Paris to Biarritz

Yesterday, after check-in and several hours of recuperating downtime in our pricy (262 €} but adequate room, we ventured out on a reconnaissance walk. To avoid any miscues for todays TGV ride, we visited the Montparnasse Gare (train station) located just across the street from our hotel. Our objective was to verify our online, pre purchased tickets, get familiar with the area for boarding the train and becoming familiar with the protocol for boarding.

After a brief bit of wandering about, we happened upon three young, motivated and multilingual Parisians with blue vests labeled “accueil” (welcoming). They cheerfully and effectively guided us thru the process and answered all our questions.

On our way back to the hotel we bought quiches for an in-room dinner and selected some enticing items for dessert/snacks. The breakfast and sandwich offerings also looked appealing for purchasing this morning on our short walk to the gare.

All trains at Montparnasse were booked today! So if you didn’t book online in advance, as we did in April, you are out of luck. The heavy crowd was apparent as we boarded at 9:40 for our 10:08 train.

In operation since 1981, the TGV (Train à Grande Vitesse) is the French version of a high speed train.

The original TVG version (left) and the current version (right) … our 4 hour ride from Paris to Bayonne, France.

Soon after leaving the outskirts of Paris, the sleek looking train picked up speed and hovered around 303 km/hr (188 mph) for most of the next 4 hours.

Traveling by train at 188 mph!
The view from our window at 188 mph.

In almost three decades of high-speed operation, the TGV has not recorded a single passenger fatality due to accidents while running at high speed on normal passenger service. There have been several accidents, including four derailments at or above 270 km/h (168 mph), but in only one of these—a test run on a new line—did carriages overturn. This is credited in part to the stiffness that the articulated design lends to the train.

Bayonne is 480 miles from Paris by automobile taking at least 7 1/2 hours to drive. The cost for the TGV ticket for the 4 hour ride today was 186€ or $200 at the current exchange rate. The ride was relaxing and comfortable, similar to first class seating on commercial jets. A typical flight (economy), one way from Paris to Bayonne (Biarritz) is around $500 for the 1 1/2 hour flight… plus the requirement to check-in at the airport 2 hours prior to boarding, plus transport time and cost from the airport to downtown Bayonne.

We arrived at the Bayonne gare on schedule, and called a Uber driver (using the same app we use at home) to take us the final 7 miles to our hotel in Biarritz… home until Monday morning. Our driver also agreed to take us back to the Bayonne gare on Monday. We planned this extra day on the front end of Camino 2023 to help overcome our jet lag before beginning to walk over the Pyrenees.

We self-checked ourselves into our reserved room per the hotel manager’s instructions, emailed to us several days ago. We spent the afternoon cleaning our selves and travel clothes and resting, to allow our travel weary bodies to heal while continuing the transition to the European time zone.

Another way to get there

Our traditional route to start the Camino has been: jet to Madrid (MAD)- train to Pamplona – bus to St Jean Pied de Port (SJPDP).

Our Camino 2023 route is: jet to Paris (CDG) – TGV to Bayonne/Barritz – local train to SJPDP.

We have several reasons for making this change. First, before we decided to do another Camino, our original destination was Provence France, requiring the leasing of a Eurodrive auto in Paris for use to, from and getting around in Provence. Second, we dislike the 90 minute, motion-sickness-inducing bus ride from Pamplona to SJPDP. Third, we love to travel on European trains, especially the TGV.

Backpacks & Carry-ons/day packs all packed, Linda opening her duffle (IKEA) for her checked backpack.

So… our planning is complete, backpacks are packed and in a few minutes, our friend, Caren, will give us a ride to the airport to begin Camino 2023.

The 7hr 45 min flight to Paris was uneventful. However, the plane was fully packed, which eliminated any chance for being comfortable enough to sleep. Customs clearance at CDG was smooth, punctual and automated. We breathed a sigh of relief when we found our backpacks waiting for us in baggage claim, as soon as we cleared customs.

Without leaving CDG Terminal 2, we followed the signage to the adjacent RER terminal. After less than a 10 minute walk, we easily bought two tickets (17€ ea) without having to wait in line and boarded the next train which had just arrived. It left for Paris central 7 minutes later. After a 22 minute ride we exited at Denfert Rochereau, connected with the metro, then two exits later, disembarked at Gare Montparnasse.

Our only glitch for yesterday/todays’s very long and potentially glitchful journey came at the very end. While still in the Metro for Gare Montparnesse, Jim entered our hotel, Hotel de Paris Montparnesse, into his Google Maps App expecting to have a nice footpath plotted from our location to our hotel. Well, our T-Mobile signal was so weak that all we got was a silly little spinning wheel. Jim, frustrated, asked a nearby fruit stand owner for help, who, in turn, struggled using his phone to get directions, finally settling for directions to a Montparnesse Tour ( “Tower” in French).

So, we walked to the “Tour” but hit a dead end when the pleasantly helpful concierge said there was no hotel in the Tour and had never heard of our hotel. We finally went into our “battle mode”, Linda agreeing to station herself at a strategic location on a wall adjacent to the Tour to establish a a base, while carefully guarding our two large backpacks and two smaller carry-ons. Jim, now unburdened by various packs, set out to find our hotel.

Just when it appeared that no French person or any other person inhabiting the Montparnesse area had the slightest idea where our hotel was, Jim spotted a bus driver puffing on some kind of combustible during his break, his bus all locked up to interested riders. Using his best, remaining command of the local language, Jim asked the critical question. The driver, rubbing his chin said he wasn’t sure, but… and Jim inserted, “and it’s a trois étoiles” (3 stars) … which gave the driver the confidence to point in a specific direction from where we were standing, he thought!

Jim thanked him, again in immaculate French politesse and headed in that direction. Miraculously, a half block from where Linda was perched, we located our hotel. Totally wiped out at this point, we checked in to our hotel and crashed for a bit.

It’s time for another Camino (2023)

Last November, while soaking up the Caribbean sun, we decided we’d like to do another Camino. Yes, we had just finished Camino 2022 in October, our 8th, since 2012 … but the operative question was when. We looked at each other, realizing that as seasoned septuagenarians, we needed to decide sooner rather than later.

We had already made reservations to spend September 2023 in Provence France (Vaison la Romaine) during the wine harvest. So, we began our planning around that trip and in tandem to avoid the cost of two European flights.

We also had booked trips to our favorite island for May/June and Oct/Nov, so that left July and August for the Camino. July and August are the peak months for Camino traffic, so we began making reservations for places to stay and transportation in January and completed the final bookings the last day of April.

Being seasoned “pilgrims”, we know what we need to take and since it will have to fit in our backpacks, we have already gathered most of our stuff and set it aside. For simplicity, this will also include a few additional items for our month in France after the Camino.

We’re leaving for our beach trip next week and will wait until we return in late June to finalize loading our backpacks and beginning Camino 2023 in early July.