From Vilseck, Germany, how can we travel to other places approaching Italy,Rome, Paris? What is the cost?



Answers:    You can travel by car, bus, plane and train.

http://www.mitfahrzentrale.de
http://www.eurolines.com
http://www.bahn.de (best scour engine for train schedules adjectives over Europe)
http://www.skyscanner.net


To amount out minimum costs you need to divide with 50 EUR per daylight plus cost of getting to your destination. From one big city in Europe to another is usually between 60-200 EUR roundtrip.

50 EUR per year will cover:

- 5-10 EUR for food and drinks from the supermarkets
- 15-25 EUR for a bed in a hostel dorm
- 5-15 EUR for getting around (local public transport inside a city, going on day trips, etc)
- 10 EUR for entry to sights

Feel free to email me for counsel on how to see Europe on the cheap.

EDIT: Essential tools to planning a trip are the internet and a good guidebook. Look the following series: Let's Go, Rough Guide, Rick Steves' and Lonely Planet.

You can also ask a great deal of questions, any here or on other travel-sites like Lonely Planet's Thorntree or Virtualtourist.
Look within Google under German Railroads, or better still, near Eurailpass. With this last you can craft any type of combination and stops in your course. In Rome you will arrive at Stazione Termini, in the middle of the city, near plenty of hotels in every category. In Paris you will arrive depending from where on earth you depart, at the Gare Du Nord or Gare l`Est, with plenty of services, including the subway to take you to any subdivision of the city. Surely contacting any of the above, you will find links to hotels, where to get through, etc.
I used Eurail Pass and works marvellously with different prices if you travel alone or contained by company.
maurituchi(a)yahoo.com
I am in the process of planning a few trips for my husband's R&R - one be going to be Rome, but there is so much to see that we are postponing that trip until subsequent year. (We're doing Amsterdam instead - If you like flowers look up the Keukenhof contained by Holland.) If you go to places similar to Rome or Paris please read up on it first or else you will miss out on seriously. Or take an organized trip from itr, that route your travel and hotel is already provided for you - much easier, but less fun for me.
One trip we are taking subsequent month will be Europa Park (it's like a German Disney). Nearby is a spa town call Baden-Baden. We will be driving because it's a scenic route and there is profusely of hiking to do by the Black Forest - waterfalls and ruins are closely of fun.
At the Grafenwoehr website below read the Bavarian American magazine - you'll see examples of the trips you can take near ITR starting on page 36. (They're very convenient and kid friendly, but more expensive sometimes and a bit restricting).
I'm also including a website that has help us find a good place to stay - it'll also assist you research the places you want to see.
As another answer stated, check the on post travel agency. That will be your best bet money wise and it will store you a lot of problems(langauge, paperwork, etc).
Again, you are coming over beside the US Military so you will have a great abundant opportunities to travel.
You will also own the luxury of being competent to buy American foods and stuff at the Commisary and BX.
Vilseck is out in the German Bavarian Country side. Very divine land, but still out at hand. They have a great military communtity(I have friends working there) that offers adjectives kinds of comfort and support. Plus they do a Thanksgiving Feast at the Mess Hall that is truely something to be appreciative for!
Anyway enjoy your time within Germany, and Good Luck!
The SATO office is a moral option, but it is by no way the ONLY option. In reality, the only time I used SATO be to fly to Germany intially, then three years latter when I flew back to the U.S. All the driving/flying/trainriding my wife and I did, we did and arranged adjectives on our own... and probably a lot smaller amount expensive than booking a SATO flight somewhere.

If you're going to drive to your destination (and I've driven to Italy AND Paris, among many other places), plan ahead; make out the route and any unforseen needs. For example, if you drive to Paris from Germany you'll be on a toll freeway (in France anyway), and you'll have need of to have some Euro on appendage to pay the toll stations along the opening. For driving over into some Alpine countries, like Austria, Switzerland and others, you want to purchase a vignette sticker for your windshield (usually available at gas stations just in the past or after the border) to legally be capable of drive in those countries. Some countries enjoy differing restrictions on what sanctuary equipment you need surrounded by your car--Germany, for example, legally requires you to own a first-aid kit and a admonitory triangle in your sports car at all times. Other countries require more, similar to a reflective vest. You need to be aware of the route you're taking--which autobahns, which by-roads, and which cities you'll be passing along the style, since knowing the cities along your route is handy for STAYING on that route (and finding your way back). It's also a terribly good view to familiarize yourself next to the destination or destinations--the layout, the sights, and how you'll get around while you're at hand (for bigger cities the public transportation is almost always a better choice than trying to drive around the city, such as beside Paris). There are many other things you own to be mindful of, if you drive.

If you take the rail, you need to be for a moment familiar beside those too--the difference between U-bahns, IC-trains, and ICE trains. How to read the schedules at the station. Where to dance to buy the tickets--and the ticket counter at any major train station contained by Germany and most European countries speak English, more often than not. Learn how to use the ticket machines anyway, though, since you can't other count on there man a ticket office (or it one open, depending on when you're there). Trains are sometimes more expensive than driving or even flying, so be sure to do a estimated price-comparison. Trains also don't travel *everywhere* that you might want to go, and don't afford fairly the same freedom as a sports car might.

Flying can sometimes be the cheapest option. Europe, unlike the U.S., have quite a few ultra-cheap airlines--Ryanair, EasyJet, and SkyEurope for example. Familiarizing yourself next to how those airlines work and how they might get you to your destination is a perceptive idea--and be mindful of the restrictions. They don't always fly into a "major" airport, so you might own to figure out how to achieve to your main destination from the airport that they DO use. They hold time restrictions if you get here too close to boarding, and the seating is recurrently first-come-first-served (ie, no reserved seats). But given the price of the ticket, it's still a viable option. I flew to Dublin and to Bratislava on Ryanair and save a LOT of money and time doing so, than if I had tried to drive or lift a train to either destination (which would've be tricky with Dublin anyway, seeing as how it's on an island).

The point is this: be aggressive and adventurous, and don't be afraid to try things for yourself and do foreign things and see new places. If you profess the bizarre fear of stepping out of the American bubble, as so tons American military families do contained by Germany, you won't end up seeing or experiencing much. There's nought to be scared of. Check near the SATO office, and the USO organization, for organized trips and for flying prices... but bear contained by mind that the less expensive, more fulfilling, and more fun option are to be had if you plan it and orchestrate it yourself.

Again, I can give you more tips, if you are interested.
I live approaching 1.5h away from Vilseck.
I assume that you dont speak no german so your best bet would be to go to Sato Travel on post and look at theor offer.
Grafenw"ohr has a huge Travel bureau so you may want to look there as powerfully or look online.There are sites like
travelocity.de
expedia.de
To jump to Paris or Rome i would take the train tho.Its cheaper and faster than the motor.Sometimes you can get special offer and catch a flight for EUR50.- down within.
The cost totally depence on where you stir to.Italy and France have their cheap parts and also their incredibly expensive tourist places.France i ust say is not really that pretty tho.And they are extraordinarily unfriendly.
Good luck tho!!

PS: your or your husbands company should hold some events comming up spring/summertime.you take the bus beside a group of other people to let say Italy for a 4-5 hours of daylight and its pretty cheap.
Go to the travel office on Graf. Now that the Wall is down, Prague, Pilsen, Nurnburg, Regensburg, Munich, Wurzburg, Rotenburg ander Tauber, Romantic road is adjectives within a couple of hours. Rome is something like 14 hours away by train,
The best way I found, after you own lived there for a year is to win a railpass. Thre is the version they supply to Americans and the version explicitly available after you hav ebeenthere or a year. The second is cheaper. Esp as gas is high over here, go by train.
Go to the travel department.
8 years in Germany. 5 1/2 years stationed within Graf 85-90 and lived in Hutten from 86-90 Bitburg 80-82

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