Countries, Cruising, Deals, Europe

Easy flow today round the canals of Strasbourg

There is an easy flow today round the canals of Strasbourg, the historically sought-after and fought-after French border bastion.

Canal boats now float through the jewel of Alsace-Lorraine, passengers disembarking to walk its cobbled stones.

Where once they resounded to the heavy thuds of army boots.

Alsace-Lorraine, the very name resonates from the pages of school history books.

The French Revolution, the Franco-Prussian War, two world wars.

EuroCentral Strasbourg 

Cruise control: Riviera cruising

Strasbourg is a symbol of the European project with the first meeting of the European Parliamentary Assembly held here in 1958.

The predecessor to the European Parliament which succeeded the Common Assembly of the European Coal and Steel Community.

And now home to the Council of Europe and the European Court of Human Rights.

The latter, the last refuge for British Europhiles, which Eurosceptics naturally want rid.

Too much politics already, we hear you scream.

Riviera of dreams

Sparkling: Strasbourg

But that’s why we’re here, to persuade you to explore the corridors of power in Strasbourg, as we did in the late Eighties.

And why not do it in style with Riviera Travel?

With eight days from €1799pp based on two sharing.

Happy valley: Your Riviera cruise

Of course, you do the politics, Riviera will do the patisserie, plonk and picturesque vistas.

You’ll leave from Cathedral City Koln, drifting down to Koblenz, at the confluence of the Rhine and Moselle.

Heidelberg for steins

Water sight: Heidelberg

If the Rhine and the Moselle conjure up wine then Heidelberg is home to a very special stein store.

A staple stop-off on an Oktoberfest bus booze cruise.

Your Riviera cruise will help you, as billed here, lap up the easy flow today round the canals of Strasbourg.

And take you deep into Colmar in the heart of Alsace as your terminus.

Toast of the canals

Koln card: Answer to your prayers

Before turning you around and taking you back to Koln.

You’ll get seven nights on board a five-star ship with a free drinks passage and full board dining.

With return flights and transfers, return Eurostar and transfers.

There will be 11 included experiences and a Riviera Cruise Director and Concierge.

 

 

 

Countries, Europe, Sport

The Olympic ode goes to…

A gold medal the pinnacle of an athlete’s career but then the Olympic ode goes to…

Well, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, the founder of the Modern Olympics whose XXXIII iteration gets underway on Friday in Paris, that’s who.

Who knew?… well, non moi until I was educated this week.

By my nouveau ami Guillame Le Roux, owner of golf travel firm Intro Travel.

Who helpfully fed me this nugget at lunch at the Engravers Suite.

In the company of Visit Hilton Head and Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport.

Games punctuated

There will be 329 medal events across 32 sports at the Paris Olympics, including golf, with breaking making its debut.

Times, fashions and sports, of course, change and many of the original line-up of Games events have been consigned to history.

With the full stop put on the literature competition.

Alas, as I reckon I could well have been in the running.

As a past performer at the Edinburgh Fringe with my group The Forth Stanza.

And judging by the reception to my impromptu offering at lunch…

‘There was a young man from Paris/Who slipped and fell on his aras.’

Let the Games begin

Now fellow wordsmith Pierre took gold for literature at the 1912 Summer Olympics for his poem Ode to Sport.

But good sport that he was, he used the pseudonym of Georges Hohrod and M. Eschbach.

The names of villages close to his wife’s place of birth in Alsace.

Even if we don’t have floppy-hatted dreamers waxing lyrical on daffodils and fair maidens to witness.

Channel your inner Olympian

All eyes will be on Paris these next few weeks.

But who among us can afford the inflated prices around the French capital now the Games is in town.

There are options thankfully and hundreds of tickets still available.

The best of which is Channel Tunnelling it to The City of Light from £69, Folkestone to Calais.

With Guillaume speaking for us all when he admitted he would attend in person.

Le course

Should an invite to the golf at Le Golf National to see new Open champion Xander Schauffele defend his title be forthcoming.

Now in the meantime I’ve been working on my limerick just in case they reintroduce the literature prize.

So that I can hear those magical words yet.

And the Olympic ode goes to..