais surtout, surtout, pour la population malienne.
mais je me fais un immense plaisir à découvrir ce pays et rencontrer ses habitants.
Bonjour,
et bien voilà je viens de rentrer de mon voyage à travers certains pays de l'afrique de l'ouest et mon itinéraire a été le suivant, sachant que je suis sortit de l'axe principale à chaque halte pour découvrir un peu les environs.
Cotonou, Ouidah, Abomey, Natitingou, koussou(Bénin), Nadiagou, Fada n Gourma, Ouagadougou, Boromo, Bobo dioulasso(burkina), Bamako, Kayes, (mali), Bakel, Podor, Saint louis, lampoul, Dakar.
Je n'ai eut aucun soucis, même au mali et ce fut un très beau périple, très riche en rencontre.
Merci à tous pour vos conseils et à bientôt. Bonne continuation.
Tchao
merci de votre message de retour! bien sympa ! ça ne m’étonne pas que cela vous ait plu 🙂
une petite demande d'infos à mon tour : la température de nuit au mali ??? (pour savoir si j'emporte un duvet ou un sac à viande). merci 😉
une petite demande d'infos à mon tour : la température de nuit au mali ??? (pour savoir si j'emporte un duvet ou un sac à viande). merci 😉
ha merci de ce renseignement. je dois aller demain à D4 finaliser 2/3 achats, votre avis tombe pil-poil 🙂
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I’d like to know if it’s better to book the entire stay in Nice and take day trips to the villages, or if there are villages worth spending at least one night in to really explore them properly?
Since all the villages are stunning and we have to make a choice, which ones are absolutely must-visit?
My 16-year-old daughter and I will be spending a week there at the end of April. We’ll arrive by TGV from Paris and plan to use public transport during our stay. Do you know if there’s a weekly transport pass available and how much it costs?
Thanks in advance for your help!
I’d like to know if it’s better to book the entire stay in Nice and take day trips to the villages, or if there are villages worth spending at least one night in to really explore them properly?
Since all the villages are stunning and we have to make a choice, which ones are absolutely must-visit?
My 16-year-old daughter and I will be spending a week there at the end of April. We’ll arrive by TGV from Paris and plan to use public transport during our stay. Do you know if there’s a weekly transport pass available and how much it costs?
Thanks in advance for your help!
hi there
I’m planning to spend about twenty days in Réunion in November. I’d like to get around using the *car jaune* (2 € per ticket), but from what I’ve heard, it doesn’t cover the whole island. I’m not looking to head toward the ocean and the beautiful beaches—more toward the mountainous landscapes, even if I’ll just be admiring them from below. 😉 Maybe other buses go where I want to go. By the way, are there any relatively easy mountain hikes, and where?
But here’s the most important part: I don’t want to book anything in advance because I don’t know what my itinerary will look like—it’ll change depending on my mood. 3 days here, 5 days there, etc. On top of that, I’d like to arrange half-board stays with locals—not professionals—by approaching them and asking if they’d be willing to host me (overnight stay, breakfast, and dinner) for 30 € to 40 € per day.
What do you think? Does the price seem reasonable? And is it okay to take the initiative and ask Réunionnais directly?
The tourist office in Réunion told me that since November is peak tourist season, I should book without delay. 🤪
For four years in a row, I traveled across Canada for a month and a half each time, relying only on hitchhiking and half-board stays with Canadians who welcomed me (and refused to let me pay them).
If I’d listened to my family and friends, I never would’ve taken the leap—and that adventure remains one of the best experiences of my life.
Thanks for your input!
I’m planning to spend about twenty days in Réunion in November. I’d like to get around using the *car jaune* (2 € per ticket), but from what I’ve heard, it doesn’t cover the whole island. I’m not looking to head toward the ocean and the beautiful beaches—more toward the mountainous landscapes, even if I’ll just be admiring them from below. 😉 Maybe other buses go where I want to go. By the way, are there any relatively easy mountain hikes, and where?
But here’s the most important part: I don’t want to book anything in advance because I don’t know what my itinerary will look like—it’ll change depending on my mood. 3 days here, 5 days there, etc. On top of that, I’d like to arrange half-board stays with locals—not professionals—by approaching them and asking if they’d be willing to host me (overnight stay, breakfast, and dinner) for 30 € to 40 € per day.
What do you think? Does the price seem reasonable? And is it okay to take the initiative and ask Réunionnais directly?
The tourist office in Réunion told me that since November is peak tourist season, I should book without delay. 🤪
For four years in a row, I traveled across Canada for a month and a half each time, relying only on hitchhiking and half-board stays with Canadians who welcomed me (and refused to let me pay them).
If I’d listened to my family and friends, I never would’ve taken the leap—and that adventure remains one of the best experiences of my life.
Thanks for your input!
Hi everyone,
It’s been ages since I last dropped by here... maybe simply because, apart from Nepal, I haven’t really had the chance to hit the road lately. 😉
This year, I’d love to spend a few days in Lisbon, probably in late May or early June. But with my budget being what it is, I’m looking for great tips to avoid wasting time once I’m there and risk missing out on hidden gems or unusual culinary specialties and/or quirky activities! I’m hoping to find a room in a local’s home where I can stay in a quiet neighborhood near the center, so I can get around without relying too much on public transport—my walking shoes are my best travel buddies. I’d love all your recommendations, especially for parks, small neighborhood markets, casual eateries for a quick bite, your favorite viewpoints to soak in the scenery (I’m bringing my travel journal to sketch my getaway in watercolors), events around traditional art and crafts, and so on. All your advice will definitely help me travel peacefully and come back with my head full of vibrant memories! Thanks in advance, everyone! Isabelle
It’s been ages since I last dropped by here... maybe simply because, apart from Nepal, I haven’t really had the chance to hit the road lately. 😉
This year, I’d love to spend a few days in Lisbon, probably in late May or early June. But with my budget being what it is, I’m looking for great tips to avoid wasting time once I’m there and risk missing out on hidden gems or unusual culinary specialties and/or quirky activities! I’m hoping to find a room in a local’s home where I can stay in a quiet neighborhood near the center, so I can get around without relying too much on public transport—my walking shoes are my best travel buddies. I’d love all your recommendations, especially for parks, small neighborhood markets, casual eateries for a quick bite, your favorite viewpoints to soak in the scenery (I’m bringing my travel journal to sketch my getaway in watercolors), events around traditional art and crafts, and so on. All your advice will definitely help me travel peacefully and come back with my head full of vibrant memories! Thanks in advance, everyone! Isabelle
Hey everyone!
I’m diving into planning a trip I’ve dreamed of for a long time: crossing Africa from North to South solo, with a departure planned for October 2025 for about 8-9 months. I’m leaving from Paris with a starting budget of around 7,000 €, aiming to supplement it with work along the way.
My planned route: Senegal → Gambia → Sierra Leone/Liberia (if logistics work out) → Côte d'Ivoire → Ghana → Togo → Benin → Cameroon → Gabon → Kenya (Masai Mara) → Uganda (Bwindi gorillas) → Rwanda → Tanzania (Kili + Serengeti + Zanzibar) → Mozambique → Malawi → Zambia (Victoria Falls) → Botswana → Namibia → South Africa (Cape Town). Madagascar as a bonus if timing/budget allows from Mozambique.
I’m not a backpacking newbie—I’ve done several trips in Europe and I’m familiar with the lifestyle, hostels, local transport, etc. But Africa is my first big adventure on this continent, and I’ve got some very concrete questions I’d love feedback on from people who’ve been there.
🎭 My big dilemma: flexibility vs. pre-organized work
What matters most to me is NOT rushing through. If I feel good somewhere, I’ll stay longer. If a region doesn’t click, I’ll cut it short. That seems totally incompatible with having pre-booked work or volunteer gigs, yet I need that income to stretch my budget.
I’m torn between two approaches:
Option A: The mixed rhythm: 3-4 weeks of volunteering in a country (free accommodation, full immersion), then 1-2 countries in classic backpacker "vacation" mode, then another mission somewhere, etc. This gives a breathing rhythm and avoids burnout from non-stop volunteering.
Option B: The continuous flow: finding gigs as I go, from the previous country, contacting hosts 2-3 weeks in advance with a flexible date range. Keeping maximum spontaneity but never arriving anywhere without a safety net.
Have you tried either? What actually works on the ground in Africa?
🌍 What I’m really looking for in this trip
Not just the classic tourist spots. I want to see the country as it is—eating at local joints, taking local transport (bush taxis, minibuses, sept-places), staying with locals when possible. The big reserves and safaris are part of the plan (Masai Mara, Serengeti, Okavango), but just as much as hanging out in a residential neighborhood in Dakar, understanding how people really live.
Volunteering or work interests me for that reason too (not just for free lodging, but because it’s the deepest way to dive into a country). Working at a school in Ghana, a lodge in Kenya, a permaculture farm in Mozambique—I see it as an immersion that classic tourism can’t offer.
🎒 My concrete questions
About Workaway and Worldpackers: I’ve read a lot but would love on-the-ground feedback, especially for West and East Africa. Are hosts really flexible with dates for long-term travelers? Do the advertised gigs match reality? Are there alternative platforms you’d recommend for Africa specifically (I’ve heard of Help Exchange, WWOOF Africa, local networks…)?
About "off-platform" jobs: Is it really doable to find informal work on the spot (bars, restaurants, lodges) without prior contacts? In which countries/cities is this most accessible for a French speaker without a local work permit?
About logistics between countries: For those who’ve done the West Coast (Senegal → Ghana → Benin), how did you cross borders? Direct buses or local shared taxis at each border? And for the jump from Central Africa → Kenya, is a flight mandatory, or are there feasible overland routes?
About Madagascar: I’m considering adding it from Mozambique (flight Maputo or Beira → Tana). Those who’ve done it backpacker-style on a tight budget—is 3-4 weeks doable, or is it too short to be worth it?
I’m open to all tips, experiences, warnings, and pleasant surprises. And if you’ve got trusted local contacts (Workaway hosts, associations, community lodges), I’m all ears!
I’ve got tons of questions and I’m eager for any advice or experiences you can share!!
I’m diving into planning a trip I’ve dreamed of for a long time: crossing Africa from North to South solo, with a departure planned for October 2025 for about 8-9 months. I’m leaving from Paris with a starting budget of around 7,000 €, aiming to supplement it with work along the way.
My planned route: Senegal → Gambia → Sierra Leone/Liberia (if logistics work out) → Côte d'Ivoire → Ghana → Togo → Benin → Cameroon → Gabon → Kenya (Masai Mara) → Uganda (Bwindi gorillas) → Rwanda → Tanzania (Kili + Serengeti + Zanzibar) → Mozambique → Malawi → Zambia (Victoria Falls) → Botswana → Namibia → South Africa (Cape Town). Madagascar as a bonus if timing/budget allows from Mozambique.
I’m not a backpacking newbie—I’ve done several trips in Europe and I’m familiar with the lifestyle, hostels, local transport, etc. But Africa is my first big adventure on this continent, and I’ve got some very concrete questions I’d love feedback on from people who’ve been there.
🎭 My big dilemma: flexibility vs. pre-organized work
What matters most to me is NOT rushing through. If I feel good somewhere, I’ll stay longer. If a region doesn’t click, I’ll cut it short. That seems totally incompatible with having pre-booked work or volunteer gigs, yet I need that income to stretch my budget.
I’m torn between two approaches:
Option A: The mixed rhythm: 3-4 weeks of volunteering in a country (free accommodation, full immersion), then 1-2 countries in classic backpacker "vacation" mode, then another mission somewhere, etc. This gives a breathing rhythm and avoids burnout from non-stop volunteering.
Option B: The continuous flow: finding gigs as I go, from the previous country, contacting hosts 2-3 weeks in advance with a flexible date range. Keeping maximum spontaneity but never arriving anywhere without a safety net.
Have you tried either? What actually works on the ground in Africa?
🌍 What I’m really looking for in this trip
Not just the classic tourist spots. I want to see the country as it is—eating at local joints, taking local transport (bush taxis, minibuses, sept-places), staying with locals when possible. The big reserves and safaris are part of the plan (Masai Mara, Serengeti, Okavango), but just as much as hanging out in a residential neighborhood in Dakar, understanding how people really live.
Volunteering or work interests me for that reason too (not just for free lodging, but because it’s the deepest way to dive into a country). Working at a school in Ghana, a lodge in Kenya, a permaculture farm in Mozambique—I see it as an immersion that classic tourism can’t offer.
🎒 My concrete questions
About Workaway and Worldpackers: I’ve read a lot but would love on-the-ground feedback, especially for West and East Africa. Are hosts really flexible with dates for long-term travelers? Do the advertised gigs match reality? Are there alternative platforms you’d recommend for Africa specifically (I’ve heard of Help Exchange, WWOOF Africa, local networks…)?
About "off-platform" jobs: Is it really doable to find informal work on the spot (bars, restaurants, lodges) without prior contacts? In which countries/cities is this most accessible for a French speaker without a local work permit?
About logistics between countries: For those who’ve done the West Coast (Senegal → Ghana → Benin), how did you cross borders? Direct buses or local shared taxis at each border? And for the jump from Central Africa → Kenya, is a flight mandatory, or are there feasible overland routes?
About Madagascar: I’m considering adding it from Mozambique (flight Maputo or Beira → Tana). Those who’ve done it backpacker-style on a tight budget—is 3-4 weeks doable, or is it too short to be worth it?
I’m open to all tips, experiences, warnings, and pleasant surprises. And if you’ve got trusted local contacts (Workaway hosts, associations, community lodges), I’m all ears!
I’ve got tons of questions and I’m eager for any advice or experiences you can share!!
Hi there,
We’re planning a trip for 2 adults and 2 kids to Tanzania and Zanzibar. I’ve had a quick look, and the prices are starting to get pretty wild.
We’ve got a budget of 8,000 €, and I was thinking of doing three or four days of safari and three or four days in Zanzibar, but even that seems like it might be over budget. Have you got any thoughts? I was also considering heading straight to Zanzibar and doing a one- or two-day excursion by plane instead—maybe that’d be cheaper than staying in a lodge.
Anyway, thanks for sharing your experiences and any price tips, departing from Nice!
Good evening,
As two senior French couples who are used to traveling independently all over the world, we’d like to visit Kenya next November.
Now, after seeing and reading a bit everywhere, and with the first quotes for a 6/7-day safari, I’m shocked by the prices (like $2,250) for places like Maasai Mara, where entry alone costs $200 per person per day, plus fees for the driver and vehicle.
So if you have any recent great tips or contacts to share to help me out, I’d really appreciate it—because despite the costs, we’d still love to go, while keeping things reasonable.
The most plausible solution is probably renting a vehicle with a driver-guide.
Thanks in advance for all your replies.
Jacques
We’ll be in Srinagar for 4 days in mid-May 2026 during our backpacking trip as a couple. Do you have any nice places to recommend, and what about the houseboats on Dal Lake? Should we spend all our nights there, or just one night for practicality when getting around?
Thanks,
Rozenn
Hi there,
This is my first time traveling to Italy, and I’m planning to go by car.
From what I’ve read, parking is tough in cities like Florence.
I’m looking for a small town not too far from Florence where I can stay and park my car, then take the train to visit Florence.
Any ideas or suggestions?
Thanks in advance
Hi there, it’s been a long time since I last went to London. I’d love to spend a week there in July with my daughter and my niece (both young adults).
Of course, I’m looking for great tips on accommodation, and I’m wondering about renting an apartment. It seems like a better deal to save on restaurants (with the option of having a few meals at home... but is that really the case? I’m not sure about the cost of a meal in a modest restaurant, the pound exchange rate, or grocery prices...). Otherwise, I’d like to stay in accommodation (hotel or apartment) near a tube station and in Zone 1.
If you have any great tips, I’d love to hear them!
Thanks,
Marsyork
Of course, I’m looking for great tips on accommodation, and I’m wondering about renting an apartment. It seems like a better deal to save on restaurants (with the option of having a few meals at home... but is that really the case? I’m not sure about the cost of a meal in a modest restaurant, the pound exchange rate, or grocery prices...). Otherwise, I’d like to stay in accommodation (hotel or apartment) near a tube station and in Zone 1.
If you have any great tips, I’d love to hear them!
Thanks,
Marsyork
Hi everyone!
I’m heading to Morocco for a trip in the south, starting with 3 days in Marrakech (from January 8th to 11th, 2026).
If you’ve got any tips, cool spots to recommend, I’m all ears! 🎊
And, fellow traveler, if you’d like to share this Marrakech adventure together, I’d love that!
Have a great evening
Hi there,
I’m planning a trip to Peru and have estimated how many days I’ll spend in each place.
Any advice on must-see sights and tourist traps to avoid?
September–October
5 days in Lima
Bus: 07:00→13:30 or 06:00 to 09:30 (express) (3 hr 30 min journey) 3 days in Paracas (beach)
3 days in Nazca
3 days in Arequipa
3 days in Puno (Lake Titicaca)
5 days in Cusco
Thanks in advance
5 days in Lima
Bus: 07:00→13:30 or 06:00 to 09:30 (express) (3 hr 30 min journey) 3 days in Paracas (beach)
3 days in Nazca
3 days in Arequipa
3 days in Puno (Lake Titicaca)
5 days in Cusco
Thanks in advance
I'd love some destination suggestions for a road trip from Nice to Livorno by car, including the routes, tolls to cross, distance, and estimated travel time. We're planning a 5-day trip, with 2 nights near Nice, 1 night along the way, and finally 2 nights in Livorno. There are 4 of us in a rental car, and we'd like to stay in either an apartment, a mobile home near the sea, or a campsite. Our budget isn't too extravagant!!!! We want to visit the Promenade des Anglais, and I've heard Menton is really interesting. Once we reach Livorno, we'll take the ferry to Corsica for 12 days with the same rental car. We're planning to leave the last week of May and the first two weeks of June 2026, so around 17-18 days total.
Thanks
Hello everyone,
We’re planning our next trip for this winter and need some advice to put it together. We’d love to avoid renting a car for the whole time. We visited southern Morocco back in 2011—our first trip as retirees! We loved the country so much, and now we’re heading back. Still focusing on the south, mainly for the weather. The plan is to travel down the coast from Essaouira to the Tighmert oasis at a relaxed pace. First question: is this doable without too much hassle using local transport? The idea of driving for the entire 6-week trip doesn’t really appeal to us. After that, we’d head to Ouarzazate, Skoura, the Todgha Gorge, Tinejdad, Erfoud, and then Marrakesh. I’d also like to visit the Fès region, which we can reach by train from Marrakesh. It’s a bit all over the place, and I’m realizing that as I write!
Thanks in advance for your valuable input! We haven’t booked flights yet or even decided on a starting point. The trip is planned from mid-January to the end of February. We know the end of the trip will fall during Ramadan.
Hi there,
Could anyone tell me how to connect Central America (starting from which country and with which airline) to Martinique in the most budget-friendly way, please?
Flight duration and number of stopovers don’t matter.
Thanks!
Claire
Could anyone tell me how to connect Central America (starting from which country and with which airline) to Martinique in the most budget-friendly way, please?
Flight duration and number of stopovers don’t matter.
Thanks!
Claire





